Articles Posted in Family Immigration

President Obama recently announced a new Deferred Action Program for people who are in the United States without lawful immigration status. This new Program is called DAPA, or Deferred Action for Parental Accountability

If you qualify for this program you may be able to get a work permit, a driver’s license and be shielded from deportation for three (3) years at a time, with the opportunity to reapply.

If you have been in the U.S. without lawful immigration status for at least 5 years and you have a child who is a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident, you may be eligible for this new Deferred Action Program.

DACA has been expanded by President Obama in his Executive Order of November 20th, 2014 to include individuals of all ages (not limited to those under 31 as of June 15, 2012) and for those who have continuously resided in the United States since January 1st, 2010.

People who entered the United States without authorization between June 15th, 2007 and January 1st, 2010, may now be eligible for DACA.

People who are 31 years old or older, but otherwise qualify, may now be eligible for DACA.

President Obama announced yesterday a vast expansion of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program and a new form of deferred action for parents (DAP) of lawful permanent residents and United States citizens who entered the United States without authorization or have overstayed their visas.

You may be able to obtain employment authorization and a driver’s license if you qualify. Deferred action will also give you the piece of mind that you will not be arrested by ICE or any law enforcement because you are not in lawful immigration status.

Details of the new deferred action program are still being finalized and applications will not be accepted immediately. However, we can begin the process of determining eligibility and preparing the application now.

DHS Announces Temporary Protected Status Designations for Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone.

WASHINGTON- Due to the outbreak of Ebola virus disease in West Africa, Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson has announced his decision to designate Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone for Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for 18 months. As a result, eligible nationals of Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone who are currently residing in the United States may apply for TPS with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). The Federal Register notices provide details and procedures for applying for TPS and are available at www.uscis.gov/tps.

The TPS designations for the three countries are effective Nov. 21, 2014 and will be in effect for 18 months. The designations mean that eligible nationals of Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone (and people without nationality who last habitually resided in one of those three countries) will not be removed from the United States and are authorized to work and obtain an Employment Authorization Document (EAD). The 180-day TPS registration period begins Nov. 21, 2014 and runs through May 20, 2015.

Jeremy Lasnetski and John Gihon, partners with Lasnetski Gihon Law, will be panelists on multiple topics this weekend at AILA Central Florida’s Annual Conference in Clearwater Beach, Florida. The 28th Annual Fall Conference, entitled, “Basics and Beyond at the Beach” is a two-day conference at the Hyatt Regency Clearwater Beach Resort and Spa and begins on October 17, 2014.

http://www.aila.org/content/default.aspx?docid=49888#reg

Jeremy will be a panelist on the topics of U Visas, T Visas and VAWA benefits. U Visas are potentially available to any non-citizen who was the victim or witness to certain crimes here in the United States. VAWA benefits are potentially available for victims of domestic abuse by U.S. citizens or Lawful Permanent Residents.

Last time I discussed the situations where an immigrant in removal proceedings could seek to terminate proceedings to avoid removal from the United States. Today I will discuss motions to administratively close proceedings.

While a successful motion to terminate removal proceedings usually removes an alien from jeopardy of deportation, a successful motion to administratively close proceedings simply pauses a removal case indefinitely. However, the outcome is the same as a motion to terminate, you are no longer in imminent danger of being ordered removed from the United States.

While administratively closing removal proceedings pauses your case indefinitely, at any time you or the Government can ask the Court to put your case back in front of the Immigration Judge.

For the poor unfortunate immigrant who finds themselves in removal proceedings, the process can be scary, confusing, and heartbreaking. Many immigrants are so intimidated by the removal process that they purposely fail to appear for court. The worst thing you can do if you are an immigrant who finds yourself in removal proceedings is not to show up. The best thing that you can do is hire an experienced immigration attorney who can review your case, explain your rights, and fight for you to be able to stay in the United States.

Once your are in removal proceedings, two of the ways that an an experienced immigration attorney can protect you from removal are to terminate the removal proceedings against you, or to administratively close them. Each action has a different outcome and different reasons to chose that strategy; however, each one can protect you from removal.

There are two general reasons to pursue a motion to terminate removal proceedings. One, is because the law says you can, the other is because the Government has a policy that says you can.

Many non-citizens find themselves in this exact position at some point in their lives. Sometimes, they do not even know they have an order of removal or deportation until they apply for a green card or other immigration benefit. When you have an order of removal or deportation the last thing you should do is nothing. The first thing you should do is call an experienced immigration attorney about your options. Depending on how and why you were ordered removed or deported, you many have many different options available to you.

One of the options if you have an order of removal or deportation is to file a motion to reopen your immigration case. If you were ordered removed or deported because you did not show up for Immigration Court, you may be able to reopen your case if you can show that you did not receive notice or were not told that you were suppose to be in court. Many times, non-citizens end up in removal or deportation proceedings without even knowing it. This may happen because they are tricked into filing immigration paperwork through a Notario. If you did not know you were in immigration court an attorney may be able to file a motion to reopen for you. In this case, filing a motion to reopen will automatically stop the government from removing or deporting you while that motion is pending.

If you were ordered removed or deported and your attorney did something wrong, or failed to do something right in your immigration case, you may be able to file a motion to reopen and argue that your attorney was ineffective. You will need to be able to show that had your attorney been better, you would not have been ordered removed.

The Board of Immigration Appeals recently issued a decision that will have serious negative consequences for non-citizens convicted of marijuana (cannabis) possession. See Matter of Dominguez-Rodriguez, 26 I&N Dec. 408 (BIA 2014). The immigration laws in the U.S. make certain non-citizens removable (subject to deportation) if they are convicted of a controlled substance offense OTHER THAN a single offense involving possession for one’s own use of thirty grams or less of marijuana. Section 237(a)(2)(B)(i) of the Immigration and Nationality Act.

This means, if a lawful permanent resident or other lawfully-admitted non-citizen is convicted of possessing any federally controlled substance, other than marijuana they are subject to deportation. HOWEVER, if that same person is convicted of possession of marijuana (cannabis) the government must also prove that the amount of cannabis was over 30 grams, or the person possessed it for something other than personal use (selling it, delivering it, etc.). If the government is unable to prove the person possessed more than 30 grams of cannabis, or possessed it for sale or delivery, then the person is not subject to deportation.

Until recently, many Immigration Judges have required that the government prove that the amount was over 30 grams or not for personal use by using the same documents they use to prove most immigration charges. Those documents include the normal record of conviction, which consists of the judgment, sentence, probation order, indictment or information and a few other documents. Until recently, in most jurisdictions, the Immigration Judges were not using documents such as the police report, or property storage cards.

Many immigrants believe that if they accept the pre-trial intervention or diversion programs offered to criminal defendants after they are arrested, they will not face deportation from the United States. That is simply not true. To understand why, you must understand that there are two different laws that the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) use to deport people from the United States. One set of laws usually applies to people who entered the country without inspection, admission or parole. The other set of laws applies to lawful permanent residents (LPRs) and non-immigrants, including students, tourists, workers, etc.

For ICE to deport someone in the second group (LPRs, etc.) based upon certain crimes, there must be a conviction. A conviction includes anytime a criminal defendant enters a plea of guilty or no contest and is adjudicated guilty or the adjudication of guilt is withheld. A successfully completed pre-trial intervention or diversion program will result in the charges being dropped. If the charges are dropped there is no conviction and an LPR or other lawfully admitted non-immigrant cannot be deported from the U.S. based upon that crime.

HOWEVER, if that same LPR or non-immigrant successfully completes a pre-trial intervention or diversion program and the criminal charges are dropped, they can still face deportation in certain circumstances. If anyone in this second category leaves the U.S. and comes back, they are subjected to the same set of laws as someone who entered the U.S. without inspection, admission or parole.

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