The 9th Circuit Ruling and the Supreme Court of the United States

Thứ Tư, 06 Tháng Ba 201300:00(Xem: 24435)
The 9th Circuit Ruling and the Supreme Court of the United States
Last September, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled that a son or daughter who was the derivative beneficiary of a family-sponsored immigrant petition but “aged out” (didn’t qualify because he or she turned age 21) may apply the old petition’s priority date to a new petition. This would help these aged out children to come to the US in about a year instead of waiting more than five years.

The 9th Circuit ruling gave a lot of hope and happiness to permanent resident parents whose aged out children had been left behind in Vietnam. However, this hope was soon followed by disappointment. At the end of December, CIS announced it wanted more time to review the matter. The 9th Circuit gave CIS until 25 January to decide if it would challenge the Court’s decision.

On 25 January, CIS announced that it would ask the Supreme Court to review the case of DeOsario V. Mayorkas with regard to the CSPA (Child Status Protection Act).

Right now we are waiting to see if the justices of the Supreme Court will vote to accept the case. If the Supreme Court refuses to accept the case, then the 9th Circuit ruling will take effect immediate and nation-wide. If the Supreme Court does accept the case, then a decision will probably be handed down some time next year.

While waiting for the decision by the Supreme Court, the Ninth Circuit’s decision cannot be put into effect.

If your child’s case is covered by De Osorio, you should seek advice from an immigration professional now. If you haven’t filed an I-130 for your aged out child, it might be wise to do that now instead of waiting, since we cannot predict when decisions will be made by the Supreme Court.

Children who couldn't get a visa because they aged out are covered by the 9th Circuit ruling if their parent immigrated as the direct beneficiary on a family-sponsored preference petition in any of the following categories:

F1: Unmarried son or daughter (21 or older) of U.S. citizens
F2A: Spouse or child (under 21) of lawful permanent resident
F2B: Unmarried sons and daughters (21 or older) of lawful permanent resident
F3: Married sons and married daughters of U.S. citizens
F4: Brothers and sisters of U.S. citizens

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Q.1. When will we know if the Supreme Court is going to agree to review the 9th Circuit decision?
A.1. The Supreme Court will vote between now and June recess, or after summer recess, on whether to review the matter.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Q.2. Would it help to write to congressmen to ask them to support the ruling of the 9th Circuit?
A.2. The matter is now in the hands of the Supreme Court and Congress can not have any influence over their decisions. This problem could have been avoided if Mr. Obama had used his influence to stop CIS before they challenged the 9th Circuit’s ruling. But it’s too late for that now. We must wait for the Court’s decision.

 
ROBERT MULLINS INTERNATIONAL www.rmiodp.com 
Immigration Support Services - Tham Van Di Tru

9070 Bolsa Ave., Westminster CA 92683 (714) 890-9933
779 Story Road, Ste. 70, San Jose, CA 95122 (408) 294-3888
6930 65th St. Ste. #105, Sacramento CA 95823 (916) 393-3388
47 Phung Khac Khoan, P. Da Kao, Q1, HCMC (848) 3914-7638
Thứ Tư, 27 Tháng Tám 2014(Xem: 17455)
Question 1: In September, the cutoff date for F2A cases will advance 8 months, to January 1st, 2013. What does this mean for Permanent Residents who have filed petitions for their spouse and children?
Thứ Tư, 20 Tháng Tám 2014(Xem: 14253)
Records that are stored and reviewed on the Consular Consolidated Database (CCD).
Thứ Tư, 13 Tháng Tám 2014(Xem: 14258)
There are rumors that on a case-by-case basis, Consulates will waive nonimmigrant visa requirements for admission into the United States for applicants whose U.S. travel involves an “emergency” (i.e., humanitarian travel and life-and-death situations) or impacts U.S. national interests.
Thứ Tư, 06 Tháng Tám 2014(Xem: 14560)
On July 30, 2014, the U.S. Department of State issued the following update related to the recent computer crash that has led to delays in visa and passport processing:
Thứ Tư, 30 Tháng Bảy 2014(Xem: 21225)
The process of sponsoring a fiancée is only for American citizens. It requires submitting Form I-129F to USCIS and obtaining a K-1 nonimmigrant visa.
Thứ Tư, 23 Tháng Bảy 2014(Xem: 13754)
Not counting family members: This means that only one visa per family would be required instead of requiring a separate visa for each spouse and child.
Thứ Tư, 16 Tháng Bảy 2014(Xem: 14590)
A listener says: I am an American citizen, sponsoring my daughter, son-in-law and two grand-daughters.
Thứ Tư, 09 Tháng Bảy 2014(Xem: 15328)
We received some interesting questions from our listeners and we will share the responses with our audience.
Thứ Tư, 25 Tháng Sáu 2014(Xem: 20256)
The CIS Fraud Detection Unit is responsible for making site visits at the homes of married couples in spousal permanent residence ("green card") cases, when the alien spouse is applying for a permanent Green Card.
Thứ Tư, 11 Tháng Sáu 2014(Xem: 14061)
The Supreme Court decision is a major disappointment because Congress probably did not intend such a narrow interpretation of the law.