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| FBI namecheck delays and Writ of Mandamus Delays in FBI namecheck during 485 processing and legal options of filing Writ of Mandamus in court to get namecheck cleared. |
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Here is a brief description of Lawyer's opinion that we heard on a conference call arranged by IV and Randall Emery of American Families United on June 7th.
These notes below were prepared by Randall after the conference call. JOIN THIS GROUP To join a group of individuals and co ordinate efforts, go to this thread and signup :FBI name check delays signup (FBI name check victims. Signup here.) Also, there is a Yahoogroups group called namechecktracker created for communicating and co-ordinating. There are nearly 100 members stuck in name check delays of 485 filing. Notes based on yesterday's conference call: This is only notes prepared based on legal opinion of a lawyer who specializes in Writ of Mandamus cases against the USCIS for citizenship cases as well as family based and employment based greencards. This most not be construed as any kind of attorney client relationship. - Priority Dates and Writ of Mandamus: In employment based immigration cases, if your priority date is not current then the chances of success by filing writ of mandamus are negligible. To have a successful Writ of Mandamus, you need to have your priority date current. Otherwise the USCIS will respond to WoM by saying that the case is not actionable and a decision cannot be made until the case becomes current per visa bulletin. - Your Case: A writ of mandamus is best for clean cases (where there are no criminal arrests, or more importantly, convictions) because a writ of mandamus only compels the government to make a decision; it does not say what the decision should be - How long have you been waiting whether to pursue a writ of mandamus depends on how long you have been waiting on your case (and for employment based cases, if your priority date is current). Rule of thumb: waiting less than 1 year - not advised unless continued wait would cause harm; 1 - 2 years - should consider WOM; 2+ years - it's time to file -Possibility of Class action because of the individual nature of a writ of mandamus (as noted in the above 2 points), and because of the difficulty in getting a national jurisdiction, WOM does not easily lend itself to a class action; Joe Hohenstein(Orlow and Orlow) will follow up on this in more detail at the American Immigration Lawyer's Association (AILA) convention later this month and get back in touch with Jay or myself - Citizenship cases if you are applying for citizenship, you have a stronger option than writ of mandamus, called a peitition for declatory judgement, where you can argue not just for a judgement but for an approval of your case as well; in addition, when applying for citizenship, there is a hard and fast rule vs. the rule of thumb for WOM -- with citizenship, you should definately file after 120 days - why WoM works when you file a WOM, it is embarassing for the government, and they do not want have the courts examine their decision making process; in many cases, if they get a letter from a law firm that they know will file in federal court one month later, they will often process the case; a successful WOM is settled before going to court - Court appearances you do not have to appear personally in court when you file a writ of mandamus 99.9% of the time. Joe said he is yet to see a case where the client had to go to court with lawyer and argue WoM case. - typical cost: between $1,500 to $2,000, plus filing fees of about $400 - Joe Hohenstein's Law Firm Orlow & Orlow is in Philadelphia, and typically represents clients in the Northeast. Joe can take individual emails at joe@orlow.com; because there may be a lot of emails, please allow for a delay in the response. If the questions are get to be more detailed, he would talk about treating them as an initial consultation, which is $100. What can be done collectively: The issue with name checks is not funding, but an institutional culture that believes that our issues are unimportant and that should not be addressed because it might impact the ability to find the "needle in the haystack" threat to security. What is needed to combat this is to debunk this argument, so our collective efforts might focus on working with non-profits to study this issue in more detail, as well as identify members of Congress who might help. This thread is closed is its redundant with other thread dealing with this issue. To join a group of individuals and co ordinate efforts, go to this thread and signup :FBI name check delays signup (FBI name check victims. Signup here.) Last edited by logiclife; 06-08-2006 at 11:17 AM. |
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