Monday, October 1, 2012

IMMIGRATION 101 --- "THE IMMIGRATION PARADOX: 15 TIPS FOR WINNING IMMIGRATION CASES"


Exclusion and removal (deportation) proceedings, along with asylum hearings, are major staples for the United States Immigration Judge and the EOIR of the Department of Justice.

Generally speaking, all aliens to the United States must satisfy State Department consular officers abroad and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Bureau of Customs and Border Protection inspectors upon entry to the U.S. that they (the aliens) are not ineligible for visas or admission under the so-called “grounds of inadmissibility” of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA).

Officially, the nine (9) INA “grounds of inadmissibility” are:

(1) health-related grounds

(2) criminal history;

(3) national security and terrorist concerns;

(4) public charge (e.g., indigence);

(5) seeking to work without proper labor certification;

(6) illegal entrants and immigration law violations;

(7) lacking proper documents;

(8) ineligible for citizenship; and, of course,

(9) aliens previously removed.
[Pages 89-90, Chapter 15, "Fundamentals of Immigration and Naturalization Law," THE IMMIGRATION PARADOX, by Attorney Charles Jerome Ware http://amzn.com/B007PLY6WA]

1 comment:

  1. Immigration laws are set, and violators are punishable by the law. Still, it is a case to case basis with regards to immigration issues. Thank you so much, Dr. Charles Jerome Ware, for taking time to share your tips and insights on the internet so that more people will learn more about immigration.

    Tyrone Urman

    ReplyDelete