USCIS Issues Two Precedent Appeals Decisions
WASHINGTON—U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) today
announced that it has issued two decisions from the USCIS Administrative
Appeals Office (AAO) as binding precedent for the agency. These decisions
will provide guidance to USCIS adjudicators and help deliver predictability
to the public. AAO precedent decisions result from a collaboration between
the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the U.S. Department
of Justice (DOJ), which publishes the cases.
"The issuance of AAO precedent decisions honors USCIS’s commitment
to the clear and consistent application of the immigration laws,"
said USCIS Director Alejandro Mayorkas. "We are grateful for the
Justice Department’s partnership in our efforts to promote predictability
in immigration-benefits cases." USCIS is committed to issuing further
precedent decisions going forward, given their value to the agency and
the public.
An AAO precedent decision is an immigration-appeals case that DHS, with
the Attorney General’s concurrence, designates as establishing a
rule for deciding future cases. Once published by DOJ, AAO precedent decisions
bind all DHS personnel in the administration of the immigration laws.
DOJ publishes the decisions in the bound volumes of the "Administrative
Decisions Under Immigration and Nationality Laws of the United States"
(I&N Dec.), which also contain the precedent decisions of the DOJ’s
Board of Immigration Appeals.
The first decision affirms USCIS’s denial of an application to adjust
status to permanent residence and holds that an employment-based petition
must be "valid" initially if it is to "remain valid with
respect to a new job." The second decision reverses USCIS’s
denial of an application to preserve residence for naturalization purposes
and clarifies the definition of employment by an "American firm or
corporation."
For more information on USCIS and its programs, visit www.uscis.gov.
USCIS Issues Two Precedent Appeals Decisions
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By
Verma Law Firm
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