Category: General Immigration

  1. ICE Investigators Use Private Database Covering Millions of Individuals to Pursue Immigration Violations

    According to Georgetown Law researchers, United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers have bought private data containing millions of individuals’ phone, water, electricity, and other utility records. ICE will use these records to pursue immigration violations. ICE’s use of this private data shows how government agencies exploit commercial data to gain access to information that they are not to compile themselves. The Private Database CLEAR, a READ MORE READ MORE

  2. United States v. Facebook: Judge Orders that Discovery Continue in PERM Recruiting Discrimination Case

    In a precedential decision published March 3, 2021, Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Andrea R. Carroll-Tipton denied Respondent’s Motion to Stay Discovery, finding that such a stay is not automatic pending a motion to dismiss. United States v. Facebook In United States v. Facebook, Inc., 14 OCAHO no. 1386a (2021), Complainant alleged that Respondent had violated the immigration-related unfair employment practices provisions of 8 U.S.C. § 1324b by READ MORE READ MORE

  3. Weekly Immigration Round-Up: Public Charge Rule Terminated; Foreigners Previously Barred from U.S. Can Reapply for Visas; Venezuelans Granted Temporary Protected Status

    End of the 2019 Public Charge Rule On Tuesday, March 9, 2021, the Biden administration asked the Supreme Court to dismiss the government’s appeals of court decisions against the “public charge” rule, which had expanded the ability of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) to deny green cards to lower-income immigrants. U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas stated that “the 2019 public charge rule was not READ MORE READ MORE

  4. Perry County Reverses Immigration Policies, Rejects “Sanctuary” Label

    Pennsylvania’s Perry County Prison, in a county that has consistently extended its support to immigration officials, has ended a five-year policy meant to protect citizens from being unconstitutionally detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). In part, the reason county officials ended the policy was that they did not relate to the “sanctuary county” designation. County officials further said this is not going to change the READ MORE READ MORE

  5. USCIS Reverts to 2008 Version of Naturalization Civics Test

    On February 22, 2021, the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced that it is reverting to the 2008 version of the naturalization civics test as of March 1, 2021. Applicants who file for naturalization after March 2, 2021, will take the 2008 version of the test. The USCIS further clarified that this announcement was consistent with the framework of the Executive Order on Restoring Faith READ MORE READ MORE

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