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Adjustment of Status
Application
to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status is
submitted by the individual wishing to obtain permanent
resident status (the "applicant"). It is generally
filed with supporting evidence, and may be filed in
conjunction with several other applications or petitions.
The Law Offices
of Susana Chung will be pleased to process
your Adjustment of Status application once your immigrant
visa number becomes available. Our law office will
carefully analyze your case and make recommendations
on the most appropriate process for you or your company
to pursue. We then assist with preparing documents
and letters, continuing the case through all processing
stages, until the principal applicant or family members
receive their Green Card.
Background
An
immigrant is a foreign national who has been granted
the privilege of living and working permanently in
the United States. You must go through a multi-step
process to become an immigrant.
First,
the USCIS must approve an immigrant petition for
you, usually filed by an employer or relative.
Second,
the State Department must give you an immigrant
visa number, even if you are already inthe United
States.
Third,
if you are already in the United States, you may
apply to adjust to
Lawful Permanent Resident
status. (If you are outside the United States,
you will be notified to go to the local U.S.
consulate to complete the processing for an immigrant
visa.)
Where
Can I Find the Law?
The
Immigration and Nationality Act is a law that governs
immigration in the United States. For the part of
the law concerning permanent resident status, please
see INA § 245. The specific eligibility requirements
and procedures for adjusting to permanent residence
status are included in the Code of Federal Regulations
[CFR] at 8 CFR § 245.
Who
May Apply to Become a Lawful
Permanent Resident
while in the United States?
You
may be eligible to apply for adjustment to permanent
resident status if you are already in the United States
and if one or more of the following categories apply
to you.
Adjustment
of Status Through...
...Family
Member
-
You are the spouse, parent, unmarried child under
age 21, the unmarried son or daughter over age 21,
the married son or daughter, or the brother or sister
of a United States citizen and have a visa petition
approved in your behalf.
-
You are the spouse or unmarried son or daughter
of any age of a lawful permanent resident and you
have a family-based visa petition approved in your
behalf.
...Employment
You
must have an immigrant visa number available from
the State Department unless you are in a category
that is exempt fromnumerical limitations. Immediate
relatives of United States citizens are exempt from
this requirement. Immediate relatives of U.S.citizens
are parents, spouses, and unmarried children under
21. (For instance, you can apply to adjust to permanent
resident statusat the same time that your U.S. citizen
daughter files an application for you to become
an immigrant.)
Other
immigrant categories that are exempt from numerical
limitations and do not need a visa number include
special immigrantjuvenile and special immigrant
military petitions.
For
family members of lawful permanent residents, visa
numbers are limited by law every year. This means
that even if the USCIS approves an immigrant visa
petition for you, you may not get an immigrant visa
number immediately. In some cases, several yearscould
pass between the time USCIS approves your immigrant
visa petition and the State Department gives you
an immigrant visa number.
...Fiance(e)
You
were a fiancé who was admitted to the United States
on a K-1 visa and then married the U.S. citizen
who applied for the K-1 visa for you. (If you married
the U.S. citizen but not within the 90-day time
limit, your spouse also must now file a Petition
for Alien Relative). Your unmarried, minor children
are also eligible for adjustment of status. If you
did not marry the U.S. citizen who filed the K-1
petition in your behalf, or if you married another
U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident, you are
not eligible to adjust status in the United States.
...U.S.
Resident Prior to January 1, 1972
You
have been a continuous resident of the United States
since before January 1, 1972. See 8 CFR 249.2(a),
under "Jurisdiction."Parent's LPR Status
Your
parent became a lawful permanent resident after
you were born. You may be eligible to receive following-to-join
benefits if youare the unmarried child under age
21 of the lawful permanent resident. In these cases,
you may apply to adjust to permanent resident status
at the same time that your parent applies for following-to-join
benefits for you.
...Otherwise
Eligible
If
"otherwise eligible" to immigrate to the U.S., immediate
relatives may adjust status to LPR (get a "green
card") in the United States even if they may have
done any of the following:
a)
worked without permission,
b)
remained in the U.S. past the period of lawful admission
(e.g., past the expiration date on your I-94) and
filed for adjustmentof status while in an unlawful
status because of that,
c)
failed otherwise to maintain lawful status and with
the proper immigration documentation, or
d)
have been admitted as a visitor without a visa under
sections 212(l) or 217 of the Act (which are the
15-day admission under the Guam visa waiver program
and the 90-day admission under the Visa Waiver Program,
respectively).Please note: If a person came into
the U.S. illegally, that person is barred from adjusting
their status to LPR (cannot obtain agreen card)
even if he or she marries a U.S. citizen or otherwise
becomes an immediate relative. An immediate relative
must meet the eligibility requirement of being "inspected
and admitted or paroled into the United States."
Ineligible
(NOT ABLE)
There
may be other reasons that you are ineligible for adjustment
to permanent resident status. You may be ineligible
for adjustment to permanent resident status if:
a)
You entered the U.S. while you were in transit to
another country without obtaining a visa.
b)
You entered the U.S. while you were a nonimmigrant
crewman.
c)
You were not admitted or paroled into the United States
after being inspected by a U.S. Immigration inspector.
d)
You are employed in the United States without USCIS
authorization or you are no longer legally in the
country (except through no fault of your own or for
some technical reason). This rule does not apply to
you if:
i) You are the immediate relative of a U.S. citizen
(parent, spouse, or unmarried child under 21 yearsold).
ii)
Certain foreign medical graduates, international
organization employees and family members.
e) You are a J-1 exchange
visitor who must comply with the two-year foreign
residency requirement, and you have not met or been
granted a waiver for this requirement.
f)
You have an A (diplomatic status), E (Treaty Trader
or Treaty Investor), or G (representative to international
organization) nonimmigrant status, or have an occupation
that would allow you have this status. This rule will
not apply to you if you complete USCIS Form I-508
(I-508F for French nationals) to waive diplomatic
rights, privileges and immunities. If you are an A
or G nonimmigrant, you must also submit USCIS Form
I-566.
g)
You were admitted to Guam as a visitor under the Guam
Visa Waiver Program. (This does not apply to immediate
relatives.)
h)
You were admitted into the United States as a visitor
under the Visa Waiver Program. (This rule does not
apply to you if you are the immediate relative of
a U.S. citizen (parent, spouse, or unmarried child
under 21).)
i)
You are already a conditional permanent resident;
and
j)
You were admitted as a K-1 fiancé but did not marry
the U.S. citizen who filed the petition for you. Or,
you were admitted as theK-2 child of a fiancé and
your parent did not marry the U.S. citizen who filed
the petition for you.
How Do File for Adjustment of Status?
The Law Offices
of Susana Chung will be pleased to process
your Adjustment of Status application once your immigrant
visa number becomes available. Our law office will
carefully analyze your case and make recommendations
on the most appropriate process for you or your company
to pursue. We then assist with preparing documents
and letters, continuing the case through all processing
stages, until the principal applicant or family members
receive their Green Card.
How Can I Find Out the Status of My Petition?
Click
on the menu button to the left, labeled "Check
Case Status" and enter your file
number. This will lead you to U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services
web site.
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