Sec. 204. [8 U.S.C. 1154]
(a) (1) (A) (i) 4a/
Except as provided in clause (viii), any citizen of the
United States claiming that an alien is entitled to classification by
reason of a relationship described in paragraph (1), (3), or (4) of
section 203(a)
or to an immediate relative status under section
201(b)(2)(A)(i)
may file a petition with the Attorney General for such
classification.
(ii) An alien spouse described in the second sentence of
section 201(b)(2)(A)(i)
also may file a petition with the Attorney General under this
subparagraph for classification of the alien (and the alien's
children) under such section.
(iii) 4/
(I) An alien who is described in subclause (II) may file a
petition with the Attorney General under this clause for
classification of the alien (and any child of the alien) if the alien
demonstrates to the Attorney General that--
(aa) the
marriage or the intent to marry the United States citizen was entered
into in good faith by the alien; and
(bb) during
the marriage or relationship intended by the alien to be legally a
marriage, the alien or a child of the alien has been battered or has
been the subject of extreme cruelty perpetrated by the alien's spouse
or intended spouse.
(II) For purposes of subclause (I), an alien described in this
subclause is an alien--
(aa)(AA) who
is the spouse of a citizen of the United States;
(BB) who believed that he or she had married a citizen of the
United States and with whom a marriage ceremony was actually
performed and who otherwise meets any applicable requirements under
this Act to establish the existence of and bona fides of a marriage,
but whose marriage is not legitimate solely because of the bigamy of
such citizen of the United States; or
(CC) who was a
bona fide spouse of a United States citizen within the past 2 years
and--
(aaa) whose spouse died within the past 2 years;
(bbb) whose spouse lost or renounced citizenship status within
the past 2 years related to an incident of domestic violence; or
(ccc) who demonstrates a connection between the legal
termination of the marriage within the past 2 years and battering or
extreme cruelty by the United States citizen spouse;
(bb) who is a
person of good moral character;
(cc) who is
eligible to be classified as an immediate relative under section
201(b)(2)(A)(i)
or who would have been so classified but for the bigamy of
the citizen of the United States that the alien intended to marry;
and
(dd) who has
resided with the alien's spouse or intended spouse.
(iv) 5/
An alien who is the child of a citizen of the United States,
or who was a child of a United States citizen parent who within the
past 2 years lost or renounced citizenship status related to an
incident of domestic violence, and who is a person of good moral
character, who is eligible to be classified as an immediate relative
under section 201(b)(2)(A)(i)
, and who resides, or has resided in the past, with the
citizen parent may file a petition with the Attorney General under
this subparagraph for classification of the alien (and any child of
the alien) under such section if the alien demonstrates to the
Attorney General that the alien has been battered by or has been the
subject of extreme cruelty perpetrated by the alien's citizen parent.
For purposes of this clause, residence includes any period of
visitation.
(v) 6/
An alien who--
(I) is the
spouse, intended spouse, or child living abroad of a citizen who--
(aa) is an
employee of the United States Government;
(bb) is a
member of the uniformed services (as defined in section 101(a) of
title 10, United States Code); or
(cc) has
subjected the alien or the alien's child to battery or extreme
cruelty in the United States; and
(II) is
eligible to file a petition under clause (iii) or (iv), shall file
such petition with the Attorney General under the procedures that
apply to self-petitioners under clause (iii) or (iv), as applicable.
(vi) 6a/
For the purposes of any petition filed under clause (iii) or
(iv), the denaturalization, loss or renunciation of citizenship,
death of the abuser, divorce, or changes to the abuser's citizenship
status after filing of the petition shall not adversely affect the
approval of the petition, and for approved petitions shall not
preclude the classification of the eligible self- petitioning spouse
or child as an immediate relative or affect the alien's ability to
adjust status under subsections (a) and (c) of sec tion 245
or obtain status as a lawful permanent resident based on the
approved self-petition under such clauses.
(vii) 6ab/
An alien may file a petition with the Secretary of Homeland
Security under this subparagraph for classification of the alien
under section 201(b)(2)(A)(i) if the alien--
(I) is the
parent of a citizen of the United States or was a parent of a citizen
of the United States who, within the past 2 years, lost or renounced
citizenship status related to an incident of domestic violence or
died;
(II) is a
person of good moral character;
(III) is
eligible to be classified as an immediate relative under section
201(b)(2)(A)(i)
;
(IV) resides,
or has resided, with the citizen daughter or son; and
(V)
demonstrates that the alien has been battered or subject to extreme
cruelty by the citizen daughter or son.
(viii) 4a/
(I) Clause (i) shall not apply to a citizen of the United
States who has been convicted of a specified offense against a minor,
unless the Secretary of Homeland Security, in the Secretary's sole
and unreviewable discretion, determines that the citizen poses no
risk to the alien with respect to whom a petition described in clause
(i) is filed.
(II) For
purposes of subclause (I), the term “specified offense against
a minor” is defined as in section 111 of the Adam Walsh Child
Protection and Safety Act of 2006.
(B) (i) (I) Except as provided in subclause (II), any alien 7a/
lawfully admitted for permanent residence claiming that an
alien is entitled to a classification by reason of the relationship
described in section 203(a)(2)
may file a petition with the Attorney General for such
classification.
(I) 7a/
Subclause (I) shall not apply in the case of an alien
lawfully admitted for permanent residence who has been convicted of a
specified offense against a minor (as defined in subparagraph
(A)(viii)(II)), unless the Secretary of Homeland Security, in the
Secretary's sole and unreviewable discretion, determines that such
person poses no risk to the alien with respect to whom a petition
described in subclause (I) is filed.
(ii) 7/
(I) An alien who is described in subclause (II) may file a
petition with the Attorney General under this clause for
classification of the alien (and any child of the alien) if such a
child has not been classified under clause (iii) of section
203(a)(2)(A)
and if the alien demonstrates to the Attorney General that--
(aa) the
marriage or the intent to marry the lawful permanent resident was
entered into in good faith by the alien; and
(bb) during
the marriage or relationship intended by the alien to be legally a
marriage, the alien or a child of the alien has been battered or has
been the subject of extreme cruelty perpetrated by the alien's spouse
or intended spouse.
(II) For purposes of subclause (I), an alien described in this
paragraph is an alien--
(aa)(AA) who
is the spouse of a lawful permanent resident of the United States; or
(BB) who believed that he or she had married a lawful permanent
resident of the United States and with whom a marriage ceremony was
actually performed and who otherwise meets any applicable
requirements under this Act to establish the existence of and bona
fides of a marriage, but whose marriage is not legitimate solely
because of the bigamy of such lawful permanent resident of the United
States; or
(CC) who was a
bona fide spouse of a lawful permanent resident within the past 2
years and--
(aaa) whose spouse lost status within the past 2 years due to
an incident of domestic violence; or
(bbb) who demonstrates a connection between the legal
termination of the marriage within the past 2 years and battering or
extreme cruelty by the lawful permanent resident spouse;
(bb) who is a
person of good moral character;
(cc) who is
eligible to be classified as a spouse of an alien lawfully admitted
for permanent residence under section 203(a)(2)(A)
or who would have been so classified but for the bigamy of
the lawful permanent resident of the United States that the alien
intended to marry; and
(dd) who has
resided with the alien's spouse or intended spouse.
(iii) 8/
An alien who is the child of an alien lawfully admitted for
permanent residence, or who was the child of a lawful permanent
resident who within the past 2 years lost lawful permanent resident
status due to an incident of domestic violence, and who is a person
of good moral character, who is eligible for classification under
section 203(a)(2)(A)
, and who resides, or has resided in the past, with the
alien's permanent resident alien parent may file a petition with the
Attorney General under this subparagraph for classification of the
alien (and any child of the alien) under such section if the alien
demonstrates to the Attorney General that the alien has been battered
by or has been the subject of extreme cruelty perpetrated by the
alien's permanent resident parent.
(iv) 9/
An alien who--
(I) is the
spouse, intended spouse, or child living abroad of a lawful permanent
resident who-
(aa) is an
employee of the United States Government;
(bb) is a
member of the uniformed services (as defined in section 101(a) of
title 10, United States Code); or
(cc) has
subjected the alien or the alien's child to battery or extreme
cruelty in the United States; and
(II) is
eligible to file a petition under clause (ii) or (iii), shall file
such petition with the Attorney General under the procedures that
apply to self-petitioners under clause (ii) or (iii), as applicable.
(v) 9a/
(I) For the purposes of any petition filed or approved under
clause (ii) or (iii), divorce, or the loss of lawful permanent
resident status by a spouse or parent after the filing of a petition
under that clause shall not adversely affect approval of the
petition, and, for an approved petition, shall not affect the alien’s
ability to adjust status under subsections (a) and (c) of section 245
or obtain status as a lawful permanent resident based on an
approved self-petition under clause (ii) or (iii).
(II) Upon the
lawful permanent resident spouse or parent becoming or establishing
the existence of United States citizenship through naturalization,
acquisition of citizenship, or other means, any petition filed with
the Immigration and Naturalization Service and pending or approved
under clause (ii) or (iii) on behalf of an alien who has been
battered or subjected to extreme cruelty shall be deemed reclassified
as a petition filed under subparagraph (A) even if the acquisition of
citizenship occurs after d ivorce or termination of parental rights.
(C) 10/
Notwithstanding section 101(f)
, an act or conviction that is waivable with respect to the
petitioner for purposes of a determination of the petitioner's
admissibility under section 212(a)
or deportability under section 237(a)
shall not bar the Attorney General from finding the
petitioner to be of good moral character under subparagraph
(A)(iii),(A)(iv), (B)(ii), or (B)(iii) if the Attorney General finds
that the act or conviction was connected to the alien's having been
battered or subjected to extreme cruelty.
(D) 10/
(i)(I) Any child who attains 21 years of age who has filed a
petition under clause (iv) of section 204(a)(1)(A)
10a/
or section 204(a)(1)(B)(iii)
that was filed or approved before the date on which the child
attained 21 years of age shall be considered (if the child has not
been admitted or approved for lawful permanent residence by the date
the child attained 21 years of age) a petitioner for preference
status under paragraph (1), (2), or (3) of section 203(a), whichever
paragraph is applicable, with the same priority date assigned to the
self-petition filed under clause (iv) of section 204(a)(1)(A)
. No new petition shall be required to be filed.
(II) Any
individual described in subclause (I) is eligible for deferred action
and work authorization.
(III) Any
derivative child who attains 21 years of age who is included in a
petition described in clause (ii) that was filed or approved before
the date on which the child attained 21 years of age shall be
considered (if the child has not been admitted or approved for lawful
permanent residence by the date the child attained 21 years of age)
10a/
a VAWA self-petitioner with the same priority date as that
assigned to the petitioner in any petition described in clause (ii).
No new petition shall be required to be filed.
(IV) Any
individual described in subclause (III) and any derivative child of a
petition described in clause (ii) is eligible for deferred action and
work authorization.
(ii) The
petition referred to in clause (i)(III) is a petition filed by an
alien under subparagraph (A)(iii), (A)(iv), (B)(ii)or (B)(iii) in
which the child is included as a derivative beneficiary.
10/
(iii) Nothing in the amendments made by the Child Status
Protection Act shall be construed to limit or deny any right or
benefit provided under this subparagraph.
10a/
(iv) Any alien who benefits from this subparagraph may adjust
status in accordance with subsections (a) and (c) of section 245
as an alien having an approved petition for classification
under subparagraph (A)(iii), (A)(iv), (B)(ii), or (B)(iii).
10a/
(v) For purposes of this paragraph, an individual who is not
less than 21 years of age, who qualified to file a petition under
subparagraph (A)(iv) or (B)(iii) 10a/
as of the day before the date on which the individual
attained 21 years of age, and who did not file such a petition before
such day, shall be treated as having filed a petition under such
subparagraph as of such day if a petition is filed for the status
described in such subparagraph before the individual attains 25 years
of age and the individual shows that the abuse was at least one
central reason for the filing delay. Clauses (i) through (iv) of this
subparagraph shall apply to an individual described in this clause in
the same manner as an individual filing a petition under subparagraph
(A)(iv) or (B)(iii) 10a/
.
(E) 10/
Any alien desiring to be classified under section
203(b)(1)(A)
, or any person on behalf of such an alien, may file a
petition with the Attorney General for such classification.
(F) 10/
Any employer desiring and intending to employ within the
United States an alien entitled to classification under section
203(b)(1)(B)
, 203(b)(1)(C)
, 203(b)(2)
, or 203(b)(3)
may file a petition with the Attorney General for such
classification.
(G) (i) 10/
(i) Any alien (other than a special immigrant under section
101(a)(27)(D)
) desiring to be classified under section 203(b)(4)
, or any person on behalf of such an alien, may file a
petition with the Attorney General for such classification.
(ii) Aliens claiming status as a special immigrant under
section 101(a)(27)(D)
may file a petition only with the Secretary of State and only
after notification by the Secretary that such status has been
recommended and approved pursuant to such section.
(H) 10/
Any alien desiring to be classified under section 203(b)(5)
may file a petition with the Attorney General for such
classification.
(I) 10/
(i) Any alien desiring to be provided an immigrant visa under
section 203(c)
may file a petition at the place and time determined by the
Secretary of State by regulation. Only one such petition may be filed
by an alien with respect to any petitioning period established. If
more than one petition is submitted all such petitions submitted for
such period by the alien shall be voided.
(ii)(I) The
Secretary of State shall designate a period for the filing of
petitions with respect to visas which may be issued under section
203(c)
for the fiscal year beginning after the end of the period.
(II) Aliens
who qualify, through random selection, for a visa under section
203(c)
shall remain eligible to receive such visa only through the
end of the specific fiscal year for which they were selected.
(III) The
Secretary of State shall prescribe such regulations as may be
necessary to carry out this clause.
(iii) A
petition under this subparagraph shall be in such form as the
Secretary of State may by regulation prescribe and shall contain such
information and be supported by such documentary evidence as the
Secretary of State may require.
(J) 10/
In acting on petitions filed under clause (iii) or (iv) of
subparagraph (A) or clause (ii) or (iii) of subparagraph (B), 10/
or in making determinations under subparagraphs (C) and (D),
the Attorney General shall consider any credible evidence relevant to
the petition. The determination of what evidence is credible and the
weight to be given that evidence shall be within the sole discretion
of the Attorney General.
(K) 10ab/
Upon the approval of a petition as a VAWA self-petitioner,
the alien --
(i) is
eligible for work authorization; and
(ii) may be
provided an ‘employment authorized’ endorsement or
appropriate work permit incidental to such approval.
(L) 10ac/
Notwithstanding the previous provisions of this
paragraph, an
individual who was a VAWA petitioner or who had the status of a
nonimmigrant under subparagraph (T) or (U) of section 101(a)(15)
may not file a petition for classification under this section
or section 214
to classify any person who committed the battery or extreme
cruelty or trafficking against the individual (or the individual’s
child) which established the individual’s (or individual's
child) eligibility as a VAWA petitioner or for such nonimmigrant
status.
(2) (A) The Attorney General may not approve a spousal second
preference petition for the classification of the spouse of an alien
if the alien, by virtue of a prior marriage, has been accorded the
status of an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence as the
spouse of a citizen of the United States or as the spouse of an alien
lawfully admitted for permanent residence, unless-
(i) a period of 5 years has elapsed after the date the alien
acquired the status of an alien lawfully admitted for permanent
residence, or
(ii) the alien establishes to the satisfaction of the Attorney
General by clear and convincing evidence that the prior marriage (on
the basis of which the alien obtained the status of an alien lawfully
admitted for permanent residence) was not entered into for the
purpose of evading any provision of the immigration laws.
In this
subparagraph, the term "spousal second preference petition"
refers to a petition, seeking preference status under section
203(a)(2)
, for an alien as a spouse of an alien lawfully admitted for
permanent residence.
(B) Subparagraph (A) shall not apply to a petition filed for
the classification of the spouse of an alien if the prior marriage of
the alien was terminated by the death of his or her spouse.
(b) After an investigation of the facts in each case, and after consultation with the Secretary of Labor with respect to petitions to accord a status under section 203(b)(2) or 203(b)(3) , the Attorney General shall, if he determines that the facts stated in the petition are true and that the alien in behalf of whom the petition is made is an immediate relative specified in section 201(b) or is eligible for preference under subsection (a) or (b) of section 203, approve the petition and forward one copy thereof to the Department of State. The Secretary of State shall then authorize the consular officer concerned to grant the preference status.
(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (b) no
petition shall be approved if (1) the alien has previously been
accorded, or has sought to be accorded, an immediate relative or
preference status as the spouse of a citizen of the United States or
the spouse of an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence, by
reason of a marriage determined by the Attorney General to have been
entered into for the purpose of evading the immigration laws or (2)
the Attorney General has determined that the alien has attempted or
conspired to enter into a marriage for the purpose of evading the
immigration laws.
(d) (1) 1/
Notwithstanding the provisions of subsections (a) and
(b) no petition may be approved on behalf of a child defined in
section subparagraph (F) or (G) of section 101(b)(1)
1/
unless a valid home-study has been favorably
recommended by an agency of the State of the child's proposed
residence, or by an agency authorized by that State to conduct such a
study, or, in the case of a child adopted abroad, by an appropriate
public or private adoption agency which is licensed in the United
States.
(2) 1/
Notwithstanding the provisions of subsections (a) and
(b), no petition may be approved on behalf of a child defined in
section 101(b)(1)(G)
unless the Secretary of State has certified that the
central authority of the child's country of origin has notified the
United States central authority under the convention referred to in
such section 101(b)(1)(G)
that a United States citizen habitually resident in
the United States has effected final adoption of the child, or has
been granted custody of the child for the purpose of emigration and
adoption, in accordance with such convention and the Intercountry
Adoption Act of 2000.
(e) Nothing in this section shall be construed to entitle an
immigrant, in behalf of whom a petition under this section is
approved, to be admitted the United States as an immigrant under
subsection (a), (b), or (c) of section 203 or as an immediate
relative under section 201(b) if upon his arrival at a port of entry
in the United States he is found not to be entitled to such
classification.
(f) (1) Any alien claiming to be an alien described in
paragraph (2)(A) of this subsection (or any person on behalf of such
an alien) may file a petition with the Attorney General for
classification under section 201(b), 203(a)(1), or 203(a)(3)
, as appropriate. After an investigation of the facts
of each case the Attorney General shall, if the conditions described
in paragraph (2) are met, approve the petition and forward one copy
to the Secretary of State.
(2) The Attorney General may approve a petition for an alien
under paragraph (1) if-
(A) he has reason to believe that the alien (i) was born in
Korea, Vietnam, Laos, Kampuchea, or Thailand after 1950 and before
the date of the enactment of this subsection, and (ii) was fathered
by a United States citizen;
(B) he has received an acceptable guarantee of legal custody
and financial responsibility described in paragraph (4); and
(C) in the case of an alien under eighteen years of age, (i)
the alien's placement with a sponsor in the United States has been
arranged by an appropriate public, private, or State child welfare
agency licensed in the United States and actively involved in the
intercountry placement of children and (ii) the alien's mother or
guardian has in writing irrevocably released the alien for
emigration.
(3) In considering petitions filed under paragraph (1), the
Attorney General shall-
(A) consult with appropriate governmental officials and
officials of private voluntary organizations in the country of the
alien's birth in order to make the determinations described in
subparagraphs (A) and (C)(ii) of paragraph (2); and
(B) consider the physical appearance of the alien and any
evidence provided by the petitioner, including birth and baptismal
certificates, local civil records, photographs of, and letters or
proof of financial support from, a putative father who is a citizen
of the United States, and the testimony of witnesses, to the extent
it is relevant or probative.
(4) (A) A guarantee of legal custody and financial
responsibility for an alien described in paragraph (2) must-
(i) be signed in the presence of an immigration officer or
consular officer by an individual (hereinafter in this paragraph
referred to as the "sponsor") who is twenty- one years of
age or older, is of good moral character, and is a citizen of the
United States or alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence, and
(ii) provide that the sponsor agrees
(I) in the
case of an alien under eighteen years of age, to assume legal custody
for the alien after the alien's departure to the United States and
until the alien becomes eighteen years of age, in accordance with the
laws of the State where the alien and the sponsor will reside, and
(II) to
furnish, during the five- year period beginning on the date of the
alien's acquiring the status of an alien lawfully admitted for
permanent residence, or during the period beginning on the date of
the alien's acquiring the status of an alien lawfully admitted for
permanent residence and ending on the date on which the alien becomes
twenty-one years of age, whichever period is longer, such financial
support as is necessary to maintain the family in the United States
of which the alien is a member at a level equal to at least 125 per
centum of the current official poverty line (as established by the
Director of the Office of Management and Budget, under section 673(2)
of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981 and as revised by
the Secretary of Health and Human Services under the second and third
sentences of such section) for a family of the same size as the size
of the alien's family.
(B) A guarantee of legal custody and financial responsibility
described in subparagraph (A) may be enforced with respect to an
alien against his sponsor in a civil suit brought by the Attorney
General in the United States district court for the district in which
the sponsor resides, except that a sponsor or his estate shall not be
liable under such a guarantee if the sponsor dies or is adjudicated a
bankrupt under title 11, United States Code.
(g) Notwithstanding subsection (a), except as provided in
section 245(e)(3)
, a petition may not be approved to grant an alien
immediate relative status or preference status by reason of a
marriage which was entered into during the period described in
section 245(e)(2)
, until the alien has resided outside the United
States for a 2-year period beginning after the date of the marriage.
(h) The legal termination of a marriage may not be the sole
basis for revocation under section 205
of a petition filed under subsection (a)(1)(B)(ii)
pursuant to conditions described in subsection (a)(1)(A)(iii)(I). 11/
Remarriage of an alien whose petition was approved
under section 204(a)(1)(B)(ii)
or 204(a)(1)(A)(iii)
or marriage of an alien described in clause (iv) or
(vi) of section 204(a)(1)(A)
or in section 204(a)(1)(B)(iii) shall not be the basis
for revocation of a petition approval under section 205
.
(i) 2/
PROFESSIONAL ATHLETES. -
(1) In General.- A petition under subsection (a)(4)(D) for
classification of a professional athlete shall remain valid for the
athlete after the athlete changes employers, if the new employer is a
team in the same sport as the team which was the employer who filed
the petition.
(2) Definition. - For purposes of paragraph (1), the term
"professional athlete" means an individual who is employed
as an athlete by -
(A) a team that is a member of an association of 6 or more
professional sports teams whose total combined revenues exceed
$10,000,000 per year, if the association governs the conduct of its
members and regulates the contests and exhibitions in which its
member teams regularly engage; or
(B) any minor league team that is affiliated with such an
association.
(j) 3/
JOB FLEXIBILITY FOR LONG DELAYED APPLICANTS FOR
ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS TO PERMANENT RESIDENCE-
A petition
under subsection (a)(1)(D)for an individual whose application for
adjustment of status pursuant to section 245
has been filed and remained unadjudicated for 180 days
or more shall remain valid with respect to a new job if the
individual changes jobs or employers if the new job is in the same or
a similar occupational classification as the job for which the
petition was filed.
12/
(k) PROCEDURES FOR UNMARRIED SONS AND DAUGHTERS OF
CITIZENS-
(1) IN
GENERAL- Except as provided in paragraph (2), in the case of a
petition under this section initially filed for an alien unmarried
son or daughter's classification as a family-sponsored immigrant
under section 203(a)(2)(B)
,based on a parent of the son or daughter being an
alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence, if such parent
subsequently becomes a naturalized citizen of the United States, such
petition shall be converted to a petition to classify the unmarried
son or daughter as a family-sponsored immigrant under section
203(a)(1)
.
(2) EXCEPTION- Paragraph (1) does not apply if the son or
daughter files with the Attorney General a written statement that he
or she elects not to have such conversion occur (or if it has
occurred, to have such conversion revoked). Where such an election
has been made, any determination with respect to the son or
daughter's eligibility for admission as a family-sponsored immigrant
shall be made as if such naturalization had not taken place.
(3) PRIORITY
DATE- Regardless of whether a petition is converted under this
subsection or not, if an unmarried son or daughter described in this
subsection was assigned a priority date with respect to such petition
before such naturalization, he or she may maintain that priority
date.
(4)
CLARIFICATION- This subsection shall apply to a petition if it is
properly filed, regardless of whether it was approved or not before
such naturalization.
(l) 13/ SURVIVING RELATIVE CONSIDERATION FOR CERTAIN PETITIONS AND APPLICATIONS-
(1) IN GENERAL- An alien described in paragraph (2) who resided in the United States at the time of the death of the qualifying relative and who continues to reside in the United States shall have such petition described in paragraph (2), or an application for adjustment of status to that of a person admitted for lawful permanent residence based upon the family relationship described in paragraph (2), and any related applications, adjudicated notwithstanding the death of the qualifying relative, unless the Secretary of Homeland Security determines, in the unreviewable discretion of the Secretary, that approval would not be in the public interest.
(2) ALIEN DESCRIBED- An alien described in this paragraph is an alien who, immediately prior to the death of his or her qualifying relative, was--
(A) the beneficiary of a pending or approved petition for classification as an immediate relative (as described in section 201(b)(2)(A)(i) );
(B) the beneficiary of a pending or approved petition for classification under section 203 (a) or (d) ;
(C) a derivative beneficiary of a pending or approved petition for classification under section 203(b) (as described in section 203(d) );
(D) the beneficiary of a pending or approved refugee/asylee relative petition under section 207 or 208 ;
(E) an alien admitted in `T' nonimmigrant status as described in section 101(a)(15)(T)(ii) or in `U' nonimmigrant status as described in section 101(a)(15)(U)(ii) ; or
(F) an asylee
(as described in section 208(b)(3)
).
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | Mayer, Bosong K |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2021-01-30 |