Robert Divine Appointed First Principal Legal Advisor for USCIS
U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services (USCIS) and the Office of the General Counsel (OGC) within
the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced last week that President
Bush as appointed Robert Divine as the agency’s first Principal Legal Advisor.
Divine practices immigration law in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
In a press release, Director of
USCIS Eduardo Aguirre said, “I am proud to welcome Mr. Divine as a member of
the USCIS family. He brings with
him 17 years of business immigration law experience and will serve our agency
and its customers as part of my Senior Executive Staff.”
In the same release, General
Counsel Joe Whitley said, “We are fortunate to have a person of Mr. Divine’s
caliber become a part of the DHS General Counsel’s Office.
Mr. Divine’s many years of immigration practice will serve the
department well in this critical new position.”
Divine was the sole author of
“Immigration Practice,” a treatise addressing all aspects of U.S.
immigration law. He was recently
highlighted in the 2003-2004 publication, Best Lawyers in America, and
has been given an A/V rating by the Martindale Hubbell law directory. Divine
has been a member of the American Immigration Lawyers Association since 1986 and
served as elected Chair for AILA’s Mid-South Chapter from 2001-2003.
Until his appointment, he had served as an expert on behalf of the U.S.
Commission on Religious Freedom in its congressionally mandated study of the
“expedited removal” process used at U.S. ports of entry.
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