New Jersey Supreme Court Issues Opinion on Immigration Representatives
The
Supreme Court of New Jersey Committee on the Unauthorized Practice of Law
published its Opinion 27 on October 31 of this year.
Opinion 27 states that non-resident attorneys who wish to practice
immigration law in the state and who are not members of the New Jersey Bar
cannot establish offices in the state. Any out-of-state attorneys can represent
clients in
The
Committee has received several complaints about unauthorized and unqualified
representatives who have misled, poorly advised, and cheated immigrants, actions
which have led to more severe consequences. Applicants and litigants in
immigration matters who are badly represented and advised risk loss of benefits,
physical liberty, and, in some cases, deportation. U.S. Immigration Judge Dana
Marks Keener is quoted in Opinion 27 as stating: “Deportation is often
tantamount to exile, with consequences which affect family members as well as
the individual himself. In the worst case, inappropriate deportation can lead to
incarceration, torture, or death in the hands of a persecutorial government from
which the consumer sought refuge.” The Committee expresses the need to address
the problem of abuses of non-lawyer practicing exceptions within the immigration
law field as urgent, since there is a large potential to client harm.
Opinion
27 states that the Committee ought to work with federal authorities in this area
in a cooperative undertaking to respond to complaints in a timelier manner.
Should the Committee find an unaccredited or unqualified representative among
the complaints that they receive, the Committee will notify the Department of
Justice, the local immigration court, the Department of Homeland Security Office
of Citizenship and Immigration Services, and Immigration and Customs
Enforcement. Or, in appropriate cases, the Committee will cede jurisdiction of
the complaint to the Committee on the Unauthorized Practice of Law. In addition,
the Committee can refer such cases to the Office of the United States Attorney
for prosecution or for further investigation.
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