News Bytes
USCIS stated at the AILA/Service
Center Operations teleconference last week that it would hold any filings
postmarked before April 30 that use the new filing fee rather than return them.
It will return premium-processing cases postmarked before April 30 that
use the new fee.
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In a memorandum, the USCIS
instructed that District Offices have to provide a new, corrected I-94 for cases
in which the USCIS is responsible for issuing an I-94 with erroneous
information. The USCIS will not
correct I-94s issued by Customs and Border Patrol (CBP), but will direct
individuals with erroneous CBP-issued 1-94s to go to CBP for corrections.
The memorandum is located at http://www.aila.org/infonet/fileViewer.aspx?docID=12938.
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An immigration employee in
Detroit was indicted by a federal grand jury on charges that he assisted
immigrants become U.S. citizens in exchange for jewelry.
When Robert Walton was employed in the Detroit district office of the
former Immigration and Naturalization Service it was found that he engaged in
illegal activity involving conspiracy to defraud the United States, bribery and
aiding foreign nationals to unlawfully obtain citizenship.
If convicted on all counts, he could be sentenced to up to 39 years in
prison and fined $1.25 million.
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USCIS has announced that a
new phone system is in the final stages of development that will allow customers
direct access to information officers at the service centers for questions
regarding pending cases and to facilitate problem resolution.
Calls will be directed to service centers based upon a caller’s
responses to prompts in the Interactive Voice Response (IVR) system.
The IVR menus are being restructured to facilitate the direct transfer of
calls and to incorporate a considerable amount of enhancements that are being
added. The rollout date for the new
system is not yet set, but its implementation is projected for later this year.
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The Republic of the Philippines
and the United States have established a joint plan addressing the residential
issues concerning certain Vietnamese nationals living in the Philippines since
1989. The two countries decided there needs to be a comprehensive humanitarian
solution for members of this group, which is made up of approximately 1,855
Vietnamese asylum seekers living in the Philippines.
The United States has agreed to conduct resettlement interviews for the
majority of the group and will apply a generous refugee-screening standard
during this interview. For those
the US cannot interview or approve, the Philippines will make best efforts to
offer residency consistent with its law.
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On
April 30, 2004, the new USCIS fee adjustment took effect.
By law, USCIS must ensure that the fees cover the costs of providing
immigration services and benefits. A
recent cost analysis discovered that the fees did not cover the costs processing
under the new post-September 11 guidelines.
The
new USCIS fee schedule can be found at http://uscis.gov/graphics/publicaffairs/newsrels/USCISFeeStructure.pdf.
Disclaimer: This newsletter is provided as a public service and not intended to establish an attorney client relationship. Any reliance on information contained herein is taken at your own risk.