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Showing posts with label education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label education. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Problems with Gang-Related Asylum Cases

Gang related asylum cases present one of the biggest challenges to immigration attorneys. But they also represent one of the largest categories of asylum claims.

Many times, clients and prospective clients come into the office with the expectation that because they were victims of gang violence in their home country, that they should receive protection in the United States. But this is rarely the case.

As many immigration judges are quick to point out, asylum law is not meant to grant protection from general criminality. To receive asylum protection, and applicant must have a reasonable fear of persecution based on one of the five protected reasons. They are: race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group.

Often, advocating for a gang related asylum case involves trying to place the applicant in some particular social group. However, this category is not meant to be a catchall category. As recent case law has demonstrated, the group cannot be defined as being too large as to include a broad segment of society. There must be some boundary to the group. There must be something about this group that sets it apart from the rest of society. And the members of this group must see themselves as some kind of social unit.

Add to the complication the fact that there are 12 different federal circuits who review immigration court decisions. The result is great variety and what is an acceptable particular social group.

Young men who have been recruited by the gangs, but who have resisted such recruitment, for example, has been recognized as a viable particular social group in some circuits. But other circuits reject the category. Likewise, witnesses providing testimony against gang violence has been recognized by some circuits, but rejected by others.

This patchwork of decisions addressing what makes up a particular social group when it comes to gang-related violence has created a rather peculiar situation. Family ties are recognized as a valid basis upon which to build a particular social group. Thus, it is possible that family members of a person targeted for gang violence may qualify as a particular social group, while the person who is actually targeted for the gang violence will not qualify for asylum protection.

What is clear however is that the victims of the gang related violence need to establish some reason why the gang has targeted them, that sets them apart from the rest of their society. This can often be difficult for applicants who come from gang ravaged countries, like those of Central America.

One way around this problem is to make the claim that the applicant is being persecuted because of an imputed political opinion. Gangs in Central America at times operate much like governments. They control particular territories, charge taxes or rent for the people who live in their territories or do business in their territories, and protect their territories fiercely. Gangs have also been known to protect their authority, engaging in extreme violence against anyone who questions them. Gangs may also target a person for violence if the gang believes that the person is affiliated with a rival gang. Applicants who have been able to paint their case as one of a struggle against the power and authority of the gangs, and thus a case of an imputed political opinion, have met with some success in progressive federal circuits, such as the Ninth Circuit.

Certainly an argument can be made that United States is in a large way responsible for the uncontrollable gang situation in the northern triangle of El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras. United States chooses to deport people after they have spent time in prison, where they have picked up their affiliations to American made gangs. Those deported individuals take back with them knowledge of an organizational structure that the Central American governments are simply unready and unable to address effectively.

But the reality is it is not politically popular for the United States to take responsibility for the gang violence in Central America. Instead, politicians push to close the borders, in an attempt to exclude the gang related element from United States. For the practitioner, the challenge is to find creative ways around this situation, and to work with the clients in order to craft the strongest asylum clean possible.

William J. Kovatch, Jr.
For an appointment, call (703) 837-8832
Se habla espanol (703) 298-0502


Links

National Immigrant Justice Center, Particular Social Group Practice Advisory

National Immigrant Justice Center, Resources for Asylum Claims Based on Membership in a Particular Social Group



Wednesday, November 14, 2012

What is the Diversity Visa Lottery?

You may have heard people talking about "winning the lottery" when they explain how they came to the United States.  What exactly does "winning the lottery" mean?  Can just anyone get a visa by winning a lottery?

It is true that U.S. law provides for a lottery to make visas available for 50,000 people each year.  But, that is a deceptively simple way of explaining it.  The program is called the diversity visa lottery.  The idea is to give countries that have traditionally sent fewer immigrants to the United States the chance to have their nationals come to the United States.

Visas through the lottery are made available to countries that have sent the fewest immigrants to the United States in the last five years.  No on country can account for more than 7% of the total of visas available for that year.  Plus, there are qualifications that the immigrant must meet.  The immigrant must have a high school education, or have been working in an occupation that requires two years of training for two of the past five years.

The qualification requirement is where many applicants get tripped up.  There is no requirement that a person meet the qualifications to enter the lottery.  A foreigner simply registers for the lottery online when the registration is open.  This means that a person can win the lottery, think they have a visa, and then become greatly disappointed when the Consulate inform them that they don't have the required education or occupation.

At any rate, the lottery may be on its way out.  In all of the talk of immigration reform, some Republicans are proposing the elimination of the diversity visa lottery, and expanding the number of immigrant visas available to graduates with advanced degrees in science and engineering by 50,000.  Whether this happens remains to be seen.  A bill that would have eliminated the lottery almost passed the House of Representatives in September.

Click here and you can read more about the diversity visa lottery in another article I wrote on the subject.

By:  William J. Kovatch, Jr.
(703) 837-8832
info@kovatchimmigrationlaw.com