The New York Times published an editorial calling for more transparency within Customs and...
LAC Releases Two Practice Advisories Relating to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) |
Released on Wed, Jan 30, 2013
For Immediate Release
LAC Releases Two Practice Advisories Relating to
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA)
Washington, D.C. - The Legal Action Center (LAC) is pleased to release two new practice advisories relating to issues faced by DACA applicants:
“Brief, Casual and Innocent” Absences from the United States
“Brief, casual and innocent” absences from the United States do not interrupt continuous residence for purposes of DACA eligibility. This practice advisory discusses the “brief, casual and innocent” standard under existing case law. Though such case law may inform USCIS’s review of absences from the United States, DACA adjudicators are not bound by these decisions. Courts have often adopted generous interpretations of the “brief, casual and innocent” standard, and it is hoped that USCIS will do the same in the DACA context.
Inspection and Entry at a Port of Entry: Where is There an Admission?
The second practice advisory – which applies beyond the DACA context – discusses entries in three common situations: where a noncitizen is “waved” through a port of entry with no questions asked; where entry is gained by fraud or misrepresentation; and where there is a false claim to U.S. citizenship. With respect to each situation, the practice advisory explores whether an “admission” has occurred, the individual’s immigration status upon entry, and the immigration consequences of the action. It also discusses the impact of these three types of entries on a DACA application.
###
For more information, contact [email protected].
U.S. Immigration Guide
Read our guide to how the United States immigration system works, and our resource page on the problems with it, as well as the possible solutions.