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Posts Tagged ‘Immigration Law’
It’s Good to Be an Immigration Lawyer
March 18th, 2011
Tushar Mathur Seattle Immigration Lawyer | Bribery of a Public Official is Not an Aggravated Felony Under INA
November 24th, 2010
Tushar Mathur As immigration attorneys and other immigration law watchers know, the definition of “aggravated felony” under the Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”) is ever-changing. Last month was no exception. In a decision that represented a victory for the narrow definition crowd, the Board of Immigration Officials (“BIA”) recently ruled in favor of an Austrian lawful permanent resident who was convicted of bribery of a public official under federal law, for which he was sentenced to 36 months of imprisonment. Matter of Chrysanth George Gruenangerl, 25 I&N Dec. 351 (BIA 2010).
In September, an Immigration Judge (“IJ”) had found Mr.
Seattle Immigration Lawyer | Permanent Residents Convicted of Crimes
October 3rd, 2010
Tushar Mathur
A good immigration attorney should know how to obtain a waiver for his or her client from deportation when the client has been unfortunate enough to be convicted of a crime. Even though a client may be deportable based on the criminal conviction, qualifying lawful permanent residents (LPR) may be eligible for the LPR cancellation of removal waiver (INA 240A(a)), and keep their LPR status. The time to apply for this waiver is when you are in removal proceedings. The Immigration Judge has the discretion to deny the waiver even if the client meets the statutory requirements.
Here’s the statutory test: removal may be canceled if the alien—(1) has been an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence for not less than 5 years; (2) has resided in the US continuously for 7 years after having been admitted in any status; and, (3) has not been convicted of any aggravated felony.
Assuming the first two requirements are not at issue, the key issue is whether the conviction qualifies as an “aggravated felony” as defined by the federal immigration statute, INA 1101(a)(a)(43). It is crucial to understand that many misdemeanors are “aggravated felonies” under immigration law and not all felonies are “aggravated felonies.” If you are shopping for an immigration lawyer and he or she does not know this, do not even think about hiring that attorney.
When an immigration attorney analyzes your conviction, there is no substitute for a close reading of the statutory definition and current court decisions, as offenses are reclassified frequently by federal appeals courts. They are not all obvious; in fact, sometimes even clients that have served long prison sentences may still be eligible for cancellation of removal.
Continue reading “Seattle Immigration Lawyer | Permanent Residents Convicted of Crimes”
Importance of an immigration lawyer
July 8th, 2010
Tushar Mathur Immigration is actually moving of a person from one country to other settling temporarily or permanently. But here the immigrant is used for the permanent resider and not the casual visitor. The migration is done due to many reasons like economic reasons, national reasons etc. Gaining permanent residency i.e. Green Card is based on the various types of opportunities like employment opportunities and that to require passing through many of the steps i.e. it is a multi step process. In order to obtain a Green Card one need to choose the path of USCIS under lawful permanent residency.
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