Law Offices of Carl Shusterman - US Immigration Law Offices of Carl Shusterman - US Immigration

DOS CABLE - CANADIANS
AND UNLAWFUL PRESENCE


Law Offices of Carl Shusterman
600 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 1550, Los Angeles, CA 90017
(213) 623-4592 x0
Representing Clients in All 50 States
30 Years of Immigration Law Experience
Return to Homepage
Visa Bulletin US CIS - Infopass Consultation with Immigration Lawyer Carl Shusterman Law Offices of Immigration Lawyer Carl Shusterman US Citizenship and Immigration Services Computer Professionals
shusterman.com Sucess Stories Client - case status access Ask Mr. Shusterman shusterman.com web site You Tube

FREE NEWSLETTER
Learn how to benefit from United States immigration laws and procedures from a former INS Attorney (1976-82) with over 30 years of experience.

SHUSTERMAN'S IMMIGRATION UPDATE is must reading for potential immigrants, employers, human resources managers, immigration attorneys, reporters and policy makers.

Join over 55,000 persons in more than 150 countries in subscribing to our FREE monthly e-mail newsletter.

E-Mail Address:

Your Name:

Visas
E.O. 12958: N/A
Tags: CVIS

Subject: Advisory Opinion: INA 212(a)(9)(B) and Canadians

Ref: (a) Montreal 1497, (b) Victars E57819, (c) 97 State 23545, (d) State 60539

  1. Montreal's Reftel asks if the unlawful presence inadmissibilities, imposed by INA (a)(9)(B)1 and 2, apply to Canadians, and Commonwealth Citizens Resident in Canada, who enter the United States following inspection by and INS officer, but have received neither a visa nor an I-94.
  2. The INS General Counsel's office has informed VO that, a Canadian, or Commonwealth Citizen Resident in Canada, admitted following inspection, who has not been issued an I-94, should be treated in the same manner as a duration of status case, similar to an F or J.
  3. As in duration of status cases, a Canadian, or Commonwealth Citizen Resident in Canada, who is found to have violated status and be removable by an Immigration Judge, or found to have violated status, by an INS officer, in the course of adjudicating a benefit, such as an extension of stay or a change of adjustment of status, is unlawfully present. The unlawful presence commences on the date when the immigration judge, or INS officer, makes the ruling, not the date the status violation began.
  4. A Canadian, or Commonwealth Citizen Resident in Canada, like other aliens, who enters without inspection, accrues unlawful presence from the time of entry. However, as unlawful presence may not be counted in the aggregate, there must be an unbroken period of unlawful presence lasting at least six months after April 1, 1997, and following the applicant's eighteenth birthday, before a 9B bar could apply.

Schedule A Legal Consultation

Return to Text and Analysis of 1996 Immigration Law

Return to Immigration Guide Homepage