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Approval of EB4 Case
Based on Business Closure after 9/11
Posted
Oct 28, 2005
©MurthyDotCom
Some unusual approvals
received at The Law Office of Sheela Murthy may show
MurthyDotCom and
MurthyBulletin readers that the
options available under U.S. immigration law are varied and require
innovative use of existing laws and regulations. From time to time our
attorneys will work on cases that are rather atypical and complex, requiring
creative legal arguments to help our clients when there are no other options
or avenues easily available. We celebrate these victories since they involve
novel issues. Highlighted here is an EB4 case approval in which the reason
for the approval for our client was a provision under the PATRIOT law based
on the business having been adversely affected after the attacks on
September 11, 2001.
©MurthyDotCom
Cases Enjoy Confidentiality
©MurthyDotCom
We do not provide confidential client information on MurthyDotCom, in
the MurthyBulletin, or elsewhere. Each case enjoys the
attorney-client privilege of confidentiality. Every person's information is
kept in the strictest of confidence and, unless the person/s agree, their
stories will not be repeated. This case was filed under one of the few
immigration-friendly provisions of the Patriot Act, enacted in the immediate
aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and required a creative use and
application of those provisions. Our client recently received the "green
card" approval based on this filing by our law firm and has given us
permission to share his case with our readers.
©MurthyDotCom
Employer Suffered Financial Hardship Post 9/11
©MurthyDotCom
The case for this family started with a labor certification (LC) filed by
The Law Office of Sheela Murthy prior to September 11, 2001. The company had
locations in New York and New Jersey. We had filed the LC case in New Jersey
for our client. The New York office was located within proximity to ground
zero. By the time the labor certification was approved, post 9/11, the
company had closed the NY operations and consolidated all its operations in
New Jersey. The company could not move forward to file the I-140 petition
for the employee as they had suffered an economic downturn following 9/11.
With no employer willing to sponsor the H1B or the "green card," the
individual and his family would have to return to their home country.
©MurthyDotCom
Creative Option to File under the PATRIOT Act
©MurthyDotCom
The lawyers at our firm
had studied the provisions of the PATRIOT Act and analyzed them in our
weekly discussions, as part of our effort to find ways to help our clients
when new laws are passed. We turned to the Patriot Act in an attempt to save
this case and our client. A section of the Patriot Act provided for
immigration relief if a business had started the green card process prior to
9/11, but was not able to complete the process due to damage sustained as a
direct or indirect result of the terrorist attacks. If this burden could be
met, the individual and all eligible family members would be able to obtain
the green card as special immigrants under the employment-based fourth
preference (EB4). The particularly difficult part of the case was to
establish a nexus between the New Jersey location, where the beneficiary was
to work, and the damage sustained by the smaller New York location.
©MurthyDotCom
Evidence Submitted to Obtain the EB4 Approval
©MurthyDotCom
Our firm submitted evidence that the New York office sustained physical
destruction and closure as a direct result of the terrorist activity of
9/11. We provided copy of the civil edict closing the businesses within a
certain radius of the blast zone for several weeks. We also produced a
Disaster Relief letter addressed to the company indicating that they were
eligible for certain federal relief as a result of the harm caused to them
by the 9/11 attacks. We provided an explanation from the company regarding
their inability to go forward with this case. We argued the application of
the Patriot Act provisions in this case. Our firm was delighted to receive
the approval of the I-360 petition within just two months of filing. The
case then had to wait for the interview. After two years, an interview was
set on this client's I-485 Application for Adjustment of Status. An attorney
from The Law Office of Sheela Murthy appeared for the interview at the local
New Jersey office. The officer commented that this was the only case of this
type that he had seen; his supervisor confirmed that he knew of no other
such case within this local office. This did surprise us, since we assumed
law firms in the New York and New Jersey area would have filed under the
PATRIOT Act as many businesses there would have been affected by the events
of September 11, 2001.
©MurthyDotCom
Conclusion
©MurthyDotCom
Although the provisions of
the PATRIOT Act allowing for such filings have expired, the goal in sharing
our client's success story with you is that there are sometimes options that
one must consider before packing up and going home. One should be open to
creative ideas that can help when the obvious course seems to evaporate!
Always discuss and understand the choices available to you with a
knowledgeable, experienced immigration lawyer who is there to help you.
©
2005 The Law
Office of Sheela Murthy, P.C. All Rights Reserved

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