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Clarification on
Blanket L-1s Filed Before June 6, 2005
Posted
Apr 21, 2006
©MurthyDotCom
The U.S. Department of State (DOS) issued a clarification regarding
employees entering the U.S. under blanket L-1 (intracompany transferee)
petitions. The L-1 is appropriate for a multinational company with at least
one office in the U.S. and one abroad, for which the U.S. operation
temporarily needs to bring employees from the foreign office. The blanket
L-1 is, essentially, for larger multinational companies. The DOS clarified
that it remains possible to bring in L-1 employees who have worked for the
foreign company for only six months, if they are entering under a blanket
L-1 that was initially filed prior to June 6, 2005.
©MurthyDotCom
This clarification was needed because of changes in the law, under the L-1
Visa Reform Act that applies to cases filed after June 6, 2005. These
changes were reported in our July 1, 2005 MurthyBulletin article,
L-1 Reform Act
Implemented,
available on MurthyDotCom. Under the Reform Act, all L-1 employees must have
worked for at least one year out of the previous three years for the company
abroad before entering the U.S. for the foreign-affiliated company. Before
this change, the one-year requirement applied to all L-1s except for those
entering under a blanket L-1. For blanket L-1s, the requirement was reduced
to six months. The June 2005 law expanded this one-full-year requirement to
all L-1s, including those entering under blanket L-1s. Thus, all L-1
petitions are now subject to the one-full-year requirement, except those who
enter on a blanket L-1 filed prior to June 6, 2005.
©MurthyDotCom
The DOS indicated that the USCIS is in agreement with this policy. The
interpretation, therefore, should be uniform so that one entering the United
States on an L-1 visa should be issued the visa stamp abroad and should not
be delayed by the CBP Inspector at the airport.
Copyright © 2006, MURTHY LAW
FIRM. All Rights Reserved

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