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Recent Blog Posts

Ice Police Agent - officer of Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Close-up of POLICE ICE marking on the back of a stab proof vest worn by a trio of police officers at the scene of immigrant incident.

ICE Notices of Inspection: First 72 Hours of an Employer Response

By Meri S. Ponist |

Why the First 72 Hours Matter For employers, an ICE Notice of Inspection is one of the most disruptive compliance events that can arrive without warning. Whether the company has ten employees or several hundred, the first 72 hours after service of the notice are critical. Decisions made in that early window can shape… Read More »

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Close up of unrecognizable woman applying for visa in US immigration office and handing documents

Specialty Occupation Scrutiny After USCIS Policy Shifts: Defending Complex H-1B Roles

By Meri S. Ponist |

Increasing Scrutiny of H-1B Specialty Occupations The H-1B visa remains one of the most important pathways for U.S. employers seeking to hire highly skilled foreign professionals. Yet in recent years, adjudications have increasingly focused on whether a role truly qualifies as a “specialty occupation.” This shift has created significant challenges for employers whose positions… Read More »

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Crimes Involving Moral Turpitude: The Categorical Approach in Immigration Law

By Meri S. Ponist |

Why CIMT Analysis Is So Important Few areas of immigration law create as much confusion as crimes involving moral turpitude, commonly called CIMTs. The phrase sounds moralistic and old-fashioned, and in many ways it is. Yet it remains deeply consequential in modern immigration practice. A CIMT finding can affect admissibility, deportability, eligibility for relief,… Read More »

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Application for asylum to USA concept with application form and USA flag on mexican serape

Asylum One-Year Filing Deadline Exceptions: Changed and Extraordinary Circumstances

By Meri S. Ponist |

Why the One-Year Deadline Matters For many asylum seekers, the one-year filing deadline is one of the most unforgiving features of U.S. immigration law. A person may have a compelling fear of persecution, credible testimony, and significant corroborating evidence, yet still face denial of asylum because the application was not filed within one year… Read More »

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Letter (Envelope) from USCIS and left hand on flag of USA background.

Mandamus Actions for Delayed Marriage-Based Green Cards: When Litigation Becomes Strategic

By Meri S. Ponist |

For most couples, the marriage-based green card process is expected to take months, not years. Yet in an era of processing backlogs, security checks, and administrative bottlenecks, some cases stall far beyond posted processing times. When a marriage-based petition or adjustment application remains pending without explanation, frustration can turn into uncertainty about legal options…. Read More »

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I-130 Petition for alien relative blank form lies on United States flag with blue pen from Department of Homeland Security close up

Waivers for Prior Misrepresentation in Family-Based Immigration

By Meri S. Ponist |

Few findings in immigration law carry consequences as severe as a determination of fraud or willful misrepresentation. Under INA § 212(a)(6)(C)(i), a foreign national who, by fraud or willful misrepresentation of a material fact, seeks to procure a visa, admission, or other immigration benefit is inadmissible. Unlike many other grounds of inadmissibility, this bar… Read More »

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USCIS form I-751 Petition to remove conditions on residence lies on flat lay office table and ready to fill. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration services paperwork concept. Top view

Conditional Residence and I-751 Petitions: Avoiding RFEs and Fraud Allegations

By Meri S. Ponist |

Obtaining a two-year conditional green card is not the end of the marriage-based immigration process. For many couples, the next stage, which is removing conditions on residence through Form I-751, carries just as much evidentiary weight as the initial green card application. In some cases, scrutiny may be even greater. Conditional residence is governed… Read More »

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USCIS United States Citizenship and Immigration Services logo close-up on website page

Public Charge Rule Updates and Marriage-Based Applications in 2026

By Meri S. Ponist |

Few aspects of the marriage-based green card process generate more confusion than the public charge ground of inadmissibility. Over the past several years, regulatory shifts, litigation, and agency reinterpretations have reshaped how U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services evaluates financial sponsorship. As we move through 2026, applicants and petitioners must understand how current policy affects… Read More »

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Close up of unrecognizable woman applying for visa in US immigration office and handing documents

Marriage-Based Green Card Interviews: Identifying and Avoiding Stokes Interview Triggers

By Meri S. Ponist |

For most couples applying for a marriage-based green card, the USCIS interview is a significant but straightforward step in the process. However, in certain cases, what begins as a routine interview can escalate into a far more intensive examination known as a Stokes interview. Understanding what triggers this heightened scrutiny and how to prepare… Read More »

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Adjustment of Status vs. Consular Processing: Timing, Risks, and Litigation Exposure

By Meri S. Ponist |

When an immigrant visa becomes available, applicants often assume the final step is procedural. In reality, the choice between adjustment of status under INA § 245 and consular processing abroad can significantly affect timing, risk exposure, and even the availability of judicial review. Although both pathways ultimately lead to lawful permanent residence, they operate… Read More »

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