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Policy Manual
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Book outline for Policy Manual
  • Policy Manual
    • Search
    • Updates
    • Table of Contents
    • Volume 1 - General Policies and Procedures
    • Volume 2 - Nonimmigrants
    • Volume 3 - Humanitarian Protection and Parole
      • Part A - Protection and Parole Policies and Procedures
      • Part B - Victims of Trafficking
      • Part C - Victims of Crimes
        • Chapter 1 - Purpose and Background
        • Chapter 2 - Eligibility Requirements for U Nonimmigrant Status
        • Chapter 3 - Documentation and Evidence [Reserved]
        • Chapter 4 - Adjudication
        • Chapter 5 - Bona Fide Determination Process
        • Chapter 6 - Waiting List
        • Chapter 7 - Final Adjudication
        • Chapter 8 - Post-Adjudicative Matters [Reserved]
      • Part D - Violence Against Women Act
      • Part E - Employment Authorization for Abused Spouses of Certain Nonimmigrants
      • Part F - Parolees
      • Part G - International Entrepreneur Parole
      • Part H - Deferred Action
      • Part I - Humanitarian Emergencies
      • Part J - Temporary Protected Status
      • Part K - Statelessness
    • Volume 4 - Refugees and Asylees
    • Volume 5 - Adoptions
    • Volume 6 - Immigrants
    • Volume 7 - Adjustment of Status
    • Volume 8 - Admissibility
    • Volume 9 - Waivers and Other Forms of Relief
    • Volume 10 - Employment Authorization
    • Volume 11 - Travel and Identity Documents
    • Volume 12 - Citizenship and Naturalization
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  3. Volume 3 - Humanitarian Protection and Parole
  4. Part C - Victims of Crimes
  5. Chapter 1 - Purpose and Background

Chapter 1 - Purpose and Background

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  • Guidance
  • Resources (19)
  • Appendices (2)
  • Updates (2)
  • History (0)

A. Purpose

In 2000, Congress created the U nonimmigrant classification (also known as the “U visa”) through the passage of the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act (including the Battered Immigrant Women’s Protection Act (BIWPA)).[1] The U visa serves two purposes:

  • Strengthen the ability of law enforcement agencies to investigate and prosecute cases of domestic violence, sexual assault, trafficking, and other crimes; and

  • Protect victims of crime who have suffered substantial mental or physical abuse due to the qualifying crime and are willing to help law enforcement authorities in the investigation or prosecution of the qualifying criminal activity or the qualifying crime (QCA).[2]

B. Background

U nonimmigrant status is available to any noncitizen who is a victim of a QCA and is otherwise eligible for the status, regardless of gender or sex.[3] Such victims may self-petition for U nonimmigrant status by filing a Petition for U Nonimmigrant Status (Form I-918).

Noncitizens petitioning for U nonimmigrant status must provide a certification from a federal, state, tribal, or local law enforcement official, prosecutor, judge, or other authority investigating or prosecuting the QCA. The certification must state that the petitioner “has been helpful, is being helpful, or is likely to be helpful” in the “investigation or prosecution”[4] of the QCA.[5]

Noncitizens can file petitions for or pursue U nonimmigrant status while living inside or outside of the United States.

Principal petitioners can submit U nonimmigrant petitions on behalf of certain qualifying family members. Qualifying family members may include the petitioner’s spouse, unmarried children under the age of 21, and unmarried siblings under the age of 18. Qualifying family member eligibility depends on the age of the principal petitioner at the time the principal petitioner files the petition for U nonimmigrant status.[6] USCIS must grant the principal petitioner U-1 nonimmigrant status before granting U nonimmigrant status to qualifying family members.

USCIS may grant U nonimmigrant status for an initial period of up to 4 years.[7] Principal petitioners in the United States receive employment authorization incident to status.[8] Qualifying family members in the United States are also authorized to work incident to status.[9]

After at least 3 years of continuous physical presence in the United States in U nonimmigrant status, principal U nonimmigrants and their qualifying family members may apply for adjustment of status to that of a lawful permanent resident.[10]

1. Acts and Amendments 

Congress first established the U nonimmigrant status in 2000. Since then, Congress has enacted several amendments. The table below provides an overview of major legislation related to U nonimmigrant status.

U Nonimmigrant Status: Acts and Amendments

Acts and Amendments

Key Changes

Violence Against Women Act of 2000[11]

  • Established U nonimmigrant status for noncitizen victims of certain serious crimes when:

    • The victim has suffered substantial physical or mental abuse as a result of the crime;

    • The victim has information about the crime; and

    • A law enforcement official or a judge certifies that the victim "has been helpful, is being helpful, or is likely to be helpful" in the "investigation or prosecution" of that crime.

    • Established a list of QCA categories.

Violence Against Women and Department of Justice Reauthorization Act of 2005[12]

  • Clarified that the duration of status for an initial grant of U nonimmigrant status is 4 years. 

  • Clarified that noncitizens in the United States on K visas (fiancé(e) or spouse) and S visas (informant), or persons admitted under the visa waiver program, are not prohibited from qualifying for U nonimmigrant status.

  • Clarified that noncitizens who came to the United States on J visas to receive graduate medical training, and noncitizens who are subject to the 2-year foreign residence requirement, may also qualify for U nonimmigrant status.

  • Established discretion for DHS to grant stays of removal to petitioners for U nonimmigrant status who have received prima facie determinations.

  • Established a prohibition on adverse determinations of admissibility or deportability based on information provided to DHS by abusers or perpetrators of QCA.

William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008[13]

  • Clarified that the duration of status for an initial grant of U nonimmigrant status is up to 4 years.

  • Provided for extensions of status based on law enforcement need or exceptional circumstances, or while an application for adjustment of status is pending.

  • Provided discretion to grant employment authorization to a noncitizen who has a pending, bona fide petition for U nonimmigrant status.

Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act of 2013[14]

  • Provided age-out protection by preserving the age of certain family members at the time the principal petitioner files his or her petition for U nonimmigrant status.

  • Provided that the exception for disclosure to law enforcement officials for a legitimate law enforcement purpose must be in a manner that protects confidentiality of the information. 

  • Provided an additional exception for disclosure of protected information to national security officials for national security purposes.

2. Program History

Congress created the U visa program in 2000 through the passage of the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act (including the Battered Immigrant Women’s Protection Act (BIWPA)). On September 17, 2007, DHS published an interim rule implementing the U nonimmigrant status provisions of BIWPA at 8 CFR 214.14 and 8 CFR 212.17.[15]

Between the time BIWPA was enacted and when the implementing regulations were published, legacy Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) and DHS gave noncitizen crime victims who may have been eligible based on the statutory criteria the opportunity to seek interim relief until regulations were promulgated. The 2007 interim rule formally created Form I-918, as well as the current administrative and adjudications processes for U nonimmigrant status.[16]

The 2007 interim rule addresses eligibility criteria, the petition process, filing requirements, evidentiary standards, and benefits associated with the U nonimmigrant classification.[17] The rule also provided that DHS would automatically issue an Employment Authorization Document (EAD) to principal petitioners upon the approval of the petition for U nonimmigrant status.[18]

The statute provides for 10,000 U visas available every fiscal year.[19] This statutory cap only applies to principal petitioners, not their qualifying family members. The statutory cap has been met each fiscal year, beginning in Fiscal Year (FY) 2010. Starting in FY 2011, DHS began to receive more petitions than visas available under the statutory cap.[20]

DHS created the waiting list process through the 2007 interim rule as a mechanism to address the remaining eligible petitioners after the statutory cap had been reached in a given fiscal year. U nonimmigrant petitioners placed on the waiting list, whose petitions have been deemed approvable but for the statutory cap, are eligible for employment authorization and receive a grant of deferred action[21] or, in limited circumstances, parole.

The William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Reauthorization Act of 2008 (TVPRA 2008), signed into law on December 23, 2008, amended the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) to provide DHS with discretion to grant employment authorization to a noncitizen who has a pending, bona fide petition for U nonimmigrant status.[22]

In June 2021, USCIS implemented the Bona Fide Determination (BFD) process for principal petitioners and qualifying family members with pending, bona fide petitions who USCIS determines merit a favorable exercise of discretion. Under this process, USCIS exercises its discretion on a case-by-case basis to grant BFD Employment Authorization Documents (BFD EADs) and deferred action. The BFD process is distinct from the waiting list process. Before June 2021, a principal petitioner and his or her qualifying family members received employment authorization and deferred action only when USCIS placed the principal petitioner on the waiting list.

C. Legal Authorities

  • INA 101(a)(15)(U) - Definition of U nonimmigrant classification
  • INA 103(a) - Powers and duties of the Secretary of Homeland Security
  • INA 214(p) - Requirements applicable to U nonimmigrant status visas
  • 8 CFR 214.14 - Alien victims of certain qualifying criminal activity
  • INA 212(a) - Classes of “aliens” ineligible for visas or admission
  • INA 212(d)(3) - Temporary admission of nonimmigrants
  • INA 212(d)(14) - Discretion to waive ground of inadmissibility for U nonimmigrant status
  • INA 212(a)(4)(E)(ii) – Exemption from public charge ground of inadmissibility
  • INA 237(d) – Administrative stay of final order of removal
  • INA 248(b) – Change of nonimmigrant classification
  • 8 U.S.C. 1367 – Penalties for disclosure of information
  • 8 CFR 212.17 – Applications for the exercise of discretion relating to U nonimmigrant status
  • 8 CFR 274a.12 – Classes of “aliens” authorized to accept employment

Footnotes


[^ 1] See Section 1513 of the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000 (VTVPA 2000), Pub. L. 106-386 (PDF), 114 Stat. 1464, 1533 (October 28, 2000), as amended by Section 801 of the Violence Against Women and Department of Justice Reauthorization Act of 2005 (VAWA 2005), Pub. L. 109-162 (PDF), 119 Stat. 2960, 3053 (January 5, 2006); Violence Against Women and Department of Justice Reauthorization Act of 2005—Technical Corrections, Pub. L. 109-271 (PDF), 120 Stat. 750 (August 12, 2006); William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008 (TVPRA 2008), Pub. L. 110-457 (PDF), 122 Stat. 5044 (December 23, 2008); and Title VIII of the Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act of 2013 (VAWA 2013), Pub. L. 113-4 (PDF), 127 Stat. 54, 110 (March 7, 2013).

[^ 2] See Section 1502 and 1513(a)(2) of the Violence Against Women Act of 2000, Pub. L. 106-386 (PDF), 114 Stat. 1518, 1533-1534 (October 28, 2000) (“[P]roviding battered immigrant women and children who were experiencing domestic violence at home with protection against deportation allows them to obtain protection orders against their abusers and frees them to cooperate with law enforcement and prosecutors in criminal cases brought against their abusers and the abusers of their children . . .”).

[^ 3] For specific requirements, see Chapter 2, Eligibility Requirements for U Nonimmigrant Status [3 USCIS-PM C.2].

[^ 4] In this context, the terms “investigation or prosecution” encompass detection, investigation, prosecution, conviction, and sentencing. See 8 CFR 214.14(a)(5).

[^ 5] See INA 214(p)(1).

[^ 6] See 8 CFR 214.14(f)(1).

[^ 7] See INA 214(p)(6) (subject to extension based on law enforcement need, while an application for adjustment of status under INA 245(m) is pending, or if warranted due to exceptional circumstances). See 8 CFR 214.14(g)(2).

[^ 8] See 8 CFR 274a.12(a)(19).

[^ 9] See INA 101(a)(15)(U)(ii). See INA 214(p)(3)(B). See 8 CFR 274a.12(a)(20). Under 8 CFR 214.14(f)(7), qualifying family members must file a separate Application for Employment Authorization (Form I-765) to obtain an employment authorization document.

[^ 10] See INA 245(m).

[^ 11] See Section 1513 of VTVPA 2000, Pub. L. 106-386 (PDF), 114 Stat. 1464, 1533 (October 28, 2000).

[^ 12] See Title VIII of VAWA 2005, Pub. L. 109-162 (PDF), 119 Stat. 2960, 3053 (January 5, 2006).

[^ 13] See TVPRA 2008, Pub. L. 110-457 (PDF) (December 23, 2008).

[^ 14] See VAWA 2013, Pub. L. 113-4 (PDF) (March 7, 2013).

[^ 15] See 72 FR 53014 (PDF) (Sept. 17, 2007) (interim rule).

[^ 16] See 72 FR 53014 (PDF) (Sept. 17, 2007) (interim rule).

[^ 17] See 72 FR 53014 (PDF) (Sept. 17, 2007) (interim rule).

[^ 18] See 8 CFR 214.14(c)(7).

[^ 19] See INA 214(p)(2).

[^ 20] See Number of Form I-918, Petition for U Nonimmigrant Status by Fiscal Year, Quarter, and Case Status (Fiscal Years 2009-2020) (PDF, 112.43 KB).

[^ 21] Deferred action is an exercise of prosecutorial discretion that makes the noncitizen a lower priority for removal. See 72 FR 53014 (PDF), 53015 (Sept. 17, 2007), footnote 3. See 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(14).

[^ 22] See Section 201(c) of Pub. L. 110-457 (PDF), 122 Stat. 5044, 5053 (December 23, 2008). See INA 214(p)(6).

Resources

Legal Authorities

8 CFR 274a.12 - Classes of aliens authorized to accept employment

8 U.S.C. 1367 - Penalties for disclosure of information

INA 101(a)(15)(U) - Definition of U nonimmigrant classification

INA 212(a) - Excludable aliens; classes of aliens ineligible for visas or admission

INA 212(a)(4)(E)(ii) - Exemption from public charge ground of inadmissibility

INA 212(d)(14), 8 CFR 212.17 - Waiver of grounds of inadmissibility for U nonimmigrants

INA 212(d)(3) - Nonimmigrant waiver of inadmissibility

INA 214(p), 8 CFR 214.14 - Admission of nonimmigrants; requirements applicable to section 1101(a)(15)(U) visas

INA 237(d) - Administrative stay of final order of removal

INA 248(b) - Change of nonimmigrant classification

Forms

AR-11, Change of Address

G-28, Notice of Entry of Appearance as Attorney or Accredited Representative

I-192, Application for Advance Permission to Enter as a Nonimmigrant

I-765, Application for Employment Authorization

I-912, Request for Fee Waiver

I-918 Supplement A, Petition for Qualifying Family Member of U-1 Recipient

I-918 Supplement B, U Nonimmigrant Status Certification

I-918, Petition for U Nonimmigrant Status

Other Materials

How to Use the USCIS Policy Manual Website (PDF, 2.99 MB)

Appendices

Appendix: Bona Fide Determination Process and Administrative Procedure Act Considerations

A. Background

A noncitizen granted U-1 nonimmigrant status as a principal petitioner is employment authorized incident to status. USCIS automatically issues an Employment Authorization Document (EAD) to principal petitioners upon the approval of the U nonimmigrant status petition.[1]

The statute only allows 10,000 U nonimmigrant visas to be issued every fiscal year.[2] If the number of approvable petitions exceeds 10,000, USCIS places the approvable petitions on a waiting list. Once they are on the waiting list, USCIS grants deferred action or, in limited circumstances, parole to U-1 principal petitioners and qualifying family members and, as a matter of discretion, may authorize employment for such petitioners and qualifying family members.[3] USCIS generally provides such employment authorization under 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(14). Under the existing regulatory structure, noncitizens with pending petitions are currently unable to apply for employment authorization before waiting list placement.

The William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Reauthorization Act of 2008 (TVPRA 2008), signed into law on December 23, 2008, amended Section 214(p)(6) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) to provide DHS with discretion to grant employment authorization to a noncitizen who has a pending, bona fide petition for U nonimmigrant status.[4] Though permitted by statute, DHS had not previously implemented a process for providing such employment authorization, separate from the existing regulatory waiting list, before June 14, 2021.

The permissive language of INA 214(p)(6) does not require the agency to create a separate employment authorization process. However, because of drastic increases in the volume of U nonimmigrant petitions and a growing backlog, USCIS decided to exercise its discretion to conduct bona fide determinations (BFD) and provide EADs and deferred action to noncitizens with pending, bona fide petitions who meet certain discretionary standards, beginning on June 14, 2021.

INA 103(a) grants the Secretary of Homeland Security the authority to enforce the immigration laws and provides general authority for deferred action. The U.S. Supreme Court has clarified that decisions made to either initiate or terminate enforcement proceedings are under the purview of the Executive Branch,[5] and therefore fall within DHS’s authority. The Executive Branch has exercised its discretion to grant deferred action, and the federal courts have consistently recognized the existence of this authority, since the mid-1970s.[6]

While USCIS has approved the statutory maximum of petitions each year since Fiscal Year 2010, the increasing number of petitions and complexity of the adjudication resulted in increased processing times. USCIS attempted to keep up with this increase by shifting resources as well as hiring and training new officers; yet, despite these attempts, the burden quickly outpaced resources given competing demands and priorities across the agency.

Consequently, the number of remaining pending petitions after the annual cap was reached grew dramatically. Though the waiting list was initially conceived to address the gap between petitions filed and available visas, USCIS’ ability to adjudicate pending petitions for placement on the waiting list has been and continues to be outmatched by the steady number of new filings.

To illustrate, in 2009, USCIS received 6,850 principal petitions; in 2020, 22,358 principal petitions were filed. From 2015-2018, over 30,000 principal petitions were filed annually.[7] The pending backlog, and the corresponding delay in adjudication time, is due to the increase in U visa filings overall, the complexity of the adjudication, the statutory cap mandated by Congress, and the agency’s priorities and limited resources.

As of June 14, 2021, USCIS is unable to adjudicate the tens of thousands of petitions for the waiting list, as well as completing full adjudication for the 10,000 principal visas available under the statutory cap, in a single fiscal year without incurring a negative impact in other humanitarian programs and fee-based applications or petitions.

Taking into consideration the overall filings increase and the numerous adjudications USCIS is responsible for, USCIS must allocate resources among the competing adjudicative priorities and balance the number of resources that can be assigned to the U visa program.

Additionally, as of June 14, 2021, USCIS is facing substantial litigation fueled by the years-long wait times for petitioners to be placed on the waiting list and obtain U nonimmigrant status due to the number of new petitions filed each year exceeding the statutory cap. Case review has revealed that most U nonimmigrant petitioners do not have lawful immigration status and are not otherwise authorized to work, so they may be vulnerable during the lengthy adjudication period.

USCIS recognizes concerns regarding such vulnerability raised by stakeholders and believes implementing the statute’s authorization to provide EADs to those with pending, bona fide petitions better aligns the U program with its dual purpose as envisioned by Congress: stabilizing victims of crime and serving as a tool for law enforcement.[8]

In addition, the BFD process enables USCIS to review petitions more efficiently, and provide the benefits of employment authorization and deferred action to more petitioners in a shorter time period than the waiting list process alone, which requires a full adjudicative review of eligibility for nonimmigrant status. USCIS notes that from FY 2009 through FY 2020, over 75 percent of fully adjudicated Petition for U Nonimmigrant Status (Form I-918) have been approved.[9]

Therefore, under this policy, USCIS deems a petition “bona fide” when USCIS determines that the Form I-918 is complete and properly filed[10] and has received the result of the petitioner’s biometrics. Because INA 214(p)(6) gives the Secretary of Homeland Security, and USCIS as the Secretary's designee, discretion to issue employment authorization to pending, bona fide principal petitioners and qualifying family members, USCIS also considers whether the principal petitioners or qualifying family members appear to pose a risk to national security[11] or public safety, and otherwise merit a favorable exercise of discretion.

The EAD and deferred action that USCIS issues for these cases is valid for 4 years, subject to termination if USCIS determines a national security or public safety concern has arisen, or a determination that the BFD EAD is no longer warranted, or that the prior BFD EAD and deferred action was issued in error.

USCIS issues BFD EADs under 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(14) because recipients of BFD EADs also receive deferred action. Furthermore, there is currently no other EAD category specifically designated for principal petitioners and qualifying family members with pending, bona fide petitions. INA 214(p)(6) provides the statutory foundation for the implementation of the BFD process, and explicitly speaks to the granting of employment authorization. As such, petitioners granted BFD EADs receive employment authorization documents under 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(14).

B. Administrative Procedure Act Considerations

The Administrative Procedure Act (APA) excepts interpretive rules; general statements of policy; and rules of agency organization, procedure, or practice from notice and comment requirements.[12]

On June 14, 2021, USCIS updated the Policy Manual to notify the public of its interpretation of “bona fide application” at INA 214(p)(6), its exercise of discretion under that provision, and explain its policy for issuing such EADs and granting deferred action. USCIS’ interpretation is reasonable because “bona fide” generally means “made in good faith; without fraud or deceit.”[13]

In this context,  USCIS interprets the bona fide standard[14] as being met once the entire petition (including the required certification on Form I-918, Supplement B) is properly filed and biometrics are submitted and received. The completion of the Supplement B by a law enforcement official or judge provides an appropriate assurance of the bona fide nature of the petition in this context.

Likewise, because INA 214(p)(6) gives USCIS discretionary authority to issue such employment authorization, it is reasonable, in the exercise of such discretion,  to assess security checks to determine whether petitioners may pose a threat to national security or public safety before according benefits under this section.

The Policy Manual guidance explains and provides clarification to officers but does not add to the substantive regulations, create legally binding rights or obligations, or change the substantive standards by which USCIS evaluates applications for immigration benefit requests.

1. Unfair Surprise and Reliance Interests

An agency changing its interpretation of a regulation should consider, among other factors, whether the interpretative change creates unfair surprise.[15] USCIS is issuing this guidance to clarify what the law and regulations permit or require. USCIS is not restricting the program for pending petitioners; rather, USCIS is using its statutory authority to provide an additional pathway to employment authorization and deferred action. Pending petitioners will not be treated in a disparate or unfair manner, as the evaluation for an EAD is based on the initial evidence petitioners must submit when filing a Petition for U Nonimmigrant Status (Form I-918).

This process does not create an undue burden on pending or future petitioners, as it does not change any evidentiary requirement. Rather, it utilizes the filing system already in place to issue benefits to Form I-918 petitioners and mitigate any vulnerabilities they may face due to the lengthy adjudicatory wait times.

Additionally, those who are not granted BFD EADs and deferred action under the first phase of review proceed to the full waiting list adjudication, thereby receiving the same adjudicative review they would have had before this policy implementation. Consequently, the new policy only has an adverse impact on overseas derivatives where the principal petitioner resides in the U.S.

USCIS notes that overseas principal petitioners and qualifying family members would not benefit from this EAD and deferred action process because they are not physically located in the United States. Neither deferred action nor employment authorization are accorded to noncitizens outside the United States.

USCIS considered the potential impact to such petitioners and determined that offering employment authorization and deferred action to the majority of petitioners (as a majority of Form I-918 petitioners are physically located in the United States), coupled with the statutory authority to provide employment to pending, bona fide petitioners, provides numerous benefits.

Additionally, USCIS does not anticipate that overseas principal petitioners and qualifying family members would be harmed by this process, since the agency continues to conduct full waiting list adjudications for overseas principal petitioners and qualifying family members, as the agency has previously done. Consequently, this policy has no adverse impact upon overseas principal petitioners and qualifying family members.

USCIS notes that there will be adverse impacts to overseas qualifying family members where the principal petitioner is in the United States; if the principal petitioner receives the BFD EAD and deferred action, there is not a sufficient basis to conduct a waiting list adjudication for the qualifying family member.

However, USCIS believes the overall benefits of this policy change outweigh the adverse impacts. The BFD process only provides a basic review of the principal petition for U nonimmigrant status, and does not require the petitioner to establish eligibility for U nonimmigrant status but for visa availability in a given fiscal year under the statutory cap.

USCIS cannot provide different levels of adjudication to a principal petitioner and the petitioner's qualifying family members. Advancing qualifying family members to an adjudicative phase beyond that of the principal petitioner would conflict with the INA’s requirement that the qualifying family members be “accompanying or following to join” the principal petitioner, and in addition would be confusing and difficult to administer.[16]

USCIS also considered providing petitioners in the United States who have overseas beneficiaries the option of forgoing the BFD process for a waiting list adjudication; however, this would create multiple adjudicatory tracks and result in operational inefficiencies that this policy change was meant to eliminate.

USCIS recognizes that 8 CFR 214.14(d)(2) states, “After U-1 nonimmigrant status has been issued to qualifying petitioners on the waiting list, any remaining U-1 nonimmigrant numbers for that fiscal year will be issued to new qualifying petitioners in the order that the petitions were properly filed.” Historically, USCIS has interpreted and applied this provision to mean that it will grant visas to those on the waiting list, based on the date the petition was filed, before granting visas to those not on the waiting list. Yet the regulation also clearly states “the oldest petitions receiving the highest priority” for such cap numbers.

Under this policy, as part of the first phase of review, USCIS issues EADs and deferred action to noncitizens in the United States with a bona fide petition, instead of placing them in the queue for a waiting list adjudication. Those who do not receive an EAD under the first phase proceed to the full waiting list adjudication.

That is, if their petitions are approvable, they are placed on the waiting list to receive an EAD and deferred action. As these two tracks receive the same benefits (EAD and deferred action), the most equitable path is to continue to issue visas based on the date a petition is filed, regardless of whether a petitioner is placed on the waiting list or not. USCIS believes this approach best implements the regulatory provision and statute, and provides the greatest benefit to all petitioners, without adversely impacting any petitioner.

USCIS considered the alternative of continuing to adjudicate petitions on the waiting list first, before those with BFD EADs, but believes that would be inequitable and in conflict with the regulatory language directing that the oldest petitions receive the highest priority. Most of those with BFD EADs will never be placed on the waiting list.

To make them wait behind all petitioners on the current waiting list regardless of filing date, and to prioritize those placed on the waiting list in the future, would effectively penalize those who were able to receive BFD EADs because they had properly filed a complete Form I-918 that did not raise any public safety or national security risks. Accordingly, USCIS will adjudicate petitions for U nonimmigrant status in date-filed order, drawing from both BFD EAD recipients and petitioners on the waiting list.

2. Criminal History Check for Bona Fide Determination Employment Authorization Documents                          

Before June 14, 2021, USCIS officers considered criminal history background checks when adjudicating a Form I-918 petition: first, for waiting list placement and second, for the final adjudication when a visa has become available.

USCIS continues to evaluate whether a principal petitioner or a qualifying family member may maintain a BFD EAD and grant of deferred action throughout the 4-year validity period until final adjudication for U nonimmigrant status; however, as of June 14, 2021, USCIS will review and update background and security checks at regular intervals during the validity period of a principal petitioner or qualifying family member’s BFD EAD and deferred action. USCIS also retains discretion to update background and security checks at any time when case-specific circumstances warrant.

By reviewing updated background and security checks at regular intervals during the validity period, USCIS will ensure the petitioner continues to pose no risk to public safety and national security. USCIS does not believe this review would adversely impact any petitioner’s reliance interests or raise retroactivity concerns, as the checks are already run regularly.

Additionally, implementing these checks allows USCIS to maintain a balance between providing employment authorization to eligible immigrant victims of crime and ensuring the security of the United States. Finally, any public safety and national security issues raised anew after a BFD EAD and deferred action have been granted will be fully evaluated during the waiting list adjudication, under the same adjudicative review as would have occurred before this policy implementation.

C. Implementation

USCIS began implementing this policy on June 14, 2021. This policy applies to all Form I-918 petitions pending on June 14, 2021, as well as Form I-918 petitions filed on or after that date. The guidance contained in the Policy Manual is controlling and supersedes any related prior guidance.

Footnotes


[^ 1] See 8 CFR 214.14(c)(7). See Petition for U Nonimmigrant Status (Form I-918).

[^ 2] See INA 214(p)(2).

[^ 3] See 8 CFR 214.14(d)(2).

[^ 4] See Section 201(c) of Pub. L. 110-457 (PDF), 122 Stat. 5044, 5053 (December 23, 2008) (amending INA 214(p)(6)).

[^ 5] See Heckler v. Chaney, 470 U.S. 821, 831 (1985) (holding that “an agency’s decision not to prosecute or enforce. . . is a decision generally committed to an agency’s absolute discretion” and noting that enforcement decisions involve a “complicated balancing of a number of factors which are peculiarly within [the agency’s expertise, including] whether agency resources are best spent on this violation or another, whether the agency is likely to succeed if it acts, whether the particular enforcement action requested best fits the agency’s overall policies, and, indeed, whether the agency has enough resources to undertake the action at all. An agency generally cannot act against each technical violation of the statute it is charged with enforcing.”).

[^ 6] See, for example, Soon Bok Yoon v. INS, 538 F.2d 1211, 1213 (5th Cir. 1976); Vergel v. INS, 536 F.2d 755, 757-58 (8th Cir. 1976); and Nicholas v. INS, 590 F.2d 802, 806-08 (9th Cir. 1979), superseded by rule on other grounds, as stated in Romeiro de Silva v. Smith, 773 F.2d 1021, 1024 (9th Cir. 1985). 

[^ 7] See Number of Form I-918, Petition for U Nonimmigrant Status Statistics by Fiscal Year, Quarter, and Case Status (Fiscal Years 2009-2020) (PDF, 112.43 KB).

[^ 8] See Section 1502 and 1513(a)(2) of the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000, Pub. L. 106-386 (PDF), 114 Stat. 1464, 1518 (October 28, 2000) (“[P]roviding battered immigrant women and children who were experiencing domestic violence at home with protection against deportation allows them to obtain protection orders against their abusers and frees them to cooperate with law enforcement and prosecutors in criminal cases brought against their abusers and the abusers of their children . . . .”).

[^ 9] See Number of Form I-918, Petition for U Nonimmigrant Status By Fiscal Year, Quarter, and Case Status (Fiscal Years 2009-2020) (PDF, 112.43 KB).

[^ 10] This includes all required initial evidence, except the Application for Advance Permission to Enter as a Nonimmigrant (Form I-192). One of the main purposes for issuing employment authorization to those with pending, bona fide petitions is to provide EADs to good faith petitioners who are vulnerable due to lengthy wait times. Requiring and adjudicating the Form I-192 for purposes of the EAD would delay the EAD adjudication and undermine the efficiency goals of this change. Instead of adjudicating the Form I-192 at this stage, USCIS relies on criminal history checks.

[^ 11] See INA 212(a)(3).

[^ 12] See 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(A).

[^ 13] See Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).

[^ 14] USCIS considered different potential definitions of “bona fide” and ultimately determined that this definition was best suited to this context. USCIS specifically considered the criteria for the “bona fide determination” at 8 CFR 214.11(e), regarding noncitizen victims of severe forms of trafficking, but ultimately decided not to adopt those criteria because of the differences between the U and T visa requirements, such as the law enforcement certification requirement for U nonimmigrant petitioners. See INA 214(p)(1); 8 CFR 214.14(c)(2)(i). The completion of the Supplement B by a law enforcement official or judge provides an appropriate assurance of the bona fide nature of the petition in this context. Additionally, the T regulation requires consideration of waivers of inadmissibility, for which an RFE is often required. This would significantly delay the U BFD adjudication, contrary to Congress’ likely intent in authorizing the issuance of this interim benefit. It would also undermine the procedural efficiencies this policy was intended to create in comparison with the waiting list process.

[^ 15] See Long Island Care at Home Ltd. v. Coke, 551 U.S. 158, 170-71 (2007). See Christopher v. SmithKline Beecham Corp., 567 U.S. 142 (2012).

[^ 16] See INA 101(a)(15)(U)(ii).

Appendix: Bona Fide Determination Process Flowchart

Appendix: Bona Fide Determination Process Flowchart (PDF, 95.1 KB)

Updates

POLICY ALERT - Bona Fide Determination Process for Victims of Qualifying Crimes, and Employment Authorization and Deferred Action for Certain Petitioners

June 14, 2021

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is publishing guidance in the USCIS Policy Manual on employment authorization and deferred action for principal petitioners for U nonimmigrant status and qualifying family members with pending, bona fide petitions.

Read More
Affected Sections

3 USCIS-PM C - Part C - Victims of Crimes

Technical Update - Moving the Adjudicator’s Field Manual Content into the USCIS Policy Manual

May 21, 2020

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is updating and incorporating relevant Adjudicator’s Field Manual (AFM) content into the USCIS Policy Manual. As that process is ongoing, USCIS has moved any remaining AFM content to its corresponding USCIS Policy Manual Part, in PDF format, until relevant AFM content has been properly incorporated into the USCIS Policy Manual. To the extent that a provision in the USCIS Policy Manual conflicts with remaining AFM content or Policy Memoranda, the updated information in the USCIS Policy Manual prevails. To find remaining AFM content, see the crosswalk (PDF, 317.68 KB) between the AFM and the Policy Manual.

Affected Sections

1 USCIS-PM - Volume 1 - General Policies and Procedures

2 USCIS-PM - Volume 2 - Nonimmigrants

3 USCIS-PM - Volume 3 - Humanitarian Protection and Parole

4 USCIS-PM - Volume 4 - Refugees and Asylees

5 USCIS-PM - Volume 5 - Adoptions

6 USCIS-PM - Volume 6 - Immigrants

7 USCIS-PM - Volume 7 - Adjustment of Status

8 USCIS-PM - Volume 8 - Admissibility

9 USCIS-PM - Volume 9 - Waivers and Other Forms of Relief

11 USCIS-PM - Volume 11 - Travel and Identity Documents

12 USCIS-PM - Volume 12 - Citizenship and Naturalization

Version History

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