Law-Help Articles
Immigration
Green Card Marriage Abuse Help | Green Card Marriage Abuse Help |
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| Written by TheLawClerk | ||||||
| Monday, 04 September 2006 | ||||||
Page 2 of 2 PART IIThe Violence Against Women Act (VAWA), passed into law in 1994 and amended in 2001, provides hope for immigrant domestic violence survivors. An abused immigrant who is married to a U.S. citizen or Lawful Permanent Resident or who divorced her abuser in the past two years may now petition on her own for an immigrant visa and green card application, without the abuser's knowledge or consent. In this confidential process, CIS (formerly called “INS”) agents cannot legally contact the abuser and tell the abusive spouse anything of the abused immigrant's attempts to obtain a green card under VAWA. The process can often be completed within a year for those married to U.S. citizens. This process also provides renewed work authorization to lawful permanent residents who usually face a longer waiting period due to visa number backlogs. Further, there is no appearance in front of a judge required (the process is paper driven) by the immigrant spouse and s/he may leave her abuser at any time, without harm to her immigration status. So, given these benefits, why do so many immigrants in such abusive marriages not file for their permanent residency under VAWA? There are two main reasons. For one, many do not know of VAWA’s protections for abused immigrants and secondly, most do not recognize that what they have experienced or are still facing can be considered abuse or “extreme cruelty” under U.S. immigration law. The following lists some common examples of behavior that may be considered “abuse” under U.S. immigration law: Any type of Physical abuse, which also includes:
Psychological/Emotional Abuse may include:
Financial Abuse may include:
Many times, an immigrant who seeks legal assistance because of abuse does not mention psychological or financial abuse because she fears that she will not know how to prove it. Physical abuse usually can be documented with photos, police reports, court transcripts, and restraining orders, but admittedly, psychological abuse is more difficult to demonstrate. Financial abuse may also be proven through receipts, checking account statements, affidavits of witnesses, and other types of documentation. Its imperative for any immigrant in an abusive marriage to seek assistance from an attorney, to brain-storm with the attorney about what kinds of evidence and witnesses will be available, and more than anything, to know her options.
About The Author Attorney Heather L. Poole practices family-based U.S. immigration law in Pasadena, California. She is a published immigration author and supervises abuse-based immigration cases at the Los Angeles Commission on Assaults Against Women. She is an active resource to the “Violence Against Women experts” list of the National Lawyers Guild, the National Network to End Violence Against Immigrant Women, and the National Domestic Violence Hotline. She can be reached at 626.432.4550 or This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it . For more information on the options available to abused immigrants, access www.humanrightsattorney.com. Submit your opinion on this article below or submit your own article!
written by a guest on November 09, 2006 i found this article very helpful - thank you for publishing it. Anita written by Daniel M. Perecky on May 07, 2007 When I saw the title, my first thought was of web-brides who come over to marry. Once they get the green-card, they get a divorce. Does anyone have any thoughts about this type of abuse? There is so much talk about illegal immigrants these days. That is only 1/2 of the problem. The other problem is that legal immigrants are coming into this country as well, taking American jobs, etc. I think that we should have a trade-partnership... for every immigrant that comes in legally, a job should open up in their source country- which is reserved for any American that may want to move there on a Visa and work there. Yes, there were waves of immigrations in the past, but by and large, they were at times of job-booms... at the end of the industrial age mostly. Nowdays in the globalization surgence, immigration to America is a different ball-game. Regards, God Bless, Daniel M. Perecky |
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