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  • Hi.

  • My name is Elizabeth Blandon.

  • I'm an immigration attorney specializing in asylum law. This video in particular is about

  • a procedure known as Motion to Reopen that hopefully will help you or someone you know

  • get a green card through asylum.

  • Now asylum is basically protection given by the United States government to foreigners.

  • Only to those who are in the United States,

  • regardless of how they arrived. Whether they arrived through the airport with authorization

  • or crossing a border without authorization. People can apply for asylum usually within

  • the first year of arrival, which is very important. That's the one-year deadline. But in some cases,

  • they apply much later. The two general ways to apply are to file an application directly

  • with immigration and request protection - and request a work permit and green card - or the

  • other way to file is as a defense to being deported. So a person has been caught in the

  • United States - they don't have authorization to stay here - and as a defense to not being

  • removed to their home country, they say, "If I'm removed to my home country, I'm going to

  • suffer serious harm." In order to get asylum, the serious harm that a person fears suffering

  • has to be on account of five protected grounds: race, religion, nationality, political opinion

  • or something called the particular social group, which is explained in another video.

  • This video discusses: what about a person who had their case denied perhaps at immigration

  • or perhaps had their case denied at immigration court, and now they have an order of deportation

  • in their hand. Well, incredibly enough, they can still apply for asylum based on something

  • known as a Motion to Reopen. Now, a Motion to Reopen generally has to be filed within 90

  • days of that order of deportation, but there are some exceptions as to why it can be filed

  • after the 90 days. I'll explain what those exceptions are, but generally they have to

  • do with changed circumstances either of the country or of the person. In some cases -

  • the ones that we win the most often or we see the most often - are a person simply didn't

  • know they have to go to court. If a foreigner does not appear in court when they're supposed

  • to appear in court, a judge will issue an automatic order of deportation. It's known as an "in absentia."

  • order of deportation. If the reason the foreign national was not at the hearing is because

  • they never received a paper that said they had to go to the hearing, or, what sometimes

  • sadly happens, they hired an attorney and then the attorney didn't tell

  • the foreign national they had to go to the hearing. In both of those cases or in other

  • cases that are similar to that - that the foreigner didn't know - we can do a Motion to Reopen, even

  • after the 90 days, which is what's important. Other cases where it's been over 90

  • days and it's been approved is, for example, marrying a US citizen. That's a change in the

  • person's personal circumstance. Perhaps before the order of deportation they weren't married,

  • and now after the order of deportation they are married. There are immigration benefits

  • for marrying a US citizen, and we might be able to do a Motion to Reopen based on that.

  • In some cases, we specifically ask for asylum because the fact that the person is now married

  • to a US citizen increases the risk that the foreign national him or herself will be harmed

  • in their home country. In addition to that, there are other personal circumstances that

  • might change. One that we see, for example, is persons from Muslim countries who might have

  • converted to Christianity. For example, in some countries such as [the Republic the Islamic

  • sorry] Republic of Iran, if a person changes from their religion to any other religion,

  • they will be killed. It's a crime of capital punishment in Iran. So, obviously, a conversion

  • to Christianity would result in death. Another similar kind of case is when a person perhaps

  • had not come out before. They had been in the United States for several years, but only recently

  • came out in public as - you know - either lesbian, gay, questioning, bisexual or transgender person.

  • And now that they've come out publicly, they can't return to their home country because

  • they might be harmed. And in some countries, serious harm or death might result. In those

  • cases, likewise, it could be years after a person has an order of deportation we can do

  • a Motion to Reopen - reopen the case - file an asylum and again get the work permit and hopefully

  • get the green card, if we win it. A little gold nugget that I also like to discuss, because

  • it's not - it's not a program that's used very often, but it is very important - it's an important

  • way of getting a green card, is for those people who have either Temporary Protected Status

  • (TPS) or Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (known as DACA). Those two programs give people a

  • work permit, but there's something more valuable that it gives them. They can also travel outside

  • the United States with something known as Advance Parole. If you leave the United States -

  • and again this is with an order of deportation we're talking - leave the United States, you

  • go to another country and you return to the United States. When you return, you are now

  • entering with authorization. One of the main reasons - in fact the main reason - that some

  • people can't get their green card in the United States, even though they might have children

  • who are US citizens over 21 or spouses who are US citizens - one of the main reasons is

  • because they entered illegally. Well, if you enter with parole and you have an order of deportation,

  • we can now reopen your case in court and get you the green card. That's something that's

  • worth considering for many, many people. Also, one of the things that needs to be considered

  • is changed country conditions. I always ask my clients to let me know what the situation

  • is in their home country today versus what it was when they were ordered deported. Some

  • countries - in particular Russia and the Ukraine - we have been able to win Motions to Reopen

  • because the situation in those countries has seriously deteriorated, and we were able to

  • prove it. It doesn't apply, however, in a case where the situation of the country was terrible

  • at the time the person got the order of deportation, and it's only much more terrible [now]. It has to

  • be a very drastic change between then and now. So I also - what I'm stressing to people - what cases

  • might win - I also would like to stress what kinds of cases won't win. A case such as that

  • where the condition of the country has worsened significantly, but it was terrible

  • before also. It won't - you won't win that case. Also, if you're now more afraid because, say,

  • you know somebody who died - there was a case where the death of a friend - the foreign national

  • said, "Well, now I'm really afraid. I wasn't afraid before. I knew the situation

  • in my country was bad, but it hadn't affected me personally until my friend was murdered." That also is not a reason to do a motion to reopen because the situation in the country

  • was bad when the person was ordered deported. Most importantly, if the reason you were given

  • a deportation order is because you did not appear at the hearing, but you knew about the hearing,

  • that is not a reason to do a Motion to Reopen. The only types of cases where a person will

  • be given a second shot at the "asylum apple" is because they didn't appear the first time

  • because they didn't know. Whether - through no fault of their own, generally. The thing

  • to remember about everything that has been spoken in this video is:our job here with

  • the Blandon Law team is to prove to the court that the totality of the circumstances under

  • all the circumstances that we're presenting to the court, it would be really unfair

  • for a person who fears being harmed in their home country to have to return just because

  • of one minor error. So, if we can prove that, we can win the Motion to Reopen on your behalf

  • and hopefully get you a green card. It's been a pleasure and good luck

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贏得驅逐令後的庇護 (Winning Asylum After Deportation Order)

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    Amy.Lin 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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