←back to thread

1009 points n1b0m | 6 comments | | HN request time: 0.893s | source | bottom
1. TriangleEdge ◴[] No.43413717[source]
I've been issued a five year bar for visiting someone in the US while unemployed. My immigration lawyer told me it's the weakest case he had ever seen. It took two years for the appeal to be approved. I had worked in the US on TN visas twice before, and never overstayed. It felt like they were just trying to meet a quota.

Edit: I had applied for a GC years before this happened, so I think the officer thought I didn't want to leave. This was not the case however. The case had been approved but not processed.

replies(2): >>43413776 #>>43414066 #
2. leereeves ◴[] No.43413776[source]
When did that happen? If it took two years for the appeal to be approved, it must have happened a while ago.
replies(1): >>43413846 #
3. TriangleEdge ◴[] No.43413846[source]
About three years ago. My lawyer told me it used to take one year, but got bumped to two recently.
4. mgh2 ◴[] No.43414066[source]
Do you care to share more details? What questions did they ask and what were your replies?
replies(1): >>43414274 #
5. TriangleEdge ◴[] No.43414274[source]
The officers were "dirty". They brought me in a room to do an interrogation where one officer asked questions and the other took notes on an old computer. I literally told them: "I am not going to stay past my return date" and the officer asking questions told the officer taking notes to not write that down. They asked who my parents were, how much money I had, my employment history, what I did in the US while working on my previous TN, if I was in danger, etc.. They asked if I was applying for jobs and I said yes because I was unemployed. They then asked if the jobs were in the US and I said I would accept another TN job if I could. They call the process a "sworn statement".

For those of you who go through that, don't agree to the statement if they modified it, like mine. There's no cameras or recording devices so they can be dirty, and they abuse that fact. You have no rights at all at the border, and your assumptions on decency and honesty are not correct.

My assumption to this day is that they thought I was trying to work illegally, but this is not the case.

replies(1): >>43416354 #
6. gruez ◴[] No.43416354{3}[source]
>They asked if I was applying for jobs and I said yes because I was unemployed. They then asked if the jobs were in the US and I said I would accept another TN job if I could. They call the process a "sworn statement".

So you told them that you were there for visiting/tourism, and they alleged you were coming to the US to work, on the basis that you're applying to jobs in the US?