When USCIS adjudicates an I-751 of a divorced immigrant, how do they determine whether she was at fault for failing to file a joint petition?

Leucosticte

New Member
Unless a divorced immigrant spouse admits to, e.g., committing adultery or abandoning her spouse for no reason, when it comes time to file the I-751, how would USCIS know if she was at fault for the breakup of the relationship? What would prevent her from fabricating a story, e.g. "I walked in and saw him having sex with the maid" or "He used to rape me," etc.?
 
It doesn't matter who's "at fault" or whether anyone is "at fault". A Removal of Conditions based on divorce only requires showing that the couple is divorced and that their marriage was not entered into to evade the immigration laws.
 
It doesn't matter who's "at fault" or whether anyone is "at fault". A Removal of Conditions based on divorce only requires showing that the couple is divorced and that their marriage was not entered into to evade the immigration laws.

So what is 8 U.S. Code § 1186a talking about when it says "the alien was not at fault in failing to meet the requirements of paragraph (1)"?
 
So what is 8 U.S. Code § 1186a talking about when it says "the alien was not at fault in failing to meet the requirements of paragraph (1)"?
It is talking about being not at fault for failing to file a joint petition for Removal of Conditions, not about being not at fault for the breakdown of the marriage.
 
It is talking about being not at fault for failing to file a joint petition for Removal of Conditions, not about being not at fault for the breakdown of the marriage.

So what's an example of a situation in which a divorced immigrant would be "at fault" for failing to file a joint petition? USCIS seems to link the reasons for the termination of the marriage to the reasons for not filing a joint petition:

The statute requires that the alien establish that he or she “was not at fault in failing to meet the requirements” for filing a joint petition for removal of conditions. This should not be read as requiring that the alien’s divorce decree finds his or her spouse to have been at fault, nor does it require that the divorce was obtained on a no-fault basis. You still might determine that the alien was wholly or partly responsible for not meeting the joint petitioning requirements. Likewise, a divorce decree stating that the alien was “at fault” (with regards to the breakup of the marriage) does not preclude you from independently determining that he or she was not at fault, at least with regard to the requirements of the immigration law.

As the adjudicator, you must make your own determination on this issue. While the language of the divorce decree may provide useful information on the reasons why the marriage was terminated (and therefore why a joint petition was not possible), and may even significantly increase the alien’s burden of proof, the decision on whether to grant the waiver belongs to the Service, not to the divorce court judge. Remember that in the worst marriage fraud cases, the parties to the fraud would agree in advance that the alien would file for divorce and that the petitioning spouse would accept fault for the breakdown of the marriage.
 
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