PendingN400 said:
Paz...
I like your line of reasoning. I suppose a cumulative reading of all reasonings cited in various case filings plus what you state should be included in any rebuttals. Do you have a list of cases (just case numbers will do) where a court has remanded the matter with explicit instructions on timely completions? If you cite these your chances may improve (although not in the initial complaint - for some reason I have never seen any initial complaint filed containing judicial opinions from other cases).
Hi PendingN400,
I will look for the cases when the court remanded the matter to USCIS with a timeline, specifically instructing FBI to complete the name check. The important point in order to convince the judge to remand but with a specific timeline is to argue about what is unreasonable delay.
Here is a citation from the Court order in the case of ElKhatib v. Bulter
"Although the Court has not found, and the parties did not cite, any Eleventh Circuit case law specifically addressing the issue raised in this case, other district courts have concluded that a petitioner has a clear right to have his or her application for lawful permanent residence status adjudicated within a
reasonable period of time . See Yu v . Brown, 36 F. Supp . 2d 922, 925 (D.N.M. 1999) ; Agbemaple v. INS, No. 97 C 8547, 1998 WL 292441 (N .D. Ill . May 18, 1998) . For instance, in Yu, where petitioner sought a writ of mandamus to force INS to act on her application for lawful permanent residence two and one half years after she applied, the court concluded that Yu's petition properly stated a claim for mandamus .
Id. at 925-933. In so holding, the court noted that administrative agencies do not possess discretion to avoid discharging the duties that Congress intended them to perform . Id. at 931 .
The Court agrees with the reasoning in Yu and Agbemaple and finds that Respondents have a non-discretionary duty to process Petitioner's Application within a reasonable period of time."
from ElKhatib_v_Bulter CASE NO. 04-22407-CIV-SEITZ/MCALILEY (SD FLA,2005)
I think that we have to look for WoM petitions decided favorably with a court order. In the text of the order the judge must address this issue, i.e., the government has a non-discretionary duty to act in a reasonable time upon applications. Looks to me that the 1447(b) cases will shiftt toward the WOM cases arguments. We will need to convince the judge essentially about the three same things, like in a mandamus complaint:
1. Petitioner has demonstrated a clear right to the relief sought (that seems relatively straightforward using the restrictive interpretation of the word "examination" and the 120 days rule (1447 b)
2. That no other remedy is available. (letters to USCIS, FBI, elected officials etc.
3. USCIS has a clear, ministerial, non-discretionary duty to adjudicate our applications in a reasonable time (here can come the argument that over 120 days is unreasonable). (see above)
See a good description and case law in the attached document about WOM cases.