Turk007 said:
Hi,
I am about to file a writ of mandamus against DHS, USCIS, FBI for not processing my I-485 case for 15 months. I contacted my district director about the case and, i was told that they were gonne work on it, and told me to wait until January 15th. But i cant wait that long. I have Temp EAD that will expire on January 17th. I applied for the new one in november but i was told i wouldnt get it til march. I am a state employee currently, and have to show them that i can work legally here. I am also a Union member with the state. Couple Questions:
1.) Can Union help me with this issue?
2.) Can state fire me for not having a legal document to work after January 17th?
3.) Should i file the lawsuit right away?
4.) Should i wait till the 15th of January, and hope that they take care of it?
5.) I am filing the lawsuit as per se, i couldnt find a lawer that does litigation in my area. How successfull will i be for filing it on my own?
6.) What is the earliest i can get this issue resolved if i file tomorrow or the next day?
7.) Whats the success rate of getting filing fees back from the defendants?
8.) Anybody knows a good case based on a marriage to US citizen, pending FBI name check for I-485 adjustment of status? (I dont even have conditional green card, thats what i am fighting for now).
9.) Any ideas what my chances are with this mess the system created for us to be resolved quick and painless?Any pointers?
10.) Anybody knows the fax number to DHS or USCIS or FBI? I want to fax them a letter stating my intention and give them couple of days to respond back. Good idea or bad?
Thanks
Turk
First of all, welcome to this forum. I would recommend that before you file your complaint, do your homework and read a lot of posting on this forum. I recommend especially the early pages written by the founders of this forum, if you have enough time and patience you will find all the answers to your questions.
Many of your questions are a bit too general, but I'll try my best to answer them as well as I can. I'm sure that other members will also pitch in.
1. I don't think that the Union can help you with this. If US senators and US representatives can't help, it it unlikely that a Union can. Some people had success contacting the First Lady's office, their name checks were expedited.
2. If you don't have a document to prove that you are allowed legally to work in the US, theoretically any employer (not only a state employer) not only
can but is
required to terminate you. However, I heard some anecdotical evidence that if the gap is only small (between two work permits) they will not terminate the alien but they will not pay him/her during the gap and they will make up the lost wage after the new work permit arrives. But I don't have any specific example.
3. This depends. I would not file Pro Se before I get familiar with the whole process. The 15 months is also at the lower limit in order to have a chance that the judge will consider the delay unreasonably long. In most of the favorable decisions the waiting time was close or more than 2 years. But you can try.
4. I personally don't believe that they will process your case till January 15, but I am biased, I'm waiting more than 2 years now...
5. This question has no exact answer. I don't have any reliable statistical data to judge what is your chance to win your case. There were many sucesses reported on this forum, many of these success stories were fought by Pro Se Plaintiffs.
6. Tomorrow or the next day. But not because your lawsuit...Again, no good, educated answer exists. I saw cases when the approval came days after filing the lawsuit, knowing how the system works (or at least pretending to know something about it), it was a pure coincidence.
7. Depends. If you win your case, i.e., there is a court order in your favor, you can ask for your costs associated with the lawsuit. If your case is solved before any order, nobody gets anything. If you lose, you can be ordered to pay the costs of the defendants.
8. hope that somebody else has such a case, mine is a N-400 application based on 5-year residency
9. To answer this question, I would need to be able to predict the future. I would rather be in that case on Wall Street or at the lottery. If you are lucky, your case will be resolved quickly and without any major pain. If you are lucky, you may win the jackpot... But rather prepare yourself for a long and hard fight.
10. This is the letter of intent to file a lawsuit. The success rate according to some guesses posted earlier on this forum, is about 30%, but I believe that it is only anectotical. Nobody has good hard data about this. To build a good, solid case for a WOM lawsuit, maybe it is not a bad idea. I would send this letter to the USCIS DO where my case is pending. You can send it by certified mail, in this way you will have a proof of mailing. I don't have the requested fax numbers. But to have a solid case for a WOM lawsuit, you will need to do a lot of additional steps, to show that you exhausted practically all possible avenues to resolve your case peacefully. I'm afraid, that these steps can't be done in a couple of days.