khalafah2000
Registered Users (C)
if the judge follows the language of the law, then USCIS loses jurisdiction as soon one files the case. In that case, the plaintiff is safe from retaliation and that is the way, it should be. If the judge follows the so-called concurrent juridiction, the plaintiff should be ready for retaliation.786riz said:Hi khalafah,
I remember seeing one case in this thread, I think somewhere in the middle. In which after filing the 1447b, USCIS denied the N400 application. Again argument was that after filing 1447b, did USCIS have authority on the N400 application or not? I think that person fought and followed with a very good motion and got the citizenship. I will go back and search for the case and will repost here.
Thank you.
How about senate passing the law of making illegals aliens legals and at the same time, USCIS retaliating against those who dare to sue them for their own ineffeciency and incompetent. Apart from US, which other country takes forever for the name check. They have all of our records from the time when we enter in the country.
See the following cases in Newark, NJ district. See if you can make any sense of what USCIS is trying to accomplish here. These are the only two, I could find which have been or being fought in this district.
2:06-cv-00313-JLL-CCC
2:06-cv-02104-JAG-MCA
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