My AUSA uses several court orders to support her motion to dismiss. I found three cases from PACER and attach them here.
There is another one she uses: Zheng v. Reno, 166 F. Supp. 2d 875, 880 (S.D.N.Y. 2001). I could not get it from PACER, so if anyone is able to get a copy, could you please posted? (since it's year 2001, I guess it is not about FBI name check)
I find it difficult to argue against these cases, therefore looking for good ideas from the folks in this thread.
A common problem with all three cases, in my opinion, is that FBI is not listed as defendant on any of these cases and each Plaintiff is asking the court to compel USCIS to adjudicate immediately their petition. USCIS rightfully can argue that they are not allowed to adjudicate an AOS petition till the full criminal background check is complete.
More appropriate would be to name FBI also as a defendant and ask in the Prayer to compel USCIS to expedite the name check with FBI, to compel FBI to finish the name check in XX days and after that to compel USCIS to adjudicate the petition in YY days.
In addition here are a few comments to the individual cases:
In
Chaudry, Plaintiff made several mistakes.
1. He didn't mention in his original complaint 5 U.S.C. 555(b) as a basis for jurisdiction and the court was reluctant to re-write the complaitn to create proper subject matter jurisdiction. A complaint must specifically identify the basis for subject matter jurisdiction
2. The judge considered that 17 months waiting can not be considered unreasonable.
3. Plaintiff showed lack of knowledge of immigration law when he listed 1447(b) as a basis for jurisdiction. This statue has nothing to do with AOS petitions, it is clearly about stalled N-400 aplications.
4. The judge dismissed the case without prejudice, hinting that Plaintiff's claims if properly pled, may have merit if the FBI and USCIS persist in delaying adjudication.
With other words, the judge just conveyed to the Plaintiff that Pro Se is not an excuse to be not well prepared.
In
Attias Plaintiff didn't bother to oppose defendants' motion to dismiss.
However, what bothers me the most is the judge's remark: "The fact that a delay has been lengthy does not necessarily mean that action has been unlawfully withheld or unreasonably delayed". I don't know how to counteract this statement. And unfortunately, what is
unreasonable (and granting a mandamus relief) is completely at the discretion of the court. This is the main reason why a WOM is more difficult than a 1447(b) case.