Hi Team,
Thank you so much for your help and words of encouragements.
In my district most of the cases were remanded back to USCIS with out any specific instruction, so this is not new. Before filing my case I had a fear that may happen but as you know that the choices were either file or wait, so I chose the former.
This is first time I saw that a judge ruled by just looking the complaint. Furthermore, same judge remanded several other cases to USCIS without any specific instruction. In one case, attorney filed for motion to reconsider but the same judge denied the motion, I have attached the judge’s order, motion to reconsider and judge’s final ruling.
I understand that the prospects are not very promising with this judge but I will try all of the available options you folks mentioned and I will not give up. I will start shopping for a good attorney from Monday.
Thank you again.
Besides making sure that you file your motion in less than 10 days, I think that the key point lies in the following:
"Generally, and without restricting the court’s discretion, the
court will not grant motions for rehearing or reconsideration that merely
present the same issues ruled upon by the court, either expressly or by
reasonable implication. The movant must not only demonstrate a
palpable defect by which the court and the parties have been misled
but also show that correcting the defect will result in a different
disposition of the case."
This means that you will need to explain that with this kind of remand instruction you are stuck exactly at the same point where you were before you filed your lawsuit and FBI not being compelled by a precise timetable can take whatever time they want to process your name check. You understand that USCIS can't adjudicate your application without the completed name check, but if the court is not compelling FBI to do his job, the whole remand is meaningless. You are not stuck because USCIS didn't do his part of the job (at least there is no apparent evidence for that), you are stuck because FBI didn't complete the name check. This remand instruction clearly violates the intent of the legislator, who wanted to provide an avenue how to move the hopelessly stuck cases and to compel the Government to perform his job (use that part from the opposition). You should list all the cases which we have where the judges ordered precise timetable when they remanded the case back to the Service (see again the opposition). And finally, you should explicitely state that correcting the deficiency of the order (i.e., no timetable) will result in a different disposition of the case, i.e., you will get what you were looking for: an end in a certain time period, which is quite different from an indefinite delay.
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