Gurus / experts.
In any of the cases that you have seen, did any of the case get litigated? Did you (as pro se) or your attorney representing you had to physically appear in the court to defend your case?
Thanks.
Although I personally didn't have to go to court (my case was solved during the first 30 day extension), I saw plenty of reports here on this forum when Pro Se Plaintiff or attorney representing the Plaintiff had to go to a hearing. Sometimes just an Initial Case Management Conference, sometimes a hearing for a Motion to Dismiss, sometimes a real trial hearing.
I would strongly recommend that if you are not comfortable with appearing in person in the court room and defending vigurously your case, you should consider hiring a professional immigration lawyer. You should not count on the possibility that your case will be solved by simply filing a complaint or eventually opposing a Motion to Dismiss. Since Dec. 21, 2006 USCIS changed their policy and filing a lawsuit in a federal court is not considered anymore a reason to ask automatically FBI to expedite the name check process.
If you don't have the necessary time and patience to read through this forum and many posted cases here or on PACER, you would only harm your case and create a dangerous precedence what the Government will use in further similar cases to support their arguments. Sueing the Government is a serious business and shouldn't be taken lightly.
The good news is that practically all the info you need to go Pro Se was already posted here and there are several very knowledgeable active forum members willing to help you if you have questions. And, in my opinion, for hopelessly stuck cases lawsuit is the only working option.