hi again, thanks for your replies.
we've talked a couple of lawyers about our case. 2 of them were very good with student related cases. and they both told us that USCIS is right and the school immigration officer had advised us wrong.
the lawyer asked "how can she say something like that?"
These lawyers may be wrong. There are many schools that state that you are in status as long as you are looking for a job. You should investigate this further.
the student imm. officer still says the same thing but refuses to give any written or signed document.
She may be afraid that you will sue the school or sue her personally. Also, she may be not authorized to issue official documents by herself.
according to the lawyers there isn't so much to do.
at that point, i've thought about sueing the student imm.officer. one of the lawyers is searching the case for us. i hope she can help us.
Bad idea. Suing the shool or the immigration officer will not help you get a greencard. On the other hand, once you sue them, the school's lawyers will become involved, and the school may become uncooperative towards you. You want the school to be your friend.
tonight i've called my country's USA embassy. i've told them the situation. the person i'm talking was very knowledgable, and told me that i can do CP. i need to immediately have my case transferred to them by contacting KCC, and about OPT, she told me to have a legal paper of it, an official notice or something, this would show that we had OPT during those dates.
i gave her all the dates about the case, she might misunderstand the dates because she told me , at most you have been only 2-3 weeks out of status, and this is nothing. it won't be a problem. i think she thought that the OPT ended on Jan 31th and AOS opened on Jan 10th. instead, AOS opened on Jan 10th before the OPT even ended on Jan 31th.
If the embassy official misunderstood the dates involved in your case, then you can't rely on her opinion.
we're gonna talk with USCIS about the case, and if they don't seem to approve we're gonna call KCC and change it to CP. if we leave US and then can't get the green card, we won't try again i think.
Your main problem is that USCIS thinks you've been out of status during your OPT. This is a problem
whether you are in the US (may be ineligible for AOS) or outside (may be barred from re-entry for 3 or 10 years).
I suggest that you talk to your school immigration official again, very politely. Make it clear that you have no quarrel with them and do not intend to take any action against them. Then ask them
why they think that you are in status when you are looking for a job on OPT.
The schools do not just invent rules. They usually learn of them from a handbook for international student advisers, or from the Federal Register. If she gives you a reference to a law or publication in the Federal Register, you can print out those pages and take it to USCIS and your lawyer. If she gives you a handbook, the handbook itself will contain a reference to the relevant law or publication in the Federal Register. You can then print those out and take them to the USCIS and your lawyer.
If your school adviser will not tell you why they think this, then you can try to call (again very politely) the international student offices at the other schools mentioned in this thread (e.g. UC Berkeley or Lousiana State) and ask them why they think that one is in status when one is looking for a job on OPT, and if they can point you to the relevant law or regulation.
Normally, this research is done by a lawyer. But since the lawyers you talked to were not aware of these rules, you need to do this yourself. Then you will know if the lawyers were right, or if you need to look for a more knowledgeable lawyer.
Good luck! The rules that you are in status when looking for a job are mentioned in multiple places, so I think you have a
good chance of finding the relevant law or regulation, and proving that you have been in status.
rc2007