Interesting report on security checks

Pending FBI name checks. Unlike other USCIS checks that return results within a few days at most, the FBI name check takes more than a month to complete for six percent of submissions. For one percent, the FBI takes more than six months to compile the hit information and verify that the initial hit matches the identity of the applicant. In December 2002, USCIS (then INS) resubmitted 2.4 million applicant names for expanded checks,30 almost double the number USCIS typically submits in a year’s time. As of February 2005, USCIS reported 171,428 FBI name checks pending, including approximately 8,500 remaining from the December 2002 rerun. USCIS may pay the FBI double to “expedite” up to a few hundred FBI name checks per month. USCIS restricts these requests to certain cases, such as when the alien is about to become ineligible due to age, the applicant files writ of mandamus lawsuits to compel USCIS to complete adjudication, or other humanitarian factors. The “expedite” requests are insufficient to clear the backlog of FBI name checks.

Interesting..
 
Open cases referred to ICE for investigation. When USCIS refers an open case to ICE for investigation, staff said long delays often occur before they receive clearance to complete the adjudication or another definitive response. In 2004, FDNS reviewed the IBIS national security/terrorism-related hit referral process and found that ICE was capable of resolving only about a quarter of the USCIS referrals in a timely manner. We observed rows of files USCIS staff shelved, pending a response from ICE. 8 C.F.R. § 103.2(b)(18) allows USCIS to place cases in formal abeyance and withhold adjudication when there is an ongoing investigation relating to the petitioner’s eligibility and disclosure to the petitioner would jeopardize the investigation.

• Inconclusive results from checks and referrals. Senior officials and staff said that security checks and supplementary information from FBI, ICE, or other record owners can sometimes be vague, inconclusive, or difficult to relate to the case adjudication. At one district office, staff said they shelved cases with complete, positive FBI name check responses for months, pending guidance on how to adjudicate them.

• Legally inapplicable security check results. In a 2003 audit, the DOJ OIG reported that INS could not deny the petition of an alien otherwise eligible for temporary worker benefits based on an IBIS hit. Unlike the adjudicative standards in the Immigration and Nationality Act for most benefits, the standards for adjudicating employment- and family-based petitions require USCIS to evaluate only the authenticity of the employment offer or family relationship,
without regard to whether the person evokes security concerns. These employment- and family-based petitions serve simply to document the relationship, but they enable approved aliens to apply for other benefits such as legal permanent residence and visas from the Department of State. Nevertheless, USCIS would prefer not to approve any petition when security concerns have been identified.
USCIS sometimes withholds adjudication through an informal Immigration and Naturalization Service’s Premium Processing Program, DOJ OIG Report No. 03-14, abeyance; 8 C.F.R. § 103.2(b)(18) does not apply unless the investigation relates to the pending application.

:rolleyes:
 
Axxe said:
As of February 2005, USCIS reported 171,428 FBI name checks pending, including approximately 8,500 remaining from the December 2002 rerun.


2006 report

as of May 2006, USCIS reported 235,802 FBI name checks pending, with approximately 65 percent (153,166) of those cases pending more than 90 days and approximately 35 percent (82,824) pending more than one year.

In a little over a year name check backlog grew by 64000 cases.

Nice.
 
Top