JoeF writes in good faith:
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Originally Posted by dr_gc
I don't think it will make any difference to what happens when you apply in five years. One can leave the employer even after one week of GC provided you maintain your profession for which your labor was approved for another six months.
Hmm, no. See
http://immigrationportal.com/showthread.php?t=154533
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And So??
That is just a (well intentiond) opinion with no particular case law to support it. There are equally well meaning but different opinions from other lawyers.
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AC 21 allows you to change jobs even before your green card approval provided you maintain your profession.
AC21 does explicitly not apply after I-485 approval.
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I think you didn't read mail carefully. I didn't say Ac21 applies after I-485 approval.
It is about the legal argument of law itself allowing the intent to be with sponsoring employer to be morphed to the intent of being in the same profession on a date earlier than when a person is being asked to prove "the intent" to be with an sponsoring employer. Since, the law itself allowed change in the intent, it will be untenable to question that intent at a subsequent date.
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Law does not work that way as most people in these forums think. It is non-trivial to affect anyone's legal residency status after approval since to do that the state must recourse to lengthy court proceedings against an individual.
First off, it is not the state. Immigration law is federal. If somebody, e.g., the employer, complains to CIS with credible evidence, CIS can start an investigation. Eventually, it would end up in front of an immigration judge, and the judge rules on it. All these judges do all day long is ruling on immigration matters.
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The "state" above refers to the "the federal government or an agency acting on behalf of it e.g., cis". Similar to the meaning of "state" in the meeting of commonwealth heads of state.
So? You can always challenge those decisions in the United States Court of Appeals.
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The courts proceedings are extremely expensive and time consuming.
These things are not overly expensive nor time consuming. This is not civil litigation...
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I have no idea if cis employs cheap lawyers
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No wonder they had so many problems in sending Elian Gonzalez back to cuba.
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The state has better things to spend money than harrass a law abiding citizen who is paying his taxes, and has not been involved any major criminal activity.
Well, leaving an employer too soon after getting the GC could be a violation of immigration law. Courts are there to resolve such matters and rule if there was a violation of law or not.
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Voilation of which law? Where is the exact wording in any law that says any thing about how long one needs to maintain the "intent" after grant of GC. There is no specific case law - it is all speculation and good faith advice. How come intent is OK after six months but not after 4 1/2 months?
I am not saying don't play safe if you can, but at the same time you don't have to be paranoid about it, and take the nonsense from evil employers that maltreat you or exploit you.
I am not a lawyer - consult a lawyer before acting on any advice.