Webinar
We will explore how alcohol and drug use, abuse, arrests, and convictions can cause problems with the naturalization process including denial and even, in some cases, deportation. We will discuss the potential effects upon naturalization of someone who is a habitual drunkard, marijuana user in places where it has been legalized, drug abuser, drug trafficker, and/or on probation or parole for a DUI or drug crimes.
Webinar
Join The VAWA Manual authors, Evangeline Abriel, Ann Block, and Sally Kinoshita, as they discuss the eligibility requirements, application process, and latest practice tips for assisting VAWA self-petitioners in obtaining legal permanent residency through adjustment of status.
Webinar
This webinar will provide an up-to-date overview of USCIS guidance on extreme hardship. Panelists will review the factors outlined by USCIS as well as the legal standard required for a successful hardship waiver for different grounds of inadmissibility. An important component of the 2016 USCIS guidance is the inclusion of “particularly significant factors” or circumstances that strongly support a finding of extreme hardship. Panelists will explore these scenarios in depth and provide tips on how to connect your client’s story with the elements highlighted in the USCIS guidance.
Webinar
This webinar will cover the current practice for filing waivers for clients with unlawful presence. It will provide an overview of the grounds of inadmissibility for unlawful presence and the available waivers. We will review the I-601A process, including latest policy developments and practice pointers. We will discuss the traditional I-601 waiver and when it must be used instead of the provisional process. This webinar is a great complement to our Hardship in Waivers webinar.
Seminar
Location: Duane Morris LLP*, Suite 2200, One Market Plaza, Spear Tower, San Francisco, CA 94105
Seminar
Are you new to immigration practice and want to be court-ready? Have you been representing people for years on affirmative cases, but afraid to appear in front of the immigration judge? Do you want a refresher on issues related to removal defense? This seminar offers an overview of removal proceedings, and will provide you with the skills to walk into court and plead on behalf of your client. In this seminar, we will focus on procedural basics and essential analytical skills needed to zealously advocate for your client in court. In the morning, we will provide an overview of removal proceedings and the immigration court; how to respond to a Notice to Appear (NTA), including challenging charges of removal. In the afternoon, we will take on more advance topics including representing your client in bond hearings, as well as an introduction to analyzing convictions in immigration cases. We will finish the day with a panel of practitioners to answer your questions on local practice.
Webinar
This webinar will cover motions to suppress and terminate in removal proceedings, with legal and practice strategies targeted and newer and experienced attorneys. Motions to suppress and terminate are a critical tool for protecting clients and holding the government accountable for violating immigrants’ rights. We will cover the essential law of suppression and termination in the immigration context, filing and litigation procedures, and explore legal theories for suppression and termination responses to the latest enforcement tactics from the Trump Administration.
Webinar
We will explore the “whys” and “hows” of securing pardons and vacaturs on behalf of immigrant clients. Jennie will discuss the ACLU’s successes securing pardons on behalf of deported veterans as well as recent policy victories. Rose will review 1473.7 on its anniversary, and discuss current trends, shortcomings, and new case law developments. Anthony will discuss other forms of post-conviction relief.
Webinar
Section 212(h) is an extremely useful waiver of inadmissibility used to prevent disaster, especially when the client cannot apply for LPR or non-LPR cancellation. This interactive webinar will cover who can apply, when it can be filed, standards for granting it, and when additional restrictions do or do not apply to permanent residents. This training is intermediate-level and assumes some familiarity with inadmissibility for crimes and waivers in general.
Publication
One thing that is abundantly clear—immigrants need representation in immigration court. Most immigrants face removal proceedings without an attorney or authorized representative, and the outcomes with and without a representative are grossly disparate. With this publication, we hope to build the capacity of immigration practitioners to assist individuals in immigration court proceedings to provide more immigrants with a meaningful chance at justice.
Publication
The Immigrant Legal Resource Center created this new, comprehensive guide about Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests and other background checks in order to provide practitioners with a one-stop guide for information about why, when, where, and how to file background checks in immigration cases. This guide describes the various federal agencies and components that generally hold immigration records, explains how to request records and appeal denials or incomplete responses, and provides tips for certain circumstances, such as representing minors or immigrants in removal proceedings. The appendices include sample FOIA requests to the Department of Homeland Security (including USCIS, ICE, and CBP), the Department of State, and the Department of Justice; sample FOIA appeals and federal complaints; sample records requests to the Office of Refugee Resettlement and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI); and many other resources for both private attorneys and nonprofit practitioners seeking records in immigration cases.
Seminar
This conference is for invited participants only.
Video
This webinar will highlight an innovative pro bono model that ensures every immigrant has their full due process rights protected and no person is deported on the basis of an unconstitutional conviction. Led by Rose Cahn from the Immigrant Legal Resource Center and Josh Gresham from Latham & Watkins, this training will describe the Immigrant Post-Conviction Relief Project and how the nonprofit and firm partnership has brought essential relief to hundreds of immigrant clients who would face certain deportation without it. This will be of particular interest to nonprofit immigrant legal services providers across the country, as well as to any law firms interested in engaging in a cutting-edge pro bono practice.
Publication
Families & Immigration: A Practical Guide is an essential tool for practitioners who assist in all aspects of family-sponsored immigration. This resource is designed for everyday practice by new and seasoned immigration attorneys, immigration paralegals, community-based organizations, and family immigration advocates.
Seminar
This unique program is designed for the lawyer with limited immigration experience but who has a commitment toward building a confident and practical understanding of immigration law so essential to the competent representation of immigration clients.
Seminar
Location: University of San Francisco School of Law, 2130 Fulton Street, San Francisco, CA 94117
Seminar
Location: Southwestern Law School, Westmoreland Building, 3050 Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90010
Webinar
In 2017 California created several state laws that will benefit our noncitizen population, including those who have contact with the criminal justice system. ILRC attorneys who worked on drafting many of the bills will discuss what the laws provide and how to use them in representing noncitizens. As of January 1, 2018, California will have true “pretrial diversion” for qualifying persons facing minor drug charges, in a program that does not require a guilty plea and thus is not a “conviction” for immigration purposes. See AB 208, amending Penal Code 1000. New laws will also help to prevent misuse of gang databases, pursuant to SB 90, which is critical to many young immigrants. The comprehensive California Values Act will limit the ways that the California criminal justice system can cooperate with federal immigration officials, pursuant to SB 54, while SB 29 and AB 103 will limit the growth of immigration detention facilities in the state. We also will discuss ongoing questions about last year’s amendment to Penal Code § 18.5, which makes the 364-day misdemeanor definition retroactive, and provides a way to reduce an imposed 365-day sentence to 364 days.
Webinar
Immigration law imposes its harshest consequences on noncitizens who have a conviction, or even evidence of conduct relating to, a drug crime. This is an especially fast-changing area of crim/imm, and new issues and defenses are emerging each year. In this interactive webinar, we will present a comprehensive overview of the potential consequences and an explanation of established and potential defenses in this area. We will include a discussion of how the categorical approach can help, and of issues presented by the legalization of marijuana in some states.
Webinar
Immigrants who are alleged to be involved with gangs are top immigration enforcement priorities for the Department of Homeland Security. This webinar will discuss what gangs and gang databases are, the over-inclusive process law enforcement employs to allege gang membership, and how allegations of gang membership arise in and impact immigration cases. In addition, we will share best practices for how to combat unfounded allegations of gang membership in immigration cases, based on a national survey of advocates conducted in fall 2017.
Webinar
This webinar will provide an introduction to the legal requirements and bases for motions to reopen. We will discuss filing motions to reopen in absentia orders, motions based on asylum eligibility and motions based on ineffective assistance of counsel.
Webinar
We will review how the CSPA protects certain family-based beneficiaries of immigrant visa petitions and how to calculate the CSPA age. We will also review when the Visa Bulletin is involved, and when and how visa regression affects the CSPA age. Finally, we will touch on the rules regarding recapturing priority dates and discuss strategies for clients in danger of “aging out” who may not be protected by CSPA.
Webinar
Family-based immigration remains a primary path to permanent residence and is even more critical in the changing legal environment. This webinar will explore different adjustment strategies for family-based immigration, including traditional 245(a) adjustment and 245(i) eligibility and grandfathering. It will also explore more recent developments for establishing adjustment eligibility for those with a parole entry and for TPS holders. In addition to reviewing the various pathways to adjustment eligibility, it will highlight red flags as well as provide practical strategies for advocates.
Webinar
We will review tips and best practices when creating your record in immigration court. We will cover evidentiary rules, objections, hearings via video teleconferencing, taking verbal testimony and submitting other evidence in court. Content will cover both practical and substantive considerations. This webinar is a great introduction to those new to the courtroom as well as a good refresher for seasoned practitioners looking for new courtroom approaches.
Webinar
Over 300,000 people currently benefit from Temporary Protected Status (TPS) and many have been protected by it for nearly 20 years. However, the current administration is terminating the program for certain countries and is reviewing the designation of several others. This webinar will describe what TPS recipients can do now to understand their legal options. It will review the most common forms of relief with a focus on family-based immigration and how recent federal court cases allow some TPS recipients in the 6th (Flores) and 9th (Ramirez) circuits to adjust status in the United States.
Webinar
This webinar will focus on how a conviction or gang affiliation could impact an applicant’s claim to asylum and future adjustment. We will focus on the particularly serious crime bar, convictions arising after a grant of asylum, and concerns about gang involvement.
Webinar
Thousands of people are victims of human trafficking in the United States each year. Immigrant victims who assist in the investigation or prosecution of their traffickers, may be eligible for a T nonimmigrant visa as well as the ability to apply for permanent residence after three years. Nevertheless, hundreds of T visas go unclaimed each year. Given the current backlog for U visas, identifying T visa eligible applicants is more critical than ever.
Webinar
Thousands of people are victims of human trafficking in the United States each year. Immigrant victims who assist in the investigation or prosecution of their traffickers, may be eligible for a T nonimmigrant visa as well as the ability to apply for permanent residence after three years. Nevertheless, hundreds of T visas go unclaimed each year. Given the current backlog for U visas, identifying T visa eligible applicants is more critical than ever.
Webinar
This webinar will lay out the basics of an SIJS case, with updates based on changing practices at USCIS and immigration courts, including the visa backlog. We will provide best practices in the changing landscape.