USCIS Clarifies Language in Form I-751 Transfer Notices Sent to Petitioners
USCIS Update June 5, 2008
Current Notice May Be Interpreted as USCIS Granting
Approval for Petition to Remove Conditions on Residence
WASHINGTONU.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced today it will revise
language in transfer notices received by petitioners who filed a Petition to
Remove Conditions on Residence (Form
I-751). The current notice includes language that may
cause petitioners to believe their cases have been approved.
USCIS
announced last month
that it is revising filing instructions for Form I-751 to require filing at the
California or Vermont Service Centers. Until the form instructions are revised,
any petitions filed with the Nebraska and Texas Service Centers will be
transferred to California and Vermont, respectively. When USCIS enters data at
one service center and later transfers the case to another, a Transfer Notice is
sent to the petitioner advising him or her that the case has been transferred
for adjudication and that they will be notified of the final decision.
The current transfer
notice currently contains the following phrase: CRI89 approved removal of
conditions (I89). That statement means that the biometric portion of the case
has been successfully transferred; it does not, however, mean that the petition
itself was approved.
While USCIS is in the
process of changing the language in the transfer notice, a substantial number of
notices have already been mailed containing the potentially confusing statement.
Any petitioner who may have received such a notice should be aware of the
following:
-
At the time the I-751 was
transferred, USCIS had not yet adjudicated (approved or denied) the case;
-
USCIS transferred the case to
the Service Center listed on the notice for adjudication; and
-
If the petitioner has not
received additional information from the California or Vermont Service
Centers, USCIS has not yet adjudicated the case.
Petitioners who have
a specific question related to their I-751 petition should contact the National
Customer Service
Center at (800) 375-5283 for more information.
USCIS
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