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Filed: Timeline
Posted

Hi,

My girlfriend has a visa expired for about 7 years; she come here with working visa as caregiver and overstayed.

She ignored twice a letter from jury to appear in jury. She listened to the worng advice and ignored two letters.

:

Now she received a letter from Queens Ny Court "juror subpoena failure to respond"; the letter has instructions to

appear in Court and has questions on it such has:

- are you a US citizen?

- do you have a visa/green card?

now she is concerened what happens if she goes to court: will she be asked her immigration status?

I really appreciate your help and advice.

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Canada
Timeline
Posted

Your girlfriend has two separate issues here: her status is in limbo/illegal, and she has been asked to sit on a jury.

One: From the description you've given, your girlfriend has no legal status in the US. She is not a green card holder, is she? If that's the case, your first stop needs to be a competent immigration lawyer who can start disentangling her status. This is actually the wrong forum; I assume she needs to establish her permanent residency first.

Two: Only US citizens can sit on a jury. If she is not a USC, then she cannot participate in the process and attempting to do so is a very good way to raise red flags with USCIS. Under no circumstances should she be a juror, though she will probably have to explain her current status. I assume they will.

26 January 2005 - Entered US as visitor from Canada.
16 May 2005 - Assembled health package, W2s.
27 June 2005 - Sent package off to Chicago lockbox.
28 June 2005 - Package received at Chicago lockbox.
11 July 2005 - RFE: cheques inappropriately placed.
18 July 2005 - NOA 1: I-485, I-131, I-765 received!
19 July 2005 - NOA 1: I-130 received!
24 August 2005 - Biometrics appointment (Naperville, IL).
25 August 2005 - AOS touched.
29 August 2005 - AP, EAD, I-485 touched.
15 September 2005 - AP and EAD approved!
03 February 2006 - SSN arrives (150 days later)
27 February 2006 - NOA 2: Interview for 27 April!!
27 April 2006 - AOS Interview, approved after 10 minutes!
19 May 2006 - 2 year conditional green card.
01 May 2008 - 10 year green card arrives.
09 December 2012 - Assembled N-400 package.
15 January 2013 - Sent package off to Phoenix.
28 January 2013 - RFE: signature missing.
06 February 2013 - NOA 1: N-400 received!
27 February 2013 - Biometrics appointment (Detroit, MI).
01 April 2013 - NOA 2: Interview assigned.

15 May 2013 - Naturalization Interview, approved after 15 minutes.

10 June 2013 - Naturalized.

Filed: Timeline
Posted

Your girlfriend has two separate issues here: her status is in limbo/illegal, and she has been asked to sit on a jury.

One: From the description you've given, your girlfriend has no legal status in the US. She is not a green card holder, is she? If that's the case, your first stop needs to be a competent immigration lawyer who can start disentangling her status. This is actually the wrong forum; I assume she needs to establish her permanent residency first.

Two: Only US citizens can sit on a jury. If she is not a USC, then she cannot participate in the process and attempting to do so is a very good way to raise red flags with USCIS. Under no circumstances should she be a juror, though she will probably have to explain her current status. I assume they will.

hi autumnal,

she dont have a green card yet. why would they send a letter to a non us?? if she explains her status, what is likely to happen?

this is a jury matter not an immigration matter correct?

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Brazil
Timeline
Posted (edited)

The sometimes send letters to non-US citizens because they get their information from the DMV database and assume that everyone with a DL is US citizen. She should have sent back both jury summons with the box marked "I am not a US Citizen." I agree that she will have a problem when she appears in court and is asked to show her immigration documentation. She is already 7 years in overstay (according to your post). She definitely needs a lawyer. Good luck!

Edited by menina
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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Canada
Timeline
Posted

Gigant, your girlfriend has both court and immigration matters. She does not have a green card, therefore she cannot serve on a jury and could be deported. It may not be in her best interests to ignore the jury summons because I think that might be grounds for another notice, and the court can figure out quite quickly she is not a citizen/visa-holder.

Talking to a lawyer is the best route for her. She needs to have representation and advice from a qualified legal expert. They can offer direction on how to proceed.

26 January 2005 - Entered US as visitor from Canada.
16 May 2005 - Assembled health package, W2s.
27 June 2005 - Sent package off to Chicago lockbox.
28 June 2005 - Package received at Chicago lockbox.
11 July 2005 - RFE: cheques inappropriately placed.
18 July 2005 - NOA 1: I-485, I-131, I-765 received!
19 July 2005 - NOA 1: I-130 received!
24 August 2005 - Biometrics appointment (Naperville, IL).
25 August 2005 - AOS touched.
29 August 2005 - AP, EAD, I-485 touched.
15 September 2005 - AP and EAD approved!
03 February 2006 - SSN arrives (150 days later)
27 February 2006 - NOA 2: Interview for 27 April!!
27 April 2006 - AOS Interview, approved after 10 minutes!
19 May 2006 - 2 year conditional green card.
01 May 2008 - 10 year green card arrives.
09 December 2012 - Assembled N-400 package.
15 January 2013 - Sent package off to Phoenix.
28 January 2013 - RFE: signature missing.
06 February 2013 - NOA 1: N-400 received!
27 February 2013 - Biometrics appointment (Detroit, MI).
01 April 2013 - NOA 2: Interview assigned.

15 May 2013 - Naturalization Interview, approved after 15 minutes.

10 June 2013 - Naturalized.

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: England
Timeline
Posted

Anyone can be called for jury duty, not just US citizens. If you do get called and you're not a US citizen you need to inform the court that do not qualify for jury duty. What you can't do is ignore the summons, which your girlfriend appears to have done.

Having said that I have no idea what will happen to her regarding her immgration status at her court hearing. Does she have a lawyer?

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Colombia
Timeline
Posted

From what you say, she has been caught. typical thing to do is to assume a new alias, get forged papers and move far away. If she became pregnant and had a baby here that is a US citizen by birth, would let her stay. In Wisconsin, could get a job working for a corporation farm, as long as they have 3 or less non-documented persons working, they don't bother them. But they do work their cans off at very low pay.

But if single and say caught in a traffic violation, they do get deported. If she came here on a work visa, how come she didn't renew it? Now, this is all water under the bridge. Not sure what an attorney can do, she already broke the law. Can work around that if she was super rich, but doubt that is the case. Around here, they sit in a county jail ofr two three months, then two big guys come and excort them out of the country, and all of their personal posessions are taken away, except for the shirt on you back.

Filed: Country: Monaco
Timeline
Posted (edited)

Hi,

My girlfriend has a visa expired for about 7 years; she come here with working visa as caregiver and overstayed.

She ignored twice a letter from jury to appear in jury. She listened to the worng advice and ignored two letters.

:

Now she received a letter from Queens Ny Court "juror subpoena failure to respond"; the letter has instructions to

appear in Court and has questions on it such has:

- are you a US citizen?

- do you have a visa/green card?

now she is concerened what happens if she goes to court: will she be asked her immigration status?

I really appreciate your help and advice.

She will be asked her immigration status, and she can tell them that she does not qualify for jury duty for she is not a US citizen. She may be questioned about her status as well, although civil courts have no jurisdictin over immigration. Hopefully she lives in a state that understands how the US Constitution works, and not in Arizona...

Edited by Gegel

200px-FSM_Logo.svg.png


www.ffrf.org




Filed: Timeline
Posted

She will be asked her immigration status, and she can tell them that she does not qualify for jury duty for she is not a US citizen. She may be questioned about her status as well, although civil courts have no jurisdictin over immigration. Hopefully she lives in a state that understands how the US Constitution works, and not in Arizona...

this is inhuman!!! she has been working here and paid taxes for a decade. does she deserves to be deported because of a jury duty mistake?

dont make me scream!

what can i do to help her?

Filed: Timeline
Posted

this is inhuman!!! she has been working here and paid taxes for a decade. does she deserves to be deported because of a jury duty mistake?

Inhuman?

Excuse me, but she came to the US on a visa and didn't leave when she was supposed to do.

She stayed illegaly. She broke the law.

I guess that's enough to be deported.

Filed: Timeline
Posted

Inhuman?

Excuse me, but she came to the US on a visa and didn't leave when she was supposed to do.

She stayed illegaly. She broke the law.

I guess that's enough to be deported.

no that is not enough.

there are millions of illegal immigrants that did not even have a visa when they entered and never paid a dime in

taxes.

She had a visa when she entered. deportation must be enforced by an immigration judge, not a civil court.

but whatever...thank you for your feedback! i just wanted to get a feeling on how nad was the situation.

a Counseler today said, the jury court could not care less of her immigration status and will not bother.

i hope she will be fine

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Wales
Timeline
Posted

She is certainly deportable, but them so are many many others.

“If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat. If you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every battle.”

 
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