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Filed: FB-4 Visa Country: Philippines
Timeline

My wife was petition by her sister who was USC, but my wife died last year 2010. My sister in law told me that she can transfer her petition for my family. We'er on F4 category me and my four kids are approved last Aug. 2010 and my priority date is Sept 1991. The NVC sent me a agent choice of address and i send it back to NVC then the following month the NVC sent me individual fee bill invoice. After paying tne invoice, what is next? The NVC can accommodate us for interview? how long it takes? Please advice....thanks in advance

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Filed: Timeline

My wife was petition by her sister who was USC, but my wife died last year 2010. My sister in law told me that she can transfer her petition for my family. We'er on F4 category me and my four kids are approved last Aug. 2010 and my priority date is Sept 1991. The NVC sent me a agent choice of address and i send it back to NVC then the following month the NVC sent me individual fee bill invoice. After paying tne invoice, what is next? The NVC can accommodate us for interview? how long it takes? Please advice....thanks in advance

The petition is dead. Once the principal beneficiary dies, the petition is automatically revoked.

Your sister-in-law cannot petition for you or her nephews and nieces.

The NVC does not know that your wife is dead because your family never informed them. The NVC is processing the case based on the wrong assumption that your wife is alive. The fees you paid will be wasted. You will not get visas and you will not get refunds.

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Filed: Timeline

http://georgetown.usembassy.gov/guyana/ac_10192006.html

Q: What happens if the beneficiary of an immigrant visa dies?

In the case of the death of the principal applicant prior to admission to the U.S., the petition is no longer valid. This means that the consular officer will not be able to issue a visa to any of the derivatives of the petition and will be required to return the petition to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). If the principal applicant has already immigrated to the US and is a legal permanent resident (LPR) when the petitioner dies, the derivative applicants (usually the children of the principal applicant) are generally still eligible to apply for an immigrant visa.

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  • 7 months later...
Filed: FB-4 Visa Country: Philippines
Timeline

http://georgetown.usembassy.gov/guyana/ac_10192006.html

Q: What happens if the beneficiary of an immigrant visa dies?

In the case of the death of the principal applicant prior to admission to the U.S., the petition is no longer valid. This means that the consular officer will not be able to issue a visa to any of the derivatives of the petition and will be required to return the petition to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). If the principal applicant has already immigrated to the US and is a legal permanent resident (LPR) when the petitioner dies, the derivative applicants (usually the children of the principal applicant) are generally still eligible to apply for an immigrant visa.

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services

Office of the Director (MS 2000)

Washington, DC 20529-2000

December 16, 2010 PM-602-0017

Policy Memorandum

SUBJECT: Approval of Petitions and Applications after the Death of the Qualifying Relative under New Section 204(l) of the Immigration and Nationality Act

Revisions to Adjudicator’s Field Manual (AFM): New Chapter 10.21 and an Amendment to Chapter 21.2(h)(1)© (AFM Update AD-10-51)

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Filed: FB-4 Visa Country: India
Timeline

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services

Office of the Director (MS 2000)

Washington, DC 20529-2000

December 16, 2010 PM-602-0017

Policy Memorandum

SUBJECT: Approval of Petitions and Applications after the Death of the Qualifying Relative under New Section 204(l) of the Immigration and Nationality Act

Revisions to Adjudicator's Field Manual (AFM): New Chapter 10.21 and an Amendment to Chapter 21.2(h)(1)© (AFM Update AD-10-51)

Lot of other members have tried in such cases and their best advice was to retain a Good Lawyer in such petitions..:yes:

Good Luck...:thumbs:

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Filed: Country: Vietnam (no flag)
Timeline

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services

Office of the Director (MS 2000)

Washington, DC 20529-2000

December 16, 2010 PM-602-0017

Policy Memorandum

SUBJECT: Approval of Petitions and Applications after the Death of the Qualifying Relative under New Section 204(l) of the Immigration and Nationality Act

Revisions to Adjudicator’s Field Manual (AFM): New Chapter 10.21 and an Amendment to Chapter 21.2(h)(1)© (AFM Update AD-10-51)

Lot of other members have tried in such cases and their best advice was to retain a Good Lawyer in such petitions..:yes:

Good Luck...:thumbs:

The revision to the Field Manual deals with what happens when the PETITIONER dies after an I-130 is approved but before visas are issued.

The death of the petitioner or the beneficiary automatically revokes a case. Humanitarian reinstatement is possible only in cases where the PETITIONER dies after the I-130 was approved. Humanitarian reinstatement does not apply when a beneficiary dies.

A good lawyer will turn down the case because there is no way he/she can help. The case is dead when the beneficiary dies.

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  • 1 month later...
Filed: FB-4 Visa Country: Philippines
Timeline

The revision to the Field Manual deals with what happens when the PETITIONER dies after an I-130 is approved but before visas are issued.

The death of the petitioner or the beneficiary automatically revokes a case. Humanitarian reinstatement is possible only in cases where the PETITIONER dies after the I-130 was approved. Humanitarian reinstatement does not apply when a beneficiary dies.

A good lawyer will turn down the case because there is no way he/she can help. The case is dead when the beneficiary dies.

Obama signs law cancelling automatic revocation of petitions upon petitioner’s death

IMMIGRATION SOLUTIONS

By ROBERT L. REEVES

October 31, 2009, 12:54pm

On October 29, President Obama passed into law Congress’ landmark immigration bill that ends the automatic revocation of a visa petition when the petitioner dies. This will provide significant relief to immigrants and their families who have waited for their priority dates to become current only to have the petition revoked upon the death of the petitioner. The new law helps many surviving family members residing in the United States.

The demand for immigrant visa numbers for family-based and employment-based sponsorship far exceeds the supply. This has resulted in massive backlogs with immigrants waiting years and even decades for their priority date (their place in line) to become available. Many petitions simply do not survive the protracted waiting period. The death of a petitioner or principal beneficiary results in an automatic revocation of the immigrant visa petition. Surviving family members were left with no means to obtain immigrant status based on that petition. In limited circumstances, the Immigration Service will reinstate a family-based petition for humanitarian purposes. Humanitarian reinstatement was discussed in one of our previous articles.

Specifically, under this new law, six groups of surviving family members, who were in the US when the petitioner or principal beneficiary died, and continue to reside in the US, may adjust status to permanent residents when their priority date is reached. The first group allows the spouse of a US citizen or the unmarried child of a US citizen under the age of 21 to continue processing even if the US citizen petitioner dies while the immigrant visa petition is either in process with the immigration service or has been approved. Before this law, if the US citizen died before the petition was approved or permanent resident status was granted, the spouse or child would be unable to obtain permanent resident status.

The second group covers the family preference categories who have approved or pending petitions. These include the spouse and unmarried children of permanent residents, the unmarried children over the age of 21 of US citizens, married children of US citizens, the brothers and sisters of US citizens, and the derivative children of this group. If a US citizen petitioned his sister in the Philippines, it would take approximately 22 years for a visa number to become available. If the US citizen died 15 years after filing, and before the visa number become available, his sister, her husband and their children would no longer be able to immigrate to the US. The new law, however, allows her and her family to immigrate to the US as long as they were residing in the US when the US citizen died and continued to reside in the US when their visa number became available.

The third group covers the derivative beneficiaries of pending or approved employment-based immigrant visa petitions. These are the spouse and unmarried children under 21 of someone sponsored under an employment-based category. For example, an immigrant was petitioned by her employer as an accountant. She and her family are residing in the US. Her immigrant visa petition is either approved or in process and she and her family are waiting for her priority date to be reached. Before her priority date is reached, or the USCIS can approve an application for adjustment of status, the accountant unfortunately dies. Prior to the new law, her family would not be able to continue the immigrant process. This scenario is unfortunately all too common. To add insult to the injury of losing a loved one, under the prior immigration law, the family would have no means of continuing the immigrant process. They would be required to burry a loved one and uproot their lives from the US. Under the new law, the family may continue processing for permanent resident status even if the principal beneficiary passes away. This law provides much comfort to those who have brought their families to the US and are dependent on the employment immigrant visa to provide immigrant status for the family. If they pass, their families will continue to be provided for in the immigrant process.

The fourth and fifth group covers spouse and children of asylees seeking a derivative asylum application and the beneficiary’s of approved refugee/asylee relative petitions. They too may continue processing if the principal beneficiary or petitioning relative passes away while they are in process. The final group covers the spouse and children of “T” and “U” visa holders who may continue processing even if the principal beneficiary passes.

Unfortunately the new law does not apply to surviving family members residing outside of the US. But, Congress has recognized that families are being disrupted by the current immigration law and has provided some relief. The President’s passing of the law grants much needed help to many immigrant families.

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