Jamaica Gleaner

When can I reapply for a visa?

- Dahlia Walker Huntington Dahlia A. Walker-Huntington, Esq is a Jamaican-American attorney who practises immigratio­n law in the United States; and family, criminal, internatio­nal and personal injury law in Florida. She is a mediator, arbitrator and special

Good day Mrs Huntington:

My visitor visa was cancelled by Border Patrol while I was attempting to catch a connecting flight from Texas to Chicago about two years ago. Border Patrol believed I was entering the USA for work purposes, and because of this, I am banned from entering the USA for five years. My guardian who raised me from childhood to adulthood is very ill with stage four cancer in the USA, and I want to go visit her before it’s too late.

Would I be able to reapply for a visitor visa even though the five years have not yet passed?

Your cooperatio­n would be greatly appreciate­d. V.V. Dear VV:

You did not indicate why Border Patrol came to the conclusion that you were travelling to the United States to work. Sometimes they come to that conclusion because the person spent several months in the United States on their previous visit on a B1/B2 visa, or they searched the person or their phone and found documents or messages indicating the stated intent.

Working without authorisat­ion as a nonimmigra­nt voids your non-immigrant visa, makes you removable, and bars you from future entry into the United States. While the Border Patrol officer may tell you that you are banned for five years, the reality is that you will still be deemed inadmissib­le when you apply for a new visa five years after your removal. You will not automatica­lly regain your visa.

If you choose to apply before the five years have expired, you may also have to apply for permission to reapply for admission to the United States – depending on which section of the Immigratio­n and Nationalit­y Act you were removed. This is a technicali­ty that, if not complied with, can lead to a permanent bar from the United States. In both cases, you would have to apply for a non-immigrant Waiver because the removal for unauthoris­ed working in the United States would also make you inadmissib­le to the United States.

It is important that you work with an immigratio­n lawyer in a case such as this because failure to comply with the necessary steps can lead to devastatin­g, permanent results. Notwithsta­nding the overwhelmi­ng emotional reason why you want to return to the United States, the consular officer will weigh the reason(s) why you are inadmissib­le to the United States and what if danger, if any, you might pose to the national security of the country against the travel reasons.

Your case is very instructiv­e to others that when you receive a non-immigrant US visa, it is to be treated cautiously as its revocation for whatever reason can lead to severe consequenc­es. A visa is a privilege and not a right and is subjective­ly granted by the consular officer.

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