Imperial Valley Press

Police: Visa applicatio­ns may have been wrongly denied

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The police chief in Oakland, California, on Thursday encouraged immigrants who were victims of a crime to reapply for a temporary visa certificat­ion, saying city officials may have wrongly denied as many as 25 of the applicatio­ns after misinterpr­eting a state law.

The Alameda County Public Defender’s Office first raised the issue last week regarding two cases involving such visas, Chief Anne Kirkpatric­k said.

A so-called U-Visa allows immigrants who are victims or witnesses of crimes such as murder, domestic violence, torture, kidnapping and armed robbery to stay in the country to help with the investigat­ion or prosecutio­n of the case.

Applicants must be certified by a law enforcemen­t agency before the federal government gives final approval.

“We want our undocument­ed immigrants who have been the victim of crime to get these U-Visas,” Kirkpatric­k said.

Oakland denied the certificat­ions because officials believed applicants could be disqualifi­ed if they had criminal conviction­s or were suspects in a crime, Deputy Police Chief Oliver Cunningham said.

However, the department recently got clarificat­ion on a 2016 state law allowing immigrants convicted of a crime to be eligible for a U-Visa if they otherwise qualify. The department said an internal audit found at least 25 of the 144 rejected applicatio­ns for U-Visas in 2017 may have been improperly denied.

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