The Violence Against Women Act Provides a Path to Citizenship for Abused Foreign Spouses

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Immigrant communities are often overlooked and marginalized by society. The most vulnerable amongst them are the abused spouses of citizens or residents.

Imagine you are in a new country where you do not have a support system, you do not know your rights and you do not know where to go for help. Your spouse, who is supposed to be your number one partner in life, is telling you that you must do certain things to stay in their good graces, otherwise you will be subject to physical or mental abuse, threats that you’re going to be deported or that they won’t sponsor your children to join you as they promised and other demeaning and painful acts.

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This occurs all over the United States on a daily basis and no immigration attorney is a stranger to it.

Oftentimes, immigrants are afraid (particularly based upon their experiences in their home countries) to report abuse to any authorities. They often, unfortunately, suffer in silence until they are empowered to leave the abuser and set forth on their own path to legal status without them. Their spouses tell them that they’re here illegally and that they’ll call Immigration and Customs Enforcement or that they have no rights or other demeaning and usually untrue statements to gain control over them.

Abuse can be 100% emotional.

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The Violence Against Women Act

Fortunately, there is a path forward without the abuser. The Violence Against Women Act or VAWA provides the foreign spouse (as well as their dependent children) with the means to legalize their status by proving the essential elements of a spousal abuse case. The law applies equally to men and women despite the act’s title.

The Requirements

  1. Marriage to U.S. Citizen or Lawful Permanent Resident: The abused must show that they legally married a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident. They can be divorced if a petition as an abused spouse is made within two years following the divorce decree.
  2. Good Faith Relationship: Next, the petitioner must show that there was a good faith relationship by providing evidence of cohabitation such as joint accounts, taxes, insurance or other proof.
  3. Good Moral Character. The immigrant must also prove that he or she is a person of good moral character by including police clearances or by showing that convictions or arrests were connected to the abuse that they suffered. For example, if an immigrant was arrested for fighting back against her husband’s physical abuse, this would not impact a finding that she has good moral character.

While all of the above elements are required, the essential element for a successful case is proving the abuse. This can range from police reports, medical records, photos, witness accounts or even solely the abused’s statement detailing what he/she has been through. Extreme cruelty can be proven by the immigrant by showing a pattern of threats or abusive acts by their spouse.

As with any legal case, the devil is in the details. An immigrant can win his or her case with a very detailed account of what they have been through, how it made them feel, how they changed their behavior as a result of the abuse, how their life was restricted, how they coped and various other detailed descriptions of their plight.

Application for Green Card

The petition can be submitted simultaneously with an application to adjust status (green card) so that interim benefits such as permission to work and travel are processed in the interim. If the underlying VAWA case is approved, then the green card will be processed and if approvable, issued.

Certain general bars to immigration are forgiven in this category such as entering the U.S. without inspection, working without permission, overstaying time permitted as a non-immigrant and proving that you will not become a public charge. Immigrants need not fear an abusive spouse as they have significant rights that they may not have known about.

William Gerstein

William Gerstein, a partner in Gerstein and Gerstein Immigration Attorneys, is a member of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, certified as an expert in immigration and nationality law by the Florida Bar, and has been practicing US immigration law since 1995. Gerstein earned his Bachelor’s degree in International Relations with minors in Spanish and Italian from Tulane University in 1992 and then went on to complete his law degree at St. Thomas University in 1995. Gerstein can be contacted by email at [email protected]

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