U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is issuing new guidance that limits the age of foreign nationals’ photos that can be used to create immigration documents to no more than three years. This update enhances national security and prevents identity fraud.
A Lebanese professor at Brown University has seen her challenge to a five-year ban on reentering the United States dismissed as a Massachusetts federal judge ruled that her deportation leaves the court without any jurisdiction.
LOUISVILLE, Ky—U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers in Louisville seized two shipments from Hong Kong the night of Oct. 28. The shipments contained a total of 53 counterfeit watches. Had these goods been genuine, the two shipments would have…
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) proposes to amend its regulations governing biometrics use and collection. DHS proposes to require submission of biometrics by any individual, regardless of age, filing or associated with an immigration benefit request, other request, or collection of information, unless exempted; expand biometrics collection authority upon alien arrest; define "biometrics;" codify reuse requirements; codify and expand DNA testing, use and storage; establish an "extraordinary circumstances" standard to excuse a failure to appear at a biometric services appointment; modify how VAWA self-petitioners and T nonimmigrant status applicants demonstrate good moral character; and clarify biometrics collection purposes.
Immigration detainees who were transported to Kansas the morning after they launched a proposed class action over allegedly inhumane conditions at the government's Broadview, Illinois, holding facility should be promptly returned to the Northern District of Illinois, a Chicago federal judge said Friday.
In this installment of Wheeling & Appealing, November's appellate calendar features a Trump lawsuit against Hillary Clinton, New York City housing disputes, drug pricing battles, immigrant rights cases, and challenges to so-called patent troll laws.
After more than 12 hours of testimony, a federal judge appeared unconvinced by the government's position that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement had done nothing wrong to warrant preliminary injunctive relief in a proposed class action alleging the agency is conducting warrantless arrests without determining probable cause.
A Florida franchisee group is suing a developer in state court over a $12 million loan to build two Twin Peaks restaurants in an EB-5 visa program, alleging the developer defaulted on the note and then told the IRS that it converted the loan into equity interest.
The new $100,000 fee for H-1B visas and a proposed overhaul of the visa lottery could have severe repercussions on healthcare access for many Americans, with experts saying the changes could worsen existing shortages of medical workers by restricting the foreign labor pool.

