| Right to Counsel |
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| Government's Denial of Hearing |
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| Expanding Judicial Review |
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| Review of Detention |
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| Right to Present Evidence |
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| Right to Rational Decision Making |
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| Protection From Abusive Questioning by Judge |
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| Limiting Interpretation of Aggravated Felony Definition |
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| Reducing the Effects of Past Criminal Activity |
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| Indefinite and Arbitrary Detention |
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| Special Registration Program and Implementation of USA PATRIOT Act |
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| Due Process for Noncitizens Seeking to Reenter US |
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| Unreasonable Delays Due to FBI Background Checks |
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| Full Litigation Docket List |
Government's Denial of Hearing | Unreasonable Delays Due to FBI Background Checks |
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| Tuesday, 08 July 2008 | |
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Applicants to the naturalization process must pass two background checks before obtaining citizenship- a fingerprint check that searches government databases for past criminal records, and a name check that compares an applicant’s names to those on the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Universal Index of investigations. Delays at the FBI can cause applicants to wait anywhere from a few months to two years before they pass their background checks. The National Immigrant Justice Center has supported litigation that challenges these unreasonable delays.
Walji v. Gonzales The Fifth Circuit found that permanent residents who have waited more than 120 days since their citizenship interview have a right to federal court review over the reasons for the delay.
Outside Resources:
The American Immigration Law Foundation:
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