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  1. #1

    Join Date
    Jan 1970
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    241

    Landmark green card case lifts Framingham attorney

    http://www.boston.com/news/local/articl ... _attorney/

    Landmark green card case lifts Framingham attorney

    By Franco Ordonez, Globe Staff | March 3, 2005

    FRAMINGHAM -- Saher Macarius cannot walk far in the Boston Immigration Court these days without someone slapping him on the back or giving him a high five. That is because he fought the federal government and won what some believe was a major victory for immigrants.

    Macarius convinced a federal appeals court that immigrants who marry US citizens should be able to apply for legal permanent residency, even if the immigrants were in the process of fighting deportation when they got married.

    ''It's a big win," said Edward R. White, a Boston immigration lawyer. ''It really is. It's huge."

    Macarius, 52, is an Egyptian immigrant whose law office is a worn two-story converted house tucked behind a CVS and a tanning salon on Route 9 in Framingham.

    ''It has a David vs. Goliath aspect to it," said Richard Perlmutter, Macarius's former professor at Suffolk University Law School, who described Macarius as an idealist. ''You're doing work against a government institution that has almost unlimited resources, and he's running a little office out of Framingham."

    Anti-immigration activists charged that the decision will only encourage more immigrants to enter into bogus marriages in order to stay in the country.

    But Macarius's clients credit him with saving their lives.

    ''Thank God, I found him," said Wissam Succar, who said he was a target of Muslim fundamentalists in Lebanon.

    Margo Lichaa, a US citizen, said her husband, Rabih, came within seven days of being sent back to his native Lebanon, where his life would be in danger, but now has a chance to apply for a green card.

    ''There were many times that I was giving up hope," she said. ''Saher saved us."

    Macarius said he has been fielding dozens of calls offering congratulations and seeking advice. For weeks after the decision, Macarius said he could not walk through the courthouse without people congratulating him.

    ''It took me a while to land back down on earth," Macarius said.

    Immigrants who marry a US citizen can apply for the green card that is given to legal permanent residents. But in 1997, the federal government issued regulations that immigrants who get married to a US citizen while seeking asylum or fighting deportation cannot apply for a green card.

    Macarius challenged the regulations. In January, he won his case in the US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in Boston.

    Macarius came to the United States in 1984. He was 31, married, and had worked for years as a police officer in Egypt but came searching for a better life. He enrolled in law school six years later, taking on a full course load while working full time as a security guard for a medical center.

    The court decision only applies to Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Puerto Rico, but immigration specialists expect the case will be cited by lawyers nationwide as they attempt to overturn the regulations in their areas.

    Macarius said he could not have done it alone. He got a lot of help, he said, from groups such as the American Immigration Law Foundation, the Massachusetts Law Reform Institute, and the American Immigration Lawyers Association.

    Kerry E. Doyle, Massachusetts chairwoman of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, said immigration activists hope the government will rethink the regulations and adjust them to agree with the First Circuit decision.

    She does not expect the government to appeal, but critics of the decision think the government should consider that possibility.

    The Massachusetts Coalition for Immigration Reform, a group that seeks to restrict immigration, believes the decision will encourage more immigrants to enter into fake marriages.

    ''It was a bad decision," said Robert Casimiro, executive director of the group, ''It's further undermining the system. It opens the door up for people who don't have legitimate reasons for asylum."

    Some lawyers believe the Succar case may be used to test other executive branch regulations, such as the implementation of the USA Patriot Act.


    This is absolutely nuts! What is wrong with Massachusetts? This is the second news item I've read today about them trying to change the immigration laws.

    This is going to open up a can of worms:

    The court decision only applies to Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Puerto Rico, but immigration specialists expect the case will be cited by lawyers nationwide as they attempt to overturn the regulations in their areas.

  2. #2

    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Posts
    241

    Landmark green card case lifts Framingham attorney

    http://www.boston.com/news/local/articl ... _attorney/

    Landmark green card case lifts Framingham attorney

    By Franco Ordonez, Globe Staff | March 3, 2005

    FRAMINGHAM -- Saher Macarius cannot walk far in the Boston Immigration Court these days without someone slapping him on the back or giving him a high five. That is because he fought the federal government and won what some believe was a major victory for immigrants.

    Macarius convinced a federal appeals court that immigrants who marry US citizens should be able to apply for legal permanent residency, even if the immigrants were in the process of fighting deportation when they got married.

    ''It's a big win," said Edward R. White, a Boston immigration lawyer. ''It really is. It's huge."

    Macarius, 52, is an Egyptian immigrant whose law office is a worn two-story converted house tucked behind a CVS and a tanning salon on Route 9 in Framingham.

    ''It has a David vs. Goliath aspect to it," said Richard Perlmutter, Macarius's former professor at Suffolk University Law School, who described Macarius as an idealist. ''You're doing work against a government institution that has almost unlimited resources, and he's running a little office out of Framingham."

    Anti-immigration activists charged that the decision will only encourage more immigrants to enter into bogus marriages in order to stay in the country.

    But Macarius's clients credit him with saving their lives.

    ''Thank God, I found him," said Wissam Succar, who said he was a target of Muslim fundamentalists in Lebanon.

    Margo Lichaa, a US citizen, said her husband, Rabih, came within seven days of being sent back to his native Lebanon, where his life would be in danger, but now has a chance to apply for a green card.

    ''There were many times that I was giving up hope," she said. ''Saher saved us."

    Macarius said he has been fielding dozens of calls offering congratulations and seeking advice. For weeks after the decision, Macarius said he could not walk through the courthouse without people congratulating him.

    ''It took me a while to land back down on earth," Macarius said.

    Immigrants who marry a US citizen can apply for the green card that is given to legal permanent residents. But in 1997, the federal government issued regulations that immigrants who get married to a US citizen while seeking asylum or fighting deportation cannot apply for a green card.

    Macarius challenged the regulations. In January, he won his case in the US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in Boston.

    Macarius came to the United States in 1984. He was 31, married, and had worked for years as a police officer in Egypt but came searching for a better life. He enrolled in law school six years later, taking on a full course load while working full time as a security guard for a medical center.

    The court decision only applies to Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Puerto Rico, but immigration specialists expect the case will be cited by lawyers nationwide as they attempt to overturn the regulations in their areas.

    Macarius said he could not have done it alone. He got a lot of help, he said, from groups such as the American Immigration Law Foundation, the Massachusetts Law Reform Institute, and the American Immigration Lawyers Association.

    Kerry E. Doyle, Massachusetts chairwoman of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, said immigration activists hope the government will rethink the regulations and adjust them to agree with the First Circuit decision.

    She does not expect the government to appeal, but critics of the decision think the government should consider that possibility.

    The Massachusetts Coalition for Immigration Reform, a group that seeks to restrict immigration, believes the decision will encourage more immigrants to enter into fake marriages.

    ''It was a bad decision," said Robert Casimiro, executive director of the group, ''It's further undermining the system. It opens the door up for people who don't have legitimate reasons for asylum."

    Some lawyers believe the Succar case may be used to test other executive branch regulations, such as the implementation of the USA Patriot Act.


    This is absolutely nuts! What is wrong with Massachusetts? This is the second news item I've read today about them trying to change the immigration laws.

    This is going to open up a can of worms:

    The court decision only applies to Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Puerto Rico, but immigration specialists expect the case will be cited by lawyers nationwide as they attempt to overturn the regulations in their areas.

  3. #3
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Posts
    130
    I wonder how long the marriage will last.

    $$$$$ $$$$$$$

  4. #4
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Posts
    130
    I wonder how long the marriage will last.

    $$$$$ $$$$$$$

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