Request For Evidence

A Request For Evidence (RFE), is a request issued by the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services to petitioners for residency, citizenship, family visas, and employment visas. Examples of petitions for which a RFE may be issued are Form I-129 (alien worker authorization), Form I-140 (immigrant worker authorization), and Form I-130 (family visas).[1][2][3]

Situations where it is used

The RFE is intended for use in cases where the adjudicator (the person evaluating the petition) believes that there is not enough to approve the petition, but also believes that the petition may be redeemable, and that there is no clear factual or statutory basis for denial.[2]

The RFE, when used, should be as clear as possible about what types of additional evidence are needed to fill in the gap, and what inconsistencies or problems have been found in the evidence submitted so far. It is not intended for use for the adjudicator's reassurance in cases where there is enough evidence to approve the petition.[1]

The RFE is sent to, and the response must be sent by, the petitioner (or the attorney representing the petitioner, in cases where the petition is filed through an attorney) rather than the beneficiary.

Related communications

Differences with NOID

The following are some key differences between the RFE and the Notice of Intent to Deny (NOID):[3][1][2]

Request for clarification

In cases where the USCIS simply needs answers to a few specific questions (such as a complete translation), it simply issues a Request for Clarification instead of a RFE.[1]

Tips for avoiding RFEs

Submitting clear and complete documentation in the petition itself can minimize the need for RFEs. The USCIS website offers the following tips to avoid RFEs:[4]

Types of evidence requested

RFEs typically request one or more of the following types of evidence:

Response protocol

The time within which the response to a RFE must be sent is indicated on the RFE. It generally varies between 30 and 90 days. If no response is received within the time indicated on the RFE, the USCIS will process the application without considering the additional evidence, which in most cases means a denial (because petitions where there was enough evidence to accept should not have RFEs in the first place).[3]

The petitioner has only one chance to respond to a RFE. There are four possible responses:[3]

When responding to a RFE, the petitioner may attach additional pieces of evidence over and above those explicitly requested in the RFE.

Relation with processing timeline

The expected processing time for petitions is generally defined as the time till an approval, denial, RFE, or NOID is issued. Therefore, the time taken while waiting for a response from the petitioner is not counted as part of the processing time. After the petitioner responds, the expected additional processing time is comparable with the processing time for a complete first application.

For petitions that request the Premium Processing Service, the expected processing time to a first response (approval, denial, RFE, or NOID) is 15 days, and the time after receiving a response to the RFE is another 15 days.[5]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 17, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.