Contributed by Koby Polaski, Senior Attorney
Included in Obama’s sweeping changes to our nation’s
immigration system are two important provisions that apply to U and T visas.
The U visa is available for certain crime victims in the United States, and the
T visa is available to victims of human trafficking.
First, President Obama expanded the Department of Labor’s (DOL) U
visa certification protocol to include three additional qualifying criminal
activities. Specifically, the DOL will begin certifying U visa requests that
include: extortion; fraud in foreign labor contracting; and forced labor.
Additionally, the DOL will certify applications for trafficking victims seeking
T visas when the Wage and Hour Division detects human trafficking activity in
the course of its workplace investigations. The DOL will publish a Federal
Register notice delegating authority to issue T visa certifications and will
amend procedures and protocol to reflect these changes.
Obama’s changes also call for the establishment of an
interagency working group addressing consistent enforcement of federal labor,
employment, and labor laws, which will seek to ensure that federal enforcement
authorities are not used to undermine worker protections. The changes also call
for the implementation of strategies to strengthening workers for asserting
workplace claims.
Finally, under a new prosecutorial discretion memo released
last week, domestic violence is now classified as a significant misdemeanor.
The memo contains a footnote instructing that in determining whether a crime is
a significant misdemeanor, careful consideration should be taken in cases where
the convicted individual was the victim of domestic violence. This indicates
sensitivity to the fact that survivors of domestic violence are often arrested
along with the perpetrator. Hopefully, under this guidance, ICE will not only
help “perfect” crime victims.
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