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Updates

Navigating Evolving U.S. Immigration Landscape: Your Rights and Resources

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Dear TLAW Readers: 

We understand that the current climate surrounding immigration is marked by uncertainty and anxiety. The recent implementation of new regulations and policy shifts has raised significant concerns for both undocumented individuals and lawful permanent residents. At Tancinco Law, we recognize the profound impact these changes have on your lives and are committed to providing you with clear, accurate, and empathetic guidance.

Quarterly Updates from Atty Lou Tancinco

This month’s newsletter addresses a critical issue: your rights during secondary inspection by Customs and Border Protection (CBP) at airports. We’ve observed a concerning trend of increased detentions and even expedited removals, leaving many travelers, including green card holders, apprehensive about international travel. We offer detailed information to help you understand your rights and navigate these challenging situations. We recognize the difficult decision many are facing regarding travel and encourage you to carefully weigh the risks and benefits.

Furthermore, we’ve included comprehensive summaries of the recent Registration Act and Real ID Act regulations. These new rules necessitate careful consideration and proactive steps to ensure compliance. We strongly advise you to consult with an experienced immigration attorney before taking any action that could potentially affect your immigration status or lead to detention.

Amidst these challenges, we also want to acknowledge the ongoing availability of family and employment-based visa petitions. While priority dates may advance slowly, we remain optimistic about the eventual processing of these applications. Patience and persistence are key during this time.

In these uncertain times, vigilance and informed decision-making are paramount. We at Tancinco Law are dedicated to providing you with the support and expertise you need to protect your rights and navigate the complexities of immigration law. We prioritize confidentiality and are committed to safeguarding your personal information.

We deeply value your trust and continued support. Please do not hesitate to reach out to us with any questions or concerns.

Sincerely,

Atty. Lou

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Updates

Leaving our hearts in San Francisco after 30 years

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I had the bragging right of doing business in the most beautiful city in America for 30 years. Until this year, when I decided not to renew our lease. This morning, as I read the news that more big tech companies were leaving their San Francisco offices, it validated what I already knew, that this city we were proud of has been transformed from a bustling tourist town to an unsafe place where crime and the homeless population have significantly increased. To be specific, I can cite the area where our office is located, right above the BART Powell Station, on 5th and Market. This is also where the Tourist Information Center is located.

On Christmas Day, I received holiday text greetings from close friends who also shared a news release from the UK DailyMail.com describing the taxpayer-funded San Francisco Christmas Market (located right were our office used to be on Hallidie Plaza) as a “dystopian hellhole after being besieged by city’s famed druggies.” My friends knew that I had been in that part of the City for three decades, so when I told them we had moved the office to Burlingame (20 minutes from the City), they all said “good decision.”

In 1992, as new immigrants with a very young family, my husband and I took a leap of faith and opened our own law firm. We had to choose the best location, and at the time, what could be better than being near the Powell station, the cable car turn- around, The Emporium, San Francisco Shopping Center and Union Square. I told my husband as we were starting, perhaps we would have walk-in clients or entice clients to visit us in the best part of the City, which is accessible to all tourist spots and the best shopping malls. True enough, we were able to slowly build our client base as the office location was convenient and attractive to those who wanted to travel to the City.

Our office overlooked Market Street from Hallidie Plaza, and our clients sometimes took pictures as if the office was also a tourist spot. The view from my office was like a wide TV screen showing the energetic mood of people walking around Market and Powell either as tourists, residents or workers. I found joy in the appreciative comments about our office location. Clients would hang out in the malls or just walk around Union Square while waiting for their appointed time to consult us. During office breaks, we would go down to the mall for coffee or a brief lunch with friends who also worked in the City. The restaurants near Hallidie Plaza were favorite hangout spots after work hours, and we did not mind what time we left the City. We knew that where we parked our cars was safe. It was a perfect location. In fact, there was even a time when chess boards were laid down on a sidewalk for anyone who wanted to play. I can still vividly recall onteresting scenes from the City.

Fast forward to the pandemic days. March 2020. With COVID-19 outbreak, we strongly suggested that the law firm operations in its physical location be suspended. To sustain our operations, we converted to a virtual law practice. In 2021, when businesses began to open in the City, we had to make a difficult decision again. Would we resume operation in the City? It was during this time that hate crimes and incidents against Asians increased. We were to beware of the virus and hate crime perpetrators as well. With homeless camps and crime rates growing, we decided not to renew our lease.

We moved our physical office in Burlingame CA. This time my view is no longer the once bustling city, but the San Francisco Bay. I now can see planes landing and taking off from the San Francisco airport. It is calming and the beginning of a new era for the law firm.

Whether the decision to move our law firm out of San Francisco was good or bad, it was honestly a difficult one to make. I know there are other areas that may be safer than Fifth and Market, in the City I called home, where we grew our careers and spent half of my life. Deep inside, I hope that one day, San Francisco will regain its old glory, as a favorite tourist destination and an ideal place to work.

(Atty. Lourdes S. Tancinco is an immigration attorney and immigrant rights advocate based in the San Francisco Bay area  and a partner at the Tancinco Law P.C.. She may be reached at law@tancinco.comwww.tancinco.com, facebook/tancincolaw, or at 1-888-930-0808)

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Updates

Tancinco Law 4.0: 2023 Onwards. The Era of a Hybrid Law Firm.

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Typewriters, copier machines, telephone landlines and stack of legal pads..these were the initial office tools that we had when Tancinco Law opened in May 1992.  The office was located at the center of downtown San Francisco on Fifth and Market.

In 1992, Tancinco Law was founded by two alumni of the University of the Philippines College of Law, spouses Rey and Lourdes Tancinco. Equipped with a law degree, Philippine and California bar licenses, they started their own practice to provide legal services to their fellow immigrants in their adopted land.

F.B.I. were the initial areas of practice:  Family Law, Business Law and Immigration. As the years passed and as the client base increased, it found itself practicing 80% immigration law with clients mainly from the first generation of Filipino immigrants.

The First Decade: 1992-2002 “Baby Steps” Years

Just like a toddler learning to walk, the first 10 years were marked with baby steps to building clientele. Family and close friends were indispensable to building the practice. In fact, the first few attorneys and staff were close friends. It was during this first decade that Attorney Lourdes Tancinco (Atty Lou) engaged voluntarily in community service by providing pro bono legal services to Filipino World War II veterans who were new immigrants then arriving under the IMMACT90. Through the free legal clinic, thousands of elderly veterans were able to reunite with their spouses and other family members.A 501(c)(3) organization was co-founded by Attorney Lou, the San Francisco Veterans Equity Center (SFVEC).

Tancinco Law’s immigration practice took on general immigration cases such as family and employment based visas. Highlights of the practice was the increase of the healthcare workers being petitioned by hospitals and health care agencies. During this decade the H1A visas, specifically created for registered nurses, were issued to many Filipino nurses assisted by the firm.  The firm also assisted with getting visas for managers and employees of businesses in the Philippines extending their operations in the United States. In 1997, a legislation was passed resulting in the major overhaul of the Immigration & Nationality Act making it more difficult for those with prior fraud immigration violations and criminal cases to legalize their stay in the United States.

While no legalization law was enacted, Section 245i was enacted giving opportunity for those in unlawful presence to adjust status as long as they have approved petitions filed before April 30, 2001. Thousands of Filipino clients took advantage of this legislation.

Second Decade: 2002-2012 “Expansion Years”

The second decade is about expansion. Physical locations of the Tancinco Law were established. First with the Manila office in 2007, Vallejo in 2008, Milpitas in 2012. With the physical offices in various locations Tancinco Law attorneys were able to reach more clients in close proximity to the office location.

With no new legislation affecting immigrants coupled with the 2008 Recession, the practice of law was somehow adversely affected. Nonetheless, the firm continued its immigration advocacy as Atty Lou continued to engage in educational campaigns through her newspaper columns published weekly in Philippine Daily Inquirer, Philippine News and Filipino Guardian. It was also during this second decade that Attorney Lou embarked on a non-traditional lawyering project, that of a Host and Producer of an Immigration TV show known as GMA’s Pusong Pinoy Sa Amerika. Pinoy Panawagan at TFC’s Balitang America was also launched where she appeared on TV answering viewers’ questions on immigration matters. 

One of the historic moments during this decade was enactment into law of the Filipino Veterans Compensation Act of 2009. Atty  Lou through the San Francisco Veterans Equity Center, and other community advocates actively lobbied for the passage of this Act which benefited thousands of Filipino veterans who fought during World War II.

The Third Decade 2012-2022 “Survival Years & the Birth of the New Normal”

With four physical locations in existence, a fifth location was established in 2015. The goal was to reach more clients in the Los Angeles area. The law firm became busy this era not because we had more clients availing of services but because we had more inquiries about consequences of Trump’s anti-immigrant policies. Restrictive deportation rules were enforced. The firm was able to assist clients in their removal cases and successfully got their green cards despite the lengthy wait.

This decade experienced the worst and unexpected crisis: the COVID-19 outbreak in the early months of 2020. The firm closed all of its 4 physical locations. Operations of Tancinco Law were done remotely. Attorneys and staff using technology were all working from home but efficiently reached out to clients and completed tasks more productively. The pandemic years gave way to the new normal, the hybrid law firm where the practice will continue to use technology to provide efficient service to its clientele.

The physical location of the office moved from the City of  San Francisco CA to Burlingame CA (near SFO Airport about 20 minutes away from the City). Tancinco Law remains very accessible to existing and potential clients. On its website, clients may reach attorneys and schedule appointments. The phone number and email addresses are the same.

2023 will be the beginning of its 4th decade. No more typewriters and paper files. It is an operational hybrid firm that has adopted the new normal of being a paperless office, staff working remotely and communicating more efficiently using different platforms. Tancinco Law is moving forward and continuing its commitment to provide services to the immigrant community especially now that it has retooled using new and best digital technology. 

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Pusong Pinoy Sa Amerika

Atty Lou Returns for 17th Season of Pusong Pinoy sa Amerika

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True to its mission of service to those wanting to come to the United States in search of a better life, award-winning weekly television program Pusong Pinoy sa Amerika (PPSA) is back for its 17th season, with veteran U.S. immigration lawyer Atty. Lou Tancinco and talented multimedia personality Eric Quizon as co-hosts. Throughout its several seasons, Pusong Pinoy sa Amerika has been an important and reliable resource on immigration issues affecting Filipino families.

Season 17 will provide viewers an understanding of the issues that affected the immigration system during the pandemic and how it is faring in a Biden administration faced with bi-partisan politics and economic challenges.

The show will also continue to feature real-life stories of immigrants to the U.S., in a feature called “Iba Ang Pinoy”.

Through the years, Pusong Pinoy sa Amerika has been consistently recognized by various award-giving bodies for its advocacy, achievements in journalism, and stellar production such as the 2019 Migration Advocacy and Media (MAM) Award, a Television Journalism Award for Best Regular TV Program, or the 2018 NAMIC Vision Award (Nominee), Foreign Language Category award for its episode called “From Deported to Supported”.

Continuing this tradition of service and excellence, here is what to expect in Pusong Pinoy sa Amerika’s 17th season:

PART 1: Current Immigration System As Affected by the Pandemic, an in-depth discussion on the visa policy changes and how it continues to impact immigrant families and immigrant owned businesses: How are Filipino families and immigrants coping?

EPISODE 1: Backlog at the U.S. Embassy and Priority Dates
EPISODE 2: Disruption in Travel and its Impact on Immigrants,Temporary Visa Holders and U.S. Citizens
EPISODE 3: Petitioner Died During the Pandemic,How to Revive a Dead Petition
EPISODE 4: Abandonment of Green Card Status: Voluntary or Unintentional?

PART 2: Addressing the Healthcare Worker Shortage: An Examination of the Visa Options and Recruitment of Health Care Workers and Entrepreneurs in the Healthcare Industry

EPISODE 5: Immigrating As Registered Nurses
EPISODE 6: H1B Visas for Physical Therapist
EPISODE 7: The Filipino American Care Home Owners
EPISODE 8: Green Cards for Filipino Caregivers?

PART 3: Filipino Immigrants in the US: The Success Stories, those Who Thrive and Strive to Survive Amid the Pandemic

EPISODE 9: The Filipino Teachers and the J1 Exchange Visitor Program
EPISODE 10: U.S. Citizenship At Birth
EPISODE 11: Filipinos In the Food Industry: Visas for the Entrepreneurs & the Filipino Workers
EPISODE 12: Families Left Behind by Filipino WWII Veterans: Are there chances of immigrating?
EPISODE 13: Voluntarily Departing: It’s Been A Good Run, is it time to go home ?

Pusong Pinoy sa Amerika airs on GMA Pinoy TV on Sundays, beginning July 3, 2022 at 4:30pm (PST); 7:30pm (EST).

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Updates

2 Filipinos spared from deportation due to PH war on drugs

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SAN FRANCISCO — Two Filipino immigrants, who served jail terms for drug offenses but were apprehended by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents and placed on deportation proceedings, were recently granted protection under the Convention Against Torture (CAT) because they are potential targets of President Rodrigo Duterte’s lethal war on drugs.

One immigrant was immediately released after an immigration judge’s CAT ruling while the other remains in custody pending the written decision of the judge that could withstand an impending appeal of ICE against the still detained convict.

The two grateful Filipinos living in San Francisco chose to remain unidentified. Both men have families, are indigents and in their mid-30s. They are green card holders who were represented for free by legal advocacy group for Asians in San Francisco.

Their lawyer, Kevin Lo, is a staff attorney in the Immigrant Rights Program of the Asian Law Caucus. Lo chanced upon the two men when he visited the San Francisco immigration detention center and realized that the two Filipinos needed representation, as most people in immigration detention are usually not legally aided enough.

Claims for protection

“In evaluating the cases of the two Filipinos clients, we learned about the situation in the Philippines with President Duterte’s drug war. And when we realized that they had claims for protection under the Convention Against Torture, we decided to take their cases because we know the situation is pretty serious,” Lo shared.

“We decided to make the argument that drug addicts who are deported to the Philippines has a more then 50 percent chance to be added to government watch lists and subsequently killed,” Lo explained.

Asian Law Caucus sought the help of Vicente Rafael, professor of history in the University of Washington, specializing in Southeast Asian history. “Rafael became our source for the condition in the Philippines particularly the drug war being waged by President Duterte,” Lo said.

Rafael’s declaration together with another expert’s statement proved very helpful in securing the detainees’ protection from the judge.

“We [also] submitted a big stack of articles and pictures to show that in the Philippines drug convictions typically equal torture and death,” Lo explained. “If we haven’t been able to submit the country condition confirmation that intended to show that the government’s (drive against drug offenders) is true, the ruling may not have been granted and they could have been deported.”

Scheduled to testify again

Rafael is scheduled to testify by phone on another case, in Tacoma, Washington, largely along the same lines. Nearby Seattle was where an earlier case employing the CAT appeal protection lost.

Lo wants to make clear though that the CAT is usually the last thing that people try for because it doesn’t lead to any legal status; one can still be deported when conditions change. It is also not granted very often.

“For our clients, the judge said he won’t be deporting our clients. But once Duterte is no longer in power and the drug war is no longer happening, they can be deported. So, CAT is an acknowledgement that you are deportable, but for human rights reason, you are not going to be for now,” disclosed Lo.

He says its a form of relief that applies to other people in other countries with dangerous condition of human rights. “The Duterte situation is so extreme, so rare that the head of state will be so explicit and proud that he killed so many people that started back when he was mayor of Davao City.”

Unfair deportation system

Lo also stressed that the U.S. deportation system is so unfair because even if immigrant convicts spent only a few months in a U.S. prison, they are being deported even for drug crimes that are not serious.

“Current U.S. immigration law punishes drug crimes very heavily. It is kind of funny that we are criticizing Duterte for his war on drugs, while the U.S. war on drugs, although not be as bad, is pretty extreme too,” Lo lamented.

In the deportation process, ICE will request for travel documents from the Philippines and also will turn over a copy of the deportee’s criminal record. What that means is that the U.S. is explicitly telling the Philippines that the deportee is a drug abuser or trafficker. Under Duterte, it is very likely that the deportee will be added to the drug list.

Duterte supporter Atty. Arnedo S. Valera, a practicing immigration attorney, congratulated Lo and company for “creative legal representation” in finding a relief from deportation for these two Filipinos.

Legal aberration

However, he contended that “this ruling is a legal aberration and not the prevailing case law in almost all immigration courts in 50 States. For the last decade, based on specific and unique removal issues faced by Filipino immigrants, I have been successful in obtaining asylum alleging fear of even torture under the Aquino and Arroyo regimes.”

Most likely, these liberal rulings will be appealed by the government because the fact is, under the drug policy of the Duterte administration, drug addicts who surrender and are not engaged in selling drugs and other criminal activities are sent to rehabilitation centers for treatment and drug rehabilitation.”

Duterte critic and seasoned litigator Ted Laguatan says that the present Philippine government has developed a global reputation for being engaged in state-sponsored extrajudicial killings and human rights violations.

“Numerous documented reports and graphic pictures of Filipinos brutally murdered by police elements and so called ‘vigilantes’ many of whom are also police elements dressed in civilians, have been published in international publications. More than 8,000 killed since President Rodrigo Duterte sat in office,” reasoned Laguatan.

Laguatan says that while government apologists continue to deny that these killings are state-sponsored, there are so many recorded footages of President Rodrigo Duterte delivering speeches urging the police to continue with these killings and assuring them of his protection.

‘Duterte behind the killings’

“Anyone with a modicum of intelligence knows that Duterte is behind these killings as the styles or modes of executions are the same as those used by the notorious Davao Death Squad reputedly headed by Duterte when he was Mayor of Davao City. Moreover, the more than 8,000 killings are self-evident. They would not have happened if Duterte were not President. As such, more Filipinos in removal proceedings in Immigration Court will be using the United Nation’s Convention Against Torture (CAT) to prevent their removal,” Laguatan opined.

Another eminent immigration lawyer Lourdes Tancinco noted that with the current social political environment in the Philippines, the view of the outside world on the controversial war of drugs has an impact on the fate of Filipinos abroad.

“I am not surprised that it had reached the immigration courts involving Filipinos who are facing removal. It would not be difficult to find sufficient evidence for protection under the Convention Against Torture (CAT) Act considering that substantial and factual information is available in regards to the increasing number of death of people involved in illegal drugs. The courts can rely on expert opinion or organizations like the UN Commission on Human Rights,” Tancinco said.

Tancinco noted that the challenge in employing CAT is proving whether the abuse is inflicted by, or at the instigation of, or with the consent or acquiescence of, a public official or any person acting in an official capacity.

By Jun Nucum, via @inquirerdotnet