Archives March 2026

I-751 Divorce Waiver: How to Keep Your Green Card After Your Marriage Ends

In transnational marriages, life isn’t always a fairy tale. We often receive calls from panicked clients asking: “My 2-year conditional green card is about to expire, but I am going through a divorce (or am already divorced). Will my green card be revoked? Will I be deported?

Facing both a marital breakdown and an immigration crisis can leave many new immigrants feeling helpless. Today, we will provide an in-depth analysis of how to protect your U.S. green card by independently filing an I-751 Waiver after a marriage ends.

What is an I-751 Waiver?

Typically, if you obtain a marriage-based green card before being married for two years, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) grants a 2-year “conditional” green card. Within the 90 days before it expires, both spouses must jointly file Form I-751 to remove the conditions and obtain a 10-year green card.

However, if the marriage breaks down during this period, making a joint filing impossible, U.S. immigration law provides a way out: the I-751 Waiver. The most common ground for this waiver is: The marriage was entered into in good faith, but was terminated through divorce or annulment.

The Key to Approval: Proving a “Bona Fide Marriage”

If you file alone, USCIS significantly raises the standard of review. Without your U.S. citizen spouse’s signature, you must provide compelling documentary evidence to prove to the immigration officer that you married with the genuine intent to build a life together, not to circumvent immigration laws. Our core mission is to help you reconstruct the genuine origins of your marriage using objective, solid evidence.

Just like your initial marriage petition, simply providing a few photos, a single year’s tax return, or a joint bank account with no transaction history is far from enough. A high-quality chain of evidence should include:

  • Joint Assets and Liabilities: Joint property deeds, lease agreements, joint utility bills, and genuine joint bank statements.
  • Joint Insurance: Health insurance, auto insurance, or life insurance listing the other spouse as the beneficiary.
  • Birth Certificates of Children: Having children born into the marriage is one of the strongest pieces of evidence (Note: Information declared to USCIS must be completely truthful and consistent; never conceal or falsify).
  • Affidavits from Friends and Family: Detailed testimonies from people who possess personal knowledge of your relationship’s history.

Red Flags: Seek Professional Legal Help Immediately!

When handling an I-751 divorce waiver, some cases face exceptionally complex legal challenges:

1. Your Ex-Spouse Alleges “Marriage Fraud”

If the relationship ends bitterly, a vindictive ex-spouse might report you to USCIS, claiming you entered a “sham marriage” for the green card. Many applicants are terrified by this prospect. However, based on our extensive practical experience, you must not panic in the face of such accusations.

In practice, experienced immigration officers are well aware of the vindictive motives that often accompany contentious divorces. If an ex-spouse makes an oral complaint out of malice, but we can build an airtight “paper trail” for you, officers are much more inclined to trust objective, written evidence. A professional attorney will not only help you organize undeniable proof but will also take the initiative in the legal Cover Letter to objectively analyze your ex-spouse’s underlying motives (such as a desire for control or financial disputes). This is essentially a battle of “evidence quality” and “legal strategy.”

2. Your Ex Files for an “Annulment” Instead of a “Divorce”

This is a massive legal trap! If a family court grants an annulment based on fraud, the marriage legally “never existed.” This will almost certainly destroy the legal foundation of your I-751 waiver.

3. Prior Misrepresentations to USCIS

Any concealment or inconsistency regarding your background, visa history, or children’s information can be deemed a “material misrepresentation,” carrying the severe consequence of a permanent bar from entering the United States.

In these high-risk scenarios, filing a DIY application or relying on non-professionals often leads to denials or even a Notice to Appear (NTA) in removal (deportation) proceedings.

Leave Professional Matters to Professional Attorneys

A setback in removing the conditions on your green card does not mean the end of your immigration journey. The key is to strategize early, gather favorable evidence, and, if necessary, fight for the most advantageous divorce decree in family court.

Wang Law Firm, LLC possesses extensive experience in both immigration and family law, dedicated to finding breakthroughs for clients in complex legal dilemmas. Licensed to practice in Illinois, New York, and Massachusetts, we accurately navigate the critical intersection between state family law and federal immigration law.

🎉 Firm Update
To better serve our East Coast clients, our new Boston office officially opened in the first quarter of 2026! No matter where you are, we are committed to providing you with the highest standard of legal services.

If you are facing challenges with your I-751 application, please contact us immediately for a case evaluation:
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*Disclaimer: The content of this article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute specific legal advice. Every case is unique. For legal guidance tailored to your individual situation, please contact us to schedule a formal consultation.

SCOTUS~Border Metering Policy & Asylum Law

📌 Executive Summary:
Today, the U.S. Supreme Court heard intense oral arguments in Noem v. Al Otro Lado. This case will ultimately determine the legality of the Trump-era “Metering Policy.” Are immigrants standing “one inch” outside the border protected by U.S. asylum law? The ruling will not only affect the executive branch’s power to intercept asylum seekers but also serve as a bellwether for future border enforcement. Attorney David Wang breaks down the legal battle at the heart of the U.S. asylum system.

Today, the U.S. Supreme Court was the stage for a fierce debate that could completely rewrite the rules of the U.S. border and asylum system—Noem v. Al Otro Lado. As a legal professional closely monitoring the frontiers of immigration law, I just finished tracking the oral arguments, grabbed a quick bite, and immediately sat down to organize this analysis of the Supreme Court’s latest moves for you!

Following the oral arguments of this case is truly a mentally taxing process. The logic presented by both the plaintiffs and the government is incredibly rigorous; it feels like your brain’s CPU is going into overdrive! This intuitively demonstrates why the Supreme Court maintains an odd number of nine justices—when facing evenly matched legal controversies, that crucial swing vote is absolutely necessary to make a final call.

Recalling my days in law school, the most thought-provoking cases were often the complex ones where justices issued “concurring in part and dissenting in part” opinions. The law is never a simple choice of black and white. This Supreme Court decision will undoubtedly be another fierce 4-to-5 legal tug-of-war, and we will continue to watch for that decisive “swing vote”!

Back to the main point: This case is not just a final ruling on the highly controversial “metering” policy from the first Trump administration; it is a soul-searching examination of the underlying logic of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). Are asylum seekers standing just outside the U.S. border protected by U.S. law? How will a distance of “one inch” affect the fate of thousands of immigrants? Today, I will break down the background, the legal disputes, and the profound future implications of this case.

I. Case Background: What is “Metering”?

“Metering” is a border control policy widely implemented during the first Trump administration. Simply put, it is “taking a number to wait in line.”

When a large number of asylum-seeking immigrants flock to legal Ports of Entry (POE) at the U.S.-Mexico border, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers physically restrict (e.g., by standing on the Mexican side of the border line) the number of people allowed to enter the U.S. and submit asylum applications each day. The reason given by officials is that the “port’s processing capacity has reached its limit.”

The consequence of this policy was that tens of thousands of asylum seekers were stranded indefinitely in makeshift camps in northern Mexico, triggering a massive humanitarian crisis and legal disputes. The immigrant advocacy group Al Otro Lado subsequently sued the government.

The clash in the lower courts (the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals) and the Supreme Court centers on the interpretation of two key provisions in the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA).

⚖️ Core Dispute 1: The Legal Definition of “Arrives in”

  • The Law: INA § 1158(a)(1) states that any alien who is physically present in the United States or who “arrives in” the United States may apply for asylum.
  • Plaintiffs’ Stance: When an immigrant stands at a legal POE and expresses their intent to seek asylum to a CBP officer, they have legally “arrived.” The Ninth Circuit previously supported this, stating that the statute cannot be eviscerated by physical pushback.
  • Government’s Stance: One must physically cross the border line and step onto U.S. soil to have “arrived.” As long as you are still in Mexico, the U.S. government has no statutory duty to process you.

⚖️ Core Dispute 2: Mandatory Duty vs. Discretion

  • The Law: INA § 1225(b) dictates that if an arriving alien indicates an intention to apply for asylum, the officer shall refer the alien for a “Credible Fear” interview.
  • Legal Battle: The Ninth Circuit ruled that the government blocking people via “metering” constitutes “unlawfully withheld or unreasonably delayed” agency action under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). The government countered that since the immigrants never crossed into U.S. jurisdiction, this “mandatory” duty was never triggered.

III. Latest Updates: The Supreme Court Split

In the oral arguments that just concluded, the nine Supreme Court justices showed a clear ideological divide:

  • Conservative Justices (Leaning toward Government): Led by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh, they focused heavily on the exact physical location of the “sovereign boundary.” They questioned why unadmitted individuals at POEs should be granted priority over those who cross illegally, and seemed more inclined to grant the executive branch broader discretion to manage border surges.
  • Liberal Justices (Leaning toward Plaintiffs): Justices like Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson expressed deep concerns. They pointedly noted that if the government’s position is upheld, the executive branch could arbitrarily push the “border” outward, effectively stripping immigrants of the statutory asylum rights granted by Congress.

IV. Predictions and Future Applications

The Supreme Court is expected to issue its final ruling by late June of this year.

  • If the Government Wins (Highly Probable): “Metering” will receive the Supreme Court’s stamp of legality. If Applicant A arrives at the San Diego POE seeking asylum, CBP officers could legally stop A on the Mexican side and indefinitely refuse entry by claiming “we are at capacity today,” and A would have no standing to sue CBP in U.S. courts for “inaction.” This grants border enforcement sweeping interception powers.
  • If Plaintiffs Win (Upholding the 9th Circuit): As long as applicants reach the POE, border patrol must legally initiate the preliminary screening process. However, this could prompt the current administration to adopt even more extreme executive orders to completely seal the border.

V. Profound Impact on the Future Immigration Landscape

With the current administration ordering a broader suspension of the asylum system at the start of its second term, the ruling in Noem v. Al Otro Lado goes far beyond “metering” itself. If the Supreme Court establishes the principle of “no jurisdiction without physical crossing,” the executive branch will gain a powerful legal weapon to legally establish barriers outside the border line, essentially dismantling the asylum function of legal ports of entry.

💡 Attorney’s Strategic Insight

The pathway to seek asylum at the border will be drastically compressed, and future legal routes to asylum will face increasingly severe administrative walls. In today’s climate of tightening border policies, the risks of blindly coming to the U.S. to seek border asylum are now incalculable.

In the rapidly shifting immigration landscape of 2026, accurately gauging the legal winds and planning your legal status pathway in advance is more critical than ever. Every gavel strike at the Supreme Court has the potential to alter the trajectories of countless families.

If you have any questions about current immigration policies, asylum applications, employment visas, or require professional legal evaluation and strategic planning, please contact Wang Law Firm. Our professional team is ready to provide you with the most authoritative and timely legal guidance.

Wang Law Firm, LLC | Attorney David Wang

☎️ Phone: 312-888-7888

📍 Locations: Chicago Headquarters | Boston (Newly Opened)

🌐 Focus Areas: Comprehensive Immigration Services, Employment Visas & EB-5

✉️ Email: info@wanglaw.com

📖 [Extended Reading: In-Depth Analysis]

1. Case Basics

  • Case Name: Noem v. Al Otro Lado
  • Supreme Court Docket No.: 25-5
  • Oral Argument Date: March 24, 2026
  • Parties Involved:
    • Petitioners: The U.S. Federal Government (represented by the government, with “Noem” referring to the current Secretary of Homeland Security).
    • Respondents: Al Otro Lado (a non-profit immigrant rights organization) and 13 individual asylum seekers.
  • Historical Background & Lower Court Rulings: The dispute stems from the “metering” policy formally established during the first Trump administration in 2018. The Biden administration rescinded the policy in 2021, but upon entering its second term, the Trump administration appealed to the Supreme Court. In 2024, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of Al Otro Lado, finding metering unlawful and determining that noncitizens turned away at POEs have legally “arrived” in the U.S.

2. SCOTUS Oral Argument Dynamics (March 24, 2026)

During the approximately 80-minute oral argument:

  • Government Arguments: DOJ Attorney Vivek Suri emphasized physical boundaries, arguing, “When a person is still standing on Mexican territory, they cannot be considered to have arrived in the United States.”
  • Plaintiffs’ Arguments: Al Otro Lado’s attorney, Kelsi Corkran, stressed procedural justice, pointing out that if the government can simply use physical obstruction to prevent immigrants from completing their “arrival,” it effectively hollows out the asylum laws enacted by Congress.

3. Key Clashes from the Transcript

The core exchanges revolved entirely around the “literal interpretation of the law” versus the “realities of border enforcement”:

  • The Conservative “Line-Drawing Problem”: Chief Justice Roberts repeatedly pressed the plaintiffs’ attorney: “If standing one inch outside the port door counts as ‘arriving,’ what about one mile away? Ten miles away? If Congress didn’t explicitly say so, why should the Court reach into Mexican territory to define U.S. legal obligations?”
  • The Liberal Critique of “Shirking Responsibility”: Justice Sotomayor sharply pointed out: “The INA explicitly uses the word ‘shall’. If the executive branch can evade a ‘must-do’ obligation simply by putting up a police tape outside the door, doesn’t that make congressional legislation a joke that can be easily bypassed?”
  • Practical Concerns of a “Surge”: Justice Kavanaugh asked: “If the port can only process 100 people a day, but 10,000 show up, and the executive is not allowed to implement ‘metering’ for physical limitation, how exactly are border officers supposed to legally operate in practice without the system collapsing?”

4. Analysis of the Amicus Briefs

This case attracted a record number of Amicus Briefs, clearly divided into two camps:

1. Briefs Supporting the Government (DOJ)

These primarily emphasize national sovereignty, border security, and the financial burden on states.

  • Coalition of Conservative Red States (e.g., Texas): Argued that if “metering” is abolished, the massive influx of immigrants will deal a devastating blow to public education, healthcare, and law enforcement resources in border states.
  • Former Senior Border Patrol Agents Association: Pointed out from a practical standpoint that CBP facilities are not designed for massive, long-term detention, arguing that “metering” is the only viable administrative tool to prevent stampedes and humanitarian disasters at POEs.

2. Briefs Supporting the Plaintiffs (Al Otro Lado)

These focus on statutory rights, international law obligations, and humanitarianism.

  • Former Immigration Judges and Asylum Officers: This brief carries significant weight. They refuted the government’s “lack of capacity” argument, pointing out that implementing “metering” is not due to logistical constraints, but rather a “political deterrence strategy.”
  • UNHCR and International Human Rights Organizations: Emphasized that as a signatory to the Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees, the U.S. interpretation of domestic law (INA) should align with the international principle of “Non-refoulement” (no pushbacks). Physical obstruction essentially constitutes a disguised pushback.