Holding that the Child Citizenship Act of 2000 does not apply retroactively to lawful permanent residents who were older than eighteen years old at the time of the Act's effective date
Holding that birth in the Philippines during the territorial period does not constitute birth "in the United States" under the Citizenship Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and thus does not give rise to U.S. citizenship
Finding that the petitioner did not qualify as a national because she continued to owe allegiance to Canada and had not chosen to renounce that allegiance by naturalizing
In Chavez-Orozco, 316 F.3d at 1072, a defendant who was charged with illegal entry after deportation argued, as a defense, that he was a national of the United States. The defendant argued that he had completed an application for naturalization and, in doing so, had signed an oath of allegiance to the United States. But the defendant later had asked to withdraw his application, and the INS had granted his request.
8 U.S.C. § 1101 Cited 16,700 times 91 Legal Analyses
Finding notice and comment rulemaking is required for the agency's interim rule recognizing fear of coercive family practices as basis for refugee status
8 U.S.C. § 1229a Cited 6,395 times 8 Legal Analyses
Granting a noncitizen the right to file one motion to reopen and providing that “the motion to reopen shall be filed within 90 days of the date of entry of a final administrative order of removal”
Granting citizenship to a child of one U.S.-citizen parent and one non-U.S. citizen parent provided that the U.S.-citizen parent was physically present in the United States for at least ten years—including at least five years after attaining the age of fourteen—before the child was born
Providing that United States nationality may be lost by "voluntarily performing" certain acts "with the intention of relinquishing United States nationality"