9 FAM 502.3
(U) Adoption-based classifications and processing
(CT:VISA-932; 08-30-2019)
(Office of Origin: CA/VO/L/R)
9 FAM 502.3-1 (U) Adoption-based
Classifications and Processing Overview
9 FAM 502.3-1(A) (U) Statutory
and Regulatory Authority
(CT:VISA-832; 06-03-2019)
(U) INA 101(b)(1) (8 U.S.C.
1101(b)(1)).
9 FAM 502.3-1(B) (U) Documentation
of Adopted Children (Overview)
(CT:VISA-832; 06-03-2019)
a. (U) Properly documenting
adopted children is important, and particularly given the fairly complicated
nature of orphan and Convention adoptee processing, parents and consular
officers should carefully consider the nature of the intended travel prior to
beginning case processing.
b. (U) Depending on the purpose
of the travel and circumstances of the case, you should determine which of the immigrant
visa options would be most appropriate, or whether other documentation,
including an NIV (9 FAM
402.2-4(B)(7)), is required (see 9 FAM
502.3-1(D)).
9 FAM 502.3-1(C) (U) Other
Adoption-Related Travel Provisions
(CT:VISA-832; 06-03-2019)
a. (U) NIVs
for Adoptees: See 9 FAM
402.2-4(B)(7) for information on NIV classifications for adoption cases.
You should not issue an NIV to an adopted child who is immigrating to the
United States as a result of this trip to reside with his or her adoptive
parents.
b. (U) Parole
for Adoptees: In rare cases where there are significant humanitarian
concerns (i.e., natural disaster, civil disorder/war, etc.), adoptive parents
may seek humanitarian parole for an adopted child. (see 9 FAM
202.3-3(B)(1)).
c. (U) No
Classification: You should also recognize that you may also encounter
cases of adopted children who are not eligible for any immigrant or NIV
classification, usually due to their advanced age, the circumstances of the
adoption, or the parents' travel plans (e.g., children who will continue to
reside overseas and do not intend to travel to the United States).
9 FAM 502.3-1(D) (U) Immigrant
Visa Classification for Adoptions - Overview
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) Adopted
Child (IR2): INA 101(b)(1)(E) permits a U.S. citizen to petition for an
unmarried, under age 21 child who was adopted while under the age of 16, and
has been in the legal custody of, and has resided with, the adopting parent or
parents for at least two years. Note that the two-year requirement does not
apply in certain cases involving child abuse. (For more information on IR2s,
see 9 FAM
502.3-2.)
b. (U) Orphan
(IR3 and IR4): INA 101(b)(1)(F) permits a U.S. citizen to petition for
an orphan under age 16 (or under age 18 if the sibling exception applies) if
(1) the prospective adoptive parent(s) have been found suitable and eligible to
adopt; (2) the child has no parents or has a sole or surviving parent who is
incapable of providing proper care for him or her and has irrevocably released
the child for emigration and adoption in writing; (3) the prospective adoptive
parent(s) jointly adopted the child abroad and at least one prospective
adoptive parent personally saw and observed the child before or during the adoption
proceeding (IR3), or the prospective adoptive parent(s) obtained legal custody
of the child for purposes of emigration and adoption (IR4); and (4) the child
must be unmarried and under age 21 at the time of immigration. (For more
information on IR3s and IR4s, see 9 FAM 502.3-3.)
c. (U) Convention
Adoptee (IH3 and IH4): The Hague Convention on Protection of Children
and Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption (Hague Adoption Convention
or Convention) entered into force for the United States on April 1, 2008. INA
101(b)(1)(G) permits a U.S. citizen to petition for a child under age 16 (or
under age 18 if the sibling exceptions applies) who meets the definition of a
Convention adoptee if the prospective adoptive parent(s) have been found suitable
and eligible to adopt. (For more information on IH3 and IH4s, including
transition cases, see 9 FAM 502.3-4.)
d. (U) IR2
Adult Sibling of Convention Adoptee: An adult (over the age of 18)
biological sibling of a Convention adoptee who is adopted abroad or is coming
to the United States for adoption may be eligible for IR2 classification under
certain circumstances. (For more information on IR2 adult siblings of
Convention adoptees, see 9 FAM 502.3-5.)
9 FAM 502.3-1(E) (U) Processing
Adoption Cases - Overview
(CT:VISA-573; 04-16-2018)
a. (U) The Bureau of Consular
Affairs (CA) considers adoption cases to be of the highest priority. Consular
sections should provide helpful, courteous, and expeditious assistance to U.S.
citizens and maintain sound visa-issuance policies. All adoption cases must be
treated with considerable sensitivity and processed as quickly as is reasonably
possible to avoid hardship for the child or adopting parents.
b. (U) Consular sections should
be responsive to inquiries, schedule interviews quickly, and make prompt
decisions. An adoption involves both the adopting parents and the child. Even
if the final resolution is that the child is ineligible for immigration, you
best serve all parties by making this determination as quickly as possible.
Any required field investigations or similar checks in an adoption case must be
given priority over other immigrant and nonimmigrant visa cases, and must be
completed expeditiously so that the case may be resolved in a timely manner. If
you determine that a petition is not clearly approvable or that a
USCIS-approved petition may have been approved in error, you should forward it
to the appropriate USCIS office without delay together with a cover memo
detailing the reasons for the return.
c. (U) Correspondence on
orphan and adoption issues should be shared with other concerned offices
outside the Visa Office (CA/VO), in particular the Office of Childrens Issues
(CA/OCS/CI) and, when appropriate, the Office of Fraud Prevention Programs
(CA/FPP). Posts should use CVIS, CASC, KOCI, and KFRD tags respectively, on
adoption-related correspondence, to ensure timely distribution of cables to
these offices. Posts should keep the Department and USCIS informed of general
adoption issues, especially changes in local documentation or legal and/or
procedural requirements.
9 FAM 502.3-1(F) (U) Effect of
Foreign Laws and Customs on Immigrant Petitions for Adopted Children
(CT:VISA-573; 04-16-2018)
a. (U) Some foreign states have
no statutory provisions governing adoption, and in some of these states the
concept of adoption is not legally recognized. Legal adoption for the purpose
of immigration does not exist in foreign states that apply Islamic law in
matters involving family status.
b. (U) Accordingly,
relationships through claimed adoptions in such countries will generally not be
sufficient for visa petition purposes. Further, an adoptive relationship
claimed to have been effected in a country that has no statutory provisions
governing adoption cannot be recognized for visa classification purposes unless
the relationship is sanctioned by local custom or religious practice,
judicially recognized in the country, and the relationship embraces all the
usual attributes of adoption, including the same irrevocable rights accorded a
natural born child.
9 FAM 502.3-1(G) (U) Validity
and Effect of Foreign Adoptions
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) The law of the country
of adoption determines the validity of the adoption. The competent authority
to grant adoptions may be a judicial or administrative body depending on the
law of the country where the adoption was completed.
b. (U) Simple
adoption: Some countries distinguish between full or plenary adoption
and simple adoption. There is usually a relevant legal distinction in the
country between a simple and full adoption, such as the continuation of some
right or obligation between the child and natural parents or differences in the
requirements to terminate the adoptive parent-child relationship. Previously,
simple adoptions were considered insufficient for immigration purposes.
However, in some countries, a simple adoption can be considered to satisfy all
essential elements for an adoption for immigration purposes. To be valid for
immigration purposes, the adoption must:
(1) (U) Create a legal
permanent parent-child relationship comparable to that of a natural legitimate
child between a child and someone who is not already the child's legal parent,
and the parent-child relationship cannot be terminated for other than serious
or grave reasons; and
(2) (U) Terminate the legal
parent-child relationship with the prior legal parent(s); and
(3) (U) Be valid under the law
of the country (or political subdivision) granting the simple adoption
c. (U) Customary
adoption: Some countries allow adoption through custom instead of, or in
addition to, adoption through a judicial or administrative procedure. To be
valid for immigration purposes, the adoption must:
(1) (U) Create a legal
permanent parent-child relationship between a child and someone who is not
already the child's legal parent;
(2) (U) Terminate the legal
parent-child relationship with the prior legal parent(s); and
(3) (U) Comply with the
requirements of the relevant customary law and be legally recognized in the
country or place the adoption occurs.
d. (U) The child must be
adopted before the child's 16th (or 18th, as appropriate) birthday for the
purposes of INA 101(b)(1)(E).
e. (U) You must accept a
foreign adoption decree as valid unless there is credible and probative
evidence that:
(1) (U) The adoption was
flawed in its execution (e.g., a court lacked jurisdiction over the adoption or
prior parents did not consent to the adoption or were not given proper notice
of the termination of parental rights); or
(2) (U) The adoption was
granted due to official corruption or the use of fraud or material
misrepresentation.
(3) (U) If there is credible
and probative evidence that the adoption may be invalid for one of these
reasons, you must consult with VO/L/A before deciding not to recognize the
adoption.
f. (U) Some foreign states
have no statutory provisions governing adoption, and in some of these states
the concept of adoption is not legally recognized.
(1) (U) Legal adoption for the
purpose of immigration does not exist in foreign states that apply Islamic law
in matters involving family status. Note that a kafala
order issued by a country that follows traditional Islamic law will not qualify
as an adoption.
(2) (U) In some multi-ethnic
or multi-religious countries, the personal status laws for each ethnic or
religious group governs adoptions. In such countries, different bodies of law
govern adoption for different children, even within the same neighborhood.
(3) (U) Accordingly,
relationships through claimed adoptions in such countries will generally not be
sufficient for visa petition purposes. Also, an adoptive relationship claimed
to have been effected in a country which has no statutory provisions governing
adoption cannot be recognized for visa classification purposes unless the
relationship is sanctioned by local custom or religious practice, judicially
recognized in the country, and the relationship embraces all the usual
attributes of adoption, including the same irrevocable rights accorded a
natural born child. However, in some countries it may be possible for a child
to immigrate based on legal custody for emigration and adoption, such that
the child may be eligible for an IR-4 or IH-4 visa.
9 FAM 502.3-1(H) (U) Hague
Adoptions Between Two Other Convention Countries
(CT:VISA-573; 04-16-2018)
a. (U) Hague Adoption
Convention adoptions finalized between two other Convention countries are
entitled to recognition by the United States if properly certified as specified
in Article 23 of the Hague Adoption Convention (see 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(7)). However, to form the basis for immigration benefits under
U.S. law, including for purposes of Form I-130, I-730, N-600, N-600K, or an
"accompanying or following to join" claim, the age, legal custody,
and joint residence requirements of INA 101(b)(1)(E) must be met.
b. (U) U.S. citizen prospective
adoptive parents who are deemed to be habitually resident in the United States
under 8 CFR 204.303(a) and who intend to move the child to the United States in
connection with a Convention adoption may seek immigration benefits for the
child under INA 101(b)(1)(G).
9 FAM 502.3-1(I) (U) Effect of
Legal Termination of a Foreign Adoption
(CT:VISA-573; 04-16-2018)
(U) As with the adoption itself,
local foreign law governs the validity of a termination of an adoption.
However, even if a termination is legally valid, it will not adversely impact
any immigration benefits already granted while the adoption was in effect. Once
an adoption has been terminated, the legal relationship with the prior
parent(s) can only form the basis for granting an immigration benefit to the
prior parents if the legal parent-child relationship has been re-established in
accordance with the local law and no immigration benefits were granted on the
basis of the adoption.
9 FAM 502.3-1(J) (U) State
Level Adoption Contacts
(CT:VISA-573; 04-16-2018)
(U) See the National Foster Care
and Adoption Directory.
9 FAM 502.3-2 (U) Adopted child
(INA 101(b)(1)(E)) IR2
9 FAM 502.3-2(A) (U) Statutory
and Regulatory Authoriy
(CT:VISA-832; 06-03-2019)
INA 101(b)(1)(E) (8 U.S.C. 1101(b)(1)(E)); INA
101(b)(1)(F) (8 U.S.C. 1101(b)(1)(F)).
9 FAM 502.3-2(B) (U) Adopted
Child (101(b)(1)(E)) Classification
(CT:VISA-573; 04-16-2018)
a. (U) Adopted
Child (IR2) Definition:
(1) (U) Under INA
101(b)(1)(E), an alien is defined as a child and is classified IR2, if the
child:
(a) (U) Was legally adopted
while under the age of 16 (or under the age of 18, if the beneficiarys is the
birth sibling of a child adopted under 16 who meets the requirements of INA
101(b)(1)(E)) or who meets the requirements of INA 101(b)(1)(F)(i); and
(b) (U) Has been in the legal
custody of, and has jointly resided with, the adopting parent(s) for at least
two years.
(2) (U) A child adopted under
the provisions of INA 101(b)(1)(E) is precluded from bestowing any benefit or
privilege or status to his or her natural parents because of such parentage.
No natural parent of any adopted child may, by virtue of such parentage, be
accorded any right, privilege or status.
(3) (U) A child who satisfies
all the requirements of INA 101(b)(1)(E) with respect to an U.S. citizen
adoptive parent/petitioner may be the beneficiary of a Form I-130, Petition for
Alien Relative, and classifiable as an IR2. A child who satisfies the
requirements of this subsection with respect to an alien may seek any
immigration benefit appropriate to a legitimate child of that alien.
b. (U) Adoption
Requirement (IR2 Adopted Child):
(1) (U) The adoption must have
been both final and legal in the jurisdiction where it occurred to create a
legal status comparable to that of a natural legitimate child between the
adopted child and the adopting parent. The adoption must:
(a) (U) Be valid under the law
of the country or place granting the adoption;
(b) (U) Create a legal permanent
parent-child relationship between a child and someone who is not already the
child's legal parent; and
(c) (U) Terminate the legal
parent-child relationship with the prior legal parent(s).
(2) (U) See 9 FAM
502.3-1(G) for additional information on the validity and effect of foreign
adoptions.
(3) (U) In cases involving an
adoptive step-parent, termination of the legal parent-child relationship with
the prior legal parent who is not the spouse of the adoptive step-parent will
be sufficient to find the adoption valid for immigration purposes.
(4) (U) Mere ongoing contact
with the birth parents will not negate the termination of the legal parent-child
relationship with the prior legal parent or validity of the adoption, provided
that the adoptive parents continue to exercise full parental authority over the
child.
(5) (U) Adopted
Child of Single Person: A child legally adopted by a single person may
be considered a "child" within the meaning of INA 101(b)(1)(E),
provided all the requirements of that section have been met.
c. (U) Legal
Custody Requirement (IR2 Adopted Child):
(1) (U) "Legal
custody" means the assumption of responsibility for a minor by an adult
under the laws of the state and under the order or approval of a court of law
or other appropriate government entity. This provision requires that a legal
process involving the courts or other recognized government entity take place.
An informal custodial or guardianship document, such as a sworn affidavit
signed before a notary public, is insufficient for this purpose.
(2) (U) The legal custody
requirement may be fulfilled either prior to or after the childs adoption. If
the adopting parent was granted legal custody by the court or recognized
governmental entity prior to the adoption, that period may be counted toward
fulfillment of the two-year legal custody requirement. However, if custody was
not granted prior to the adoption, the adoption decree shall be deemed to mark
the commencement of legal custody.
d. (U) Joint
Residence Requirement (IR2 Adopted Child):
(1) (U) The period of
residence for which the adoptive parent(s) and child have lived together must be:
(a) (U) At least two years,
prior to or after the adoption; the time frame in which the two years are
accrued need not be continuous;
(b) (U) The petitioning adoptive
parent must have exercised primary parental control during the period in which
the adoptive parent seek to establish compliance with the statutory two-year
joint residence requirement:
(i) (U) The adoptive parents
must have evidence of parental control, especially in cases where the adopted
child resided or continues to reside in the same household with the natural
parents; and
(ii) (U) The evidence may
include competent, objective evidence that the adoptive parents have provided
or are providing financial support and day-to-day care, and have assumed the
responsibility for important decisions in the childs life.
(2) (U) Generally, such
documentation must establish that the petitioner and the beneficiary resided
together in a parent-child relationship. The evidence must clearly indicate
the physical living arrangements of the adopted child, the adoptive parent(s),
and the natural parent(s) for the period of time during which the adoptive
parent claims to have met the residence requirement. When the adopted child
continued to reside in the same household as the natural parents during the period
in which the adoptive parent/petitioner seeks to establish his or her
compliance with this requirement, the petitioner has the burden of establishing
that he or she exercised primary parental control during that period of
residence. Evidence of parental control may include, but is not limited to,
evidence that the adoptive parent provided financial support and day-to-day
supervision of the child, and owned or maintained the property where the child
resided.
(3) (U) Applying
Two-Year Custody and Joint Residence Requirements: The two years the
child was in the legal custody of the adoptive parent do not have to be the
same two years the child resided with the adoptive parent. The requisite
two-year custody and two-year residence may take place either prior to or after
the adoption, but both must be completed before the child will be eligible for
benefits under INA 101(b)(1)(E). Both legal custody and joint residence are
counted in aggregate time. A break in legal custody or joint residence,
therefore, will not affect the time already fulfilled.
e. (U) IR2
Adopted Children Do Not Have to be Orphans: Adopted children may be
properly documented as children, orphans, or as Convention adoptees, and in
some cases should receive nonimmigrant visas (see 9 FAM 502.3-1).
A child immigrating to the United States who satisfies the requirements of INA
101(b)(1)(E) does not also have to qualify as an orphan under INA 101(b)(1)(F),
nor does he or she have to have been an orphan prior to the adoption. If a
child qualifies under INA 101(b)(1)(E), adopting parents should not be
encouraged to pursue orphan processing for the child.
f. (U) Adoptive
Stepchildren (IR2 Adopted Child):
(1) (U) A child can be
considered the stepchild of his or her adoptive parent's spouse only if he or
she qualified as the child of the adoptive parent under INA 101(b)(1) at some
point when both a legal marriage existed between the adoptive parent and spouse
and the child was still under age 18. For example, if an alien woman adopts a
child, fulfills the two-year legal custody and joint residence requirements per
INA 101(b)(1)(E), and then marries a U.S. citizen while her adoptive child is
still under age 18, the child qualifies as the stepchild of the U.S. citizen.
If she marries the U.S. citizen before fulfilling the two-year custody and
joint residence requirements, then the child does not become a stepchild of the
American citizen for immigration purposes until those requirements are
fulfilled, provided she is still legally married to the U.S. citizen and the
child is still under age 18 when all requirements of INA 101(b)(1)(E) are met.
(2) (U) A step-parent is not
required to adopt his or her step-child in order for a Form I-130 or Form I-730
to be approved. If the parent and step-parent married before the child's 18th
birthday, the step-parent/step-child relationship can be a basis for approving
a Form I-130 or Form I-730. However, the child must have been adopted by the
step-parent and meet the age, legal custody, and joint residence requirements
of INA 101(b)(1)(E) and the requirements in 9 FAM 502.3-2(b)
before the individual can be the adopting step-parent's "child" for
purposes of naturalization under INA 320 or INA 322.
g. (U) Relating
INA 101(b)(1)(E) to Adult or Married Sons or Daughters:
An alien may subsequently be considered the son or daughter of an adoptive
parent provided he or she had satisfied the requirements of INA 101(b)(1)(E)
with respect to that adoptive parent while still unmarried and under the age of
21. An alien who never satisfied the requirements of that subsection with
respect to an adoptive parent, however, may not petition for or be the
beneficiary of a petition filed by a previous parent, regardless of whether or
not any benefit has been sought based on the adoptive relationship.
9 FAM 502.3-2(C) (U) Processing
Immigrant Visas for IR2 Adopted Children
(CT:VISA-573; 04-16-2018)
a. (U) Demonstrating
Eligibility for IR2 Adopted Children Classification: An adopted child
who has satisfied all of the requirements of INA 101(b)(1)(E) while still
unmarried and under the age of 21 qualifies as a child of the adoptive parent.
An immigrant visa (IV) for such a child is processed in much the same way as an
IV would be for a legitimate biological child of the same parent. In support
of the Form I-130, Petition for Alien Relative, the adoptive parent and/or
petitioner must provide:
(1) (U) A certified copy of
the adoption decree;
(2) (U) The legal custody
decree, if custody occurred before the adoption;
(3) (U) A statement showing
dates and places where child resided with the parents; and
(4) (U) If the child was
adopted while aged 16 or 17 years, evidence that the child was adopted together
with, or subsequent to the adoption of, a natural sibling under age 16 by the
same adoptive parent(s).
b. (U) Child
Citizenship Act (IR2 Adopted Child): Many adoptive parents have
questions related to the Child Citizenship Act and its impact on their child.
They can be referred to the USCIS website or Department website for additional
information and important details on the legislations impact on adopted
children. In general, IR2 adopted children under the age of 18 at the time of
admission to the United States are granted automatic citizenship upon admission
as lawful permanent residents to reside in the legal and physical custody of
the U.S. citizen adoptive parent(s). Adoptive parents must file a Form N-600,
Application for Certificate of Citizenship with USCIS or apply for a U.S.
passport to obtain proof of citizenship.
9 FAM 502.3-3 (U) Orphans Adopted
under INA 101(b)(1)(F) IR3 and ir4
9 FAM 502.3-3(A) (U) Statutory
and Regulatory Authority
9 FAM 502.3-3(A)(1) (U) Immigration
and Nationality Act
(CT:VISA-832; 06-03-2019)
(U) INA 101(b)(1)(F) (8 U.S.C. 1101(b)(1)(F)).
9 FAM 502.3-3(A)(2) (U) Code
of Federal Regulations
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
(U) 8 CFR 204.3; 22 CFR 42.21.
9 FAM 502.3-3(A)(3) (U) Public
Law
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
(U) Child Citizenship Act of 2000,
Public Law 106-395.
9 FAM 502.3-3(B) (U) Orphan
(101(b)(1)(F)) Classification
9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(1) (U) Key
Elements of Orphan Classification
(CT:VISA-573; 04-16-2018)
a. (U) There
are Three Key Elements in the Orphan Classification:
(1) (U) The child is under the
age of 16 at the time a petition is filed on his or her behalf (or under the
age of 18 if the natural sibling of a child who has immigrated or will
immigrate based on adoption by the same adoptive parent(s)) and is unmarried
and under the age of 21 at the time of petition and visa adjudication (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(2));
(2) (U) The child has been or
will be adopted by a married U.S. citizen and spouse, jointly or by an
unmarried U.S. citizen at least 25 years of age (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(2) and (3)); and
(3) (U) The
Child is an Orphan Because Either:
(a) (U) The child has no parents
because of the death or disappearance, abandonment or desertion by, or
separation from or loss of both parents (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(4) paragraph b); or
(b) (U) The childs sole or
surviving parent is incapable of providing proper care and has, in writing,
irrevocably released the child for emigration and adoption (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(4) paragraph c).
b. (U) In addition, you must be
satisfied that the petitioner (and spouse, if applicable) intends to enter into
a bona fide parent-child relationship with the orphan (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(5)), and that there is no credible evidence of child-buying,
fraud, or misrepresentation associated with the case (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(6)).
c. (U) Children who are
determined to be orphans may be classified as an IR3 or IR4. Proper
classification is very important given passage of the Child Citizenship Act of
2000, and is addressed in 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(7).
9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(2) (U) Age
and Citizenship Requirements (Orphan)
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) To qualify as an orphan,
the adopted child must have a Form I-600, Petition to Classify Orphan as an
Immediate Relative, filed on his or her behalf before the childs 16th
birthday, or, in the case of a child who is the natural sibling of a child who
has immigrated or will immigrate based on an adoption by the same adoptive
parent(s) before the childs 18th birthday.
(1) Form I-600 must be filed, but does not have to be
approved, before the beneficiarys 16th (or 18th for natural siblings)
birthday.
(2) (U) Because an orphan
must meet the general definition of child in INA 101(b)(1), the beneficiary
must be unmarried and under the age of 21 at all stages of petition
adjudication, visa processing, and travel to the United States.
(3) (U) INA 201(f)(1):
(a) (U) Under INA 201(f)(1)
whether the beneficiary of an immediate relative petition filed for a U.S.
citizen's child is "under 21 years of age" is determined based on the
beneficiary's age when the petition was filed. Since any Form I-600 must
always be filed by the beneficiary's 16th birthday (or 18th birthday for
eligible natural siblings), the beneficiary of a properly filed petition will
always be considered under 21 years of age, for purposes of visa issuance and
admission, regardless of the beneficiary's actual age. So long as the
beneficiary remains unmarried at all stages of petition adjudication, visa
processing, and travel to the United States, the beneficiary will remain
eligible for classification and admission as an IR3 or IR4 immigrant.
(b) (U) Section 201(f) of the
Act preserves the beneficiary's age as the age on the date the petition is
filed only for purposes of visa issuance. It does not have this effect for
purposes of acquisition of citizenship under section 320 or 322 of the Act.
The beneficiary must actually be under the age of 18 when the conditions of
section 320 or 322 are met in order to benefit from those provisions.
(4) (U) Public Law 106-139 of
1999 amended INA 101(b)(1)(E) and was enacted to prevent the separation of
natural siblings through adoption where the circumstances of the older child
are essentially those of the younger child except that the older child is age
16 or 17. Therefore, 16- or 17-year olds traveling with or after younger
siblings who are being or have been adopted by the same adoptive parent(s) may
also benefit from a Form I-600 as long as the petition is filed prior to their
18th birthday.
(5) (U) See 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(2) on other case-specific age-related requirements that may have
to be met at the time of petition filing based on USCIS approval of individual
parents suitability to adopt overseas.
b. (U) Only a
U.S. Citizen May File a Form I-600 for an Orphan:
(1) (U) If the petitioner is
legally married, the spouse does not have to be a U.S. citizen. However, if
not a U.S. citizen, the spouse must be in lawful immigration status. There are
no age requirements for a married petitioner and spouse. Regardless of any
legal separation or separation agreement, the spouse must sign the Form I-600.
(2) (U) If the petitioner is
unmarried, he or she must be at least 24 years old at the time he or she
submits a Form I-600A, Application for Advance Processing of an Orphan
Petition, (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(2)), and at least 25 years old at the time he or she files the
Form I-600.
9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(3) (U) Adoption
or Intent to Adopt (Orphans)
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
(U) A Form I-600 petitioner(s)
must have adopted or intend to adopt the orphan, as demonstrated by either
paragraph 1 or paragraph 2 below:
(1) (U) Evidence of a
full and final adoption under the laws of the foreign sending country. For
adoptions abroad where at least one of the adoptive parent(s) did not
personally see and observe the orphan prior to or during the foreign adoption
proceeding or, if petitioners are married, where the spouses did not jointly
adopted the child, the petitioner(s) must also provide evidence that the state
of the orphans proposed residence allows re-adoption or provides for judicial
recognition of the adoption abroad. The foreign adoption proceeding concludes
when a competent authority, usually a court, issues the adoption decree or
guardianship order.
(a) (U) Evidence of a full and
final adoption would usually be in the form of an adoption decree, giving the adopted
child the same rights and privileges that are accorded to a natural legitimate
child (such as inheritance rights, etc.). Simple, conditional, or limited
adoptions, such as those conducted under Islamic family law in some countries,
are more accurately described as guardianships and are not considered valid
adoptions for U.S. immigration purposes (see 9 FAM
502.3-1(E)). If married, both petitioners must be party to the adoption.
(b) (U) A foreign adoption, even
if documented with a valid local adoption decree, is not valid for purposes of
demonstrating a full and final adoption unless at least one adoptive parent
actually sees and observes the child in person at some point before or during
the foreign adoption proceeding. If neither adoptive parent actually saw
and observed the child in person, the foreign adoption cannot be considered
full and final, although it should adequately prove legal custody of the child
for purposes of emigration and adoption (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(3) paragraph b(1)). In such
a case, if the petitioners can demonstrate that their state of residence allows
re-adoption, or provides for judicial recognition of the adoption abroad, and
that pre-adoption requirements have been met, the petitioner should be
considered to have adequately shown evidence of the intent to adopt.
(c) (U) For proxy adoptions
where neither adopting parent has seen the child, the Form I-600 will need to
be filed with a USCIS office in the United States since the petitioner will not
be physically present overseas (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(3)).
(2) (U) Evidence of an
irrevocable release of the orphan for emigration and adoption from the person,
organization, or competent authority that had the immediately previous legal
custody or control over the orphan. The petitioner (and spouse, if applicable)
must intend to, and be legally able, to adopt the child in the United States;
petitioners must present evidence showing that any state pre-adoption
requirements noted in the approval of their Form I-600A approval notice finding
them suitable and eligible to adopt have been met (unless they cannot be
complied with prior to the orphans arrival in the United States).
(a) (U) Evidence of custody of
the child for purposes of emigration and adoption will vary greatly depending
on local laws and regulations governing child custody. Generally, this
evidence will consist of documentation from a governmental agency, a court of
competent jurisdiction, an adoption agency, or an orphanage legally authorized
to release the child for emigration and adoption according to local law or
regulation. The evidence does not have to include specific reference to the
custody being granted for purposes of emigration and adoption, but should not
prohibit the childs ability to leave the country or otherwise limit the
custody arrangements of the parents (i.e., guardianship for academic purposes,
temporary custody, etc.). Generally speaking, grants of guardianship under
Islamic sharia law do not meet custody requirements. Consular officers should
consult with VO/L/A on a case-by-case basis to assess individual guardianship
orders under Islamic sharia law.
(b) (U) Petitioners who have
custody of the child for purposes of emigration and adoption must also
demonstrate that they have met or will meet the pre-adoption requirements of
the state of the childs proposed residence. The Form I-600A approval notice
should note any pre-adoption state requirements that must be met. Adoptive
parents must provide you with evidence that all such identified pre-adoption
requirements (except those that cannot be complied with prior to the childs
arrival in the United States) have been met. Officers should be as flexible as
possible in evaluating such evidence, opting for the minimum level of proof
acceptable in each case. If questions arise regarding pre-adoption
requirements, you can consult with CA/OCS/CI and CA/VO/F.
(3) (U) You need to be well
versed in the host countrys adoption, custody and guardianship laws and
procedures, and should rely on competent local authorities to make responsible
decisions about the facts surrounding child custody and final adoptions, not
second-guessing whether such authorities are correctly implementing their own
laws or regulations. At the same time, you must keep in mind that terms used
by such local authorities (such as abandonment) may not always be equivalent
to definitions for such terms in U.S. immigration law. In all cases, the
requirements of U.S. immigration law must be met. If you have evidence of a
trend involving inappropriate application of local laws or local officials
decisions contributing to child-buying, fraud or misrepresentation in adoption
cases, details of posts findings should be reported to CA/VO/F and CA/OCS/CI.
9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(4) (U) Status
of Birth Parents (Orphans)
(CT:VISA-832; 06-03-2019)
a. (U) Introduction:
(1) (U) A child may qualify as
an orphan if he or she has no parents because of the death or disappearance of,
abandonment or desertion by, or separation or loss of both parents (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(4) paragraph b below). A child may also qualify as an orphan if
he or she has a sole or surviving parent who is incapable of providing proper
care for the child who irrevocably releases the child for emigration or
adoption in writing (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(4) paragraph c below).
(2) (U) These two sets of
criteria are distinct and separate, and only one set of requirements must be
met for the child to be considered an orphan. For example, a child whose sole
parent is unable to provide proper care does not have to have been abandoned by
both parents in order to qualify as an orphan. Similarly, if one of the
childs parents has died and local courts have legally separated the child from
the remaining parent, there is no need under U.S. immigration law for the
separated parent to irrevocably release the child for emigration and adoption.
(3) (U) Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) regulations establish very specific meanings for terms
describing an orphans birth parents, and specific documentation is required in
each case, as outlined in 9 FAM 502.3-6 below. Questions related to whether the
circumstances of and evidence submitted for a particular case are sufficient
for orphan classification should be directed to CA/VO/F and CA/VO/L/A. If primary
evidence is not available but posts feels the case may still merit orphan
classification, you should consult with CA/VO/F and CA/VO/L/A.
b. (U) Orphan
With No Parents: An orphan may have no parents due to any combination
of the following six reasons: death, disappearance, abandonment, desertion,
separation, or loss. A child is not required to have lost each parent in the
same way. For example, if one parent disappeared and the second parent was
legally separated from the child, the child may qualify as an orphan. A
parent-child relationship is terminated by any one of these conditions: a child
separated from a parent, for example, does not also have to have been abandoned
by that parent. See 9 FAM 502.3-6 below for the definitions of the terms death,
disappearance, abandonment, desertion, separation, and loss.
c. (U) Orphan
With Sole or Surviving Parent:
(1) (U) If a child is not an
orphan by nature of having no parents, he or she may still qualify as an orphan
if the child has a sole or surviving parent who is incapable of providing
proper care and who has, in writing, irrevocably released the child for
emigration and adoption. This is the only circumstance where a child released
directly to the adoptive parent(s) can qualify as an orphan.
(2) (U) Irrevocable
Release (Orphan):
(a) (U) The sole or surviving
parents irrevocable release for emigration and adoption must be in writing, in
a language that the parent is capable of reading and signed by the parent. The
release must be irrevocable and without stipulations or conditions. The
release may, however, identify the person(s) to whom the parent is releasing
the child, even if that person is the prospective adoptive parent. If the
parent is illiterate, but in an interview satisfies you that he or she had full
knowledge of the contents of the document and understood the irrevocable nature
of the release, the officer may also treat the document as evidence of the
release required for the orphan classification.
(b) (U) There is no requirement
that the written irrevocable release be completed in the presence of a consular
officer or notary, and in most cases, the birth parents presence should not be
required for post to process an orphan case. However, when post has serious
concerns with a particular case regarding the natural parents intent or
understanding of the release, post may request an interview with the natural
parent. If there are concerns that purported natural parents may not be the
biological parents of the child, DNA tests may be used to affirm that the true
natural parent is releasing the child for emigration and adoption. Consular
officers should consult with CA/VO/F and FPP regarding DNA use in orphan
determinations.
(c) (U) In countries where the
law provides a birth parent the right to revoke his or her release for a
specified period of time after granting such release, even up until the final
adoption order including any revocation or appeal period thereafter, the
release is not considered irrevocable until such time has passed or a court
order indicates that the birth parent was aware of the right to revoke and
waived that right. For example, if the law provides that a birth parent has
two weeks after the final adoption order to revoke his or her consent to the
adoption, the birth parents release would not become irrevocable until the two
week period after the issuance of the adoption order has elapsed. If you have
any questions regarding whether a release is irrevocable, you may request an AO
from CA/VO/L/A.
(3) (U) If
Sole or Surviving Parent Remarries: Generally, to qualify as a
stepchild under the INA, the marriage creating the stepchild status must have
occurred before the stepchild's 18th birthday. USCIS, however, has adopted a
narrow interpretation of "stepchild" under INA 101(b)(1)(B) solely
for determining whether a child is an "orphan" as the child of a sole
or surviving parent. Under this interpretation, a sole or surviving parents
new spouse must have a legal parent-child relationship with the child in order
for the child no longer to be considered the child of a sole or surviving
parent.
(a) (U) A sole or surviving
parent who has married (or remarried) will still be considered the child's sole
or surviving parent if the petitioner establishes that the sole or surviving
parents new spouse has no legal parent-child relationship to the child under
the law of the foreign sending country.
(b) (U) To
Establish a Legal Parent-Child Relationship:
(i) (U) The stepparent must
have adopted the child; or
(ii) (U) The stepparent must
have obtained legal custody of the child; or
(iii) (U) Under the law of the
foreign sending country, the marriage between the parent and stepparent must
have created a legal parent-child relationship between the stepparent and the
child before the child's 18th birthday.
(c) (U) If you are unsure of the
legal status of the relationship between a stepparent and a child, contact
CA/VO/L/A.
9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(5) (U) Bona
Fide Parent-Child Relationship, Severing of Previous Relationship (Orphans)
(CT:VISA-573; 04-16-2018)
a. (U) Petitioners seeking to
bring an orphan to the United States must intend to enter into a bona fide
parent-child relationship with that orphan. A bona fide parent-child
relationship implies the provision of care, support, and direction to the
orphan, without the intent to profit financially or otherwise from the presence
of the child.
b. (U) Adoptions should
permanently sever previous parental ties. Therefore, a caretaker relationship
in which the adopting parents intend to return the child to their natural
parents or former guardians in the future would generally not constitute a bona
fide parent-child relationship. Also, as provided in INA 101(b)(1)(F), no
natural parent or prior adoptive parent of an orphan may obtain any immigration
benefit as a result of their relationship with an orphan.
9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(6) (U) Child-Buying,
Fraud, Misrepresentation (Orphans)
(CT:VISA-730; 02-05-2019)
(U) Orphan classification is not
appropriate for cases involving evidence (or an admission) of child-buying, fraud,
or misrepresentation.
(1) (U) Child-Buying:
(a) (U) A child is not eligible
for orphan classification if the prospective adoptive parent(s) or adoptive
parent(s), or a person or entity working on their behalf, have given or will
give money or other consideration (i.e., an item of objective value) either
directly or indirectly to the childs parent(s), agent(s), other individual(s),
or entity(ies) as payment for the child or as an inducement to release the
child. You must carefully review allegations of child-buying, and carefully
weigh the evidence available to substantiate such charges.
(b) (U) Reasonable payment for
necessary activities such as administrative, court, legal, translation, and/or
medical services related to the adoption proceedings are not precluded, and should
not be automatically conflated with child buying. Foreign adoption services
can be and adoption facilitators who assist in processing individual cases
expect to be paid for their services. However, under U.S. law governing intercountry
adoption service providers' compensation must be for services actually rendered
and should not be an incentive or contingent fee for locating or placing a
child for adoption. Moreover, such compensation must be "reasonable"
based on the services rendered and take into account the country in which the
service was provided and other factors. A person who offers, gives, solicits,
or accepts inducement by way of compensation intended to influence or affect in
the United States or a foreign country the relinquishment of parental rights or
the giving of parental consent relating to the adoption of a child may face
criminal or civil penalties. Cash given directly to a biological parent may be
justifiable if it is directly related to an expense such as administrative,
legal, court, translation, and/or medical services related to the adoption
proceedings that do not influence or affect the relinquishment of parental
rights. However, adjudicators should be alert to expenditures that fall
outside the parameters of these reasonable or permissible payments, and should
always further investigate patterns of fact that suggest child-buying. If
there is evidence of child-buying, either direct or circumstantial, or an
admission of child-buying, the child is not eligible for orphan classification
and the Form I-600 petition should be
returned to USCIS as "not clearly
approvable" or as a consular return for possible revocation. Please
contact VO/F and VO/L/A if you discover evidence of suspected child buying. If
there is concern about an adoption service provider's activities, including the
activities of agents of the provider in foreign countries, please contact
OCS/CI.
(2) (U) Fraud
or Misrepresentation:
(a) (U) A child may not be
eligible for orphan classification if there is evidence of fraud or material
misrepresentation with the purpose of using deception to obtain visas for
children who do not qualify. In many cases, both the U.S. citizen adoptive
parents and adoptive children may be unwitting victims of fraud perpetrated
upon them by unscrupulous agents misrepresenting material facts about these
children. If the fraud involves stolen or kidnapped children, biological
parents may also be victims. In some cases, biological parents may also have
been misled about the permanent nature of their separation from the child.
(b) (U) You must carefully
scrutinize documentation presented in support of orphan cases. In some cases,
it may be necessary to conduct field investigations, DNA tests, or additional
interviews in order to investigate fraud indicators. Because adoption cases
are multi-faceted, a successful anti-fraud program should engage the entire
adoption community, including agents, lawyers, orphanages, foster care
providers, medical personnel, judges, local officials, and law enforcement
personnel.
(c) (U) You should keep in mind,
however, that the responsibility for enforcing local laws and for protecting
the rights of children and biological parents rests primarily with local
authorities. Also, anti-fraud efforts must be balanced with the mandate to
provide service to U.S. citizens and the need to be sensitive to the victims of
fraud. Whenever possible, posts should use anti-fraud techniques that do not
unnecessarily delay processing or create further hardship for fraud victims.
9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(7) (U) Immediate
Relative (IR3 vs. IR4) Orphan Classifications and the Child Citizenship Act
(CT:VISA-832; 06-03-2019)
a. (U) Orphans
May Be Classified as Either IR3 or IR4: The correct classification of
immigrant visas issued to orphans is particularly important due to the Child
Citizenship Act of 2000 (Public Law 106-395). As a result of that Act, orphans
properly admitted to the United States as lawful permanent residents (LPR),
based on the IR3 classification, while under the age of 18 who are residing in
the legal and physical custody of the U.S. citizen adoptive parents(s) will
automatically acquire U.S. citizenship, while those admitted based on the IR4
classification will not immediately acquire citizenship (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(7) paragraphs e and f below for additional details). You should
take particular care to classify visas correctly and to inform prospective
parents of the significance of the immigrant visa classification their child
receives. (See 9 FAM
502.3-1(C) on adopted children who should be issued other types of visas.)
b. (U) Although proper
classifications should be noted on Form I-600, Petition to Classify Orphan as
an Immediate Relative, or petition approval notices, the final determination of
proper classification for the visa rests with the adjudicating consular
officer. Travel plans and circumstances change, such that parents expecting to
apply for an IR3 visa for their adopted child may not be eligible to apply for
an IR3 visa because they were not able to complete the adoption abroad and/or
at least one parent did not personally see and observe the child prior to the
foreign adoption proceedings. If the child cannot be classified as an IR3, you
may approve the case as an IR4 classification if the IR4 criteria below have
been met.
c. (U) The
IR3 Classification is Appropriate for Orphans Who Meet the Following Criteria:
(1) (U) The orphan was the
subject of a full, final, and legal adoption abroad by the petitioner (and spouse,
if married) prior to visa issuance; and
(2) (U) An adoptive parent
personally saw and observed the child before or during the foreign adoption
proceedings. If the petitioner is married, at least one of the adoptive
parents must have personally seen and observed the child before or during the
adoption proceedings. Seeing and observing the child for the first time during
the visa interview after a full, final, and legal adoption has been completed
does not constitute seeing and observing the child during the foreign adoption
proceeding.
d. (U) The IR4
Classification is Appropriate for Orphans Who Meet the Following Criteria:
(1) (U) The orphan will be
adopted by the petitioner (or spouse, if applicable) after being admitted to
the United States (requires both petitioner intent and satisfaction of any
applicable pre-adoption requirements of the home state); and
(2) (U) The petitioner (or
someone working on his and/or her behalf) must have secured legal custody of
the orphan under the laws of the foreign sending country sufficient to allow
the child to depart from the foreign sending country and adopted elsewhere.
e. (U) Upon being legally
admitted into the United States as an LPR and assuming the IR3 classification
was appropriate, a child under the age of 18 who resides in the legal and
physical custody of the U.S. citizen adoptive parent(s)will automatically
acquire U.S. citizenship as of the date of admission to the United States. The
USCIS Buffalo Field Office processes newly entering IR3 visa packets,
automatically sending Certificates of Citizenship to eligible children without
requiring additional forms or fees. Adoptive parents may also request a U.S.
passport for the child.
f. (U) IR4 visa recipients
become LPRs upon admission to the United States, but do not automatically
acquire U.S. citizenship. A child who enters the United States on an IR4 visa
acquires U.S. citizenship as of the date of a full and final adoption decree in
the United States (assuming the child is under age 18 at the time of
adoption). While citizenship is acquired as of the date of the adoption in
such cases, beneficiaries will need to file Form N-600, Application for
Certificate of Citizenship, and submit it to the local USCIS District Office or
Sub-Office that holds jurisdiction over their permanent residence to receive a
Certificate of Citizenship. Alternatively, adoptive parents may request a U.S.
passport for the child as evidence of citizenship.
g. (U) Many adoptive parents
have questions related to the Child Citizenship Act. They can be referred to
the USCIS website or the State Department website for additional information
and important details on the legislations impact on adopted children.
h. (U) B2 Visas:
U.S. citizen parents of children adopted overseas who reside overseas and do
not intend to reside in the United States may apply for naturalization on
behalf of the child by filing Form N-600K, Application for Citizenship and
Issuance of Certificate under INA 322, at any USCIS District Office or
Sub-Office in the United States. The naturalization process for such a child
cannot take place overseas except for children of U.S. citizen military members
who are authorized to accompany and reside with their U.S. citizen military
parent(s) abroad pursuant to official orders. The child will need to be in the
United States temporarily pursuant to a lawful admission and maintaining such
lawful status to complete naturalization processing. You may therefore receive
applications for B-2 nonimmigrant visas to attend Section 322 naturalization
hearings (see 9 FAM
402.2-4(B)(7)). You are encouraged to give positive consideration to such
cases whenever possible, and should not force or encourage such parents and
children to undergo the immigrant visa process if they do not intend to reside
in the United States.
9 FAM 502.3-3(C) (U) Processing
Orphan Visas
9 FAM 502.3-3(C)(1) (U) Orphan
Case Processing Introduction
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) Because processing
orphan cases varies somewhat from standard IV processing, the following section
examines each of the stages for processing these cases. Questions related to
processing of such cases should be directed to CA/VO/F; classification
questions should be directed to CA/VO/L/A (with a copy to CA/VO/F); and
reporting on countries adoption practices should be directed to CA/OCS/CI (with
a copy to CA/VO/F).
b. (U) Processing
an Orphan Case Requires the Following Steps:
(1) (U) Prospective adoptive
parents establish their suitability and ability to provide a proper home
environment for the adopted child and eligibility to adopt, usually through an
approved Form I-600A, Application for Advance Processing of an Orphan Petition
(see 9
FAM 502.3-3(C)(2) below);
(2) (U) Prospective adoptive
parents establish that a particular child may be classified as an orphan, as
demonstrated by an approved Form I-600, Petition to Classify Orphan as an
Immediate Relative, and confirmed through the Form I-604, Determination on Child
for Adoption (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(3) and 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(4) below); and
(3) (U) A visa application is
filed on behalf of the child, providing all necessary documentation for
production of the visa and demonstrating that no ineligibilities apply.
c. (U) Where required or when
requested, USCIS alerts post, visa NVC, or the USCIS officer abroad via email
to information on petitions for orphans and approval of Form I-600A,
Application for Advance Processing of an Orphan Petition. Upon receipt of this
email, you will notify the petitioner of the steps to be taken for further
processing of the case.
9 FAM 502.3-3(C)(2) (U) Establishing
Adoptive Parent(s) Suitability (Form I-600A, Application for Advance
Processing of an Orphan Petition)
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) Form
I-600A Introduction, Purpose:
(1) (U) USCIS has
responsibility to determine if prospective adoptive parent(s) are suitable and
eligible to adopt a foreign born child. You may assist in this process by
providing information or necessary forms to prospective petitioners, or taking
fingerprints or forwarding paperwork on behalf of such individuals under
certain limited circumstances. You will also need to refer to USCIS
suitability approvals in order to adjudicate orphan petitions or visa
applications (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(2) paragraph d below).
(2) (U) INA 101(b)(1)(F)
requires that USCIS be satisfied that proper care will be furnished to a child
if admitted to the United States as an orphan. Form I-600A allows the adopting
parent(s) to demonstrate that they are financially, logistically, and otherwise
prepared and suited to adopt a child internationally, and are eligible to adopt
a foreign born child. Form I-600A is not designed to evaluate a particular
childs classification as an orphan. Because Form I-600A reviews suitability
and eligibility of the prospective adoptive parents, rather than a specific
beneficiarys orphan eligibility. A single Form I-600A may result in approval
for prospective adoptive parents to adopt multiple children. Prospective
adoptive parents are often encouraged to begin the overseas adoption process
early by filing Form I-600A before identifying a particular child to adopt.
(3) (U) You will sometimes
adjudicate visas for orphan applicants where the suitability and eligibility
determination has been made based on a Form I-600 approval filed with a USCIS
office. See 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(2) paragraph f below for more information about these cases.
(4) (U) See a copy of Form I-600A
at the USCIS Forms website.
b. (U) Filing
the Form I-600A, Application for Advance Processing of
Orphan Petition:
(1) (U) U.S. citizen
prospective adoptive parent(s) residing in the United States file the Form
I-600A with the USCIS office in accordance with the form instructions. U.S.
citizens currently residing overseas may file the Form I-600A with either USCIS
in the United States or with the USCIS office overseas with jurisdiction over
their current place of residence abroad.
(2) (U) You may not adjudicate
a Form I-600A. However, with the concurrence of the USCIS overseas office
having jurisdiction over the consular district, you may accept a completed Form
I-600A and fees from a U.S. citizen resident of the consular district for
transmittal to the USCIS overseas office. In such a case, the U.S. citizen
should be advised to communicate directly with the USCIS overseas office
regarding requirements and status of the adjudication of the Form I-600A.
(3) (U) Form I-600A is
available on USCISs website. The petitioner and spouse, if the petitioner is
married, must sign Form I-600A. The application must be signed and submitted
with the following documentation:
(a) (U) Proof of U.S.
citizenship of the adoptive parent;
(b) (U) Proof of marriage of
petitioner and spouse (if married);
(c) (U) Home study (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(2) paragraph b(4) below);
(d) (U) Proof of compliance with
state pre-adoption requirements; and
(e) (U) Fees.
(4) (U) The home study is used
to evaluate prospective parent(s) financial ability to rear and educate the
child, describe the living accommodations where the prospective parent(s)
resides and where the child will reside, and to provide a factual evaluation of
the physical, mental, and moral capabilities of the prospective parent(s) to
rear and educate the child. The home study must include a statement
recommending or approving the parents for adoption.
(a) (U) 8 CFR 204.311 provides
specific guidance on who can perform home studies when an accredited agency must
review and approve a home study.
(b) (U) The home study must
contain specific approval of the prospective adoptive parents for adoption.
The home study preparer must specify the number of children the prospective
adoptive parent(s) are approved to adopt, and whether there are any specific
restrictions to the adoption such as a childs nationality, age, gender, or
other characteristics. If the home study preparer has approved the prospective
adoptive parents for a handicapped or special needs adoption, this fact must
also be clearly stated.
(5) (U) As part of Form I-600A
suitability and eligibility application, the petitioner, spouse (if married)
and each additional adult member of the household must be fingerprinted.
(a) (U) For petitioners residing
in the United States, Form I-600A is filed and then USCIS notifies each person
in writing of the time and location where they must go to be fingerprinted
(usually done electronically). Any required updates for these individuals
would be handled at the same location.
(b) (U) For petitioners residing
overseas, USCIS officers or consular officers in countries without a USCIS
presence will need to complete fingerprint cards Form FD-258, Applicant
Fingerprint Card and collect fingerprinting fees for each individual. Any
required updates for these individual should be handled by either the USCIS
officer at post, or in countries without a USCIS presence, by collecting the
fingerprints on the Form DS-258 and send the FD-258 to the Nebraska Service
Center (for I-600A forms pending with a USICS office abroad) or to the National
Benefits Center (for I-600A forms pending with NBC).
(c) (U) For petitioners (and
adult family members in the household) whose 15-month fingerprint clearances
have expired and who appear in person at posts overseas with invalid (expired)
fingerprint clearances, CA/VO/F assists to expedite new fingerprint
clearances. Post should email the CA/VO/F analyst with the adoptions
portfolio, who will consult with USCIS. If USCIS updates the fingerprint
clearance, USCIS will send an updated I-600 approval letter to post through the
normal channels (i.e. from the USCIS National Benefits Center through the
National Visa Center for I-600s filed in the United States).
c. (U) Approval
of Form I-600A, Application for Advance Processing of
an Orphan Petition:
(1) (U) USCIS approval of Form
I-600A will be noted on the original Form I-600A and on a Form I-171H, Notice
of Favorable Determination Concerning Application For Advance Processing of
Orphan Petition or Form I-797C, Notice of Action, sent to the petitioner and a
visas 37 cable sent to the IV-issuing post with jurisdiction over any country
where the petitioner intends to file a Form I-600 for the particular adopted
child (if a country is indicated). You may not accept Form I-171H/I-797C as
proof of Form I-600A approval, but may accept the original approved Form
I-600A, a visas 37 cable, or faxed or e-mail notice of an approved Form I-600A
if transmitted directly from USCIS or the Department. Upon request by the
prospective adoptive parents, posts may transfer Form I-600A approval notices
to other immigrant visa-issuing posts by cable, fax, or email. Information on
approval of home study updates or updated fingerprint clearances will be
provided by USCIS or the Department by cable, fax, or e-mail. Posts should not
require applicants to present home studies, background information, or the
original Form I-600A in order to process orphan cases.
(2) (U) Because USCIS
adjudicators consider other factors besides the home study in reviewing Form
I-600A applications, a Form I-600A approval notice may show different criteria
for the children who may be adopted than those listed in the home study
originally prepared on the parents. In such cases, the Form I-600A approval
criteria governs. If no criteria are listed, and if no pre-adoption
requirements are noted, you should assume that there are no age- or
gender-related restrictions on which children may be adopted, and that no
pre-adoption requirements exist. If the Form I-600A approval notice does not
specifically mention approval to adopt a special needs or disabled child, you
should assume that the parents were not approved for such an adoption. If
posts encounter cases where two different approval notices for the same case
provide differing information (for example, the physical Form I-600A with its
approval stamp does not note restrictions on the age or gender of the adopted
child, but the visas 37 cable does), contact CA/VO/F for assistance.
(3) (U) Form I-600A approval
is valid for 18 months from the date of its approval, and adoptive parents
filing a petition for a child to be classified as an orphan must file Form I-600
within the 18-month validity period. Prospective adoptive parents may request
a one-time no fee extension of a Form I-600A approval from USCIS. If granted,
the extension is for an additional 18 months from the date of the initial
I-600A approval period. If Form I-600 is not filed within that period, Form
I-600A is considered to have been abandoned. You may not extend the validity
period of a Form I-600A approval. If the prospective parent(s) wishes to file
an orphan petition after their Form I-600A expires, they must file a new Form
I-600A and submit required documentation to the appropriate USCIS office (or
include additional information with the Form I-600 filed with a USCIS office,
see 9
FAM 502.3-3(C)(2) paragraph f below. Further action on the case must be
put on hold until the new Form I-600A is approved.
(4) (U) Separately, the
fingerprint clearance obtained during the Form I-600A process has a 15-month
validity period. Dates of fingerprint clearances should be provided in the
Form I-600A approval documentation (if they are not, request assistance from
CA/VO/F). If an orphan petition is not approved within the 15-month clearance
period, adoptive parents must request updated fingerprint clearance per
procedures outlined in 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(2) paragraph b(5) above. You may not extend the validity of the
fingerprint clearance and must wait for updated clearance information, either
by notice from the appropriate USCIS office or by email from CA/VO/F.
(5) (U) It is important to
remember that the Form I-600A application approval is valid for 18 months, but
the associated fingerprints check is only valid for 15 months. The
fingerprints must be valid at visa issuance.
(6) (U) Prospective adoptive
parents must contact USCIS if there are significant changes in their
circumstances subsequent to the Form I-600A approval. Such changes include
significant changes in the petitioners household (birth of a child, divorce of
the petitioner, etc.), a change in jurisdiction (petitioner moves across state
or country border, etc.), or a change in financial circumstances (petitioner loses
his or her job, etc.). USCIS will generally then request an updated or amended
home study, and send notice of an updated Form I-600A approval if USCIS finds
the prospective adoptive parents remain suitable and eligible to adopt. A
change in marital status of the prospective adoptive parent(s) will require a
new Form I-600A and new home study. You have no authority to request updated
or amended home studies. If you learn of changes in the petitioner(s)
circumstance, and the petitioner has not requested and obtained an updated Form
I-600A approval, you should contact CA/VO/F for assistance in consulting with
the original approving USCIS office regarding the case. See 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(2) paragraph e below on fraud or misrepresentation issues with
the Form I-600A.
d. (U) Consular
Officer Use of Form I-600A, Application for Advance
Processing of Orphan Petition Information: Since suitability issues are
solely the responsibility of USCIS, you are not involved in the Form I-600A
adjudication and have no authority to review USCIS determinations regarding
adoptive parent(s) suitability or eligibility to adopt. However, you will
need to review Form I-600A approvals for the following:
(1) (U) Form I-600 Filing: As noted in 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(3), you are only permitted to accept Form I-600 petitions if
they have acceptable evidence of a valid Form I-600A approval (and fingerprint
clearance) for the petitioner(s).
(2) (U) Form I-600 and Visa Adjudication: You may only approve Form I-600
petitions and/or visas for children who meet the conditions noted in the Form
I-600A approval. For example, if the Form I- 600A approval was only for one
child under the age of two, or was made without noting special approval to
adopt a child with special needs, you could not approve a Form I-600 petition
or visa for a 10-year old or a child with special needs, respectively.
Similarly, if state pre-adoption requirements were identified and have not been
met, you cannot approve the Form I-600 petition or immigrant visa.
(3) (U) Fraud
Concerns: You may encounter fraud in orphan cases, and information from
the Form I-600A may occasionally be used to corroborate information that post
sends to USCIS in not clearly approvable or consular return memorandums.
(See 9
FAM 502.3-3(C)(3) paragraph c and 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(5) paragraph b below for additional information on processing
such cases.)
e. (U) Fraud
or Misrepresentation in the Form I-600A, Application
for Advance Processing of an Orphan Petition: In cases where you have a
well-founded and substantive reason to believe that Form I-600A approval was
obtained on the basis of fraud or material misrepresentation, or have knowledge
of a change in material fact subsequent to the approval of Form I-600A, you
should consult with its regional USCIS office on disposition of the case.
f. (U) Using
the Form I-600, Petition to Classify Orphan as an
Immediate Relative, to Demonstrate Suitability:
(1) (U) Adoptive parents who
already know which child they intend to adopt and who intend to file their
paperwork with a USCIS office in the United States or overseas may submit proof
of their suitability and eligibility to adopt (per guidelines in 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(2) paragraph b above) at the same time that they file the Form I-600
petition for orphan classification for the child. In such cases, notice of
USCIS approval of Form I-600 petition should be considered as approval of the
parents suitability and eligibility to adopt.
(2) (U) Parents are not
obligated to use the Form I-600 petition in such cases. Under current USCIS
regulations, parents can choose to demonstrate their suitability and
eligibility to adopt overseas by filing the Form I-600A advance processing
application (and then subsequently file Form I-600), or by filing the Form I-600
alone with evidence to support both their suitability and eligibility to adopt,
and the childs eligibility for orphan classification. While filing both
suitability/eligibility and classification-related documentation on an already
identified child using Form I-600 alone may be more convenient for some
adoptive parents, many prospective adoptive parents may find that doing so
would unnecessarily delay or even prevent processing on their case. In
particular, if the parents intend to file the Form I-600 overseas with post,
consular officers will be unable to accept Form I-600 petition unless USCIS has
already approved a Form I-600A. Also, for parents who have not yet identified
the child they intend to adopt, filing a Form I-600A application first will
result in faster processing of an immigrant visa for their child once identified.
9 FAM 502.3-3(C)(3) (U) The
Orphan Petition (Form I-600, Petition to Classify Orphan as an Immediate
Relative)
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) Form I-600 is used to
document a particular childs classification as an orphan under INA
101(b)(1)(F). A separate Form I-600 must be filed for each child, even if the
associated Form I-600A approval may have been for multiple children. An orphan
can only be issued an immigrant visa if he or she is the beneficiary of an
approved Form I-600.
b. (U) Filing
the Form I-600, Petition to Classify Orphan as an
Immediate Relative:
(1) (U) Prospective adoptive
parents may file Form I-600 on behalf of the adoptive child with USCIS in the
United States, or with a USCIS or consular officer overseas, per the guidelines
noted below:
(a) (U) Prospective adoptive
parents residing in the United States may file Form I-600 with USCIS in the
United States, or with the USCIS overseas office in the country where the child
beneficiary resides, or, in countries without a USCIS presence, with consular
officers covering that consular district. Adoptive parents involved in proxy
adoptions (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(3) paragraph b(1) above) will need to file petitions in this
way;
(b) (U) Prospective adoptive
parents currently residing overseas may file a Form I-600 with USCIS in the
United States, the USCIS overseas office with jurisdiction over their place of
residence abroad, or with the USCIS overseas office in the country where the
child beneficiary resides, or, in countries without a USCIS presence, with
consular officers covering that consular district. Note that adoptive parents
who intend to continue residing overseas should generally not be pursuing IV
processing for the child.
(c) (U) Petitioners not resident
in the consular district should verify local USCIS or posts practices
regarding Form I-600 filing overseas. In general, USCIS and consular officers
may accept Form I-600 from a nonresident petitioner if the petitioner has been
or will be physically present, at some point during the adoption or immigrant
visa process (up until visa issuance), within the jurisdiction of the USCIS
overseas office or the U.S. embassy or consulate designated to act on the
petition. In order for a petitioner to file a Form I-600 with the U.S. embassy
or consulate, the petitioner must have an already approved Form I-600A. For
consular officers, it is anticipated that petitions for orphan cases should
generally be considered humanitarian cases, and therefore accepted (see 9 FAM 504.2-4);
and
(d) (U) Prospective adoptive
parents adopting children who will soon turn 16 may wish to file Form I-600
petitions on behalf of the children with USCIS in the United States or
overseas, since USCIS may accept and consider as properly filed a Form I-600
without all of the documents listed in 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(3) paragraph b(3)(e) below (although the documents will
ultimately be required for petition approval.) You, however, should not accept
(or consider to have been properly filed) petitions submitted without all
required documentation as listed in 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(3) paragraph b(3).
(2) (U) You
May Only Accept Form I-600 (Permit it to be Filed)
Under the Following Circumstances:
(a) (U) Post has notice of a
Form I-600A approval and both the approval and fingerprint clearances are still
valid (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(2) paragraph c(3) and (4) above);
(b) (U) There is no USCIS
petition-adjudicating office in-country;
(c) (U) The U.S. citizen
petitioner does not already have a Form I-600 pending for the same beneficiary;
and
(d) (U) The U.S. citizen
petitioner must be physically present in the adopted childs country of origin
at some point during the adoption or immigrant visa process, which is until the
consular officer issues the visa. A designated representative may submit a
Form I-600 petition on the petitioner(s) behalf, provided that the Form I-600
contains the original signature(s) for the petitioner (and spouse, as
applicable) and is accompanied by the proper fee, if required.
(3) (U) If
the Required Circumstances are Present for You to Accept a Form I-600:
(a) (U) Completing
and Signing the Petition: You must ensure that the Form I-600 has been
completely filled out and signed by the petitioner (and spouse, if applicable)
after having been completed. A third party may not sign the petition on the
petitioners (or spouses, if the petitioner is married) behalf, even with a
power of attorney. Post may not accept a Form I-600 submitted by mail.
(b) (U) Spouses:
If the petitioner is married, his or her spouse must sign the petition. In the
event that only one spouse travels abroad to file the Form I-600 at post, you should
verify that the non-traveling spouse did not sign the petition before all of
the information relating to the child had been entered onto the form. If the
Form I-600A has been approved for a married couple, either spouse may sign Form
I-600 as the prospective petitioner with the other signing as the spouse
(unless the married couple consists of one U.S. citizen and one alien, in which
case the U.S. citizen must be the applicant on the Form I-600A and the
petitioner on the Form I-600).
(c) (U) Fees:
A prospective adoptive parent who filed the Form I-600A with USCIS may file a
Form I-600 for one child without any additional fee. If more than one Form I-600
is being filed based on a Form I-600A, the petitioner must pay a Form I-600
filing fee for each child beyond the first, unless the petitions are for
children who are siblings (in which case no additional fees would be
collected).
(d) (U) Documents:
The petitioner must present the following documents with the Form I-600 in
order for the petition to be considered properly filed:
(i) (U) Childs original
birth certificate, or if such certificate is not available, a written
explanation together with secondary evidence of identity and age (example: a
re-issued birth certificate showing adoptive parents);
(ii) (U) Evidence that the
child either has no parents or has a sole or surviving parent incapable of
providing proper care who has irrevocably released the child for emigration and
adoption in writing, per guidelines in 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(4) paragraphs (b) and (c) above; and
(iii) (U) Evidence of adoption
or intent to adopt, per guidelines in 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(3) above.
(e) (U) Any foreign language
documents submitted with the Form I-600 petition must be accompanied by a full
English translation, which the translator has certified as complete and
correct, and by the translators certification that he or she is competent to
translate the foreign language into English.
(f) (U) For any Form I-600
filed with consular officers, originals of required documents must be submitted
for review with Form I-600. You should make copies of relevant documents for
the immigrant visa packet, noting that originals were seen and returned in the
case notes field in the Immigrant Visa Overseas system.
(g) (U) USCIS permits
petitioners to submit copies of some documents when accepting a Form I-600;
petitioners should be directed to the Form I-600 instructions for rules
regarding copies of required documents when filing the petition with USCIS.
(h) (U) 8 CFR 204.3 states that
documents used in the filing of an orphan petition must have been obtained in
accordance with the laws of the foreign-sending country. A foreign-sending
country is defined as the country of the orphans citizenship, or, if he or she
is not permanently residing in the country of citizenship, the country of the
orphans habitual residence. This excludes a country to which the orphan
travels temporarily, or to which he or she travels either as a prelude to or in
conjunction with his or her adoption and/or immigration to the United States.
(4) (U) You should be
particularly sensitive to legal requirements that the Form I-600 be filed
before an orphan reaches the age of 16, or age 18 if the sibling exception
applies. Posts should ensure that prospective parents are aware of age-related
concerns and, whenever possible and subject to the guidelines above, should
provide a reasonable opportunity for parents to file the Form I-600 and
accompanying documentation prior to the childs 16th birthday.
c. (U) Consular
Officer Adjudication of Form I-600, Petition to
Classify an Orphan as an Immediate Relative:
(1) (U) Once the Form I-600
has been properly filed, you should review the Form I-600 and accompanying
documentation. Based on that review and completion of the Form I-604,
Determination on Child for Adoption (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(4) below), you will determine whether the child is eligible for
immigrant classification as an orphan.
(2) (U) Consular officers have
been given authority to approve Form I-600 petitions that are found to be
clearly approvable. Clearly approvable in this context means that:
(a) (U) Form I-600 petitions and
supporting documentation, Form I-604, (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(4) below), and other relevant documentation establish by a
preponderance of the evidence that the child qualifies as an orphan according
to INA 101(b)(1)(F) per criteria outlined in 9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(1)
above;
(b) (U) There are no unresolved
issues of child-buying, fraud or material misrepresentation associated with the
case (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(6) above);
(c) (U) The child meets criteria
identified in the Form I-600A approval (i.e., age, gender, special needs, etc.,
if any);
(d) (U) Any state pre-adoption
requirements have been met if the child will be adopted in the United States;
(e) (U) There are no significant
changes within the petitioner's household or a change in the number of children
or characteristics of the child(ren) whom the petitioner was approved to adopt
that would necessitate an amended or updated home study (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(2) above); and
(f) (U) Unless an exception
applies (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(5) paragraphs c and g), the petitioner has established that an
accredited or approved adoption service provider is acting as the primary
provider in the case (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(5) paragraphs b and h below).
(3) (U) If you find Form I-600
clearly approvable, you must document the approval in the top block on the
first page of Form I-600. The approval annotation should include the
approved notation, classification of the petition and section of law under
which petition was approved (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(7) above), petition filing date, petition approval date, and the
signature and title (including post) of the approving officer.
(4) (U) If a petition does not
appear to be clearly approvable, you may give the petitioner the opportunity
to respond to questions or issues that may be quickly or easily resolved. In
cases involving Form I-600 or a visa application where any state pre-adoption
requirements have not yet been met, prospective adoptive parents should be
given the opportunity to demonstrate that they have satisfied any unmet
requirements. If the problem with the case is that evidence presented varies
from or contradicts that originally submitted with the petition, but does not
contradict the fact that the child qualifies under INA 101(b)(1)(F), the case
should be processed to conclusion. For example, a late registered birth
certificate may be irregular, but if other evidence shows that the child
qualifies as an orphan by a preponderance of the evidence, the petition should
be approved.
(5) (U) In some cases, further
investigation may be warranted due to doubts related to the documents (or
absence of documents) presented, contradictory information, or indications of
child-buying, fraud, and other inappropriate practices. You should work with
the Fraud Prevention Unit, regional security officer (RSO), and, if
appropriate, local officials and contacts to further investigate if necessary.
Investigation procedures vary from post to post, since the best means of
collecting necessary information regarding the childs eligibility as an orphan
and history often depend on local conditions. Some possible elements of an
investigation may include interviews with the child (if of sufficient age),
social workers, orphanage representatives, the prospective adoptive parents, or
natural (biological) parent(s), and relevant government officials. When fraud
is detected or indicated, a full field investigation may be warranted. Fraud
investigations should be conducted as expeditiously as possible. Please
consult with CA/FPP and CA/VO for assistance.
(6) (U) You do not have the
authority to deny a Form I-600 under any circumstances. If you determine that
the petition is not clearly approvable, post should send the Form I-600, all
supporting documentation (including the completed Form I-604, the not clearly
approvable memo, and any other related documentation) expeditiously to the
USCIS overseas office with jurisdiction. (See the USCIS Overseas Office
locator). Your memo should explain the facts of the case and posts actions to
try to resolve outstanding issues. In addition, you should notify the
petitioner in writing of this action and provide contact information for the
USCIS office where post sent the petition. At your discretion, you may provide
a brief explanation of posts not clearly approvable decision.
d. (U) Approval
of Form I-600, Petition to Classify Orphan as an
Immediate Relative:
(1) (U) Depending on where the
Form I-600 was filed and adjudicated, you will encounter different proof that
USCIS approved the Form I-600. Any of the following should be considered
sufficient evidence of Form I-600 approval:
(a) (U) Original Form I-600 with
approval notations from a USCIS or consular officer;
(b) (U) Electronic notification
from USCIS or the Department (e.g., the National Visa Center) of petition
approval; or
(c) (U) Officer verification in
consular systems and applications, including the USCIS Person Centric Query
Service (PCQS) accessible in the CCD.
(2) (U) You may not issue an
IR3 or IR4 visa unless you have evidence of Form I-600 approval. As with other
visa-related petitions, you should consider a USCIS or consular officer notice
of petition approval as prima facie evidence of the childs entitlement to
classification as an orphan.
9 FAM 502.3-3(C)(4) (U) Overseas
Orphan Determinations
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) Purpose
of Form I-604, Determination on Child for Adoption:
(1) (U) Form I-604 is
primarily used to document consular officer or overseas USCIS officer
determinations that a child should be properly classified as an orphan. The
form was created as a checklist for officers to ensure that key criteria for
the orphan classification have been reviewed, as elaborated in 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(1) above.
(2) (U) If USCIS has
articulable concerns that can only be resolved through the I-604 determination,
then USCIS may request that posts conduct the Form I-604 determination prior to
USCIS adjudication of an orphan petition. In such cases, the USCIS office
should provide posts with a copy of all pertinent documents in the case and a
memorandum explaining the reason for requesting the inquiry.
b. (U) Responsibility
for Completion of Form I-604:
(1) (U) Form I-604,
Determination on Child for Adoption, must be completed for all orphan cases.
Responsibility for completion of the Form I-604 varies depending on how the
Form I-600 is filed:
(a) (U) If Form I-600 is filed
with and approved by USCIS in the United States, the consular officer must
complete Form I-604 prior to visa approval, unless USCIS has an office in the
childs country and has assumed jurisdiction over the Form I-604 workload for
Form I-600 petitions filed domestically with USCIS.
(b) (U) If Form I-600 is filed
overseas in a country with a USCIS presence, USCIS overseas officers in the
childs country should complete Form I-604 prior to I-600 petition approval.
(c) (U) If Form I-600 is filed
overseas in a country with no USCIS presence, Form I-604 is completed by you
prior to petition approval. Please use ACRS code 101 to account for all I-604s
completed at post.
(d) (U) When used by USCIS to
request that posts verify orphan eligibility of an individual prior to domestic
adjudication of the orphan petition, Form I-604 should be completed by USCIS
officers if there is a USCIS presence in-country, or by the consular officer in
a country with no USCIS presence. Contact CA/VO/F with questions about
accounting for this work on USCIS behalf pursuant to the Economy Act.
(2) (U) Form I-604 is designed
as an internal worksheet to ensure proper processing of orphan cases. The form
is not available to the public on the USCIS website, and adopting parents and
other entities should not be requested to directly assist in completion of the
form.
c. (U) Completion
and Disposition of Form I-604 by Consular Officers:
(1) (U) Consular officers
completing Form I-604 based on Form I-600 approved in the United States or on
Form I-600 filed overseas (9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(4) paragraphs b(1)(a) and (c) above) should complete all
sections of Form I-604 except question 2. The completed Form I-604 should then
be attached to Form I-600, and remain with the petition regardless of the
outcome of the case.
(2) (U) Consular officers completing
Form I-604 prior to adjudication of the Form I-600 domestically with USCIS
based on a request by USCIS (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(4) paragraph b(1)(d) above) should complete items 1 and 5
through 15 of Form I-604, as applicable. If any item does not apply at the
time of the inquiry, you should note in block 15 why it is inapplicable. Sign
and date on page 4 under Officer Performing Inquiry. Post should send the
completed Form I-604 with any relevant documentary evidence directly to the
requesting USCIS office.
(3) (U) Approval of Form I-600
and an orphan visa require a favorable Form I-604 determination that the child
should be properly classified as an orphan. For cases where the I-604
reflects that orphan classification is not appropriate, you should follow
guidance in 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(3) paragraph c(4)-(6) above, 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(5) paragraph b below, and 9 FAM 504.2-8
for returning petitions to USCIS as not clearly approvable or for possible
revocation.
(4) (U) Completion of Form I-604
should not be the basis for delays in processing cases. Form I-604 itself does
not trigger a requirement that investigations or field visits be done on each
case, although it provides a mechanism for documenting any such reviews deemed
necessary by the adjudicating officer to address potential classification of
fraud issues.
d. (U) Form I-604
Determination on Child for Adoption (Example): A fillable I-604 is
available on CAWeb.
9 FAM 502.3-3(C)(5) (U) Requirement
for an Accredited or Approved Primary Provider in Each Orphan Case
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) Effective July 14,
2014, the Intercountry Adoption Universal Accreditation Act of 2012 (UAA)
(Public Law 112-276) extends the accreditation requirements and standards
applicable in Convention adoption cases to orphan (non-Convention) cases under
INA 101(b)(1)(F). As of that date, the UAA requires that unless one of the
exceptions listed below in paragraphs (c) or (g) applies, an accredited or
approved adoption service provider (ASP) must act as the primary provider in
every orphan case. ASPs providing adoption services on behalf of prospective
adoptive parents (PAPs) in orphan cases must be accredited or approved, or be a
supervised or exempted provider. See 9 FAM 502.3-4(B)
paragraph b below for more on the accreditation process.
b. (U) Unless one of the
exceptions listed below in paragraphs (c) or (g) applies, before you issue an
immigrant visa based on a USCIS approved Form I-600 petition or approve a Form I-600
petition filed at Post, the petitioner must establish through the evidence in
the record that an accredited or approved adoption service provider is acting
as the primary provider in the case (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(3) above). A name, address, and contact information listed for
an accredited or approved ASP on the Form I-600 alone does not establish that
an accredited or approved adoption service provider is acting as the primary
provider in the case, without further evidence. Evidence of a primary provider
may include, but is not limited to:
(1) (U) a letter from the
accredited or approved primary adoption service provider stating that it is
acting as the primary provider in the case, or a letter or other documentary
evidence demonstrating that the accredited or approved ASP is involved in the
provision of an adoption service if only one accredited agency or approved
person is involved in providing adoption services in the case, or a letter or
other documentary evidence demonstrating that the adoption service provider has
child placement responsibility if more than one accredited agency or approved
person is providing adoption services;
(2) (U) a copy of the service
plan (detailing the six adoption services); or
(3) (U) a copy of a contract
between the petitioner and the primary adoption service provider demonstrating
that the accredited agency or approved person is acting as the primary provider
in the case.
(4) (U) If you have any
questions about whether the evidence in the record constitutes sufficient
evidence of a primary provider, consult with CA/VO/L/A and the USCIS office
with jurisdiction over the case.
c. (U) The UAA does not apply
to orphan cases that are considered "UAA grandfathered." A case is
UAA grandfathered if:
(1) (U) the prospective
adoptive parent(s) (PAP(s)) filed Form I-600A or Form I-600 before July 13,
2013;
(2) (U) the PAP(s) submitted
an application to the relevant competent authority before July 13, 2013 (the
application need not designate a specific child); or,
(3) (U) the PAP(s) accepted a
match proposed by a competent authority or appropriate entity before July 13,
2013.
d. (U) Officers should first
determine if a case is grandfathered under option 1 above, and then look to
options 2 and 3 only if option 1 does not apply.
e. (U) Under option 2,
officers should consider the following in determining whether the PAP(s)
submitted an application to the relevant competent authority:
(1) (U) An application filed
with a competent authority need not designate a specific child. What
constitutes an application will vary from country to country. You will need to
consider the country-specific adoption process.
(2) (U) Competent authority
is defined at 22 CFR 96.2 and means a court or governmental authority of a foreign
country that has jurisdiction and authority to make decisions in matters of
child welfare, including adoption. This must be a court or governmental
authority. The focus is on a competent authority with jurisdiction and
authority at the time the application was filed. Whether the authority is
still in operation or still has jurisdiction later in the process is
irrelevant.
f. (U) Under option 3,
officers should consider the following in determining whether the PAP(s)
accepted a match proposed by a competent authority or appropriate entity:
(1) (U) The match may either
be proposed by a competent authority (defined above) or an appropriate
entity, which includes a licensed orphanage or ASP authorized by the country
to make the placement.
(2) (U) Contracting with or
submitting documents to an ASP alone is not sufficient. The ASP must be
authorized to make the placement and have done so. PAP(s) contracting with an
ASP to provide adoption services in the case or submitting documents to the ASP
alone shall not be construed as meeting Section 2(c)(2) of the UAA.
(3) (U) The date of the match
can generally be inferred from any official records of the placing agency
concerning the match or from contemporaneous records of the ASP. If that is
not available, you may consider other credible evidence. If you cannot
determine the date of match, the match cannot be the basis for determining the
case is UAA grandfathered.
g. (U) Even if a case is not
UAA grandfathered, if some adoption services were provided before the UAA
effective date and some were provided after the UAA effective date, no
accredited or approved primary provider is required if you determine, in
consultation with CA/VO/L/A, that no adoption services were provided on or
after July 14, 2014, by any person or entity other than a public foreign
authority, competent authority, or public domestic authority. If adoption
services were provided before July 14, 2014, you do not need to determine
whether those services were provided by an accredited primary service
provider. (See the UAA Transition Guidance for example scenarios.)
h. (U) If a primary provider is
required:
(1) (U) You should first
review the evidence in the record in light of paragraph (b) to determine
whether the petitioner has established that an accredited or approved adoption
service provider is acting as the primary adoption service provider. Note that
you may only contact the primary provider if the petitioner has a signed and
dated Privacy Act waiver.
(2) (U) If the petitioner has
not established that an accredited or approved adoption service provider is
acting as the primary adoption service provider, you should:
(a) (U) For USCIS-approved
petitions: informally encourage the petitioner to provide evidence in light of
paragraph (b). If the petitioner is not responsive, the evidence presented
after informal attempts still does not establish that an accredited or approved
adoption service provider is acting as the primary provider in the case, or you
have any questions, contact CA/VO/L/A and the USCIS office that approved the
Form I-600 petition before returning the approved petition for review and
possible revocation. If CA/VO/L/A and the USCIS office that approved the Form I-600
petition agree that the petition should be returned, include the petition,
supporting documents, the completed Form I-604, and any other relevant
documentation.
(b) (U) For petitions filed at
Post that you are adjudicating: informally encourage the petitioner to provide
evidence in light of paragraph (b). If the petitioner is not responsive, or
the evidence presented after informal attempts still does not establish that an
accredited or approved adoption service provider is acting as the primary
provider in the case, or you have any questions, contact CA/VO/L/A and the
USCIS office with jurisdiction before referring the case as "not clearly
approvable." If CA/VO/L/A and the USCIS office with jurisdiction agree
that the petition should be referred as "not clearly approvable," for
these reasons, include the petition, supporting documents, the completed Form I-604,
and any other relevant documentation with the not clearly approvable memo to
USCIS.
9 FAM 502.3-3(C)(6) (U) Accreditation
Requirements in Form I-604 Determinations when USCIS Already Approved Form
I-600
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) When conducting a Form I-604
orphan determination for a USCIS-approved petition, you must determine if a
primary provider is required, or if an exception applies (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(5) above).
b. (U) If a primary provider is
required, follow the steps in 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(5) to determine whether to return the approved petition to USCIS
for review and possible revocation.
c. (U) After appropriate
consultation with CA/VO/L/A, CA/VO/F, and/or CA/FPP and the USCIS approving
office, as appropriate. Situations that may warrant post returning an approved
petition (along with supporting documents, the completed Form I-604, and any
other relevant documentation) to the USCIS approving office include, but are
not limited to:
(1) (U) The Form I-600
petition, supporting documentation, Form I-604, and/or other relevant
documentation establish that the child does not meet the definition of an
orphan in INA 101(b)(1)(F), per criteria outlined in 9 FAM 102.3-1;
(2) (U) There are unresolved
issues related to the bona fides of the parent-child relationship,
child-buying, fraud, or material misrepresentation associated with the case
(see 9
FAM 502.3-3(B)(5) and 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(6) above);
(3) (U) The child does not fit
all criteria identified in the Form I-600A approval (i.e., age, gender, special
needs, etc., if any);
(4) (U) Any state pre-adoption
requirements have not been met if the child will be adopted in the United
States;
(5) (U) There is a significant
change within the petitioner's household or a change in the number of children
or characteristics of the child(ren) whom the petitioner was approved to adopt
that would necessitate an amended or updated home study (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(2) above); or
(6) (U) The petitioner has not
established that an accredited or approved adoption service provider is acting
as the primary provider in the case when one is required (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(5) above).
9 FAM 502.3-3(C)(7) (U) Orphan
Visa Applications
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) Requirements
for the Orphan Immigrant Visa (IR3 or IR4) Interview:
(1) (U) Immigrant visa (IV)
applications on behalf of orphans may be submitted to IV-issuing posts once
Form I-600 has been approved and post has received notification of such
approval per 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(3) paragraph d above and Form I-604 has been completed. Posts
should give prospective adoptive parents realistic expectations about the time
necessary for post to complete the Form I-604 determination and the subsequent
steps in the process.
(2) (U) After post has a
DS-260 for the child, post should schedule the visa interview. The IV fee
should be collected at the time of the visa interview. You may receive the
DS-260 to completing the I-604 determination, but the visa fee collection and
visa adjudication should not take place until the I-604 has been performed.
The applicant should have evidence of orphan classification (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(1) above) and all standard IV supporting documentation (see 9 FAM 504.4-4,
9 FAM
504.4-7, and 9 FAM
302.8-2(C)(9)), including:
(a) (U) Birth certificate;
(b) (U) Passport or other
appropriate travel document;
(c) Two photographs taken according to specifications in
9 FAM 303.6-2(A)(1);
(d) (U) Police,
military, or prison records, if required (rare); and
(e) (U) Either a Form I-864-W,
Intending Immigrant's Form I-864 Exemption, or a Form I-864 Affidavit of
Support (see paragraph d(4) below).
(i) (U) For applicants in the
IR3 classification, if post determines that the orphan will likely
automatically become a citizen under the Child Citizenship Act of 2000 or where
the PAP(s) have at least 40 quarters of coverage under the Social Security Act
(see 9
FAM 302.8-2(C)(1) paragraph b(2)),
then the petitioner may file an I-864W. An orphan properly classified as an
IR3 who resides in the United States in the legal and physical custody of the
adoptive U.S. citizen parent pursuant to a lawful admission for permanent
residence while under the age of 18 will likely automatically become a citizen
under INA 320. See 9 FAM
302.8-2(C)(1) paragraph b(1). All
other IR3 visa holders must have an I-864 filed on their behalf. For IR4
classification where the PAP(s) have at least 40 quarters of coverage under the
Social Security Act (see 9 FAM
302.8-2(C)(1) paragraph b(2)), then
the petitioner may file an I-864W.
(ii) (U) For other applicants
in the IR4 classification, the petitioner must file an I-864. Note that
sponsors who file I-864s must be domiciled in any of the several States of the
United States, the District of Columbia, or any territory or possession of the
United States. INA 213A(f)(1)(C). See 9 FAM
302.8-2(C)(5) for further information
on domicile requirements, including how a U.S. citizen living abroad
temporarily could be considered to be domiciled in the United States. If a
petitioner cannot satisfy the domicile requirement, the petitioner fails to
qualify as a sponsor as that term is defined by INA 213A(f). If the petitioner does not meet the
definition of sponsor for the purposes of submitting the Form I-864, then a
joint sponsor cannot be accepted and the applicant must be refused pursuant to
INA 212(a)(4).
(3) (U) You must also ensure
that the medical exam is completed prior to adjudicating the visa application.
The IV processing fee can be collected the time of the visa interview.
b. (U) Adjudicating
Orphan (IR3 or IR4) Application and Classification:
(1) When adjudicating orphan IV applications, you must
confirm that the applicant qualifies as an orphan. Approval of Form I-600
should be considered prima facie evidence of orphan eligibility, but you must
briefly review Form I-600, completed Form I-604 and originals of documentation
supporting the Form I-600 to confirm that the classification is appropriate.
This is particularly important in cases where Form I-600 was adjudicated in the
United States, without the possible benefit of physically seeing the parties
involved and having more in-depth knowledge of the documents and fraud patterns
in the local country.
(2) (U) If the petition
appears to have been approved in error, the Form I-604 determination reveals
new facts not known to USCIS at the time of Form I-600 approval that may have
resulted in a denial of the Form I-600 petition, or if you develop substantive
evidence of material fraud or misrepresentation in the Form I-600, then the
petition should be returned to the USCIS approving office with a recommendation
for revocation, per instructions in 9 FAM 504.2-8.
However, if the evidence is at variance with that originally submitted with the
petition, but does not contradict the fact that the child qualifies under INA
101(b)(1)(F), the case should be processed to conclusion.
c. (U) Determining
Orphan Ineligibilities:
(1) (U) Ineligibilities
for Orphan Cases Introduction: Orphan visa applicants are subject to
all of the standard INA 212(a) ineligibilities, although in practice almost all
adopted (or to-be-adopted) children will not be affected by criminal, security,
immigration violation and other ineligibilities due to their age. The two
areas where orphans are treated somewhat differently deal with medical issues
(in particular, INA 212(a)(1)(A)(ii) as amended on vaccination requirements),
and INA 212(a)(4) (public charge), both discussed below.
(2) (U) Orphan
Medical Issues:
(a) (U) As with any other IV
case, if a child is found to have a Class A medical condition, the child will
be ineligible for a visa under INA 212(a)(1) until and/or unless that condition
is waived or otherwise overcome. The two key medical issues that are treated
somewhat differently with orphan cases are vaccinations and evidence of
significant medical conditions revealed in the panel physicians medical exam.
(b) (U) Vaccinations:
(i) (U) IR3 and IR4
applicants under 10 years of age are exempt from INA 212(a)(1)(A)(ii)
vaccination requirements provided that the adoptive parent(s) signs an
affidavit attesting that the child will receive the required vaccination within
30 days of the childs admission to the United States or at the earliest time
that is medically appropriate. The affidavit is Form DS-1981, and once
completed, it should be attached to the medical exam form and included in the
IV packet.
(ii) (U) Only children whose
adoptive parents have signed such an affidavit will be exempt from the
vaccination requirement. In situations where the adopting parent(s) objects to
the child receiving vaccinations on religious or moral grounds, the applicant
will still require an individual INA 212(g)(2)(C) waiver from USCIS (see 9 FAM
302.2-6(D)(1)).
(c) (U) Significant
Medical Conditions:
(i) (U) You should ensure
that adoptive parents understand that the orphan petition and visa application
are not meant to provide comprehensive evaluations of an adoptive childs
health. Parents should be encouraged to arrange private evaluations by
qualified medical professionals, preferably ones versed in childhood
development if they have health-related concerns about the child. However, if
a previously unknown significant medical condition is revealed through the
panel physicians medical exam, you must furnish the adoptive parents with
available information concerning the affliction or disability. This is
especially important in cases where the parents have not physically observed
the child.
(ii) (U) If a serious medical
condition is discovered, and in particular one which is a physical, mental, or
emotional condition that would affect the childs normal development,
processing should be suspended until you receive a notarized statement from the
adoptive parent, or parents if married, indicating awareness of the child's
affliction and willingness to proceed with orphan processing. An abstract of a
home study made by a social service agency, countersigned by the adoptive
parent(s), is acceptable if it notes the parent(s) are aware of the child's
condition and nevertheless willing to adopt the child. An appropriate entry in
item 20 of the Form I-600 initialed by the adoptive parent(s) is also
acceptable. If the adoptive parents choose not to pursue the petition, you
should forward it, along with an explanation and all other pertinent
information, to the appropriate USCIS overseas office.
(iii) (U) Note also that a
child with a serious medical condition or disability may sometimes be
considered a child with special needs, and therefore subject to the requirement
that the adoptive parents Form I-600A approval includes reference to parents
ability to adopt a special needs child. In cases where a child is later
determined to be a special needs child and parents suitability approvals do
not note approval to adopt a special needs child, the petition and related
documentation should be forwarded to the regional USCIS office overseas for
possible revocation or reconsideration of suitability determinations. You (U) should notify the prospective parents of the action.
(3) (U) Public
Charge: USCIS has determined that Form I-864, Affidavit of Support
under INA 213A, is not required for IR3 applicants who will automatically
acquire U.S. citizenship upon admission to the United States as legal permanent
residents. However, IR4 applicants (as well as IR3 applicants not eligibility for
U.S. citizenship under CCA, e.g., those over age 18 at the time of admission,
etc.) must have properly completed and signed Form I-864 with all required
supporting documents submitted on their behalf by the petitioner. In general, the adoptive parents ability to
care for a child is evaluated during Form I-600A adjudication, such that an IR3
or IR4 applicant is unlikely to become a public charge. Except where Form I-864
is required, the Form I-600A serves as proof that the underlying requirements
of INA 212(a)(4) have been met. Additional financial evidence should only be
required if the child has an illness or defect not addressed by the approved
Form I-600A that would entail significant financial outlay or if other unusual
circumstances prevail.
(4) (U) Waivers:
If you determine that the orphan has a visa ineligibility and a waiver
exists for that ineligibility, post should direct the petitioner(s) to public
information on the waiver process on USCISs website.
d. (U) Adjudication
of Orphan Visa Application, Issuance of the Visa:
(1) (U) If you confirm that
the child may be classified as an orphan, that all required documentation to
produce the immigrant visa have been submitted, and that no ineligibilities
exist (or those that exist have been waived), you should approve the visa
application. If the application cannot be approved, you must explain orally
and in writing the reason for the refusal and any possible remedies available.
(2) (U) If the consular
officer issues the IR3 or IR4, post should follow standard IV procedures (see 9 FAM 504.10).
Form I-604 should be included as part of the IV package, immediately following
Form I-600 in the packet. Particular care should be paid to ensuring proper
classification of the visa as an IR3 or IR4 (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(7) above).
(3) (U) In accordance with 9 FAM
504.10-2(A), IVs for orphans should generally be issued with a six-month
validity period. However, a child legally adopted by a U.S. citizen and spouse
while they are serving abroad in the U.S. armed forces, employed abroad by the
U.S. Government, or temporarily abroad on business, may be issued an IV for a
longer period (not to exceed three years) to accommodate adoptive parents
intended return to the United States upon completion of the military service,
employment, or business.
(4) (U) Upon receipt of the
issued visa, adopting parents (or those traveling with the child) should be
informed of Child Citizenship Act implications of the type of visa issued (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(7) above) and referred to Department and USCIS websites for
additional information.
9 FAM 502.3-4 (U) Convention
Adoptees Adopted under INA 101(b)(1)(G) IH3 and IH4
9 FAM 502.3-4(A) (U) Statutory
and Regulatory Authority
9 FAM 502.3-4(A)(1) (U) Immigration
and Nationality Act
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
(U) INA 101(b)(1)(E)-(G) (8 U.S.C.
1101(b)(1)(E)-(G); INA 101(c)(1) (8 U.S.C. 1101(c)(1)); INA 201(b)(2)(A) (8
U.S.C. 1151(b)(2)(A)); INA 201(f) (8 U.S.C. 1151(f)); INA 204 (8 U.S.C. 1154);
INA 322 (8 U.S.C. 1433).
9 FAM 502.3-4(A)(2) (U) Code
of Federal Regulations
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
(U) 8 CFR 204.309(a), 8 CFR
204.309(b)(1); 8 CFR 204.309(b)(3); 8 CFR 204.313(c)(2)-(3); 8 CFR 322.2; 8 CFR
322.3; 22 CFR 42.21; 22 CFR Part 96.
9 FAM 502.3-4(A)(3) (U) Public
Law
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
(U) Intercountry Adoption Act of
2000, Public Law 106-279; Child Citizenship Act of 2000, Public Law 106-395.
9 FAM 502.3-4(B) (U) Convention
Adoptee Overview
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) Convention
Adoptee Introduction:
(1) (U) The Hague Convention
on Protection of Children and Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption
(Convention) is a multilateral treaty that establishes international legal
standards for the adoption of children habitually resident in one country party
to the Convention by persons habitually resident in another party to the
Convention. It establishes procedures to be followed in such adoption cases
and imposes safeguards to protect the best interests of the children at issue.
It also provides for international recognition of adoptions that occur in
accordance with the Convention. In the United States, the implementing
legislation for the Convention is the Intercountry Adoption Act of 2000 (IAA).
To implement the Convention, the IAA made two significant changes to the
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA):
(a) (U) It created a new
definition of child, found at INA 101(b)(1)(G), applicable only to children
being adopted from Convention countries. (Note that the definition of child
in INA 101(b)(1)(F) continues to apply to orphans being adopted from any
country that is not a party to the Convention; and
(b) (U) It incorporated
Convention procedures into the immigration process for children covered by INA
101(b)(1)(G), most directly by precluding approval of an immigration petition
under this classification until the Department has certified that the child was
adopted or legal custody of the child was granted in accordance with the
Convention and the IAA. Separately, pursuant to the IAA, adoptions or grants
of custody that have been so certified by the Department are to be recognized
as such for purposes of all Federal, State, and local laws in the United
States. For more background information on the Convention, the IAA, and U.S.
obligations under the Convention, see 7 FAM 1796.
(2) (U) In accordance with the
United States Convention obligations, you must treat Convention adoptee cases
with considerable sensitivity and process them as quickly as is reasonably
possible to avoid hardship for the child or prospective adoptive parents
(PAPs).
(3) (U) In order to adjudicate
Convention adoptee cases, it is essential that you are thoroughly familiar with
the Convention adoptee classification. For a detailed explanation of the
Convention adoptee classification, see 9 FAM
502.3-4(C) below.
(4) (U) Things
to Keep in Mind to Ensure Correct Adoption-Related Visa Classification:
(a) (U) Depending upon whether
the country of habitual residence has a treaty relationship with the United
States under the Convention and the circumstances of the case, adopted children
could receive immigrant visas (IVs) based on the Convention adoptee (IH3 or
IH4, per INA 101(b)(1)(G)), orphan (IR3 or IR4, per INA 101(b)(1)(F)see 9 FAM 502.3-3
above), or adopted child (IR2, per INA 101(b)(1)(E)see 9 FAM 502.3-2
above) classifications. Adult siblings of Convention adoptees may in some
cases also be eligible for IR2 classification (see 9 FAM 502.3-5
below). For purposes of this document, a Convention country is a country
that has a treaty relationship with the United States under the Convention.
(b) (U) For countries in which
the Convention entered or enters into force after April 1, 2008, the Convention
does not apply if the adoptive parents obtained a final adoption of a child
before the date the Convention entered into force for the other Convention
country. See uscis.gov and adoptions.state.gov for additional information
about specific transition rules for other countries in which the Convention
entered into force after the United States. (Such cases are not Convention
cases and should be processed under the orphan classification based on 9 FAM
502.3-3(B) guidelines see 9 FAM
502.3-4(B) paragraph c above).
(c) (U) An adopted child
immigrating to the United States and habitually resident in a non-Convention
country cannot be classified as a Convention adoptee under INA 101(b)(1)(G).
(d) (U) Adopted children who
meet the requirements of INA 101(b)(1)(E) may, under certain circumstances, be
classified as IR2 children, even if they are habitually resident in a
Convention country (see 9 FAM 502.3-2
below).
(e) (U) An adopted child whose
parents do not intend to return immediately to the United States may qualify
for NIV issuance in order to come to the United States for naturalization under
INA 322. Under 8 CFR 322.3(b)(1)(xii), a Form I-800, Petition to Classify
Convention Adoptee as an Immediate Relative, must be approved for the child in
order for the child to seek naturalization under INA 322. (See 9 FAM
402.2-4(B)(7) and 8 CFR 322.2.)
(f) (U) In rare cases, some
adopted children qualify for NIVs as family members of other NIV holders (see 9 FAM 502.3-1),
or as short-term tourists or participants in a naturalization hearing under INA
322 (see 9
FAM 402.2-4(B)(4) and 9 FAM
402.2-4(B)(7)). However, you should
not issue a nonimmigrant visa to an adopted child who is immigrating to the
United States to reside there with his or her adoptive parents as a result of
this trip or to a child who will be adopted in the United States. Moreover, if
a petitioner is a United States citizen who is domiciled in the United States
but posted abroad temporarily under official orders as a member of the
Uniformed Services, as defined in 5 U.S.C. 2101, or as a civilian officer or
employee of the United States Government, you must deem the child to be coming
to the United States to reside there with that petitioner and therefore not to
be entitled to a NIV. (See 9 FAM 502.3-1
above for additional details on appropriate options for documenting adopted
children.)
b. (U) Entities
Performing Convention Adoption Functions:
(1) (U) Under the Convention,
the IAA, and the implementing regulations, only certain entities may perform
particular functions in Convention adoptions. For further information, consult
7 FAM 1796
and 22 CFR Part 96.
(2) (U) The Department is the
United States Central Authority under the Convention. Within the Department,
CA/OCS/CI has the lead in coordinating the day-to-day work of the Central
Authority. In accordance with the IAA and the Convention, some of the Central
Authoritys case-specific Convention responsibilities have been delegated to
Adoption Service Providers (ASPs) accredited or approved by
Department-designated Accrediting Entities. Other Central Authority duties will
be performed by other government bodies. In each case, there will be a
primary provider who has overall responsibility for the case.
(3) (U) Either public bodies
or authorized ASPs must be used for the following Convention adoptee visa
processing-related activities:
(a) (U) Completion and approval
of home study (accredited or temporarily accredited ASPs only) (Note, however,
that approved, exempted, or supervised ASPs may complete a home study, provided
the study is approved by an accredited or temporarily accredited ASPsee 22 CFR
Part 96);
(b) (U) Transmission of report
on parents (i.e., home study, USCIS approval notice, and other evidence) to
Convention country Central Authority (see 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(3) below);
(c) (U) Receipt of Convention
countrys Central Authority report on the child for transmission to the PAP(s)
(see 9
FAM 502.3-4(D)(3) paragraph c below);
(4) (U) Like the United
States, other Convention countries may also delegate their Central Authority
functions to accredited or approved ASPs or other government entities. Other
Convention countries may also choose to work with only certain U.S. accredited
or approved ASPs, or they may require U.S. ASPs to be accredited under the laws
and standards of that country. (See 7 FAM 1796.3
for information on U.S. accreditation/approval requirements, relationships
between accredited/approved ASPs and other providers, and U.S. regulatory
requirements for ASPs.)
(5) (U) You can verify
accredited or approved status of U.S. ASPs by checking the list on CA/OCS/CIs
website at the Departments website. Take note, also, that the primary ASP
should already be entered into the Adoption Service Provider field of the IVO
system before the case comes to Post. Questions or concerns related to an
adoption service providers accreditation or approval status should be directed
to CA/OCS/CI.
9 FAM 502.3-4(C) (U) Convention
Adoptee (101(b)(1)(G)) Classification
9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(1) (U) Convention
Adoptee Classification Summary
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) There are five key
elements to the Convention adoptee classification. All of the following must
be true for a child to be eligible for the Convention adoptee classification:
(1) (U) The child is under the
age of 16 at the time a petition is filed on his or her behalf (taking into
account special rules on filing dates for children aged 15-16), or before his
or her 18th birthday if he or she is the natural sibling of another foreign
national child who has immigrated or will immigrate based on adoption by the
same adoptive parents; is unmarried; and is habitually resident in a country
that has a treaty relationship with the United States under the Convention (see
9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(2) paragraph a below);
(2) (U) A person must be under
the age of 21 to be considered a child. INA 201(f), as amended by the Child
Status Protection Act, provides, however, that a child who is over 21 will be
deemed to be under 21, if certain requirements are met (see 9 FAM
502.1-1(D)). Since a Form I-800 must be filed before the childs 16th
birthday, a Convention adoptee will almost always meet the requirements of INA
201(f) and so will generally be eligible to immigrate even if over 21.
(3) (U) The child has been
adopted or will be adopted by a married U.S. citizen and spouse jointly, or by
an unmarried U.S. citizen at least 25 years of age, habitually resident in the
United States, whom USCIS has found suitable and eligible to adopt, with the
intent of creating a legal parent-child relationship (see 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(2) paragraph b, 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(3) and 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(4) below). Note, however, that at the provisional approval
stage, the petitioner must not have adopted or obtained legal custody of the
child yet, unless that adoption or legal custody has been voided vacated,
annulled or terminated by the country of origin or the Central Authority
indicates that, under the law of that country, the petitioner is not able to
obtain an order voiding, vacating, annulling or otherwise terminating the
adoption or custody order (see 8 CFR 204.309(b)(1));
(4) (U) The childs birth
parents (or parent if the child has a sole or surviving parent), or other legal
custodian, individuals, or entities whose consent is necessary for adoption,
freely gave their written irrevocable consent to the termination of their legal
relationship with the child and to the childs emigration and adoption (see 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(5) below);
(5) (U) There is no
requirement that an adoptive parent personally see and observe the child before
or during the adoption proceedings.
(6) (U) If the child has two
living birthparents who were the last legal custodian who signed the
irrevocable consent to adoption, they are determined to be incapable of
providing proper care for the child (see 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(6) below);
(7) (U) The child has been
adopted or will be adopted in the United States or in the Convention country in
accordance with the Intercountry Adoption Act of 2000 and applicable federal
regulations, including that accredited or approved adoption service providers
were used where required, and there is no indication of improper inducement,
fraud or misrepresentation, or prohibited contact associated with the case (see
9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(7) and 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(8) below). Again, at the provisional approval stage, the child
must not have been adopted yet, unless that adoption has been voided by the
country of origin or the Central Authority indicates that the adoption cannot
be voided (see 8 CFR 204.309(b)(1)).
b. (U) A child who is determined
to be a Convention adoptee must be classified as an IH3 or IH4. Proper
classification is very importantthe Child Citizenship Act of 2000 confers
citizenship on children adopted abroad who meet certain requirements, and the
childs immigrant classification is an important factor in determining whether,
as a result of the Act, a child will be eligible for U.S. citizenship
immediately upon immigration. 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(9) below provides guidance on proper classification as a
Convention adoptee.
9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(2) (U) Age,
Citizenship and Residency Requirements (Convention Adoptee)
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) Requirements
for Child:
(1) (U) Age-Related
Requirements:
(a) (U) To qualify as a
Convention adoptee, the child must generally have a Form I-800 petition filed
on his or her behalf before his or her 16th birthday, or before his or her 18th
birthday if he or she is the natural sibling of another foreign national child
who has immigrated or will immigrate based on adoption by the same adoptive
parents; the Form I-800 petition does not, however, have to be approved before
the beneficiarys 16th birthday(or 18th birthday if the sibling exception
applies).
(b) (U) The USCIS regulation, at
8 CFR 204.313(c)(2) and (3), provides two special rules for determining whether
this filing deadline has been met, in cases involving children who are between
the ages of 15 and 16:
(i) (U) First:
If the Central Authority matches the child with the PAP(s) more than 6 months
after the childs 15th birthday but before the childs 16th birthday, and the
evidence required for Form I-800 petition filing in 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(4) paragraph c(5) below is not yet available, the PAP must still
file the I-800 before the childs 16th birthday. If the Central Authority report
and accompanying documents are not available at that time, the PAP(s) may,
instead of that evidence, submit a statement from the primary provider, signed
under penalty of perjury under U.S. law, confirming that the Central Authority
has, in fact, made the adoption placement on the date specified. The Form I-800
petition in such cases cannot be adjudicated until the required documents are
submitted.
(ii) (U) Second:
If the Form I-800A was filed after the childs 15th birthday, but
before the childs 16th birthday, AND the Form I-800 is filed no more than 180
days after approval of the Form I-800-A, then the filing date for the Form
I-800A will be deemed also to be the filing date for the Form I-800.
(c) (U) Because a Convention
adoptee must meet the general definition of a child in INA 101(b)(1), the
beneficiary must be unmarried and must be under the age of 21 (or deemed by INA
201(f) to be under 21) at all stages of petition adjudication, visa processing,
and travel to the United States.
(d) (U) For adult siblings of
Convention adoptees, classification as an IR-2 child may be possible (see 9 FAM 502.3-5
below).
(2) (U) The child must meet
all criteria specified in the Form I-800-A approval (age, gender, special
needs, if any) (see 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(2) paragraph a(5) below).
(3) (U) A child must be
habitually resident in a Convention country to qualify as a Convention
adoptee. USCIS has determined that a Convention adoptee is habitually
resident in the country of the childs citizenship, or in the country in which
the child actually resides if the Central Authority (or another competent
authority of the country in which the child has his or her actual residence)
has determined that the child's status in that country is sufficiently stable
for that country properly to exercise jurisdiction over the child's adoption or
custody. This determination must be made by the Central Authority itself, or
by another competent authority of the country of the child's habitual
residence, but may not be made by a nongovernmental individual or entity
authorized by delegation to perform Central Authority functions.
b. (U) Requirements
for PAPs:
(1) (U) PAPs ability to meet
age- and citizenship-related requirements is generally evaluated as part of
USCISs suitability determination.
(a) (U) Only a U.S. citizen may
file a Form I-800 petition for a Convention adoptee.
(b) (U) If the petitioner is
legally married, the spouse does not have to be a U.S. citizen, but, if the
spouse is not a U.S. citizen, s/he must be a non-citizen U.S. national, or, if
an alien, must be in lawful immigration status if residing in the United States.
There are no age requirements for a married petitioner and spouse. The spouse
must sign the Form I-800 petition and be party to the adoption or grant of
legal custody even if a legal separation agreement exists.
(c) (U) If the petitioner is
unmarried, he or she must be at least 24 years old at the time he or she
submits a Form I-800A, and at least 25 years old at the time he or she files
the Form I-800 petition.
(d) (U) Some countries of origin
also have age or other restrictions for adoptive parents. Although these and
other foreign country requirements must be addressed in the home study, USCIS
will not deny a Form I-800A based solely on the country of origins
requirements.
(2) (U) PAPs must be
habitually resident in the United States to adopt a Convention adoptee using
these procedures. A U.S. citizen will be deemed to be habitually resident in
the United Sates if the individual has his or her domicile in the United States
(even if living abroad temporarily), will have established such a domicile in
the United States on or before the Convention adoptee is admitted to the United
States or the citizen indicates on the Form I-800 that the citizen intends to
bring the child to the United States after adopting the child abroad, and
before the childs 18th birthday, to apply for naturalization under INA 322.
9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(3) (U) Adoption
or Custody for Purposes of Emigration and Adoption (Convention Adoptee)
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) The petitioner(s) must
adopt the Convention adoptee abroad or intend to adopt the Convention adoptee
in the United States, as provided in the notes below. (Note, however, that at
the provisional approval stage, the petitioner must not have adopted or
obtained legal custody of the child yet, unless that adoption or legal custody
has been voided, vacated, annulled or terminated by the country of origin (see
8 CFR 204.309(b)(1)). Final adoption is required at the time of petition
approval for IH3 and B-2 cases.
(1) (U) Definitions
of Adoption and Custody for Purposes of Emigration and Adoption:
(a) (U) Adoption is defined as a
judicial or administrative act that establishes a permanent legal parent-child
relationship between a minor and an adult who is not already the legal parent,
and which terminates any prior legal parent-child relationship with any former
parents. Generally speaking, to qualify as an adoption for immigration
purposes, the adopted child should have the same rights and privileges that are
accorded to a birth child (such as inheritance rights, etc.). Simple,
conditional, or limited adoptions, such as those conducted under Islamic family
law in some countries, are more accurately described as guardianship and will
generally not qualify as adoptions for U.S. immigration purposes.
(b) (U) Custody for purposes of
emigration and adoption exists when the competent authority of the country of
origin has by judicial or administrative act, which may be either the act
granting custody of the child or a separate judicial or administrative act,
expressly authorized the petitioner, or an individual or entity acting on the
petitioners behalf, to take the child out of the country of the childs
habitual residence and to bring the child to the United States for adoption in
the United States. If the custody order was given to an individual or entity
acting on the petitioners behalf, the custody order must indicate that the
child is to be adopted in the United States by the petitioner.
(c) (U) A foreign judicial or
administrative act that is called an adoption but that does not terminate the
legal parent-child relationship between the former parent(s) and the adopted
child and create a permanent legal parent-child relationship between the
petitioner and the adopted child is considered a grant of legal custody if the act
expressly authorizes the custodian to take the child out of the country of the
childs habitual residence and to bring the child to the United States for
adoption in the United States by the petitioner.
(2) (U) Evidence
of Adoption and Custody of the Child for Purposes of Emigration and Adoption:
(a) Adoption: Evidence of a
full and final adoption would usually be in the form of an adoption decree or
administrative order granted by a Convention countrys competent authority. If
the petitioners are married, the adoption decree or order must show that both
parties adopted the child. (If both spouses are not included in the decree or
order, see 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(8) paragraph e below and paragraph a(2)(b)(i) below.) The
adoption decree must be accompanied by or include a certification from the
Central Authority of the Convention country stating that the adoption was done
in accordance with the Convention. The certification must include the names of
the parties from the Convention countrys Central Authority and the receiving
countrys Central Authority that agreed that the adoption could proceed, and
the date that such agreements were made.
(b) (U) Custody
of the Child for Purposes of Emigration and Adoption:
(i) (U) Proof of custody of
the child for purposes of emigration and adoption will vary depending on local
laws and regulations governing child custody. Generally, this evidence will
consist of a judicial or administrative act expressly authorizing the PAP(s) or
those acting on their behalf to take the child out of the country and bring the
child to the United States for adoption in the United States by the PAP(s).
For married petitioners whose adoption decree is in the name of only one of the
spouses, that decree or order is sufficient to show release and custody to
bring the child to the United States for adoption by the other spouse. Under
these circumstances, a child will have a Hague Adoption Certificate (HAC)
annotated to show that the child will have to be adopted by the other spouse
before meeting the definition of adopted child under INA 101(b)(1)(G) for
purposes of naturalization under section 320 or 322 (see 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(8) paragraph e).
(ii) (U) Petitioners who have
custody of the child for purposes of emigration and adoption must also
demonstrate that they have met or will meet any pre-adoption requirements of
the state of the childs proposed residence. Some of these may have been met
at the Form I-800A stage, and some may not be capable of being met until the
child is in the United States. The PAP(s) should provide a written statement
describing the pre-adoption requirements, specifying which have already been
met, and indicating the plan for meeting remaining requirements, if any. You
should be as flexible as possible in evaluating evidence presented by parents
to satisfy such requirements, opting for the minimum level of proof acceptable
in each case and keeping in mind that compliance with only those requirements
that can be met before the childs arrival in the United States need be
proven. If questions arise regarding pre-adoption requirements, you can
consult with CA/OCS/CI and CA/VO/F.
b. (U) You need to be well
versed in the host countrys adoption, custody, and guardianship laws and
procedures, but you should rely on competent local authorities to make
responsible decisions about the facts surrounding child custody and adoptions,
not second-guessing whether such authorities are correctly implementing their
own laws or regulations or whether the adoption is in the best interests of the
child. At the same time, you must keep in mind that terms used by such local
authorities (such as adoption) may not always be equivalent to definitions
for such terms in U.S. immigration law. In all Convention adoptee cases, the
requirements of U.S. immigration law must be met. If you have evidence of a
trend involving inappropriate application of local laws or local officials
decisions contributing to child-buying, fraud or misrepresentation in adoption
cases, details of posts findings should be reported to CA/VO/F and CA/OCS/CI.
9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(4) (U) Legal
Parent-Child Relationship (Convention Adoptee)
(CT:VISA-573; 04-16-2018)
a. (U) Petitioners seeking to
bring a Convention adoptee to the United States must intend to enter into a legal
parent-child relationship with that Convention adoptee. The intent to create a
legal parent-child relationship requires the intent to raise the child as their
own child, with the same mutual rights and obligations that exist between a
birth parent and birth child. Intent in this case implies the provision of
care, support, and direction to the Convention adoptee, without the intent to
profit financially or otherwise from the presence of the child. The adoptive
parents must seek to adopt the child not solely to facilitate the childs
immigration to the United States.
b. (U) An adoption is intended
to sever previous parental ties. Therefore, a caretaker relationship in which
the PAP(s) intend to physically return the child (or return legal custody of
the child) to their birth parents or former guardians in the future would not
constitute a legal parent-child relationship.
c. (U) As provided in INA
101(b)(1)(G), no birth parent or prior adoptive parent of an Convention adoptee
may obtain any immigration benefit as a result of his or her previous
relationship with the Convention adoptee.
9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(5) (U) Consent
to Adoption (Convention Adoptee)
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) For a child to be
eligible for the Convention adoptee classification, a Convention adoptees
legal custodian and any other individual or entity who must consent to the
childs adoption must have freely given his or her written irrevocable consent
to the adoption.
b. (U) It is important to note
that consent issues, and in particular the terms used related to legal
custodians and their definitions, are treated differently in Convention adoptee
and orphan cases. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) regulations establish
very specific meanings for each of the terms related to a legal custodians
consent in a Convention Adoption. For Convention adoptee cases, the guidance
and definitions listed for Convention adoptees in 9 FAM 502.3-6 below must be used.
c. (U)
Because the report required under Article 16 should include information about
the childs identity, adoptability, background, social environment, family
history, medical history (including that of the childs family), and any
special needs, and be accompanied by proof that the necessary consents have
been obtained, the report should provide information regarding the abandonment,
desertion, or disappearance.
d. (U) Written
Irrevocable Consent:
(1) (U) A written irrevocable
consent is a document in which the legal custodian freely consents to the
termination of the legal custodians legal relationship with the child. If
more than one individual or entity is the childs legal custodian, the consent
of each legal custodian may be recorded in one document, or in an additional
document, but all documents, taken together, must show that each legal
custodian has given the necessary irrevocable consent. The consent need not
necessarily use the term irrevocable consent provided that it is in fact
irrevocable by operation of law.
(2) (U) To be valid, the
written irrevocable consent must indicate the place and date the document was
signed by a childs legal custodian. The document must specify whether the
legal custodian is able to read and understand the language in which the
consent is written. If the legal custodian is not able to read or understand
the language in which the document is written, then the document does not
qualify as an irrevocable consent unless it is accompanied by a declaration,
signed by an identified individual, establishing that that individual is competent
to translate the language in the irrevocable consent into a language that the
legal custodian understands, and that the individual, on the date and at the
place specified in the declaration, did in fact read and explain the consent to
the legal custodian in a language that the legal custodian understands. The
declaration must also indicate the language used to provide the explanation.
(3) (U) If the Central
Authority specifies in its report (see 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(3) below) that all
necessary consents have been obtained, that should normally be considered
sufficient to establish that both the consent to the childs adoption and the
consent to the childs emigration have been obtained from the relevant
custodian, regardless of whether the consent document specifically refers to
consent to the childs emigration.
(4) (U) Timing
of Consent: A consent signed by the birth mother or any legal custodian
other than the birth father may not be given before the childs birth.
(5) (U) Evidence
of Consent: A copy of the irrevocable consent(s) signed by the legal
custodian(s) and any other individual or entity that must consent to the
childs adoption will generally be required with the filing of the Form I-800
petition. However, an exception to this requirement is permitted if the law of
the country of the childs habitual residence provides that their identities
may not be disclosed, so long as the Central Authority of the country of the
childs habitual residence certifies in its report that the required documents exist
and that they establish the childs age and availability for adoption.
(6) (U) If the host country
prohibits disclosure of identity of birth parents, post should work with
Central Authority to ensure that the Central Authority uses a certification of
this nature to meet its Article 16 obligation of proving that necessary
consents have been obtained. Because the Convention does not explicitly refer
to a certification, it may be necessary for posts to raise this issue with
the host country Central Authority so that a document meeting this DHS
requirement can be produced in United States cases.
9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(6) (U) Inability
to Provide Proper Care (Convention Adoptee)
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. (U) In the case of a child
placed for adoption by both of his or her birth parents, for the child to be
eligible for the Convention adoptee classification, the factual basis for
determining that they are incapable of providing proper care for the child must
be submitted with the Form I-800. This requirement does not apply to cases
involving the consent of a sole or surviving parent. Nor does it apply if the
irrevocable consent for the childs adoption is given by a legal custodian
other than the two birth parents, such as an institution or other non-birth
parent.
b. (U) Incapable of providing
proper care means that, in light of all the relevant circumstances including
but not limited to economic or financial concerns, extreme poverty, medical,
mental, or emotional difficulties, or long term incarceration, the childs two
living birth parents are not able to provide for the child's basic needs,
consistent with the local standards of the Convention country.
9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(7) (U) Compliance
With Convention Requirements (Convention Adoptee)
(CT:VISA-398; 07-14-2017)
a. (U) An adoption or grant of
legal custody for purposes of adoption of a Convention adoptee must be done in
accordance with the provisions of the Convention and IAA. Most of the visa
processing provisions detailed in 9 FAM
502.3-4(D) below are designed to ensure compliance with such provisions.
You may assume that if procedures and guidelines outlined in 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(1) above and 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(1) and discussed throughout 9 FAM 502.3-4
are followed, the case will be in compliance with Convention requirements.
b. (U) As background, several
of the key Convention requirements can be summarized by the following:
(1) (U) As the receiving
country, the United States is required to notify a Convention countrys Central
Authority of its determination that PAP(s) are eligible and suitable to adopt,
that they have been counseled as necessary regarding the intercountry adoption,
that, if adopted, the child would be eligible to enter and reside in the United
States, and that the United States agrees that the adoption should proceed.
The United States is required to provide to the Convention country a detailed
report on the PAP(s) eligibility and suitability to adopt.
(2) (U) The Central Authority
of the Convention country where the child is habitually resident is required to
notify the U.S. Central Authority of its determination that the child is
adoptable, that the adoption would be in the childs best interests, that
appropriate counseling has been done in the case, that appropriate consents
have been obtained, and that the Convention country agrees that the adoption
should proceed. The Central Authority of the Convention country is required to
provide to the U.S. Central Authority a report on the background of the child
being adopted. The Central Authorities of both countries must agree in advance
that the adoption may proceed.
(3) (U) Both the United States
and other Convention country Central Authorities are required to ensure that
Convention cases do not involve improper financial gain or prohibited contact
between the parties, and that the transfer of the child and any possible
post-placement monitoring and disruptions be handled as spelled out in the
Convention. Convention countries are required to certify that adoptions take
place in accordance with the Convention, and to recognize the effects of such
adoptions so certified. Convention countries also agree to cooperate on
achieving the objectives of the Convention and keeping each other informed of
local adoption laws and practices and Convention implementation.
(4) (U) The Convention also
establishes the concept of accredited and approved ASPs and permits them to
perform certain Central Authority tasks.
c. (U) The IAA establishes the
system for accrediting and approving ASPs in the United States. Among the
requirements of the IAA is that ASPs must be authorized to provide adoption
services as set forth in 22 CFR 96.12 through 22 CFR 96.17. (See 9 FAM
502.3-4(B) paragraph b and 7 FAM 1796.3.)
Any questions regarding an ASPs authorization to act should be addressed at
the time the Form I-800 is filed (see 9 FAM
502.3-4(B) paragraph b(5) above).
9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(8) (U) Improper
Inducement, Prohibited Contact, Fraud and Misrepresentation (Convention
Adoptee)
(CT:VISA-573; 04-16-2018)
a. (U) The Convention prohibits
improper financial or other gain in an intercountry adoption; under Article 32
of the Convention, only costs and expenses may be charged or paid. The
Convention also prohibits certain contact with the child. The Convention
adoptee classification is not available for intercountry adoption cases
involving improper inducement, prohibited contacts between PAP(s) or members of
their household and the childs parents and legal custodian(s), or fraud or
misrepresentation.
b. (U) Improper
Inducement:
(1) (U) PAPs are required to
disclose in Part 4 of the Form I-800 petition all payments, including in kind
contributions, made in relation to the adoption of the child. Such payments
include all fees, expenses, in kind contributions, and other compensation that
the PAP(s) made, either directly or indirectly, to any individual, agency,
entity, governmental authority, or other payee or recipient.
(2) (U) A child may not
qualify as a Convention adoptee if the PAP(s), or any person or entity working
on their behalf, including their ASP, paid, gave, or offered to pay or give
money or other consideration (including in-kind gifts of items) either directly
or indirectly to the childs birth parent(s), agent, or other individual as
payment for the child, or as an inducement to give consent, to relinquish the
child for adoption, or to have the childs birthparents perform any act that
would make the child a Convention adoptee.
(3) (U) However, the
prohibition on such payments does not preclude payment of reasonable costs
incurred for the services listed below. A payment for the following services
would not be considered improper inducement if the payment is not prohibited
under the law of the country in which the payment is made and the amount
involved is commensurate with reasonable costs for such services in the country
in which the service is provided.
(a) (U) Services of an adoption
service provider in connection with an adoption;
(b) (U) Expenses incurred in
locating a child for adoption;
(c) (U) Medical, hospital,
nursing, pharmaceutical, travel, or other similar expenses incurred by a mother
or her child in connection with the birth or any illness of the child;
(d) (U) Counseling services for
a parent or a child for a reasonable time before and after the childs
placement for adoption;
(e) (U) Expenses commensurate
with the living standards of the Convention country for the care of the birth
mother while pregnant and immediately following the birth of the child;
(f) (U) Expenses incurred in
obtaining the home study;
(g) Expenses incurred in obtaining the report and other
information on the child to comply with Form I-800 evidence requirements;
(h) (U) Legal services, court
costs, and travel or other administrative expenses connected with an adoption,
including any legal services performed for a parent who consents to the
adoption of a child or relinquishes the child to an agency;
(i) (U) Other services which a
USCIS or consular officer reviewing the case finds reasonably necessary; and
(j) (U) Costs for such services
must be disclosed on Form I-800.
(4) (U) Allegations of
improper inducement must be carefully reviewed, analyzing the evidence
available to substantiate such claims. Investigations into such allegations
should generally focus on concrete evidence or an admission of guilt. As noted
in 9
FAM 502.3-4(D)(4) paragraph c(5)(c)(vi), a Convention countrys Central
Authority is required to ensure that no payment or inducement of any kind has
been given to obtain the consents necessary for the adoption to be completed.
Statements regarding whether there was any payment or inducement, as well as
any other concrete evidence or discussion from the PAP(s) or ASPs, should be
used to assist in determination of whether improper inducement occurred in the
case.
c. (U) Limitations
on Contact:
(1) (U) Except as noted in
paragraph c(2) below, PAP(s) and/or any additional adult member of their
household must not meet or have any other form of contact with the childs
birthparent(s), legal custodian(s), or other individual or entity who is
responsible for the childs care. If prohibited contact has occurred, the
child cannot qualify as a Convention adoptee and the Form I-800 must be
denied. Note that an authorized ASPs sharing of general information about a
possible adoption placement is not considered contact.
(2) (U) Contact
is Permitted Only If:
(a) (U) The first such contact
took place only after USCIS had approved the Form I-800A and after the
competent authority of the Convention country had determined that the child was
eligible for intercountry adoption and that the required consents had been
given;
(b) (U) The competent authority
of the Convention country permitted earlier contact, either in the particular
instance or through laws or rules of general application, and the contact
occurred only in compliance with the particular authorization or generally
applicable laws or rules. If the PAP(s) first adopted the child without
complying with the Convention, the competent authoritys decision to permit the
adoption to be vacated and to allow the PAP(s) to adopt the child again after
complying with the Convention will also constitute approval of any prior
contact; or
(c) (U) The PAP(s) were already
related to the childs birthparent(s), which means that the petitioner was,
before the adoption, the father, mother, son, daughter, brother, sister, uncle,
aunt, first cousin (i.e., the petitioner, or either spouse, in the case of a
married petitioner had at least one grandparent in common with the child's
parent), second cousin (i.e., the petitioner, or either spouse, in the case of
a married petitioner, had at least one great-grandparent in common with the
child's parent) nephew, niece, husband, former husband, wife, former wife,
father-in-law, mother-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, brother-in-law,
sister-in-law, stepfather, stepmother, stepson, stepdaughter, stepbrother,
stepsister, half-brother, or half-sister of the child's birthparent(s).
d. (U) Fraud
or Misrepresentation:
(1) (U) A child should not be
considered a Convention adoptee if there is evidence of fraud or material
misrepresentation with the purpose of using deception to obtain visas for
children who do not qualify. In particular, material misrepresentation in the
Form I-800 petition or its supporting documents (see 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(4) paragraph c(5)) would result in denial of Convention adoptee
classification. (See also discussion of other grounds for possible USCIS
denial of Form I-800 petitions in 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(4) paragraph d, and 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(2) paragraph b notes below on fraud and material
misrepresentation issues with the Form I-800A and the home study.)
(2) (U) In such cases, U.S.
citizen PAP(s) and adoptive children may all be unwitting victims of a fraud
that was actually perpetrated upon them by unscrupulous agents misrepresenting
important facts about these children. If the fraud involves stolen or
kidnapped children, birth parents may also be victims. In some cases, birth
parents may also have been misled about the permanent nature of their
separation from the child.
(3) (U) The Convention and its
provisions were created to help prevent such abuses. However, documentation
presented in support of a Convention adoptee case must still be carefully
scrutinized. Occasionally, it may be necessary to conduct field
investigations, DNA tests, or additional interviews in order to investigate
possible adoption fraud. Because intercountry adoption cases are
multi-faceted, a successful anti-fraud program should engage the entire
adoption community, including agents, lawyers, orphanages, foster care
providers, medical personnel, judges, local officials, and law enforcement
personnel.
(4) (U) You should keep in
mind, however, that the responsibility for enforcing local laws and for
protecting the rights of children and birth parents rests primarily with the
country of origin Central Authority and other local authorities. Also,
anti-fraud efforts must be balanced with the mandate to provide service to U.S.
citizens and the need to be sensitive to the victims of fraud. Whenever
possible, posts should use anti-fraud techniques that do not unnecessarily
delay processing or create further hardship for fraud victims.
9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(9) (U) IH3,
IH4 or B2 Classifications and the Child Citizenship Act (Convention Adoptee)
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) A Convention adoptee may
be classified as either an IH3 or IH4 immigrant or, in the case of a child who
will reside abroad with the prospective adoptive parent(s) after the adoption
but will travel to the United States for the purpose of acquiring U.S.
citizenship based on an application under INA 322, a B2 nonimmigrant. The
correct classification of a visa issued to a Convention adoptee is particularly
important due to the Child Citizenship Act of 2000 (Public Law 106-395). As a
result of that Act, a Convention adoptee properly admitted to the United States
as a lawful permanent resident, in the IH3 classification, while under the age
of 18, who resides in the United States in the legal and physical custody of
the U.S. citizen parent, will automatically acquire U.S. citizenship, while
those admitted as a result of an IH4 IV or a NIV classification will not
immediately acquire citizenship (see paragraph d below). You should take
particular care to classify Convention adoptee visas correctly and to inform
prospective parents of the significance of the visa classification their child
receives. (See also 9 FAM
502.3-1(C) above on adopted children who should be issued other types of
visas.)
b. (U) Although proper
classifications should be noted on Form I-800 petitions or petition approval
notices, the final determination of proper classification for the visa rests
with the adjudicating consular officer.
c. (U) Classification
Criteria:
(1) (U) The IH3 classification
is appropriate for a Convention adoptee who was the subject of a full, final,
and legal adoption abroad by the petitioner (and spouse, if married). (Note
that, unlike for orphan cases, there is no requirement that at least one
adoptive parent personally see and observe the child before or during the
adoption proceedings in order for the IH3 classification to be appropriate.)
(2) (U) The IH4 classification
is appropriate for a Convention adoptee who will be adopted by the petitioner
(and spouse, if applicable) after being admitted to the United States. The
petitioner must demonstrate intent to adopt the application and must satisfy
any applicable pre-adoption requirements of the home state. The petitioner
must have legal custody of the Convention adoptee and authorization for the
emigration and adoption of the child. (Note that adoption by one spouse in a
married couple is not considered sufficient to obtain IH3 status, even though
the petitioner will be issued an Hague Adoption Certificate (HAC) (with
annotation). This should be treated as a custody case for purposes of visa
issuance, and an IH4 is appropriate.)
(3) (U) The B2 NIV
classification is appropriate for a Convention adoptee who was the subject of a
full, final, and legal adoption abroad by the PAP(s) and the PAP(s) and the
child will continue to live abroad immediately following the adoption, but the
child seeks a nonimmigrant visa in order to travel to the United States to
obtain naturalization under INA 322 and 8 CFR 322 (see 9 FAM
402.2-4(B)(7)). Note that for a child
seeking B-2 classification for this purpose, it would involve the review and
adjudication of a Form DS-160 Nonimmigrant Visa Application, rather than a Form
DS-260, Immigrant Visa Electronic Application and that, as an NIV applicant,
such a child would not require a medical examination unless you have reason to
believe that the applicant may be ineligible for a visa under INA 212(a)(1)
(see 9
FAM 302.2-2(B)).
d. (U) Citizenship
Determination Based on Proper Classification of the Convention Adoptee:
(1) (U) IH3:
Upon residing in the United States with the U.S. citizen parent, after having
been lawfully admitted into the United States for permanent residence, and
assuming the IH3 classification was appropriate and the Convention adoptee is
under the age of 18, the child will automatically acquire U.S. citizenship as
of the date of admission to the United States. The USCIS Buffalo office
processes newly entering IH3 visa packets, automatically sending Certificates
of Citizenship to eligible children without requiring additional forms or
fees. Adoptive parents may also request a U.S. passport for the child.
(2) (U) IH4:
IH4 Convention adoptees become lawful permanent residents upon admission to the
United States, but do not automatically acquire U.S. citizenship. A Convention
adoptee who enters the United States on an IH4 visa acquires U.S. citizenship
as of the date of a full and final adoption decree in the United States as long
as the child is under age 18 at the time of adoption and is residing in the
United States with the citizen parent. While citizenship is acquired as of the
date of the adoption in such cases, beneficiaries will need to file Form N-600,
Application for Certificate of Citizenship and submit it to the local USCIS
District Office or Sub-Office that holds jurisdiction over their permanent
residence to receive a Certificate of Citizenship. Alternatively, adoptive
parents may request U.S. passports for the child as evidence of citizenship.
(3) (U) B2:
A child temporarily residing abroad with the PAP(s), who seeks to enter the
United States for the acquisition of U.S. citizenship under INA 322 may be entitled
to B-2 nonimmigrant classification, provided the child demonstrates an intent
to return abroad after a temporary stay in the United States, the child has
filed Form N-600K, Application for Citizenship and Issuance of Certificate
Under Section 322 with USCIS, and has been scheduled for an interview on the
Form N-600K. (As discussed in 9 FAM
502.7-2(B) paragraph d, a child under the age of 16 is not considered to
possess a will or intent separate from that of the parents with regard to
residence in the United States or abroad.) U.S. citizen parents of children
adopted overseas who reside overseas and do not intend to reside in the United
States in the immediate future may apply for naturalization on behalf of the
child by filing Form N-600K, at any USCIS District Office or Sub-Office in the
United States. The naturalization process for such a child cannot take place
overseas. The child would need to be in the United States temporarily pursuant
to a lawful admission and maintain such lawful status to complete
naturalization processing and take the oath of allegiance. You are encouraged
to give positive consideration to such cases whenever possible. Note that children
of U.S. citizen military members who are authorized to accompany and reside
with their U.S. citizen military parent(s) abroad pursuant to official orders
are not required to be temporarily present in the U.S. to acquire U.S.
citizenship under section 322 of the INA. Such children may be able to
complete the N-600 process to acquire a Certificate of Citizenship with USCIS
abroad. Consular officers should direct parents to the USCIS office overseas
with jurisdiction. Contact CA/VO/F and CA/VO/L/A for assistance with these
cases.
e. (U) Many adoptive parents
have questions related to the Child Citizenship Act. They can be referred to
the State Department website or USCIS website for additional information and
important details on the legislations impact on adopted children.
9 FAM 502.3-4(D) (U) Convention
Adoptee Processing
9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(1) (U) Summary
of the Convention Adoption Process
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) The Convention adoptee
visa process differs from standard IV or orphan processing primarily in that
the PAP(s) must work with an accredited or approved Adoption Service Provider
(ASP) (see 9
FAM 502.3-4(B) paragraph b above) and in that a Convention adoptees
eligibility for the visa classification and visa must be reviewed before the
adoption or grant of legal custody takes place. Final approval of the petition
and visa application only takes place after the adoption or grant of legal
custody is complete and a Hague Convention Certificate indicating the
adoptions or grant of legal custodys compliance with the Convention and IAA
has been issued.
b. (U) A summary of the
Convention adoption process is provided below. For ease of navigation through
this FAM Note, each point is linked to an expanded and more detailed section.
(1) (U) Form I-800A, Application for Determination of Suitability to Adopt a Child From
a Convention Country: The PAP(s) must file the Form I-800A with USCIS
per the form instructions, and USCIS determines whether the PAP(s) satisfy
criteria for eligibility and suitability to adopt. If USCIS approves the Form
I-800A, the PAP(s) may arrange for the relevant accredited, approved, , or
supervised ASP to submit the approval notice, the accompanying home study, and
other supporting evidence to the Central Authority in the Convention country in
which the PAP(s) plan to adopt. See 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(2) below for additional details on the I-800A.
(2) (U) Convention
Country Matches PAP(s) With Child: Working through an accredited,
approved, or supervised ASP and in accordance with procedures established by
the Convention country, PAP(s) obtain from the Convention countrys Central
Authority an Article 16 report on a child with the Central Authoritys
determination that the child is adoptable, proof that necessary consents have
been obtained, and its reasons why the envisaged placement is in the best
interests of the child. PAP(s) agree to adopt the child. See 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(3) below for additional details on PAP and child matches.
(3) (U) Provisional
Adjudication of I-800: Petition to Classify Convention Adoptee as an
Immediate Relative: PAP(s) file a Form I-800 petition with USCIS per USCIS
instructions, including the Article 16 report on the child. The Form I-800 is
used to determine whether the child will qualify as a Convention adoptee. This
step must occur before the PAPs have adopted or obtained legal custody of the
child. (If the PAPs have already adopted or obtained legal custody of the
child, that adoption or legal custody will have to be voided, vacated,
annulled, or terminated, and the process redone in accordance with the Convention
in order for the child to immigrate as a Convention adoptee.) (See 8 CFR
204.309(b)(1).) At this stage, the adjudicating USCIS officer will determine
whether to provisionally approve the Form I-800 petition in accordance with
USCIS regulations. This includes USCIS adjudication of any waiver applications
filed with the Form I-800 petition to cover any known or suspected visa
ineligibilities. See 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(4) below for additional details on provisional adjudication of
the I-800 petition.
(4) (U) Convention
Adoptee Visa Application: After the petition has been provisionally
approved by USCIS, the PAP(s) (in person only if practicable) or an ASP then
file a Form DS-260, Online Immigrant Visa Application (or, in certain cases, a
Form DS-160, Online Nonimmigrant Visa Application, with a consular officer (see
9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(9) above). The consular officer reviews the application and
determines whether the child appears to meet the criteria for visa eligibility
based on the evidence available. If the consular officer decides that there
are no ineligibilities and that the child appears eligible to receive a visa,
the officer will annotate the application to reflect this conclusion. This
stage includes the first of two ineligibility reviews for the child. See 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(5) below for additional details on Convention adoption visa
applications.
(5) (U) Article
5 Letter: Provisional approval of the petition and favorable annotation
of the visa application result in the consular officers issuance of an Article
5 Letter to the Convention countrys Central Authority stating that the PAP(s)
have been counseled (including child-specific counseling) and found suitable
for the adoption, and that the child will be authorized to enter and reside in
the United States; PAP(s) then adopt the child or obtain legal custody of the
child for purposes of emigration and adoption. See 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(6) below
for additional information on the Article 5 letter.
(6) (U) Appropriate
Notification from Country of Origin: In the case of an adoption, the
Central Authority of the Convention country will issue an Article 23
Certificate certifying that the adoption has occurred in accordance with the
Convention. In the case of a grant of legal custody, posts should work with
host country to determine whether, in the particular country, a document
comparable to the Article 23 Certificate exists with respect to custody cases
(i.e., a document certifying Convention compliance) and, if so, should request
this document. If such a document does not exist, proof that the grant of
legal custody occurred, as described in 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(3) paragraph a(2)(b),
will in these cases be sufficient to constitute appropriate notification. See
9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(7) below for additional details on Country of Origin
notifications.
(7) (U) Hague
Convention Certificate (Hague Adoption Certificate or Hague Custody
Certificate): After verifying compliance with the Convention and IAA,
consular officers provide either (1) a Hague Adoption Certificate to the
adoptive parent(s), certifying that the requirements of the Convention and the
IAA have been met with respect to the adoption, or (2) a Hague Custody
Certificate to the PAP(s), certifying that the requirements of the Convention
and the IAA have been met with respect to the grant of legal custody. See 9
FAM 502.3-4(D)(8) below for additional details on Hague Certificates.
(8) (U) Form I-800 Final Adjudication: USCIS has delegated to consular
officers the authority to grant final approval of the Form I-800. You may not,
however, deny a Form I-800. If the Form I-800 is not clearly approvable,
forward the Form I-800 and accompanying evidence to the appropriate USCIS
office for adjudication. See 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(9) below for additional
information on final adjudication of the I-800 petition.
(9) (U) Convention
Adoptee Visa Issuance: Consular officers adjudicate the visa
application and, if there are no ineligibilities found upon this second review,
issue the visa. See 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(10) below for additional information on
adjudication of the visa application.
c. (U) Direct questions
related to processing of Convention adoptee cases to CA/VO/F and classification
questions to CA/VO/L/A, with a copy to CA/VO/F. Direct reporting on countries
adoption practices to CA/OCS/CI, with a copy to CA/VO/F.
9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(2) (U) Consular Officer Use of Form
I-800A Information (Convention Adoptee - Step 1 of 9)
(CT:VISA-573; 04-16-2018)
a. (U) Use of
Form I-800A:
(1) (U) USCIS has responsibility
for determining eligibility and suitability of PAP(s). The Form I-800A
application allows the PAP(s) to demonstrate that they are both eligible to
adopt and capable of providing proper care to a Convention adoptee.
(2) (U) You may grant final
approval of Form I-800 petitions only if you have acceptable evidence of a
valid Form I-800A approval for the petitioner(s) and of provisional approval of
the Form I-800.
(3) (U) The Form I-800A
approval and the fingerprint clearances obtained during the Form I-800A process
have a 15-month validity period from the date the fingerprints were cleared
(although the Form I-800A can be extendedsee below). Validity dates will be
clearly indicated on the Form I-800A approval. PAP(s) filing a petition for a
child to be classified as a Convention adoptee must file the Form I-800
petition within the validity period of the Form I-800A. If the Form I-800
isnt filed within the validity period, the Form I-800A approval has expired
and will no longer support the filing of the Form I-800.
(4) (U) Before the Form I-800A
expires, PAP(s) may request an extension of the Form I-800A validity period by
filing a Form I-800A Supplement 3 Request for Action on Approved Form I-800A
with USCIS. Only USCIS can extend the validity of the Form I-800A approval.
If the PAP(s) wish to file a Convention adoptee petition after the Form I-800-A
expires, they must file a new Form I-800A and submit required documentation to
the appropriate USCIS office. Further action on the case must be put on hold
until the new Form I-800-A is approved.
(5) (U) In the Convention
process, both the form I-800A application approval and the associated
fingerprint checks are valid for 15 months.
(6) (U) You may approve Form I-800
petitions and/or Convention adoptee visas only for children who meet the
conditions noted in the Form I-800-A approval. For example, if the Form I-800-A
approval was for only a child under the age of two or did not note special
approval to adopt a special needs child, you may not approve a Form I-800
petition or a visa for a 10-year old or a child with special needs,
respectively. Similarly, if state pre-adoption requirements were identified in
the Form I-800A and have not yet been met, you cannot approve the Form I-800
petition or immigrant visa, unless those requirements cannot be met until the
PAPs acquire legal custody of the child or the child is physically in the
United States (see 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(9) paragraph b(2) below).
(7) (U) Although you are not
involved in Form I-800A adjudication and have no authority to review USCIS
determinations regarding PAP(s) suitability and eligibility to adopt, you may
assist in the suitability determination process by providing information or
necessary forms to prospective petitioners, taking their fingerprints, and/or
forwarding paperwork on behalf of such individuals under certain limited
circumstances, where authorized by USCIS.
(8) (U) The PAP(s) must file
the Form I-800A with USCIS in accordance with Form I-800A instructions.
(9) You cannot adjudicate Form I-800A applications and
may only accept a Form I-800A on behalf of USCIS upon written instructions from
USCIS or CA/VO.
b. (U) Fraud
or Misrepresentation in the Form I-800A:
(1) (U) You may encounter
fraud in Convention adoptee cases, and information from the Form I-800A may
occasionally be used to corroborate requests for USCIS review or revocation of
Form I-800-A applications, as well as of Form I-800 petitions. 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(4) paragraph c(2) and 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(5) paragraph c(2) provide
below additional information on dealing with such cases.
(2) (U) In cases where you
have a well-founded and substantive reason to believe that the Form I-800-A
approval was obtained on the basis of fraud or material misrepresentation, or
have knowledge of a change in material fact subsequent to the approval of the
Form I-800-A, consult with the appropriate USCIS office on disposition of the
case.
(3) (U) For further
information, see 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(1) above, Summary of the Convention Adoption
Process.
9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(3) (U) Country of Origin Identification
of a Convention Adoptee for Adoption (Step 2 of 9)
(CT:VISA-573; 04-16-2018)
a. (U) Once USCIS has approved
the Form I-800A, the accredited, approved, or supervised ASP must transmit the
USCIS determination to the Central Authority of the Convention country where
the PAP(s) wish to adopt a Convention adoptee. The documentation on the
parents (i.e., the home study and other supporting evidence) provided to the
Convention country Central Authority must be identical to that submitted to and
approved by USCIS.
b. (U) In accordance with
Articles 4 and 16 of the Convention, the Central Authority of the Convention
country then identifies a child as a prospective match for the parents. The
Central Authority of the Convention country must fulfill several Convention
obligations at this point, including preparing a report on the child.
c. (U) The Central Authority
of the Convention country must transmit its report on the child, including proof
that the necessary consents have been obtained and the reasons for its
determination on the placement directly to the authorized ASP, which has been
delegated authority to receive such a report. Formats for this report will
vary; send questions related to the report to CA/VO/F and CA/OCS/CI.
d. (U) For further information,
see 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(1), Summary of the Convention Adoption Process, above.
9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(4) (U) Form I-800 Provisional
Adjudication (Convention Adoptee - Step 3 of 9)
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) Most of the analysis of
the childs eligibility for the Convention adoptee classification will take
place at the provisional adjudication stage; the final adjudication of the
petition will be based on a rebuttable presumption that the child is eligible
for the Convention adoptee classification. The section below discusses USCISs
review, provisional adjudication, and approval of a Convention adoptee
petition. See 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(9) below for instructions related to final
approval of the petition.
b. (U) Purpose
of the Form I-800 Convention Adoptee Petition:
(1) (U) The Form I-800
petition form is used to document a childs classification under INA
101(b)(1)(G) and eligibility to immigrate as a Convention adoptee. Separate
Form I-800 petitions must be filed for each child, even though the associated
Form I-800A approval may have been for multiple children. A Convention adoptee
can be issued an immigrant visa only if he or she is the beneficiary of an
approved Form I-800 petition.
(2) (U) In rare cases, the
Form I-800 petition may also be used to demonstrate Convention adoptee
classification for a child who will continue to live abroad with his or her
PAP(s) in the near term, but whose parents plan to seek naturalization under
INA 322. In such cases, approval of the petition will become the basis for a
USCIS appointment for a naturalization hearing in the United States, and a
request for a nonimmigrant visa to attend that hearing. See 9 FAM 502.3-4(B)
paragraph a(4)(e) above for additional details.
c. (U) Filing
the Form I-800 Convention Adoptee Petition:
(1) (U) Once U.S. citizen
PAP(s) have accepted the referral of a child from the Central Authority of the
country of origin, the PAP(s) file the Form I-800 petition. The petition must
be filed in accordance with instructions associated with the Form I-800.
Consular officers should consult Form I-800 and the instructions to familiarize
themselves with current filing requirements; although USCIS officers will
provisionally approve Form I-800s, consular officers will be responsible for
final approval and will have to verify Convention and IAA compliance based in
large measure on the Form I-800. A description of key requirements for filing
follows in this note.
(2) (U) Where
PAPs Must File: PAP(s) must file the Form I-800 petitions with the
USCIS office that approved, or granted the most recent extension of, the PAP(s)
Form I-800A.
(3) (U) Who
Can File: In order to file a Form I-800 petition, the petitioner must
meet the following requirements:
(a) (U) The PAP is habitually
resident in the United States, as defined in applicable DHS regulations (see 9
FAM 502.3-4(C)(2) paragraph b(2) above);
(b) (U) The PAP is an unmarried
U.S. citizen who is at least 25 years old or a married U.S. citizen whose
spouse will also adopt the child the citizen seeks to adopt. (The spouse must
be either a U.S. citizen, a non-citizen U.S. national, or an alien who, if
living in the United States, holds a lawful status under U.S. immigration law);
(c) (U) The PAP has an approved
and unexpired Form I-800A; and
(d) (U) Within the last year,
USCIS has not denied the PAPs:
(i) (U) Form I-800A under 8
CFR 204.309(a)
(ii) (U) Form I-600A under 8
CFR 204.3(h)(4)
(iii) (U) Form I-800 under 8
CFR 204.309(b)(3)
(iv) (U) Form I-600 under 8 CFR
204.3(i)
(v) (U) These 8 CFR provisions
relate to failure to disclose a history of abuse and/or violence, failure to
disclose a criminal history, failure to disclose prior adoption home studies,
failure to cooperate in checking child abuse registries, and child-buying.
(4) (U) When
to File: PAP(s) must generally file the Form I-800 before the childs
16th birthday or before the childs 18th birthday if the sibling exception
applies. See 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(2) paragraph
a(1)(b) above for special rules concerning children between the ages of 15 and
16.
(5) (U) What
to File with the Form I-800: PAP(s) generally
must present the following with the Form I-800 petition. (See 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(2) paragraph a(1)(b) above regarding an exception to documentary
filing requirements for children approaching the age of 16):
(a) (U) The Form I-800-A
approval notice and, if applicable, proof that the approval period has been
extended (if the approval notice is not included, it would be necessary to
request it only if post does not have a copy; cases in which post is not in
possession of the USCIS approval for the Form I-800A will be rare);
(b) (U) A statement from the
primary provider signed under penalty of perjury under U.S. law, indicating
that all of the pre-placement preparation and training provided for in the
accreditation standards (22 CFR 96.48) has been completed;
(c) (U) The report required
under Article 16 of the Convention, specifying the child's name and date of
birth, the reasons for making the adoption placement, and establishing that the
competent authority has, as required under Article 4 of the Convention:
(i) (U) Established that the
child is eligible for adoption;
(ii) (U) Determined, after
having given due consideration to the possibility of placing the child for
adoption within the Convention country, that intercountry adoption is in the
child's best interests;
(iii) (U) Ensured that the
legal custodian, after having been counseled as required concerning the effect
of the child's adoption on the legal custodian's relationship to the child and
on the child's legal relationship to his or her family of origin, has freely
consented in writing to the child's adoption, in the required legal form;
(iv) (U) Ensured that if any
individual or entity other than the legal custodian must consent to the child's
adoption, this individual or entity, after having been counseled as required
concerning the effect of the child's adoption, has freely consented in writing,
in the required legal form, to the child's adoption;
(v) (U) Ensured that the
child, after having been counseled as appropriate concerning the effects of the
adoption, has freely consented in writing, in the required legal form, to the
adoption, if the child is of an age that, under the law of the country of the
child's habitual residence, makes the child's consent necessary, and that
consideration was given to the child's wishes and opinions; and
(vi) (U) Ensured that no
payment or inducement of any kind has been given to obtain the consents
necessary for the adoption to be completed.
(d) (U) The report referenced in
paragraph c(5)(c) above must be accompanied by:
(i) (U) A copy of the child's
birth certificate, or secondary evidence of the child's age;
(ii) (U) A copy of the
irrevocable consent(s) signed by the legal custodian(s) and any other
individual or entity who must consent to the child's adoption unless, as
permitted under Article 16 of the Convention, the law of the country of the child's
habitual residence provides that their identities may not be disclosed, so long
as the Central Authority of the country of the child's habitual residence
certifies in its report that the required documents exist and that they
establish the child's age and availability for adoption. (See 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(5) paragraph c(5) above on obtaining such a certification);
(iii) (U) A statement, signed
under penalty of perjury by the primary provider (or an authorized
representative if the primary provider is an agency or other juridical person),
certifying that the report is a true, correct, and complete copy of the report
obtained from the Central Authority of the Convention country;
(iv) (U) A summary of the
information provided to the PAP under 22 CFR 96.49(d) and 22 CFR 96.49(f)
concerning the child's medical and social history. This summary, or a separate
document, must include:
(U) A statement concerning whether, from
any examination as described in 22 CFR 96.49(e) or for any other reason, there
is reason to believe that the child has any medical condition that makes the
child inadmissible; if the medical information that is available at the
provisional approval stage is not sufficient to assess whether the child may be
inadmissible under INA 212(a)(1), the submission of this information may be
deferred until the PAP seeks final approval of the Form I-800;
(U) If both of the child's birth parents
were the child's legal custodians and signed the irrevocable consent, the
factual basis for determining that they are incapable of providing proper care
for the child;
(U) Information about the circumstances
of the other birth parent's death, if applicable, supported by a copy of the
death certificate, unless the Central Authority has made the certification
referenced in 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(3) paragraph
a above;
(U) If a sole birth parent was the legal
custodian, the circumstances leading to the determination that the other parent
abandoned or deserted the child, or disappeared from the child's life; and
(U) If the legal custodian was the
child's prior adoptive parent(s) or any individual or entity other than the
child's birth parent(s), the circumstances leading to the custodian's
acquisition of custody of the child and the legal basis of that custody.
(v) (U) If the child will be
adopted in the United States, the primary provider's written report, signed
under penalty of perjury by the primary provider (or an authorized
representative if the primary provider is an agency or other juridical person)
detailing the primary adoption service provider's plan for post-placement
duties, as specified in 22 CFR 96.50; and
(e) (U) If the child may be
inadmissible under any provision of INA 212(a) for which a waiver is available,
a properly completed waiver application for each such ground;
(f) (U) Either a Form I-864-W,
Intending Immigrant's Form I-864 Exemption, or a Form I-864, Affidavit of
Support (see 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(5) paragraph
d(4) below);
(g) (U) Any other information
required by Form I-800 (for example, a statement of expenses paid in connection
with the adoption and evidence of compliance with pre-adoption requirements);
and
(h) (U) Required
Fees: Note that a PAP who filed a Form I-800A with USCIS may file a
Form I-800 petition for one Convention adoptee without any additional fee. If
more than one Form I-800 petition is being filed based on one Form I-800A, the
PAP must pay a Form I-800 filing fee for each Convention adoptee beyond the
first, unless the children involved are already siblings before the proposed
adoption (in which case no additional fees would be collected). USCIS Form I-800
filing fees are established in 8 CFR 103.7(b)(1).
(6) (U) See 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(2) paragraph a(1)(b) above for special rules regarding determining
the Form I-800 filing date for children between the ages of 15 and 16.
(7) (U) Any foreign language
documents submitted with the Form I-800 petition must be accompanied by a full
English translation, which the translator has certified as complete and
correct, and by the translators certification that he or she is competent to
translate the foreign language into English. If questions arise regarding the
adequacy of the submitted statements or certifications outlined in 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(4) paragraph c(5) above, consult with USCIS officer at post or, if
USCIS is not at post, contact CA/VO/F, CA/OCS/CI, and CA/VO/L/A for assistance.
d. (U) Post
Investigation During USCIS Review of the Form I-800,
Petition to Classify Convention Adoptee as an Immediate Relative:
(1) (U) USCIS review of the
Form I-800, Petition to Classify Convention Adoptee as an Immediate Relative,
and accompanying documentation will generally focus on the following:
(a) (U) Whether the Form I-800
petition and accompanying documents clearly establish that the child meets the
criteria outlined in 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(1) above. Note that parents will not
have completed the adoption or acquired legal custody of the child at this
point, and therefore proof of adoption or legal custody is not required for
provisional adjudication of the Form I-800 petition.
(b) (U) Whether the child fits
all criteria identified in the Form I-800A approval (e.g., age, gender, special
needs, if any).
(c) (U) If the child will be
adopted in the United States, rather than abroad, whether all applicable state
pre-adoption requirements have been met (except those that cannot legally be
met without the childs presence in the United States).
(2) (U) If the USCIS officer
reviewing the Form I-800 petition finds that the Form I-800 petition and
accompanying documentation raise questions about whether the child is a
Convention adoptee or concerns about possible improper inducement, prohibited contact,
or fraud or misrepresentation,the USCIS officer may request post assistance
with investigating the case prior to provisional adjudication of the petition.
(a) (U) Upon receipt of a
request for an investigation and the accompanying documentation (copies of the
filed petition and supporting documents), you should work with posts Fraud
Prevention Unit, the RSO, and local officials and contacts to investigate the
issues identified by the USCIS officer and return the documentation and a
written report of the results of your investigation to the USCIS office.
Investigation procedures vary from post to post, since the best means of
collecting necessary information regarding the childs status and history often
depends on local conditions.
(b) (U) In the vast majority of
Convention adoption cases that raise (U) concerns of
this nature, liaison with the Central Authority and competent authorities will
be required. In some cases, interviews with the petitioner and/or caregiver
will be helpful.
(c) (U) An investigation can
also include document or phone checks, or interviews with the child (if of
sufficient age), social workers, orphanage representatives, or birth parent(s),
if available. In some cases, a full field investigation, DNA tests or other
measures may be warranted (see 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(8) paragraph d).
(3) (U) For further
information, see 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(1), Summary of the Convention Adoption
Process, above.
9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(5) (U) Convention Adoptee Visa
Application (Step 4 of 9)
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) Convention
Adoptee Visa Application - Introduction:
(1) (U) Once the Form I-800
petition has been provisionally approved, USCIS will send notification to the
National Visa Center (NVC), which will notify post of the provisional approval
and inform the PAP(s) that they, or an ASP acting on their behalf, should
submit a visa application to post for the child.
(2) (U) Your consideration of
a Convention adoptee Form DS-260 (or Form DS- 160, see below) will take place
in two stages. Based on the information initially available on the child and
not including evidence on the completed adoption or grant of legal custody, an
initial review takes place upon filing of the Form DS-260. Later, once the
adoption is complete or custody is granted, the formal adjudication of the visa
application is done and the IV fee is collected.
(3) (U) Generally speaking,
most of the analysis of the childs eligibility for a visa will take place at
the initial review stage; the adjudication of the application will generally
consider additional information obtained after the initial review. The section
below provides instructions for the initial review of the Convention adoptee
visa application. (See 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(10) below for instructions related to
formal adjudication of the visa application.)
(4) (U) Note that a Form DS-160
Nonimmigrant Visa Application would be filed for a child who seeks a
nonimmigrant visa to travel to the United States to obtain naturalization under
INA 322 (see 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(9) above).
The review process, however, is the same except where noted below.
b. (U) Submitting
Convention Adoptee Visa Applications:
(1) (U) Visa applications on
behalf of Convention adoptees may be submitted to an IV-issuing post once post
has received notification of USCIS provisional approval.
(2) (U) For Convention adoptee
visa applications, the application packet must include:
(a) (U) A completed DS-260 (for
IV cases) or DS-160(for NIV cases);
(b) (U) Birth certificate;
(c) Two photographs (taken according to the
specifications at 9 FAM 303.6-2(A)(1);
(d) (U) Police, military, or
prison records, if required (very rare); and
(e) (U) Visa processing fees,
which should be collected at post only at the final interview. (See 9 FAM
504.6-3 for more information).
(3) (U) In addition, to the
extent practicable, the visa application packet must also include the following
documents. Submission of these documents is not absolutely required at this
stage of the process, although they will be required by the time of
adjudication of the visa application.
(a) Passport of the Convention adoptee; and
(b) (U) Results of panel
physicians medical exam (required in NIV cases only if you suspect a medical
ineligibility).
(4) (U) The following are also
required, to the extent practicable, at the time of final interview for a visa:
(a) (U) The personal presence of
the Convention adoptee. (If personal appearance is impracticable, visa
applications may be submitted by PAP(s) or authorized ASPs on behalf of the
child); and
(b) (U) Biovisa fingerprinting
(applicants age 14 and over).
c. (U) Visa
Application Reviewing Convention Adoptee Classification:
(1) (U) You must confirm that
the applicant qualifies as a Convention adoptee. Provisional approval of the
Form I-800 petition should be considered prima facie evidence of Convention
adoptee status, but you must briefly review the Form I-800 and documentation
supporting Convention adoptee status to confirm that the classification is
appropriate. The documentation may include IVO scans of the documents
submitted to USCIS to obtain provisional approval, but may also include the
actual paper record submitted to USCIS. Keep in mind that the Form I-800 was
provisionally adjudicated in the United States without the benefit of
physically seeing the parties involved and having more in-depth knowledge of
the documents and fraud patterns in the local country.
(2) (U) If, during the
provisional visa eligibility review, you come to know or have reason to believe
that the petition is not clearly approvable, expeditiously forward the Form I-800
petition and accompanying documentation to the appropriate USCIS office having
jurisdiction over the place of the childs habitual residence for action (see 9
FAM 504.2-8 and 9 FAM 602.2-2(B)(2) with
an explanation of the facts of the case and a detailed analysis of why you find
the petition is not clearly approvable. You are not authorized to deny
petitions. Also provide written notification to the ASP and/or PAPs of this
action, including a brief explanation of the decision and the name and address
of the USCIS office to which the petition has been forwarded. If the
petitions provisional approval is subsequently upheld, resume processing of
the Convention adoptee case.
d. (U) Visa
Application Reviewing Convention Adoptee Ineligibilities:
(1) (U) Based on the
information available at the time the application is submitted, review the visa
application to identify any possible ineligibilities which might affect final
approval of the visa. Convention adoptee visa applicants are subject to all of
the standard INA 212 ineligibilities, although in practice almost no adoptive
children will be affected by criminal, security, immigration violation and
other ineligibilities due to their age. Instructions for handling possible
ineligibilities at the initial visa application review stage of Convention adoptee
processing are provided in paragraph d(6) below.
(2) (U) Unique to Convention
adoptee cases, ineligibility-related information may be a factor in the
approvability of a Form I-800 petition. While Form I-800 provisional
adjudication does not include a review of ineligibilities, PAP(s) are permitted
to apply, at the time of the Form I-800 filing, for a waiver of any known or
suspected ineligibilities of the child (see 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(4) paragraph
c(5)(e) above). Those potential ineligibilities, if identified by the PAP(s),
are addressed during the Form I-800 provisional adjudication stage through the
filing, and USCIS review, of a request for a waiver of ineligibilities.
Provisional approval of the Form I-800 in such cases will include approval of the
waiver. (In the event that the Form I-800 is finally denied, or the IV or NIV
application is refused on grounds other than INA 221(g), after the granting of
a waiver of an ineligibility, the waiver will be void.) During both the
initial review and the final adjudication of the visa application, however, you
still must carefully review the visa application and supporting documents for
evidence of any other ineligibilities.
(3) (U) Convention
Adoptee-Specific INA 212(a) Medical Issues: It
is likely that the panel physicians medical exam results will not be part of
the Convention adoptee visa application packet at this provisional stage of
processing. However, based on any available exam results and the summary of
medical information provided on the child with the Form I-800, including
vaccination records, you should identify any possible medical ineligibilities
in the case.
(a) (U) Vaccinations:
(i) (U) IH3 and IH4
applicants under 10 years of age are exempt from INA 212(a)(1)(A)(ii)
vaccination requirements provided that the adoptive parent(s) signs an
affidavit attesting that the child will receive the required vaccination within
30 days of the childs admission to the United States or at the earliest time
that is medically appropriate. The affidavit is Form DS-1981, and once
completed, it should be attached to the medical exam form and included in the
IV packet.
(ii) (U) Only children whose
adoptive parents have signed such an affidavit will be exempt from the
vaccination requirement. In situations where the adopting parent(s) objects to
the child receiving vaccinations on religious or moral grounds, the applicant
will still require an individual INA 212(g)(2)(C) waiver from USCIS (see 9 FAM
302.2-4).
(b) (U) Significant
Medical Conditions:
(i) (U) If the results of the
panel physicians medical exam are available during this initial review of the
visa application and a significant medical condition is revealed in them that
was not revealed in the Convention countrys report on the child (9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(3) paragraph c above, you must ensure that the adoptive parents are
aware of the condition identified. Processing should be suspended until you receive
a notarized statement from the adoptive parent(s) or PAP(s) indicating
awareness of the child's medical condition and willingness to proceed with case
processing. If the adoptive parents choose not to pursue the petition, forward
it, along with an explanation and all other pertinent information, to the
appropriate USCIS office. Inform CA/OCS/CI and CA/VO/F of the circumstances of
the case, such that any necessary notification to the Convention countrys
Central Authority may be arranged.
(ii) (U) Note also that a
child with a serious medical condition or disability may sometimes be
considered a special needs child, and therefore be subject to the requirement
that the adoptive parents or PAP(s) Form I-800A approval include a reference
to parents ability to adopt a special needs child. In cases when a child is
later determined to be a special needs child and the parents Form I-800A
suitability approval does not give approval to adopt a special needs child, you
should consult with CA/VO/F, which will coordinate with USCIS/NBC, on the next
steps to process the case.
(iii) (U) You should ensure
that adoptive parent(s) or PAP(s) understand that the medical exam that is part
of the visa application process is not meant to provide a comprehensive evaluation
of an adoptive childs health. Encourage parents to arrange private
evaluations by qualified medical professionals, preferably ones versed in
childhood development and who specialize in adoption medicine and have
experience reviewing Convention country medical information.
(4) (U) Convention
Adoptees and Public Charge: In general, the adoptive parents ability
to care for a child is evaluated during the Form I-800A adjudication, such that
an IH3 or IH4 applicant is unlikely to become a public charge. Although Form I-864
forms are filed with the Form I-800 petition, briefly review them as part of
the Convention adoptee visa application review. The following forms should be
used:
(a) (U) For IH3 applicants
eligible for citizenship upon admission to the United States (see 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(9) paragraph d(1) above and 9 FAM 302.8-2(B)), and for IH4
applicants whose PAP(s) have at least 40 quarters of coverage under the Social
Security Act (see 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(9) paragraph d(2) above and 9 FAM
302.8-2(B)), review the Form I-864-W that was submitted with the Form I-800
petition.
(b) (U) For all other Convention
adoptee visa applicants, including those applying for B-2 NIV classification as
children adopted abroad who seek to enter the United States for the acquisition
of U.S. citizenship under INA 322 (see 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(9) paragraph d(3) above
and 9 FAM 302.8-2(B)), review the Form I-864 or Form I-864-EZ that was
submitted with the Form I-800.
(c) (U) If, in a given case, the
adoptive parents did not submit the Form I-864, Form I-864-EZ, or Form I-864-W
with the Form I-800 petition, they must submit the appropriate form with the
visa application.
(d) (U) In a rare case where the
child has an illness or medical condition not addressed by the approved Form
I-800A that would entail significant financial outlay, or where other unusual
circumstances prevail, you should consult with the appropriate USCIS overseas
regional office before determining whether the case requires an updated Form
I-800A.
(5) Unavailable
(6) (U) If a possible
ineligibility is found during the initial review of the Convention adoptee visa
application and that ineligibility has not already been resolved through the
issuance of a waiver:
(a) (U) INA 212(a)(1): You should ensure that the PAP(s) are aware of the issue
and determine whether the parents will seek treatment and/or a waiver of the
ineligibility. If the PAP(s) indicate that they do intend to seek treatment
and/or a waiver on behalf of the Convention adoptee, inform them that post
cannot provide an Article 5 Letter (see 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(6) above) unless USCIS
approves the waiver request and/or the medical condition is successfully
treated and there appear to be no other grounds of ineligibility (unless these
are overcome or waived). The Department and USCIS anticipate that approval of
waivers and treatment of medical conditions will be successful in the vast
majority of cases in resolving INA 212(a)(1) ineligibilities, such that a INA
212(a)(1) finding will not generally be a permanent obstacle to admission and
residence in the United States. Posts with questions on handling INA 212(a)(1)
ineligibilities may request assistance from CA/VO/L/A and CA/VO/F.
(b) (U) Other INA
212(a) or INA 212(f) Ineligibilities
Where a Waiver Is Available: Submit an advisory opinion request on the
case to CA/VO/L/A, with a copy to CA/VO/F and CA/OCS/CI. We will consult with
USCIS on the ineligibility and the likelihood of approval of the waiver, and
provide appropriate instructions to post.
(c) (U) Other INA
212(a) Ineligibilities Where No Waiver Is Available (Very
Rare): After consultation with CA/OCS/CI, CA/VO/L/A, and CA/VO/F,
refuse the visa application in accordance with 9 FAM 504.11 and inform the
applicant, adoption service provider (ASP), and/or prospective adoptive parents
(PAPs) of the bases for the refusal. In accordance with CA instructions, post
should then inform the Central Authority of the Convention country of the
inability to determine that the child would be authorized to enter and reside
permanently in the United States.
e. (U) Documenting
Results of Initial Convention Adoptee Visa Application Review:
(1) (U) If you confirm that
the adoptive child is eligible for Convention adoptee classification, and you
either identify no potential ineligibilities in the case based on available
information, or any such potential ineligibilities have been waived or overcome
(per 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(5) paragraph e above), annotate the visa application to
reflect a positive initial review. You should annotate the case in IVO or (in
B-2 cases) the NIV system, noting that no obstacles were identified to the
applicants admission or residence in the United States.
(2) (U) Inform the ASP and/or
PAP(s) that, based on the currently available information, the United States
will notify the Central Authority of the Convention country that the Convention
adoptee will be authorized to enter and reside permanently in the United
States, and that, once that notification is provided, the Convention provides
that the adoption or grant of legal custody may proceed. Caution PAP(s),
however, that if derogatory information develops prior to final processing of
the case, it may delay or, in extremely rare cases, prevent visa processing.
(3) (U) In the rare cases
covered by 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(5) paragraph d(6)(c) or where instructed by CA/VO
for cases under 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(5) paragraph d(6)(b) above, you should refuse
the visa application in the IVO or NIV system, as applicable, under the relevant
legal ground. For cases covered by 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(5) paragraph d(6)(a) or
where instructed by CA/VO for cases under 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(5) paragraph
d(6)(b), note the potential ineligibility in the IVO or NIV case notes, but
favorably annotate the case once USCIS has granted the waiver.
(4) (U) For further
information, see 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(1), Summary of the Convention Adoption
Process, above.
9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(6) (U) Article 5 Letter (Convention
Adoptee - Step 5 of 9)
(CT:VISA-832; 06-03-2019)
a. (U) Processing
Article 5 Letter:
(1) (U) The Convention
requires that in order for an adoption or grant of legal custody to be
completed, the receiving countrys Central Authority must determine that the
PAP(s) are eligible and suitable to adopt, ensure that the PAP(s) have been
counseled as necessary, determine that the child is or will be authorized to
enter and reside permanently in the receiving country (here, the United
States), and agree that the adoption or grant of legal custody may proceed.
Confirmation that these steps have been taken is conveyed to the country of
origins Central Authority via an Article 5 letter (the name refers to the
relevant article of the Convention). This letter will also constitute our
agreement, under Article 17 of the Convention, for the adoption to proceed.
(2) (U) Provisional approval
of the Form I-800 petition and a favorable initial review of the visa
application are the critical factors in determining whether the child will be
eligible to enter and reside in United States, and that the adoption or grant
of legal custody may proceed.
(3) (U) Once post enters both
Form I-800 provisional approval and visa application annotation into the IVO
system, the Article 5 Letter will be generated by the IVO system for sending to
the Convention countrys Central Authority. A copy of the text of the letter
is provided in paragraph b below. Post should scan the signed Article 5 Letter
into IVO. There is no standard means of delivering Article 5 Letters to the
Central Authorities. Posts handling Convention adoptee cases will need to
contact the Central Authority in their respective countries to determine the
best way to forward the Article 5 Letter to the Central Authority.
Transmission through an authorized ASP may be a possibility. For any questions
concerning Article 5 Letter forwarding, post should contact CA/OCS/CI and
CA/VO/F.
(4) (U) Once the Convention
countrys Central Authority receives the Article 5 Letter, the adoption or
grant of legal custody may proceed. If issues arise with the Central Authority
of the Convention country regarding the Article 5 Letter, post should consult
with CA/OCS/CI and CA/VO/F.
(5) (U) For further
information, see 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(1), Summary of the Convention Adoption
Process, above.
b. (U) Example
of Article 5 Letter for Convention Adoptions:
Article 5 Letter
[date]
[Central Authority of Country of Origin, Address ]
To [name of COO CA]:
Subject: [Name of Child], born [Date and place of
Birth of Child], to be adopted by [Name of prospective adoptive parents]
The United States Central Authority is pleased to
confirm that, in accordance with Article 5 of The Hague Convention on
Protection of Children and Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption
(Convention), and, based on information currently available, U.S. competent
authorities have determined that [prospective adoptive parent(s) names] are
eligible and suited to adopt; have ensured that they have been counseled as may
be necessary; and have determined that [childs name] will be authorized to
enter and reside permanently in the United States following [adoption by/the
grant of legal custody to] [prospective adoptive parents names] and their
presentation of required documentation.
Pursuant to Article 17 of the Convention, the United
States Central Authority hereby agrees that [the adoption of [childs name] by
[PAP(s) name(s)] may proceed] OR [the grant of legal custody of [childs name]
to [PAP(s) name(s)] may proceed.]
______________________________
(seal) Signature
______________________________
Name
______________________________
Title
c. (U) Adoption
or Custody Order Issued Before Issuance of Article 5/17 Letter:
(1) (U) If it becomes apparent
to you that, prior to your sending an Article 5/17 Letter (see paragraph a
above), but after provisional approval of the Form I-800 petition, the PAP(s)
adopted the child or obtained custody for purposes of emigration and adoption,
then you should notify CA/OCS/CI and CA/VO/F of the case and present the options
outlined below to the now adoptive parent(s) and/or custody holder(s) (AP(s)).
If the AP(s) are unwilling or unable to take one of the corrective measures
identified, you may request an advisory opinion from CA/VO/L/A. Keep CA/OCS/CI
and CA/VO/F informed of your request and subsequent developments.
(a) (U) Option
1: The AP(s) may return to the local court and void, vacate, annul, or
otherwise terminate the existing adoption or grant of custody for the purpose
of adoption. Following one of the above listed actions and upon receipt of a
new court order as evidence of the courts action, post may continue to process
the case. If your review of the provisionally approved Form I-800 Petition and
initial review of the visa application are favorable, and all other Convention
requirements have been met, post may proceed with the IVO entries that will
generate the Article 5/17 Letter (see paragraph a(3) above).
(b) (U) Option
2: Some countries laws, regulations, customs, or practices may not
allow a local court to void, vacate, annul, or otherwise terminate an adoption
or grant of custody. In this situation, post should consult CA/VO/F and
CA/OCS/CI, and, if warranted, request an advisory opinion from CA/VO/L/A. If
the reviews of the provisionally approved Form I-800 Petition and initial
review of the visa application are favorable, and post has established that
local laws, customs, or practice prevent an adoptive family from pursuing
Option 1, then post may proceed with the IVO entries that will generate the
Article 5/17 Letter (see paragraph a(3) above). A statement from a judge or
competent administrative body should be kept on file with Post explaining that
a family may not successfully void, vacate, annul, or terminate the adoption
and then re-adopt the child. This statement should be scanned into applicable
IVO cases and should be considered sufficient for post to establish that local
laws, customs, or practice prevent a family from pursuing Option 1.
(2) (U) Exception
to These Procedures:
(U) For situations where a U.S. service member has been
living overseas in one Convention country and completed an adoption from a
second Convention country, if a service member intends to pursue the immediate
relative process under INA 101(b)(1)(E) for the adopted child to immigrate to
the United States, but the Department of Defense orders the family to return to
the United States prior to the two years being completed, then post should
consult with CA/VO/F and CA/OCS/CI. In general these cases may then be
processed as Form I-800 cases in the service members country of residence.
9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(7) (U) Appropriate Notification from
the Country of Origin (Convention Adoptee Step 6 of 9)
(CT:VISA-398; 07-14-2017)
a. (U) The next step in the
process for PAP(s) and the child is the adoption or grant of legal custody by
the childs Convention country. The adoption or grant of legal custody for the
Convention adoptee must be completed based on the laws and regulations of the
Convention country and in accordance with the Convention.
b. (U) The Intercountry
Adoption Act of 2000 (IAA) requires that the Department certify that the
adoption or grant of legal custody has been done in accordance with the
Convention and IAA provisions.
(1) (U) PAP(s) and/or the ASP
must provide you with valid proof that the adoption or grant of legal custody
for purposes of emigration and adoption has been completed (see 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(3) paragraph a(2) above).
(2) (U) In cases involving an
adoption in the country of origin (as opposed to grant of legal custody), the
competent authority of the Convention country must certify that the adoption
was done in accordance with the Convention. This certificate, known as the
Article 23 Certificate, should be included in or affixed to the Convention
countrys final adoption decree. Upon receiving the Article 23 Certificate,
you must scan the Certificate into the IVO system as well as noting it in the
proper field in the IVO system. The Article 23 Certificate will identify the
Central Authority and the date it agreed to the adoption.
(3) (U) In cases involving
only a grant of legal custody for purposes of emigration and adoption, the
Convention does not require competent authorities of the country of origin to
certify to compliance with the Convention. Proof that the grant of legal
custody occurred, as described in 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(3) paragraph a(2) above,
will in these cases be sufficient to constitute appropriate notification.
Generally, this will be evidenced by a judicial or administrative act expressly
authorizing the PAP(s) or those acting on their behalf to take the child out of
the country and bring the child to the United States for adoption in the United
States by the PAP(s).
(a) (U) Post may consider any
credible record in the case that shows that the country of origin Central
Authority agrees that the granting of custody was for this purpose. However,
post should work with host country to determine whether, in the particular
country, a document comparable to the Article 23 Certificate exists with
respect to custody cases (i.e., a document certifying to Convention compliance)
and, if so, should request this document.
(b) (U) In addition, post should
note in the IVO system the foreign Central Authority that agreed to allow the
adoption to go forward and the date of that agreement. (Consistent with the definition
of Central Authority for purposes of these notes, this agreement may be made by
any entity to whom authority to perform this function has been delegated by the
designated Central Authority in accordance with the Convention and local law.)
Post may need to coordinate with country of origin authorities to determine how
to obtain this information.
c. (U) For further
information, see 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(1), Summary of the Convention Adoption
Process, above.
9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(8) (U) Issuance of Hague Adoption
Certificate or Hague Custody Certificate (Convention Adoptee Step 7 of 9)
(CT:VISA-832; 06-03-2019)
a. (U) Before issuing the
Certificate you must verify that the adoption or grant of legal custody was
done in accordance with the Convention and IAA. Issuance of the Article 5
letter constitutes prima facie evidence that the adoption or grant of legal
custody was done in accordance with the Convention and IAA. Verification
entails taking the following steps:
(1) (U) Verify that the
notification from the country of origin meets the conditions set forth in 9 FAM
502.3-4(D)(7) paragraph b above; and
(2) Verify that there is no new derogatory information
since issuance of the Article 5 letter that brings into question either the
applicants Convention adoptee classification (see 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(1) above
for factors associated with classification) or compliance with Convention
adoption procedures (particularly Convention adoptee processing guidelines
summarized in 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(1) above).
b. (U) In rare cases where new
information arises after the issuance of the Article 5 Letter (e.g., post
investigation based on poison pen letter provides credible evidence of fraud or
misrepresentation, etc.), immediately notify and consult with CA/VO/L/A,
CA/VO/F, and CA/OCS/CI regarding the circumstances of the case. Quick action
in such cases is essential, especially when the foreign adoption proceeding has
not yet occurred and the information may be relevant to the foreign court.
(1) (U) If CA/VO concurs, you
should expeditiously forward the Form I-800 petition and accompanying
documentation to the appropriate USCIS office for action (see 9 FAM 504.2-8 and
9 FAM 602.2-2(A)(2)) with an explanation of the facts of the case and detailing
the suspected non-compliance. Although you may decline to issue a Hague
Adoption Certificate (HAC) or Hague Custody Certificate (HCC), you are not
authorized to deny Form I-800 petitions. In such cases, you should notify the
PAP(s) in writing of the return of the petition to USCIS, including a brief
explanation of the decision and the name and address of the USCIS office to
which the petition has been forwarded.
(2) (U) Except in cases in
which post believes it to be contrary to the interests of the United States or
the parties involved to do so, when new adverse information is discovered after
the putative adoption or grant of custody has taken place, and CA/VO has
concurred that the new information may warrant denial of the HAC or HCC, post
should consult with the Central Authority of the country of origin concerning
whether the Central Authority is willing to rescind the Article 23
certification (for adoption cases) or other notice (for custody cases). Even
if the Central Authority is not willing to do so, post may still decline to
issue the HAC or HCC, if, with CA/VO concurrence, post concludes that the
adoption or grant of custody does not comply with the Convention and the IAA.
(3) (U) Post should promptly
notify USCIS if the suspected non-compliance is overcome after the forwarding
of the Form I-800 petition. If on further review the derogatory information is
resolved such that you are able to issue the HAC or HCC, you should inform
USCIS that the petition now appears clearly approvable and should therefore be
returned to post, and you should continue processing the Convention adoptee
case.
c. (U) If you are able to
verify Convention and IAA compliance as described 9 FAM paragraph a above, you
should then produce a Hague Adoption Certificate (HAC) or Hague Custody Certificate
(HCC), as appropriate.
d. (U) Care must be taken to
ensure that the appropriate document is issued. If the adoption occurred in
the convention country, you will issue a Hague Adoption Certificate (HAC). If
there was a grant of legal custody for purposes of emigration and adoption, you
should issue a Hague Custody Certificate (HCC). Both certificates will be
generated by the IVO system only after receipt of appropriate notification from
the country of origin. A copy of these documents is provided in paragraph i
below.
e. (U) In the rare case when
the child has been adopted in the Convention country by only one spouse of a
married couple, you should produce an HAC but you must include the following
annotation: One spouse of a married couple adopted the child named above.
This child must be adopted by both spouses before he or she may qualify as a
Convention adoptee under 101(b)(1)(G) of the Immigration and Nationality Act,
for purposes of naturalization under sections 320 or 322 of that Act. As
provided in the DHS rule, the adoption decree or order is sufficient to show
release and custody to bring the child to the United States for adoption by the
other spouse. Therefore, since you have issued the special HAC that notes the
child does not yet qualify as an adopted child under INA 101(b)(1)(G), the case
should otherwise be treated as a custody case, and proper visa classification
would be IH4.
f. (U) After reviewing the
printed HAC or HCC for accuracy, you should sign and dry seal the document.
Then you should attach the HAC or HCC to the original adoption decree or
custody document, as appropriate. The signed HAC or HCC must be scanned into
the IVO system, and a copy of HAC or HCC and adoption decree or custody
document should be made for the visa package.
g. (U) Adoptive parents and
their ASP(s) may request and receive several copies of the HAC or HCC, as the
document may be required for many administrative tasks in the United States. A
person may also request additional copies of the HAC or HCC at any point
following the issuance of the certificate (for example, a parent may request a
copy of the certificate several years after it is initially issued because the
original has been lost). Post may either print the scanned original or reprint
the certificate from IVO and provide it to the requestor at no charge. If
reprinting the certificate, and the officer who issued the initial certificate
is no longer at post, a consular supervisor should sign the certificate and
note that he or she is "signing on behalf of" the issuing officer on
the certificate signature line. For any questions concerning the issuance of
copies of the Hague Certificate, contact CA/OCS/CI and CA/VO/F.
h. (U) For cases in which the
Convention country granted the adoptive parent(s) legal custody for the
purposes of emigration and adoption, the adoptive parent(s) will have to
present the Hague Custody Certificate to the State court in the U.S. to obtain
a final adoption decree in the United States. Once the adoption in the U.S. is
completed, the adoptive parent(s) may request a certification from the
Secretary of State that the adoption was completed in accordance with the
Convention and the IAA if they need it to obtain recognition of the adoption in
other Convention states. Adoptive parents may request this certification by
following the instructions on the State Department website (see 22 CFR 97.5 for
additional details on this process). It is not anticipated, however, that
there will be any need for this certification in most cases, since the state
court adoption certificate will be recognized throughout the United States and
the Department has no specific information to indicate that United States
adoption orders are not normally recognized abroad.
i. (U) In rare cases you may
encounter a U.S. citizen child determined to be habitually resident in a
country other than the United States, who is in the process of being adopted by
a U.S. citizen PAP under the guidelines of the Hague Convention, but will not
reside in the United States with the U.S. citizen PAP. In these cases, the PAP
would file the I-800A and I-800, and post may issue a HAC, but should not issue
an immigrant visa to the child. To do so, post should process the case through
IVO like a normal Hague case, produce the HAC approve the visa, but to not
print it, unlock the case so it returns to open status in IVO, refuse the case
221(g), and contact the CA Service Desk to manually close the case.
j. (U) Examples of Hague
Certificates:
(1) (U) Hague Adoption Certificate
(HAC):

(2) (U) Hague Custody Certificate
(HCC):

k. (U) For further information,
see 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(1), Summary of the Convention Adoption Process, above.
9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(9) (U) Final Adjudication of Form I-800
Petition (Convention Adoptee Step 8 of 9)
(CT:VISA-741; 02-11-2019)
a. (U) Before adjudication of
the immigrant visa application, you must complete final adjudication of the
Form I-800 petition. Note that consular officers will always do final approval
of Form I-800 petitions handled overseas; only if the Form I-800 is found to be
not clearly approvable would the petition be returned to USCIS for action.
b. (U) Final adjudication of
the Form I-800 cannot take place until the adoptive parent(s) or guardian(s) of
the child have complied with all remaining Form I-800 petition requirements. A
copy of the adoption or custody decree must be submitted. In addition, if the
child will be adopted in the United States, the PAP(s) must submit the
following, if not already provided before the provisional approval (because,
for example, the PAP(s) thought the child would be adopted abroad, but that
plan has changed so that the child will now be adopted in the United States):
(1) (U) A statement from the
primary provider, signed under penalty of perjury under U.S. law, summarizing
the plan under 22 CFR 96.50 for monitoring of the placement until the adoption
is finalized in the United States; and
(2) (U) A written description
of the pre-adoption requirements that apply to adoptions in the State of the
childs proposed residence, evidence of compliance with those requirements that
can be met before the child arrives in the United States, and a description of
when and how the PAP(s) intend to complete the childs adoption, including a
citation to the relevant State statutes or regulations and the details of how
the PAP(s) intend to comply with any pre-adoption requirements that can be
satisfied only after the child arrives in the United States.
c. (U) Since issuance of the
Hague Adoption Certificate (HAC) or Hague Custody Certificate (HCC) entails
verification and certification of compliance with the IAA, and,
correspondingly, its amendments to the INA 101(b)(1)(G) and the Convention, no
further review of Convention adoptee classification is required before granting
final approval of the Form I-800. Annotate approved Form I-800 petitions at
this final stage Final approval, with the date and your name, title, and
post.
d. (U) In the rare instances
where you could not issue a Hague Convention Certificate due to previously
unknown reasonse.g., fraud, invalid consent, illicit paymentdiscovered after
issuance of the Article 5 letter, you must send the petition to USCIS as not
clearly approvable. In so doing, you should base this decision on the
underlying flaw in the adoption (i.e., invalid consent), instead of the lack of
a Hague Convention Certificate.
9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(10) (U) Adjudication of Convention
Adoptee Visa Application (Step 9 of 9)
(CT:VISA-741; 02-11-2019)
a. Unavailable
b. (U) Before the adjudication
of the visa, the adoptive parents or guardians of the child must comply with
all remaining visa application requirements:
(1) (U) If not previously
provided, the Convention adoptees passport and results of the medical exam
with a panel physician must be presented to the consular officer (a medical
exam is not required in NIV cases unless the consular officer has reason to
believe the child has a medical ineligibility); and
(2) (U) The Convention adoptee
must appear in person before a consular officer, and, if applicable, have
biovisa fingerprinting done.
c. (U) As soon as all visa
application materials and information outlined above paragraphs a and b above
have been provided, final adjudication of the Convention adoptee petition and
adjudication of the visa application should be completed. Approval of the
Convention adoptee visa application and issuance of the visa should take place
if:
(1) (U) Namecheck and biovisa
results reveal no ineligibilities;
(2) (U) Any
ineligibilities that were identified in the initial review of the visa
application have been overcome; and
(3) (U) No new derogatory
information with regard to ineligibilities has developed since the Article 5
Letter was done.
d. (U) If you find that the
Convention adoptee is ineligible for a visa, the case should be handled
according to the following:
(1) (U) If the ineligibility
was identified when the Form I-800 petition was filed or during the provisional
adjudication of the visa application, and a waiver request was submitted to
USCIS and subsequently approved (see 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(5) paragraph d(6) above),
refuse the case under the appropriate ground of ineligibility and then note the
waiver in IVO (or NIV, as appropriate). Issue a visa that contains an
annotation indicating the waiver.
(2) (U) If the ineligibility
is identified during final adjudication of the visa application, you should
refuse the case under INA 221(g) and seek an advisory opinion from CA/VO/L/A,
which will consult with CA/OCS/CI and L/CA. If, after receiving the advisory
opinion, you refuse the case on substantive ineligibility grounds, you must
explain to the applicant, adoptive parent(s), or guardian(s) orally and in
writing the reason for the refusal and possible remedies. Post should
immediately consult with and notify CA/VO/F and CA/OCS/CI about such cases in
order to ensure appropriate follow-up on the case (coordination with USCIS, notification
of the Central Authority, etc.).
(3) (U) In cases described in
paragraph d(2) above where a waiver is possible, the adoptive parent(s) or
guardian(s) should be instructed to submit a waiver request to USCIS. If the
waiver is subsequently granted, issue a visa that contains an annotation
indicating the waiver.
e. (U) Visa Issuance:
(1) (U) Post should produce
the Convention adoptee immigrant visa per standard procedures (see 9 FAM
504.10). Include a copy of the Hague Adoption Certificate (HAC) or Hague
Custody Certificate (HCC), and a copy of the adoption decree or custody order
as part of the packet, immediately following the Form I-800 petition. Per 9
FAM 502.3-4(D)(11) paragraph b below, copy and retain packet documents until
scanned into IVO. If the adopted child will be traveling to the United States
in B-2 NIV classification (see 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(9) paragraph d(3)), post should
similarly provide such documents with the visa. Particular care should be paid
to ensuring proper classification of the visa as an IH3, IH4, or B-2, per 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(9) above.
(2) (U) Per standard IV
validity guidelines in 9 FAM 504.10-2(A), you should generally issue IVs for
Convention adoptees with a six-month validity period. However, a child legally
adopted by a U.S. citizen and spouse while they are serving abroad in the U.S.
armed forces, employed abroad by the U.S. Government, or temporarily abroad on
business may be issued an IV for a longer period (not to exceed three years) to
accommodate adoptive parents intended return to the United States upon
completion of the military service, employment, or business.
(3) (U) When issuing a visa to
adoptive parent(s) (or those traveling with the child), inform them of Child
Citizenship Act implications of the type of visa issued per 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(9)
paragraph d and refer them to the Department and USCIS websites for additional
information.
f. (U) For further
information, see 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(1), Summary of the Convention Adoption
Process.
9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(11) (U) Disposition of Convention
Adoptee Case Documents
(CT:VISA-573; 04-16-2018)
a. (U) Convention Adoptee
Recordkeeping: In accordance with the IAA, the Department or DHS must
preserve for 75 years all Convention adoptee visa documents or data that are
Convention records. As a result, instructions for proper handling of
supporting documents in Convention adoptee cases vary somewhat from standard IV
case file procedures. 9 FAM 502.3-6 provides
definitions related to recordkeeping requirements, and paragraph b below
provides instructions for handling Convention adoptee issued and refused case
files. Handling inquiries and requests for access to Convention adoptee
records is addressed in paragraph c below.
b. (U) Handling Convention Adoptee
Case Files:
(1) (U) Issued Case Files: In
the great majority of issued Convention adoptee cases, Convention records
generated or received by consular officers or the Department that are not
already in electronic form will all be scanned into IVO or NIV, as
appropriate. The Department will need to retain these electronic Convention
adoptee case files for 75 years. Examples of such case file contents could
include emails with case-related guidance, or case-specific cables. Any
classified documents would be retained separate from IVO records, in paper or
electronic form. In general, posts should retain any paper classified files at
post; posts with limited space may contact CA/VO/F regarding alternative
storage options.
(2) (U) Refused Case Files:
The same retention requirements apply to refused case files as to issued case
files, for no less than 75 years since the first record in the file was
obtained or created; posts with limited space may contact CA/VO/F regarding
alternative storage options.
(a) (U) In very rare cases where
the grounds for refusal would require a non-Convention adoptee IV Visa Refusal
File to be kept for more than 75 years (refusal grounds 1A1, 1A3, 1A4, 2, 3,
6C, 6E, 6F, 8, 9A if the individual was convicted of an aggravated felony, 9C,
10D, 10E, 222g, 212f if the presidential proclamation is not rescinded before
75 years pass, or Title IV of the Helms-Burton Actsee Record Disposition
Schedule), retain the Convention adoptee case file for the period specified in
the Record Disposition Schedule.
(b) (U) For example, if a
Convention adoptee case were refused under INA 212(a)(3) grounds, the file
would be retained until the applicant reaches 100 years of age; a Convention
adoptee case refused under INA 221(g) grounds would be retained until 75 years
have passed since the first record in the file was obtained or created.
(3) (U) Automated Systems:
IVO, NIV and ATS records on Convention adoptee cases will automatically be
retained for 75 years; no consular officer action is required to preserve these
Convention records once any paper documents have been scanned into IVO or NIV.
c. (U) Requests for Convention
Adoptee Records: These disposition instructions for Convention records
are not intended to change procedures for accessing such records. As with
other records retained by the Department or DHS, access to Convention records
is governed by the Freedom of Information Act and the Privacy Act (see 9 FAM
601.6 for additional information). State laws continue to govern access to
adoption records held by adoption service providers or state government
entities.
d. (U) For further information,
see 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(1), Summary of the Convention Adoption Process, above.
9 FAM 502.3-5 (U) OLDER sibling of convention adoptee
9 FAM 502.3-5(A) (U) Statutory and Regulatory Authority
9 FAM 502.3-5(A)(1) (U) Immigration and Nationality Act
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
(U) INA 101(b)(1)(G) (8 U.S.C.
1101(b)(1)(G)); INA 320 (8 U.S.C. 1431); INA 322 (8 U.S.C. 1433).
9 FAM 502.3-5(A)(2) (U) Code of Federal Regulations
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
(U) 22 CFR 42.24(n).
9 FAM 502.3-5(A)(3) (U) Public Law
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
(U) International Adoption
Simplification Act of 2010, Public Law 111-287; Child Citizenship Act of 2000,
Public Law 106-395.
9 FAM 502.3-5(B) (U) IR2 Classification for Older
Siblings of Convention Adoptee
(CT:VISA-932; 08-30-2019)
a. (U) Older Sibling Exception Defined:
Certain biological siblings of an adopted child of
a United States citizen described in INA 101(a)(1)(E)(i), (F)(i) or (G)(i) are
classifiable as an IR2 child under the following:
(1) (U) The beneficiary has
been adopted in a Convention country or is emigrating from a Convention country
for adoption in the United States by the same adoptive parents of the
biological sibling;
(2) (U) At the time of filing
of the Form I-800 petition, the beneficiary was 18 or older, and the
petitioning parents had an approved, valid Form I-800A, Application for
Determination of Suitability to Adopt a Child from a Convention Country; and
(3) (U) USCIS approved the
Form I-800. See 9 FAM 502.3-5(C) paragraph a below for additional information
on the Form I-800 petition and required supporting documents for Older Sibling
Exception beneficiary cases.
b. (U) Competent Authority Defined
for Older Sibling Exception Beneficiaries Not Issued Final Adoption:
(1) (U) INA
101(b)(1)(G)(i)(V)(aa) requires that, in situations where a final adoption has
not been granted at the time of petition approval, the competent authority of
the Convention country of origin must approve the child's emigration to the
United States for the purpose of adoption by the petitioning prospective
adoptive parent(s). The International Adoption Simplification Act of 2010 does
not exempt Older Sibling Exception beneficiaries from satisfying this
requirement.
(2) (U) In many Convention
countries, it may not be legally possible to conclude a legal adoption or
obtain a guardianship order for an adoptee age 18 or older. Furthermore,
Central Authorities may not be willing or able to issue a statement approving
such an adoptee's adoption abroad.
(3) (U) In such situations, 22
CFR 42.24(n)(2) designates as a competent authority the passport-issuing
authority of the country of origin. An Older Sibling Exception beneficiary in
possession of a passport that meets the requirements of INA 101(a)(30) may be
considered to have satisfied INA 101(b)(1)(G)(i)(V)(aa).
c. (U) Classification of Older
Sibling Exception Beneficiaries:
(1) (U) Although the Older
Sibling Exception falls under INA 101(b)(1)(G), which covers Hague Convention
Adoptees, a beneficiary of the provision is age 18 or older and therefore does
not legally qualify as a Convention Adoptee. For this reason an Adult Sibling
Exception beneficiary is classifiable as an IR2 child.
(2) (U) The Child Citizenship
Act of 2000 (Public Law 106-395), which amended INA 320, does not apply to
beneficiaries of the Adult Sibling Exception, since such individuals are age 18
or older. Consequently such beneficiaries will not automatically obtain U.S.
citizenship upon their admission to the United States and therefore must
provide Form I-864, Affidavit of Support.
9 FAM 502.3-5(C) (U) Processing Procedures for Older
Sibling Exception Cases
(CT:VISA-573; 04-16-2018)
a. (U) Processing Overview:
(1) (U) Petitioners file Form I-800,
Petition to Classify Convention Adoptee as an Immediate Relative, with USCIS;
(2) (U) Form I-800 is fully
adjudicated by USCIS's National Benefits Center, and if approved, is marked as
"IR2 IASA Older Sibling Exception to 101(b)(1)(G)(iii)(III)" in the
Provisional Action Block and forwarded to the National Visa Center;
(3) (U) The National Visa
Center forwards the case to post;
(4) (U) Post verifies the
beneficiary's claim to classification under the Older Sibling Exception; and
(5) (U) Post annotates the visa
foil "IASA sibling exception to 101(b)(1)(G)(iii)(III)."
b. (U) Petitions:
(1) (U) USCIS Retains Full Petition
Adjudication Authority: Unlike petitions for Convention Adoptees, the
State Department has no role in adjudicating Form I-800 petitions for beneficiaries
of the Older Sibling Exception. Such petitions will not be provisionally
approved by USCIS and sent to post for final approval, but will instead either
be forwarded to post as approved or denied by USCIS and therefore not forwarded
to post.
(2) (U) I-800 Petition Supporting
Documents: Supporting evidence would include:
(a) (U) A full and final
adoption is issued by a competent authority to the petitioning U.S. citizen
parent(s); or
(b) (U) The prospective adoptive
parent(s) demonstrate they are able to complete the adoption of the beneficiary
in the United States by providing evidence that the pre-adoption requirements
under the law of the state where they will complete the adoption permit
adoption of a person age 18 or older; and
(c) (U) Evidence that the
beneficiary can lawfully travel from the country of origin to the United States
for adoption. This evidence could consist of one or more of the following
documents:
(i) (U) A passport issued to
the beneficiary by the passport issuing authority of the country of origin (see
9 FAM 502.3-5(B) paragraph b above); or
(ii) (U) A court order of
legal guardianship is issued in the country of origin granting legal
guardianship of the beneficiary to the petitioning U.S. citizen prospective
adoptive parent(s) permitting the beneficiary to travel abroad for the purpose
of completing a legal adoption; or
(iii) (U) A statement by the
Central Authority of the country of origin approving the beneficiary's adoption
abroad.
9 FAM 502.3-6 (U) Orphan and Convention Adoptee
Definitions
9 FAM 502.3-6(A) (U) A Definitions
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) Abandonment:
(1) (U) In the context of Convention
adoption cases, abandonment means:
(a) (U) That a childs parent
has willfully forsaken all parental rights, obligations, and claims to the
child, as well as all custody of the child without intending to transfer, or
without transferring, these rights to any specific individual(s) or entity.
(b) (U) The childs parent must
have actually surrendered such rights, obligations, claims, control, and
possession.
(c) (U) That a parent's
knowledge that a specific person or persons may adopt a child does not void an
abandonment; however, a purported act of abandonment cannot be conditioned on
the child's adoption by that specific person or persons.
(d) (U) That if the parent(s)
entrusted the child to a third party for custodial care in anticipation of, or
preparation for, adoption, the third party (such as a governmental agency, a
court of competent jurisdiction, an adoption agency, or an orphanage) must have
been authorized under the Convention countrys child welfare laws to act in
such a capacity.
(e) (U) That, if the parent(s)
entrusted the child to an orphanage, the parent(s) did not intend the placement
to be merely temporary, with the intention of retaining the parent-child
relationship, but entrusted the child permanently and unconditionally to an
orphanage.
(f) (U) That, although a
written document from the parent(s) is not necessary to prove abandonment, if
any written document signed by the parent(s) is presented to prove abandonment,
the document must specify whether the parent(s) who signed the document were
able to read and understand the language in which the document is written. If
the parent(s) are not able to read or understand the language in which the
document is written, then the document is not valid unless the document is
accompanied by a declaration by an identified individual, establishing that
that identified individual is competent to translate the language in the
document into a language that the parent(s) understand and that the individual,
on the date and at the place specified in the declaration, did in fact read and
explain the document to the parent(s) in a language that the parent(s)
understand. The declaration must also indicate the language used to provide
this explanation. (See 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(5) above for additional information on
birth parents consent to Convention adoptions.)
(2) (U) In the context of orphan
adoption cases, abandonment means:
(a) (U) That the parents have
willfully forsaken all parental rights, obligations, and claims to the child,
as well as all control over and possession of the child, without intending to
transfer, or without transferring, these rights to any specific person(s). See
9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(4) above for additional information on the status of an
orphans natural parents.
(b) (U) Abandonment must include
not only the intention to surrender all parental rights, obligations, and
claims to the child, and control over and possession of the child, but also the
actual act of surrendering such rights, obligations, claims, control, and
possession. A child who is placed temporarily in an orphanage should not be
considered to be abandoned if the parents express an intention to retrieve the
child, are contributing or attempting to contribute to the support of the
child, or otherwise exhibit ongoing parental interest in the child.
(c) (U) A relinquishment or
release by the parent(s) to the prospective adoptive parents or for a specific
adoption does not constitute "abandonment." Similarly, the
relinquishment or release of the child by the parent to a third party for
custodial care in anticipation of, or preparation for, adoption does not
constitute "abandonment" unless the third party (such as a
governmental agency, a court of competent jurisdiction, an adoption agency, or
an orphanage) is authorized under the child welfare laws of the foreign-sending
country to act in such a capacity. A child released to a government-authorized
third party, however, could be considered to have been abandoned even if the
parent(s) knew at the time that the child would probably be adopted by a
specific person or persons, so long as the relinquishment was not contingent
upon adoption by a specific person or persons.
b. (U)
Accrediting Entity (AE): In the context of Convention adoption cases,
an AE is an entity that has been designated by the Secretary to accredit
agencies (including to temporarily accredit) and/or to approve persons for
purposes of providing adoption services in the United States in cases subject
to the Convention. See 9 FAM 502.3-4(B) above for additional information on
Convention adoptees.
c. (U) Acquisition of Another
Parent: A parent is a person who is related to a child based on a
relationship described in INA 101(b)(1)(A) - (G) (see definition of parent).
Note, however, in the context of Convention adoption cases, that a stepparent
described in INA 101(b)(1)(B) is not considered a child's parent, solely for
purposes of classification of the child as a Convention adoptee, if the
petitioner establishes that, under the law of the Convention country, there is
no legal parent-child relationship between a stepparent and stepchild.
However, if the stepparent adopted the child, or if the stepparent, under the
law of the Convention country, became the childs legal parent by marrying the
other legal parent, he or she would be considered a parent. A stepparent who
is a legal parent may consent to the childs adoption, or may be found to have
abandoned or deserted the child, or to have disappeared from the childs life,
in the same manner as would apply to any other legal parent. See 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(5)
above for additional information on consent in Convention adoptee cases.
d. (U)
Adoption: In the context of Convention adoption cases, adoption is
defined as a judicial or administrative act that establishes a permanent legal
parent-child relationship between a minor and an adult who is not already the
legal parent, and which terminates any prior legal parent-child relationship
with any former parents. Generally speaking, to qualify as an adoption for
immigration purposes, the adopted child should have the same rights and
privileges that are accorded to a birth child (such as inheritance rights,
etc.). Simple, conditional, or limited adoptions, such as those conducted
under Islamic family law in some countries, are more accurately described as
guardianship and are not considered adoptions for U.S. immigration purposes.
See 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(3) above for more information on adoption in the context
of Convention adoption cases. See also 9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(3) above for a
discussion of adoption in the context of orphan adoption cases, and 9 FAM
502.3-2(B) above for information on adoption in the context of IR-2 adopted
children.
e. (U)
Adoption Record: In the context of Convention adoption cases, adoption
record means any record, information, or item related to a specific Convention
adoption of a child received or maintained by an agency, person, or public
domestic authority, including, but not limited to, photographs, videos,
correspondence, personal effects, medical and social information, and any other
information about the child. An adoption record does not include a record
generated by an agency, person, or a public domestic authority to comply with
the requirement to file information with the Adoption Tracking System on
adoptions not subject to the Convention pursuant to section 303(d) of the IAA
(42 U.S.C. 14932(d)). See 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(11) above for additional
information on disposing of Convention adoptee records.
f. (U)
Adoption Services: In the context of Convention adoption cases (see 9
FAM 502.3-4(B)), adoption services are any one of the
following six services:
(1) (U) Identifying a child
for adoption and arranging an adoption;
(2) (U) Securing the necessary
consent to termination of parental rights and to adoption;
(3) (U) Performing a
background study on a child or a home study on PAP(s) and reporting on such a
study;
(4) (U) Making non-judicial
determinations of the best interests of a child and the appropriateness of an
adoptive placement for the child;
(5) (U) Monitoring a case
after a child has been placed with prospective adoptive parent(s) until final
adoption; or
(6) (U) When necessary because
of a disruption before final adoption, assuming custody and providing
(including facilitating the provision of) child care or any other social
service pending an alternative placement. (See 9 FAM 502.3-4(B).)
g. (U)
Adoption Service Provider (ASP): In the context of Convention adoption
cases, an ASP is an agency (private, nonprofit organization licensed to provide
adoption services in at least one state) or a person (an individual or a
private, for-profit entity, including a corporation, company, association,
firm, partnership, society, or joint stock company, but not including public
authorities, providing adoption services). The one provider responsible for
ensuring all six adoption services are provided and being responsible for
supervised providers where used is called the primary provider. (See 7 FAM
1796.3 for a full discussion of adoption
service providers. See also 9 FAM 502.3-4(B) above for additional information
on Convention adoptees.)
h. (U)
Adoptions Tracking System (ATS): In the context of Convention adoption
cases, ATS is the computer system developed by the Department to track the
process of both incoming and outgoing adoption cases (i.e., orphan and
Convention adoption cases of children both immigrating to, and emigrating from,
the United States), support the functions of the Central Authority, and
aggregate data for mandatory reporting to Congress. This system is sometimes
referred to as the case registry. See 9 FAM 502.3-4(B) above for additional
information on Convention adoptees.
i. (U) Adult Member of the
Prospective Adoptive Parents' Household:
(1) (U) In the context of
orphan cases, adult member of the prospective adoptive parents' household
means an individual, other than a prospective adoptive parent, over the age of
18 whose principal or only residence is the home of the prospective adoptive
parents. This definition excludes any child of the prospective adoptive
parents, whose principal or only residence is the home of the prospective
adoptive parents, who reaches his or her eighteenth birthday after the
prospective adoptive parents have filed the advanced processing application (or
the advanced processing application concurrently with the orphan petition)
unless the USCIS Director has an articulable and substantive reason for
requiring an evaluation by a home study preparer and/or fingerprint check.
(2) (U) See 9 FAM 502.3-3(C)(2)
above on home studies and establishing adoptive parents suitability in orphan
cases. Direct any questions related to definitions to CA/VO/L/A and CA/OCS/CI,
with a copy to CA/VO/F.
j. (U)
Advanced Processing Application: Advanced processing application
means Form I-600A (Application for
Advanced Processing of Orphan Petition) completed in accordance with the form's
instructions and submitted with the required supporting documentation and the
fee as required in 8 CFR 103.7(b)(1). The application must be signed in
accordance with the form's instructions by the married petitioner and spouse,
or by the unmarried petitioner. See 9 FAM 502.3-3(C)(2) above for additional
information on use of the Form I-600A to
establish suitability of an orphans adoptive parents.
k. (U)
Authorized Adoption Services Provider (ASP): An authorized ASP is an
Adoption Services Provider that is authorized to provide adoption services in
connection with an adoption under the Hague Convention, including both accredited
agencies (nonprofit agencies accredited by an Accrediting Entity (AE) to
provide adoption services in Convention cases in the United States) and
approved persons (for-profit entities and individual service providers approved
by an AE to provide adoption services in Hague cases in the United States), as
well as other providers authorized under 22 CFR 96 to perform the relevant function on their
behalf (supervised, exempted or other). See 9 FAM 502.3-4(B) above for
additional information on Convention adoptee cases.
9 FAM 502.3-6(B) (U) B Definitions
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
(U) Birth Parents or Parent: In
the context of Convention adoption cases, birth parent means a natural
parent as used in the INA. See 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)
for additional information on Convention adoptees.
9 FAM 502.3-6(C) (U) C Definitions
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) Central Authority: In
the context of Convention adoption cases, the Central Authority is the entity
designated by each member country under Article 6(1) of the Convention, among
other things, to serve as the central point of contact for Convention
adoptions. For the United States, the Central Authority is the Department of
State. Note that for purposes of these FAM notes, any reference to a Central
Authority should be understood to include any individual or entity (such as a
public authority or a body duly accredited in that country) that is performing
a function delegated to it by the designated Central Authority in accordance
with the Convention and local law. Questions related to identification of the
Central Authority in other Convention countries or regarding entities
authorized to perform Central Authority responsibilities should be directed to
CA/OCS/CI. See 9 FAM 502.3-4(B) above for
additional information on Convention adoptees.
b. (U) Competent Authority: In
the context of both orphan adoption and Convention adoption cases, competent
authority means a court or governmental agency of a foreign-sending country
having jurisdiction and authority to make decisions in matters of child
welfare, including adoption. See 9 FAM 502.3-3(B) for additional information on orphan cases and
9 FAM 502.3-4(B) for additional
information on Convention adoptee cases above. (See 9 FAM 502.3-5(B) above.)
c. (U)
Convention Record: In the context of Convention adoption cases,
Convention record means any item, collection, or grouping of information
contained in an electronic or physical document, an electronic collection of
data (including the information contained in IVO, NIV, or ATS software
systems), a photograph, an audio or video tape, or any other information
storage medium of any type whatever that contains information about a specific
past, current, or prospective adoption covered by the Convention (regardless of
whether the adoption was made final) that the Department of State or the
Department of Homeland Security has generated or received.
(1) (U) Convention records do
not include adoption records that are held by States or countries of origin,
but only those records which the Department or DHS has created or received.
(2) (U) In accordance with 9
FAM 603.1, as with other visa records, a Convention record is considered to
include only information or documents pertaining to an individual visa
applicant, not material from general instructions, visa manuals or other
similar documents that make no reference to individual named applicants. As
per 9 FAM 603.1, a Convention record could include (but is not limited to)
correspondence with other posts about a visa, correspondence with the
applicant, investigative reports, immigrant visa refusal worksheets, post's
requests for advisory opinions from the Department, and Department responses.
(3) (U) Unless the original
(or a scanned, electronic, copy) is retained by post, a document or other data
which an applicant presents in connection with his or her visa application
should not be considered a Convention record.
(4) (U) The 75-year period for
retention of Convention records starts as of the date that the Department or
DHS receives the first Convention record for that particular Convention adoptee
case (see 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(11) above for more on retention of Convention
records.)
d. (U)
Country of Origin: In the context of Convention adoption cases (see 9
FAM 502.3-4(B) above), a country of origin is the country in which a child is
resident and from which the child is emigrating in connection with his or her
adoption.
e. (U) Custody, Custody for Purposes
of Emigration and Adoption:
(1) (U) The context of
Convention adoption cases, custody for purposes of emigration and adoption
exists when the competent authority of the country of origin has by judicial or
administrative act (which may be either the act granting custody of the child
or a separate judicial or administrative act), expressly authorized the
petitioner, or an individual or entity acting on the petitioners behalf, to
take the child out of the country of the childs habitual residence and to
bring the child to the United States for adoption in the United States. If the
custody order was given to an individual or entity acting on the petitioners
behalf, the custody order must indicate that the child is to be adopted in the
United States by the petitioner.
(2) (U) A foreign judicial or
administrative act that is called an adoption but that does not terminate the
legal parent-child relationship between the former parent(s) and the adopted
child and create a permanent legal parent-child relationship between the
petitioner and the adopted child is considered a grant of legal custody if the
act expressly authorizes the custodian to take the child out of the country of
the childs habitual residence and to bring the child to the United States for
adoption in the United States by the petitioner.
(3) (U) See 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(5) for additional information
on consent in Convention adoptee cases. See also definitions of legal
custody (adopted child classification) and legal custodian (Convention
adoptee classification), as well as a discussion of custody in orphan adoption
cases in 9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(3) above.
9 FAM 502.3-6(D) (U) D Definitions
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) Deserted, Desertion:
(1) (U) In the context of
Convention adoption cases, deserted or desertion means that a childs
parent has willfully forsaken the child and has refused to carry out parental
rights and obligations and that, as a result, the child has become a ward of a
competent authority in accordance with the laws of the Convention country (see
9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(5)).
(2) (U) In the context of
orphan adoption cases, "desertion" means that the parent(s) has
willfully forsaken the child and has refused to carry out normal parental
rights and obligations and that, as a result, the child has become a ward of a
competent authority in accordance with the laws of the foreign-sending
country. Desertion does not mean that the parent(s) has disappeared, but
rather that he and/or she refuses to carry out his or her parent rights and
obligations towards the child. Desertion differs from abandonment in that the
parent(s) has not taken steps to divest him or herself of parental duties, but
that the parent's inaction has caused a local authority to step in and assume
custody of the child. See 9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(3) above for additional information
on the status of an orphans adoptive parents.
b. (U)
Disappeared, Disappearance:
(1) (U) In the context of
Convention adoption cases, disappeared or disappearance means that a
childs parent has unaccountably or inexplicably passed out of the child's life
so that the parents whereabouts are unknown, there is no reasonable
expectation of the parents reappearance, and there has been a reasonable
effort to locate the parent as determined by a competent authority in
accordance with the laws of the Convention country. However, a stepparent who
is deemed to be a childs legal parent may be found to have disappeared if it
is established that the stepparent never knew (1) of the childs existence, or
(2) of the stepparents legal relationship to the child (see 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(5) and 9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(4) above.)
(2) (U) In the context of
orphan adoption cases, "disappearance" means that the parent(s) has
unaccountably or inexplicably passed out of the child's life; his or her or
their whereabouts are unknown; there is no reasonable hope of reappearance; and
there has been a reasonable effort to locate them as determined by a competent
authority in accordance with the laws of the foreign-sending country. See 9
FAM 502.3-3(B)(4) above for additional information on the status of orphans
adoptive parents.
9 FAM 502.3-6(E) (U) F Definitions
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
(U) Foreign-Sending Country: In the context of orphan adoption cases (see 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(3) above), foreign-sending
country means the country of the orphans citizenship, or if he or she is not
permanently residing in the country of citizenship, the country of the orphans
habitual residence. This excludes a country to which the orphan travels
temporarily, or to which he or she travels either as a prelude to, or in
conjunction with, his or her adoption and/or immigration to the United States.
9 FAM 502.3-6(F) (U) H Definitions
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) Hague Convention Certificate: In
the context of Convention adoption cases, a Hague Convention Certificate is a
certificate issued by a consular officer overseas to the adoptive parent(s) or
prospective adoptive parent(s) certifying that the foreign adoption or grant of
legal custody in the country of origin was granted pursuant to the Convention
and Intercountry Adoption Act. A Hague Convention Certificate will be either a
Hague Adoption Certificate (HAC) (in the case of a final adoption overseas) or
a Hague Custody Certificate (HCC) (in the case of custody granted overseas for
the purpose of adoption in the United States). See 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(8) above for
additional information on Hague Convention Certificates.
b. (U) Home Study Preparer:
(1) (U) In the context of
orphan adoption cases, home study preparer means any party licensed or
otherwise authorized under the law of the state of the orphans proposed
residence to conduct the research and preparation for a home study, including
the required personal interview(s). This term includes a public agency with
authority under that states law in adoption matters, public or private
adoption agencies licensed or otherwise authorized to conduct the research and
preparation for a home study, including the required personal interview(s),
under the laws of the state of the orphans proposed residence.
(2) (U) In the case of an
orphan whose adoption has been finalized abroad and whose adoptive parents
reside abroad, the home study preparer includes any party licensed or otherwise
authorized to conduct home studies under the law of any state of the United
States, or any party licensed or otherwise authorized by the foreign countrys
adoption authorities to conduct home studies under the laws of the foreign
country.
(3) (U) See 9 FAM
502.3-3(C)(2) above for additional information on establishing adoptive
parents suitability in orphan visa cases.
9 FAM 502.3-6(G) (U) I Definitions
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
(U) Incapable of Providing Proper Care: In the context of orphan adoption cases, incapable
of providing proper care means that a sole or surviving parent is unable to
provide for the childs basic needs, consistent with the local standards of the
foreign sending country. A parent could be unable to provide proper care due
to a number of reasons, including extreme poverty, mental or emotional
difficulties, or long-term incarceration. See 9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(4) for additional information on the status of
orphans natural parents. See also 9 FAM 502.3-4(B)(6) for a discussion of incapable of providing
proper care in the context of Convention adoption cases.
9 FAM 502.3-6(H) (U) L Definitions
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
a. (U) Legal Custodian:
(1) (U) In the context of
Convention adoption cases, legal custodian means the individual who, or
entity that, has legal custody of a child. Legal custody means having legal
responsibility for a child under the order of a court of law, a public domestic
authority, competent authority, public foreign authority, or by operation of
law. (A public foreign authority is an authority operated by a national or
sub-national government of a Convention country.)
(2) (U) In Convention adoptee
cases, the legal custodian could be the state, a child welfare organization, or
other body appointed by a competent authority. The legal custodian could also
include birth parent(s), a non-birth parent (i.e., a step-parent or adoptive
parent), or other individual who has legal custody in accordance with the law
of the Convention country.
(3) (U) Generally speaking,
the reason behind a legal custodians having legal custody of the child
(abandonment, desertion, etc.) is not relevant to a determination of
eligibility for the Convention adoptee classification. As long as the legal
custodian is able to establish that it has legal custody of the child and all
other aspects of the consent meet the requirements described below, his, her,
or its consent to the adoption is considered valid.
(4) (U) See 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(5) for additional information
on consent in Convention adoption cases, and Convention adoptee definitions in
this section for custody and legal custody. See also a discussion of
custody in orphan adoption cases in 9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(3) and in IV adopted child cases in 9 FAM
502.3-2(B).
b. (U)
Legal Custody:
(1) (U) In the context of
adopted child cases (classification as a child under INA 101(b)(1)(E)),
"legal custody" means the assumption of responsibility for a minor by
an adult under the laws of the state and under the order or approval of a court
of law or other appropriate government entity. This provision requires that a
legal process involving the courts or other recognized government entity take
place. An informal custodial or guardianship document, such as a sworn
affidavit signed before a notary public, is insufficient for this purpose.
(2) (U) The legal custody
requirement may be fulfilled either prior to or after the childs adoption. If
the adopting parent was granted legal custody by the court or recognized
governmental entity prior to the adoption, that period may be counted toward
fulfillment of the two-year legal custody requirement. However, if custody was
not granted prior to the adoption, the adoption decree must be deemed to mark
the commencement of legal custody.
(3) (U) See 9 FAM 502.3-2(B) for additional information on IV classification
as an adopted child. See also Convention adoptee definitions for custody
and legal custodian (9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(3)), and
a discussion of custody in orphan adoption cases in 9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(3) above.
c. (U) Loss: In the context of orphan adoption cases,
"loss" from a parent means the involuntary severance or detachment of
the child from the parents in a permanent manner such as that caused by a
natural disaster, civil unrest, or other calamitous event beyond the control of
the parents, as verified by a competent authority in accordance with the laws
of the foreign sending country. See 9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(4) above for additional
information on the status of orphans natural parents.
9 FAM 502.3-6(I) (U) P Definitions
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
(U) Prospective Adoptive Parents (PAPs): In
the context of orphan adoption cases, prospective adoptive parents means a
married United States citizen of any age and his or her spouse of any age, or
an unmarried United States citizen who is at least 24 years old at the time he
or she files the advanced processing application and at least 25 years old at
the time he or she files the orphan petition. The spouse of the United States
citizen may be a citizen or an alien. An alien spouse must be in lawful
immigration status if residing in the United States. See 9 FAM 502.3-3(B) for additional information on the orphan
classification and 9 FAM 502.3-3(C)(2) above for information on establishing
prospective adoptive parents suitability in orphan cases. See also 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(2) for adoptive parent
requirements for Convention adoptee classification, and 9 FAM 502.3-4(D)(2) above
for information on prospective adoptive parents suitability in Convention
adoptee cases.
9 FAM 502.3-6(J) (U) R Definitions
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
(U) Receiving Country: In the context of Convention adoption cases, the
receiving country is the country to which a child adopted abroad is brought
by the childs adoptive family. For Hague visa cases, the receiving country is
the United States. See 9 FAM 502.3-4(B) above for additional information on
Convention adoption cases.
9 FAM 502.3-6(K) (U) S Definitions
(CT:VISA-932; 08-30-2019)
a. (U) Separation: In the
context of orphan adoption cases, "separation" means the involuntary
severance of the child from his or her parent(s) by action of a competent
authority for good cause and in accordance with the laws of the foreign sending
country. This is often called "termination" of parental rights and
often occurs because of child abuse or neglect, or because a competent
authority deems the parent to be "unfit." The parent(s) must have
been properly notified and granted the opportunity to contest such action. The
termination of all parental rights and obligations must be permanent and
unconditional. See 9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(4) above for additional information on the
status of orphans natural parents.
b. (U) Sole Parent:
(1) (U) In the context of
Convention adoption cases, a sole parent is a childs mother or father, when
a Convention countrys competent authority has determined that the childs
other parent has abandoned or deserted the child, or has disappeared from the
childs life, as long as the child has not acquired another parent. See 9 FAM
502.3-4(C)(5) above for additional information on sole parents consent in
Convention adoption cases.
(2) (U) In the context of
orphan adoption cases (see 9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(4)) above, a sole parent, under 8 CFR 204.3(b), means
the mother of the child, whose situation meets all of the following criteria:
(a) (U) The child was born out
of wedlock (regardless of whether or not local law deems all children to be
legitimate at birth);
(b) (U) The child has not been
legitimated under the law of the childs residence or domicile or under the law
of the natural fathers residence or domicile while the child was in the legal
custody of the legitimating parent or parents;
(c) (U) The child has not
acquired another parent under INA 101(b)(2), which may include a stepparent.
(See definition of stepchild, 9 FAM 102.8-2(F)
paragraph (d), concerning whether a child who has a stepparent
nevertheless may be considered the child of a sole parent); and
(d) (U) The natural father of
the child is unknown, or has disappeared or abandoned or deserted the child, or
has in writing irrevocably released the child for emigration and adoption.
(See 9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(4) above.)
c. (U)
Surviving Parent:
(1) (U) In the context of
Convention adoption cases, a surviving parent is the childs living parent when
the childs other parent is dead, and the child has not acquired another
parent. (See definition of acquisition of another parent for Convention
adoptee cases above at 9 FAM 502.3-6(A) paragraph
(c), and 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(5) for additional information on surviving
parent consent in Convention adoptee cases.)
(2) (U) In the context of
orphan adoption cases, a surviving parent is defined as a childs living parent
when the childs other parent is dead, and the child has not acquired another
parent (i.e., a stepparent per definition in INA 101(b)(2)). See 9 FAM
502.3-3(B)(4) above for additional information on the status of natural parents
in orphan cases.
9 FAM 502.3-6(L) (U) W Definitions
(CT:VISA-916; 08-07-2019)
(U) Written Irrevocable Consent: In
the context of Convention adoptee cases, a written irrevocable consent is a
document in which the legal custodian freely consents to the termination of the
legal custodians legal relationship with the child. If more than one
individual or entity is the childs legal custodian, the consent of each legal
custodian may be recorded in one document, or in an additional document, but
all documents, taken together, must show that each legal custodian has given
the necessary irrevocable consent. See additional information on Convention
adoptee consent in 9 FAM 502.3-4(C)(5), and
additional information on orphans natural parents (and their release of the
child for adoption) in 9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(3) and
9 FAM 502.3-3(B)(4) above.