Ever Evolving L-1B Adjudication Standards


Immigration law practitioners have been receiving Requests for Evidence (RFEs) on most L-1B (Intracompany Transferee-Specialized Knowledge) petitions for new issuance as well as L-1B renewals. These RFEs, requiring burdensome responses, in fact may misinterpret the term “specialized knowledge.”

So how could an RFE template be proposed when an interpretive memorandum on which it is based has not been published in its final form? Moreover, has USCIS even considered the comments it solicited on the Draft Memorandum and Draft RFE Template in these proceedings?

The Draft RFE Template appears to be based upon language in the draft (now final) memorandum which was still the subject of considerable comment from stakeholders when the Draft RFE Template was issued. All of this leads to more confusion, ambiguity, and uncertainty in the application process. This also gives rise to a need for burdensome and generally unnecessary documentation at the initial filing in response to an RFE, or both.

The L-1 saga will continue.

 


Jackson Lewis P.C. © 2025
National Law Review, Volume V, Number 233