Stuck outside the US for over a year

(Second of two parts)

Board a flight. Another option is to board a flight to the US and make (or plead) your case with the CBP officers at the airport, rather than to a consul. I know some airlines were refusing to board green card holders if they were outside the US for a long time, especially if the green card had expired. However, this is wrong, and the airlines should not be doing that.

In fact, CBP put out a reminder on the requirements for boarding LPRs. As for green card holders with unexpired valid permanent resident cards, CBP notes that “passengers with valid, unexpired permanent resident card… may be boarded without any additional documentation.”

As for LPRs with expired permanent resident cards with ten-year validity, CBP reminds airlines that “LPRs with expired I-551 may be boarded without penalty, provided the card was issued with a 10-year expiration date.”

So you can see, LPRs with a green card should be allowed to board a plane, even if the green card has expired, and airlines are warned that they “should not be determining admissibility of a travel outside the parameters of the document requirements.”

While I cannot guarantee results, it has been my experience (and the experience of other immigration attorneys) that it is best to deal with CBP at the airports on the issue of overstaying versus applying for an SB-1 visa, as CBP officers are far more flexible and understanding than the consuls at the embassy.

Of course you should be prepared to be sent to secondary, which is not custody or detention, but just a more in-depth questioning of a person than at the primary inspection or the immigration booths. Usually, there are more senior inspectors in secondary.

If you are going to pursue this option or even the SB-1, I would strongly suggest that you first consult with an attorney, who can evaluate your case, even via phone. An attorney can evaluate your case, assist in gathering documents and evidence and packaging your presentation, demonstrating you never intended to abandon your lawful permanent resident status, and your efforts to try to get back to the US and how the COVID-19 pandemic and delays prevented that.

If you are a green card holder, CBP cannot send you back to your home country by what we call “airport to airport.” Nor can they force you to sign forms to give up your green card, such as a Form I-407. Only an immigration judge can order that a person’s green card be taken away due to abandonment, not a CBP officer. By consulting with an attorney ahead of time, before you fly back to the US, you can be properly briefed, so you know what to expect and how best to truthfully answer the questions.

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