Summary
If ne is eligible for a waiver, your mother, the petitioner, would have to demonstrate extreme hardship to herself if her son were not allowed to re-enter to live with her. Examples of extreme hardship differ from person to person, and her personal situation would have to be analysed, documented and submitted in a request for a waiver. The hardship that is to be documented is to the petitioner, not to the beneficiary - your brother.
I have no papers to ahow immigration authorities of this two-year ban, only medical papers. My aunts are also saying if he gets a chance to return, he will be a police target because they will see him as a sex offender and mentally ill. Is this true, or are they only being negative? They say they're not helping because he is free in Jamaica and don't see a reason why they should bring him back.See the full content of this document
Extract
Haunted by Sex Offence
Dear Mrs Huntington,
My mother is filing for my brother and I. However, my brother is the problem. He was once a permanent United States (US) resident. He developed a mental il...See the full content of this document
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