dismissed EB-2 NIW

dismissed EB-2 NIW Case: Anatomical Sciences

📅 Date unknown 👤 Individual 📂 Anatomical Sciences

Decision Summary

The AAO affirmed the director's denial, finding that the petitioner did not establish that a waiver of the job offer requirement would be in the national interest. The decision noted that the petitioner failed to provide sufficient documentary evidence to corroborate claims regarding past achievements, such as receiving several honors, fellowships, and awards.

Criteria Discussed

Substantial Intrinsic Merit National In Scope Serving National Interest To A Greater Degree Than A U.S. Worker

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(b)(6)
DATE: MAY 2 7 2014 OFFICE: TEXAS SERVICE CENTER 
INRE: Petitioner: 
Beneficiary: 
U.S. Department of Homeland Security 
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services 
Administrative Appeals Office (AAO) 
20 Massachusetts Ave., N.W., MS 2090 
Washington, DC 20529-2090 
U.S. Citizenship 
and Immigration 
Services 
FILE: 
PETITION: Immigrant Petition for Alien Worker as a Member of the Professions Holding an Advanced 
Degree or an Alien of Exceptional Ability Pursuant to Section 203(b )(2) of the Immigration 
and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1153(b)(2) 
ON BEHALF OF PETITIONER: 
INSTRUCTIONS: 
Enclosed please find the decision of the Administrative Appeals Office (AAO) in your case. 
This is a non-precedent decision. The AAO does not announce new constructions of law nor establish agency 
policy through non-precedent decisions. If you believe the AAO incorrectly applied current law or policy to 
your case or if you seek to present new facts for consideration, you may file a motion to reconsider or a 
motion to reopen, respectively. Any motion must be filed ona Notice of Appeal or Motion (Form I-290B) 
within 33 days of the date of this decision. Please review the Form I-290B instructions at 
http://www.uscis.gov/forms for the latest information on fee, filing location, and other requirements. 
See also 8 C.P.R.§ 103.5. Do not file a motion directly with the AAO. 
Thank you, 
7 Ron Rosen g 
Chief, Administrative Appeals Office 
www.uscis.gov 
(b)(6)
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Page 2 
DISCUSSION: The Director, Texas Service Center, denied the employment-based immigrant visa 
petition and certified the decision to the Administrative Appeals Office (AAO) for review. The AAO 
will affirm the denial of the petition. 
The petitioner seeks classification under section 203(b)(2) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (the 
Act), 8 U.S.C. § 1153(b)(2), as an alien of exceptional ability in the sciences and as a member of the 
professions holding an advanced degree. A statement submitted with the petition indicates that the 
petitioner "is cunently a nrofessor in the Histolo!N and Cell Biolo!Lv Division of the Department of 
Anatomical Sciences at ' The petitioner asserts that an 
exemptimi from the requirement of a job offer, and thus of a labor certification, is in the national interest 
of the United States. The director found that the petitioner qualifies for classification as a member of 
the professions holding an advanced degree, but that the petitioner has not established that an exemption 
from the requirement of a job offer would be in the national interest of the United States. The director 
also found that the petitioner did not submit sufficient 
information to establish the nature of his intended 
employment in the United States. 
In response to the certified denial, the petitioner submits a personal statement, a legal brief, and 
supporting exhibits. 
Section 203(b) of the Act states, in pertinent part: 
. (2) Aliens \Vho Are Members of the Professions Holding Advanced Degrees or Aliens of 
Exceptional Ability.-
(A) In General. - Visas shall be made available ... to qualified immigrants who are 
members of the professions holding advanced degrees or their equivalent or who 
because of their exceptional ability in the sciences, arts,or business, will substantially 
benefit prospectively the national economy, cultural or educational inten~sts, or welfare 
of the United States, and whose services in the sciences, arts, professions, or business 
are sought by an employer in the United States. 
(B) Waiver of Job Offer-
(i) ... the Attorney General may, when the Attorney General deems it to be in 
the national interest, waive the requirements of subparagraph (A) that an alien's 
services in the sciences, arts, professions, or business be sought by an employer 
in the United States. 
The director found that the petitioner had not established that a waiver of the job offer requirement, and 
thus a labor certification, is in the national interest. 
Neither the statute nor the pertinent regulations define the tern1 "national interest." Additionally, 
Congress did not provide a specific definition ()f "in the national interest.'' The Committee on the 
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Page 3 
Judiciary merely noted in its report to the Senate that the committee had "focused on national interest by 
increasing the number and proportion of visas for immigrants who would benefit the United States 
economically and otherwise .... " S. Rep. No. 55, lOlstCong., 1st Sess., 11 (1989). 
Supplementary information to regulations implementing the Immigration Act of 1990, P.L. 101-649, 
104 Stat. 4978 (Nov. 29, 1990), published at 56 Fed; Reg. 60897, 60900 (Nov. 29, 1991), states: 
The Service [now U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)] believes it 
appropriate to leave the application of this test as flexible as possible, although clearly 
an alien seeking to meet the [national interest] standard must make a showing 
significantly above that necessary to prove the "prospective national benefit" 
[required of aliens seeking to qualify as "exceptional."] The burden will rest with the 
alien to establish that exemption from, or waiver of, the job offer will be in the 
national interest. Each case is to be judged on its own merits. 
In reNew York State Dep 't of Transportation, 22 I&N Dec. 215, 217-18 (Act. Assoc. Comm'r 1998) 
(NYSDOT), has set forth several factors which must be considered when evaluating a reqpest for a 
national interest waiver. First, a petitioner must establish that the alien seeks employment in ·an area of 
substantial intrinsic merit. !d. at 217. Next, a petitioner must establish that the proposed benefit will be 
national in scope. !d. Finally, the petitioner seeking the waiver must establish that the alien will serve 
the national interest to a substantially greater degree than would an available U.S. worker having the 
same minimum qualifications. !d. at 217-18. · 
While the national interest waiver hinges on prospective national benefit, the petitioner must establish 
that the alien's past record justifies projections offuture benefit to the national interest. !d. at 219. The 
petitioner's assurance that the alien will, in the future, serve the national interest cannot suffice to 
establish prospective national benefit. The term "prospective" is included here to require future 
contributions by the alien, rather than to facilitate the entry of an alien with no demonstrable prior 
achievements, and whose benefit to the national interest would thus be entirely speculative. !d. 
The USCIS regulation at 8 C.F.R. § 204.5(k)(2) defines "exceptional ability" as "a degree of 
expertise significantly above that ordinarily encountered" in a given area of endeavor. By statute, 
aliens of exceptional ability are generally subject to the job offer/labor certification requirement; 
they are not exempt by virtue of their exceptional ability. Therefore, whether a given alien seeks 
classification as an alien of exceptional ability, or as a member of the professions holding an 
advanced degree, that alien cannot qualify for a waiver just by demonstrating a degree of expertise 
significantly above that ordinarily encountered in his or her field of expertise. 
The petitioner filed the Form I-140, Immigrant Petition for Alien Worker, on March 15, 2013. The 
petitioner left Part 6 of the petition form, Basic Information About the Proposed Employment, blank. 
The petitioner provided an introductory letter, which stated: 
(b)(6)
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NON-PRECEDENT DECISION 
[The petitioner] is currently a professor in the Histology and Cell Biology Division of 
the Department of Anatomical Sciences at 
[The petitioner] currently focuses on the evaluation of animal systems (in­
vivo and in-vitro) for toxicological effects of alcohol and some natural plant products . 
. . . Academically and professionally, [the petitioner] has contributed to the training 
and development of several generations of Medical, Nursing, Dental and Medical 
rehabilitation students from Nigeria, Grenada, USA, Canada and several other 
countries. . . . He has contributed to the generation and promotion of 
awareness in Grenada targeting the youths in secondary schools through the Grenada 
events that he pioneered and had the unique opportunity of 
bringing Grenada as a Nation to the International arena in for the 
time in the history of the country in 
Not only is [the petitioner's] field of employment in the national interest, but he in 
particular, to a greater extent tha[n] the few U.S. workers who have a background in 
both mechanical engineering [sic], plays a significant role in the furtherance of his 
field. There are few qualified US professionals with comparable academic or 
professional qualifications. He is, therefore, more skilled than others who perform 
similar work. ... It is my professional opinion that [the petitioner] possesses a degree 
of expertise significantly above that ordinarily encountered in his field. He is the 
recipient of several honors, fellowships and awards .... Several of his publications in 
reputable and scholastic international journals have been cited and referenced, in 
addition to his contributions as reviewer to several international journals and a 
consulting Editor to the 
The record lacks evidence to corroborate many of the above claims regarding the petitioner's past 
experience and achievements (such as the petitioner's claimed receipt "of several honors, 
fellowships, and awards"). Going on record without supporting documentary evidence is not 
sufficient for purposes of meeting the burden of proof in these proceedings. Matter of Soffici, 
22 I&N Dec. 158, 165 (Comm'r 1998) (citing Matter of Treasure Craft of California, 14 I&N Dec. 
190 (Reg'l Comrn'r 1972)). 
The supporting evidence submitted with the petition consisted of copies of the following: 
• The petitioner's master's and Ph.D. diplomas from 
, Nigeria; 
• The petitioner's Nigerian "Certificate of Full Registration as a Medical 
Practitioner"; 
• A January 29, 2013 letter from the chancellor of _ 
informing the petitioner ofhis promotion "to the rank of Professor"; 
• Documentation of the petitioner's participation at various scientific conferences; 
and 
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NON-PRECEDENT DECISION 
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• Published articles, some written by the petitioner, others citing his work. 
In some instances, the record offered only partial support for the petitioner's claims. The petitioner, 
for example, claimed to have documented ten or more years of experience in his field, thereby 
satisfying the USCIS regulation at 8 C.P.R. § 204.5(k)(3)(ii)(B). That regulation requires the 
petitioner to submit "[e]vidence in the form ofletter(s) from current or former employer(s) showing 
that the alien has at least ten years of full-time experience in the occupation for which he or she is 
being sought." The petitioner's introductory letter contained the claim: "During the years 1994-2007 
[the petitioner] held many positions and served in several diverse capacities with the 
" and that the petitioner had worked at various hospitals from 1990 to 1994. 
The only evidence cited in support of this claim was an article that the petitioner co-authored in 
2003. The petitioner's initial submission did not include that article. Apart from the aforementioned 
January 2013 letter regarding the petitioner's promotion, the petitioner submitted no employer letters 
specifically attesting to his prior employment, as required by the above regulation. 
Regarding the assertion that the petitioner "possesses a degree of expertise significantly above that 
ordinarily encountered in his field," the quoted phrase is a close match for the regulatory definition 
of "exceptional ability" at 8 C.P.R. § 204.5(k)(2). By statute, aliens of exceptional ability in the 
sciences, the arts, and business remain subject to the job offer requirement at section 203(b )(2)(A). 
Exceptional ability neither implies nor demonstrates eligibility for a waiver of that requirement. 
The introductory letter stated: 
[The petitioner] may not [seek classification under section 203(b)(2) of the Act] 
through a sponsor for two additional reasons. First, the inability to articulate the 
requisite skills in a Labor Certificate is because [the petitioner's] work requires a 
combination of formal education and practical experience in both biomedicine, 
neuroscience, and animal care. Such a combination of qualifications cannot be 
articulated in a Labor Certification. Second, being tied to a single employer would 
preclude [the petitioner] from doing even part-time training of medical nursing, dental 
and medical rehabilityation [sic] students as he has been doing due to the facts that 
EB-2 self sponsorship and part-time employment are precluded by the Department of 
Labor. 
The petitioner cited no statutes or regulations to support or explain the above assertions regarding 
Department of Labor policy. Regarding the assertion that employment for a single employer would 
preclude the training of students, the petitioner claims to be a professor at a medical school. The 
petitioner did not explain why a professor at a medical school would be unable to pursue research 
while also training medical students. The petitioner also did not establish which, if any, of his past 
achievements took place outside of his employment, or with multiple simultaneous employers. 
Furthermore, the claimed unavailability of labor certification is not, by itself, grounds for approving 
the waiver. See NYSDOT at 218 n.S and 223. The statutory threshold for the waiver is the national 
(b)(6)
NON-PRECEDENT DECISION 
Page 6 
interest, not the alien's inability or unwillingness to pursue labor certification through a petitioning 
employer. 
The introductory statement did not specify the occupation in which the petitioner seeks employment. 
The statement referred to neurochemistry, training of students in medicine and related fields, 
mechanical engineering, the petitioner's degrees in anatomy, and his "license to practice medicine." 
Some of the petitioner's earlier published research work indicated that he was on the "Faculty of 
Pharmacy" at the Nigeria . Most of these elements all deal with medicine or 
medical research in various ways, but those fields encompass a broad variety of individual 
occupations. 
A printout from the Google Scholar search engine identified 14 published articles by the petitioner, 
and indicated that ten of the articles had earned a total of 87 citations. Eight of the ten cited articles 
appeared between 2002 and 2007. With respect to his more recent work, an article from 2009 
showed four citations and an article from 2011 showed one citation. The petitioner submitted copies 
of some of the citing articles. 
The petitioner requested that, if the director judged the petitioner's evidence to be insufficient, the 
director "issue a Request for Evidence [RFE] compliant with the February 16, 2005 Yates memo 
entitled 'Requests for Evidence and Notices of Intent to Deny." In that memorandum, William R. 
Yates, USC IS's Associate Director of Operations, stated: 
Generally it is unacceptable to issue a RFE for a broad range of evidence when, after 
review of the record so far, only a small number of types of evidence is still required. 
"Broad brush" RFEs tend to generate "broad brush" responses (and initial filings) that 
overburden our customers, over-document the file, and waste examination resources 
through the review of unnecessary, duplicative, or irrelevant documents .... The RFE 
should set forth what is required in a comprehensible manner so that the filer is 
sufficiently informed of what is required .... 
It can be helpful to customers to articulate how and why information already 
submitted is not sufficient or persuasive on a particular issue. Customers can become 
confused and frustrated when they receive general requests for information that they 
believe they have already submitted. 
The director issued an RFE on May 29, 2013, stating: "The self-petitioner did not declare any 
proposed employment, nor did he submit any letter of interest in regard to future employment. ... In 
fact, the self-petitioner has not told us what work he will be doing or if there is any pending 
employment." The director quoted the "cover letter ... on Page 5, Paragraph 2," regarding "part­
time employment," and stated "These statements do not show an intent for full-time employment." 
The director instructed the petitioner: "Please explain exactly what type of full-time work you are 
intending. Please submit evidence of employment that has been offered to you." 
(b)(6)
NON-PRECEDENT DECISION 
Page 7 
The director stated that the petitioner had submitted "no letters ... to support the national interest 
waiver"; all of the submitted letters concerned invitations to attend various conferences. After 
listing some of the requirements deriving from NYSDOT, the director stated that the petitioner had 
submitted an incomplete copy of ETA Form 9089, Application for Permanent Employment 
Certification. The USCIS regulation at 8 C.P.R. § 204.5(k)(4)(ii) requires the submission of parts J, 
K, and L of that form.1 The director added that, on Part K of. that form, the petitioner had not 
identified any employment before his current position. Part K of ETA Form 9089 instructs 
applicants to "list any other experience that qualifies the alien for the job opportunity." 
The petitioner's response consisted of a letter which reads, in part: "The RFE is yet another 'broad 
brush' and inconsistent with the February 16, 2005 Yates memo entitled 'Requests for Evidence and 
Notices of Intent to Deny.' ... Please, therefore, issue a compliant RFE forthwith or favorably 
adjudicate the petition." The letter did not explain how the RFE was "broad brush"; the RFE 
contained several case-specific requests and observations that clearly did not derive from any 
general template. 
The only substantive response to specific points in the RFE was this statement: "the request asks for 
pages 9 and 10 of Form 9089 which do not apply [to national interest waiver cases]. Moreover, 
statements about employment are not required under the regulations which were apparently ignored 
once again." 
Pages 9 and 10 of ETA Form 9089 comprise parts N through Q of that form. It is correct that these 
elements are not required in an application for a national interest waiver. This assertion, however, 
did not address the director's separate observation that the petitioner provided what appeared to be 
an incomplete employment history on Part K, which is one of the required parts of the form. 
The director denied the petition on January 21, 2014, stating that the record "included insufficient 
information support a conclusion that the petitioner's past work had benefitted the field as a whole." 
The director acknowledged the petitioner's submission of citation evidence, but found that this 
evidence did not establish ongoing influence. The director stated: 
The petitioner's published research has been independently cited 87 times since 2002, 
with only four [citations] in 2009 and one in 2011. There were no recent citations 
after 2011, which points to a lack of use and not a continuation of the self­
petitioner[']s influence [on] others in the field. 
More specifically, the numbers quoted by the director refer to citations of articles that the petitioner 
published in 2009 and 2011. 
1 The regulation requires the submission of Form ETA-750B, Statement of Qualifications of Alien. This form is now 
obsolete. Parts J through L of ETA Form 9089 fulfill the same function. 
(b)(6)
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Page 8 
The director found that "the record lacked sufficient descriptive evidence (such as testimonial 
evidence) setting forth in understandable terms, how the research community had, in fact, benefitted 
from the petitioner's work. ... Letters submitted with the petition ... did not describe past work or 
prior achievements." 
The director also stated: 
The self-petitioner also did not declare any proposed employment, nor did he submit 
any letter of interest in regard to future work. Counsel's supporting statement . . . 
[did] not show intent for full-time work. In fact, the self-petitioner has not told us 
what type of work he will be doing n~r if there is any pending work. 
The director concluded that the petitioner had not provided sufficient evidence to show that the 
benefit from the petitioner's future work would be national in scope, or that the prospective benefit 
from the petitioner's future work would warrant the national interest waiver. 
The director observed that the director issued an RFE to allow the petitioner the opportunity to 
supplement the record, but that the petitioner's "RFE response consisted solely of [a] letter" 
claiming that the RFE was deficient. The director certified the decision to the AAO. 
The petitioner's legal brief includes the observation that the initial submission included "[o]ver one 
hundred pages of evidence ... which demonstrated [the petitioner's] related advanced degree, over 
ten years of experience, professional licensure, professional memberships, recognition for 
achievement and eligibility for exemption from a job offer." The petitioner's initial evidence, 
described above, supported only some of these claims. 
The petitioner asserts that the director "issued a boiler-plate Request for Evidence (RFE) that held 
[the petitioner] to the EB-1, not the correct EB-2 standard." The record contradicts this claim. The 
petitioner, here, claims that the director issued a generic request for evidence relating to aliens of 
extraordinary ability, which is a higher preference classification with more stringent requirements 
than the benefit that the petitioner seeks. The principal evidentiary requirements for aliens of 
extraordinary ability appear in the subsections of the regulation at 8 C.F.R. § 204.5(h)(3). The RFE 
contained no mention of extraordinary ability, and it did not cite or quote the evidentiary 
requirements at 8 C.F.R. § 204.5(h)(3). 
Furthermore, contrary to the allegation that the RFE is "likely the result of indolent 'cutting and 
pasting' from RFE templates," the RFE contains specific references to this petition that could not 
have originated from any general template. Some of these specific references, such as the assertion 
that the petitioner "has not told us what work he will be doing" and that "[t]here were no letters 
offered to support the national interest waiver," later formed the basis for the denial of the petition. 
The claim that the RFE was "non-compliant" did not relieve the petitioner of the obligation to 
submit a substantive response to the RFE. 
(b)(6)
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Page 9 
The petitioner observes that "on page three of the certification," the director stated "the record of 
evidence demonstrates an employment offer." This misstatement could result in some confusion, 
but it does not rebut the director's detailed conclusion that the petitioner provided no specific 
information regarding his intended work in the United States. The petitioner established that he is a 
professor at an overseas university, and that he has engaged in research in the past, but he did not 
indicate what he intended to do in the United States. The director requested more details not as a 
means of imposing the job offer requirement, but because the petitioner's ability to benefit the 
United States in the future depends in large part on the nature of his intended employment. The 
petitioner ' s claimed credentials indicate that he could, for instance, work as a college professor, or a 
medical researcher, or a physician. These professions draw from a similar well of subject matter 
expertise, but involve highly divergent duties and, therefore, affect the national interest in very 
different ways. It cannot suffice for the petitioner to state that, because he has done all of these 
things in the past, it is reasonable to predict that he will somehow benefit the United States. The 
petitioner has not indicated, even approximately, what form that 
benefit would take. 
The legal brief states: 
[The director] made the following laughable assertion: "there was little to no evidence 
submitted to support a conclusion that the petitioner's research had been influential to 
his field. The petitioner's published research has been independently cited 87 
times ... " It is a well-known fact that by the very nature of being a citation a citation 
is "influential." . . . If the material . . . that has been cited 87 times were not 
influential, it would not have been so extensively cited. 
The above selective quotation of the certified denial notice omitted crucial context. A fuller 
quotation of the relevant portion follows: 
There was little to no evidence submitted to support a conclusion that the petitioner's 
research had been influential to his field. The petitioner's published research has 
been independently cited 87 times since 2002, with only four in 2009 and one in 
2011. There were no recent citations after 2011, which points to a lack of use and not 
a continuation of the self-petitioner[']s influence [on] others in the field. 
The brief does not address the latter portion of the above passage, which raised the highly relevant 
issue of the petitioner's ongoing influence on his field. 
The brief states: 
Had the [Texas Service Center] complied with its own policy and extended the 
courtesy of a specific RFE, counsel would have been able to furnish additional details 
such as the following: 
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NON-PRECEDENT DECISION 
(The petitioner] was invited by 
research from July 1-15, 2013 .... 
fThe petitioner] was nominated bv the 
where he conducted 
to Co-Chair a of the Association to develop 
... A first report of the activity of the Panel is due at the 
, in 
China. 
In furtherance of his effort to establish and Use for Scientific 
purposes in developing countries, in particular in Africa, [the petitioner] facilitated 
in Nigeria. The first held at the 
Nigeria on 2011 and the 
held at Nigeria from 
201[3] .... 
These efforts recent! v culminated in the establishment and incorporation of the 
organization to sustain the successes achieved 
following the National and International Workshops held ... in 2011 and 2013 
respectively, which 
are being propagated to Ghana and Kenya ... . 
[The petitioner] has been invited as Faculty to the 
conference, holding [sic] in Denver, CO, USA from 
[The petitioner's] 
publication bv 
book on 
book titles, is under consideration for 
publishers to submit an initial draft. This is first of its kind, a 
for undergraduate students, and it is [a] work in active progress . 
As shown above, the brief contains a series of specific claims of fact. Some of these claims are 
unsupported and therefore cannot meet the petitioner's burden of proof. See Matter of Soffici, 
22 I&N Dec. at 165. 
The petitioner submits copies of fliers for two events that both occurred after the filing of the petition. 
One flier promoted a 2013 seminar at at which the petitioner spoke; 
the other identified the pe 1t10ner as a "resource person" at an workshop on animal testing 
ethics held at on 2013. An applicant or petitioner must 
establish that e or she is e igio e for the requested benefit at the time of filing the benefit request. 
8 C.F.R. § 103.2(b)(1). Therefore, subsequent events cannot cause a previously ineligible alien to 
become eligible after the filing date. See Matter of Katigbak, 14 I&N Dec. 45, 49 (Reg'l Comm'r 
1971). Furthermore, the petitioner has not explained how these events establish the petitioner's 
influence on the field as a whole. Therefore, even if they predated the filing of the petition, they would 
establish only that the petitioner has been active in the fields discussed on the fliers. 
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The only evidence that the 2etitioner submitted regarding his claimed forthcoming book is a copy of 
_ These guidelines state the publisher's 
policies, but 
contain no internal evidence that has solicited a book from the petitioner. At most, 
the petitioner's possession of the guidelines suggests that he has looked into submitting a manuscript to 
for publication. 
The director, in the RFE, had instructed the petitioner: "Please explain exactly what type of :full-time 
work you are intending." The petitioner did not submit any explanation in response to the RFE. On 
that basis alone, USCIS may not approve the petition. See 8 C.P.R.§ 103.2(b)(14). The petitioner's 
submission of such an explanation at this stage is untimely, and he has offered no explanation for his 
failure to submit it when the director specifically requested it in the RFE. 
On certification, the petitioner submits a brief, stating: 
[C]ounsel hereby submits evidence labeled "Exhibit A" that ... [the director] claimed 
was missing in [the] certification notice but did not have the courtesy or 
professionalism to request [the above evidence] in a properly written RFE. Such 
evidence includes correspondence from [the petitioner] that he intends to continue to 
work in his field and that he, to a greater extent than U.S. workers having the same 
minimum qualification, plays a significant role in the furtherance of that field. 
The petitioner, in his new letter, describes his claimed past employment at length, and states that he 
hopes to work at "a College/University, when given an opportunity to do so." The petitioner did not 
identify any U.S. college or university that had expressed an interest in employing him. 
The petitioner seeks an employment-based immigrant classification, and must show how his 
intended employment will serve the national interest. The petitioner cannot do so without providing 
reasonable details about the petitioner's intended work in the United States. The statutory job offer 
requirement includes several specific elements, such as labor certification and documentation 
regarding the prospective employer's finances (to establish ability to pay the offered salary). A 
waiver of the job offer would exempt the petitioner from submitting these specific pieces of 
documentation, but it does not entitle the petitioner to omit basic information about his intended 
employment in the United States. Furthermore, a waiver of the job offer requirement does not mean 
that the petitioner can express an intention to work at an unnamed "College/University" and leave it 
at that. Employment at such an institution is not entirely up to the petitioner; the college or 
university must seek to employ him. Therefore, the petitioner's unilateral assertion of intent cannot 
suffice to show that he will, in fact, secure employment at a U.S. college or university at some point 
in the future. 
The regulation states that the petitioner shall submit additional evidence as the director, in his or her 
discretion, may deem necessary. The purpose of the request for evidence is to elicit further 
information that clarifies whether eligibility for the benefit sought has been established, as of the 
time the petition is filed. See 8 C.P.R. §§ 103.2(b)(8) and (12). The failure to submit requested 
(b)(6)
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Page 12 
evidence that precludes a material line of inquiry shall be grounds for denying the petition. 8 C.P.R. 
§ 103.2(b)(14). The director specifically requested information regarding the petitioner's intended 
work in the United States, and the petitioner's failure to provide that requested information was 
grounds for denial of the petition. The petitioner's submission of a statement at this late date cannot 
show that the director's decision was improper or in error. Cf Matter of Soriano, 19 I&N Dec. 764, 
766 (BIA 1988); see also Matter of Obaigbena, 19 I&N Dec. 537 (evidence requested iJt an RFE, 
but not submitted until after the denial decision, will not establish eligibility.) 
As indicated in the legal brief, heavy citation of the petitioner's early work is an indication of its 
influence. The petitioner, however, has failed to address the director's observation that the evidence 
does not establish an ongoing pattern of continued influence in the petitioner's field. The director 
specifically requested third-party evidence of the significance of the petitioner's work, which the 
petitioner has not submitted. The director, in the RFE, also asked for more information about the 
petitioner's intended work in the United States, and the petitioner's response to the RFE did not 
address or even acknowledge this request. This lack of a substantive response is, itself, sufficient 
grounds for denial of the petition under 8 C.P.R. § 103.2(b)(14). Beyond that issue, the petitioner 
has offered insufficient evidence to support claims put forth at various stages in the proceeding. The 
legal brief blames the denial of the petition on the director's issuance of a generic RFE, but the 
record demonstrates that the RFE contained specific, customized language that did not originate 
from any "boilerplate" template. 
The petitioner has not established a past record of achievement at a level that would justify a waiver of 
the job offer requirement. The petitioner need not demonstrate notoriety on the scale of national 
acclaim, but the national interest waiver contemplates that his influence be national in scope. NYSDOT, 
22 I&N Dec. 217, n.3. More specifically, the petitioner "must clearly present a significant benefit to the 
field of endeavor." Id. at 218. See also id. at 219, n.6 (the alien must have "a past history of 
demonstrable achievement with some degree of influence on the field as a whole."). 
As is clear from a plain reading of the statute, it was not the intent of Congress that every person 
qualified to engage in a profession in the United States should be exempt from the requirement of ajob 
offer based on national interest. Likewise, it does not appear to have been the intent of Congress to 
grant national interest waivers on the basis of the overall importance of a given profession, uather than 
on the merits of the individual alien. On the basis of the evidence submitted, the petitioner has not 
established that a waiver of the requirement of an approved labor certification will be in the national 
interest of the United States. 
While the director cited sufficient grounds to warrant denial of the petition, review of the record reveals 
an additional ground for denial. The AAO may deny an application or petition that fails to comply with 
the technical requirements of the law even if the Service Center does not identify all of the grounds for 
denial in the initial decision. See Spencer Enterprises, Inc. v. United States, 229 F. Supp. 2d 1025, 1043 
(E.D. Cal. 2001), aff'd, 345 F.3d 683 (91h Cir. 2003); see also Soltane v. DOl, 381 F.3d 143, 145 (3d 
Cir. 2004) (noting that the AAO conducts appellate review on a de novo basis). 
(b)(6)
NON-PRECEDENT DECISION 
Page 13 
Apart from the issue of the petitioner's eligibility for the national interest waiver, the petitioner must 
also establish eligibility for the underlying immigrant classification, either as a member of the 
professions holding an advanced degree or as an alien of exceptional ability in the science, the arts, or 
business. 
The director, in the certified decision, made a summary finding in the petitioner's favor, stating: "It is 
established that the self-petitioner holds a Ph.D. from the md meets the 
advanced degree qualification under INA 203(b)(2)." The record, however, does not support this 
finding. The USCIS regulation at 8 C.F.R. § 204.5(k)(3)(i)(A) states that, to show that the alien is a 
professional holding an advanced degree, the petition must be accompanied by an official academic 
record showing that the alien has an United States advanced degree or a foreign equivalent degree. 
The petitioner holds master's and doctorate degrees from the university named above. That university 
is in Nigeria, and therefore it is not a United States university. The petitioner has submitted no 
evaluation to establish that the degrees are the foreign equivalent of advanced degrees from a United 
States university. They could be equivalent degrees, but the petitioner has submitted no evidence to 
warrant such a finding. Therefore, the petitioner has not sufficiently documented that he qualifies as a 
member of the professions holding an advanced degree. 
The petitioner also claims to qualify for classification as an alien of exceptional ability in the sciences. 
The director did not address this claim. Responsibility to make the initial determination on the claim 
rests with the director rather than with the AAO. Detailed discussion of the claim on certification would 
not change the outcome of the present decision, because the petition cannot be approved without 
concurrent approval of the national interest waiver application. 
The AAO will affirm the denial of the petition for the above stated reasons, with each considered as an 
independent and alternate basis for the decision. In visa petition proceedings, it is the petitioner's 
burden to establish eligibility for the immigration benefit sought. Section 291 of the Act, 8 U.S.C. 
§ 1361; Matter of Otiende, 26 I&N Dec. 127, 128 (BIA 2013). Here, the petitioner has not met that 
burden. 
ORDER: The director's decision of January 21, 2014 is affirmed. The petition is denied. 
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