dismissed L-1B

dismissed L-1B Case: Culinary Arts

📅 Date unknown 👤 Company 📂 Culinary Arts

Decision Summary

The appeal was summarily dismissed because the petitioner's counsel failed to specifically identify any erroneous conclusion of law or statement of fact in the director's decision. Counsel had promised to submit a brief with more details but failed to do so even after a request from the AAO.

Criteria Discussed

Specialized Knowledge

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U.S. Department of Homeland Security 
20 Massachusetts Ave. N.W., Rm. A3042 
Washtngton, DC 20529 
FILE: EAC 04 094 52358 Office: VERMONT SERVICE CENTER Date: e f Tp5 
PETITION: Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker Pursuant to Section 101(a)(15)(L) of the Immigration 
and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. 5 1101(a)(15)(L) 
ON BEHALF OF PETITIONER: 
INSTRUCTIONS: 
This is the decision of the Administrative Appeals Office in your case. All documents have been returned to 
the office that originally decided your case. Any further inquiry must be made to that office. 
24 obert P. Wiemann, Direc or 
Administrative Appeals Office 
1 
EAC 04 094 52358 
Page 2 
DISCUSSION: The Director, Vermont Service Center, denied the petition for a nonimmigrant visa. The 
matter is now before the Administrative Appeals Office (AAO) on appeal. The appeal will be summarily 
dismissed. 
The petitioner filed this nonimmigrant petition seeking to employ the beneficiary as an L-1B noninimigrant 
intracompany transferee with specialized knowledge pursuant to pursuant to section 101(a)(15)(Lt) of the 
Immigration and Nationality Act (the Act), 8 U.S.C. 3 1101(a)(15)(L). The petitioner is a New York limited 
liability company that intends to operate an Indian restaurant chain in the United States. The petitioner claims 
to be a subsidiary located in Chennai, India. The petitioner seeks to employ the 
beneficiary as a rice and sweets specialist chef in its new office for a three-year period. 
The director denied the petition concluding that the petitioner had not established that the beneficiary has 
specialized knowledge or that he would be employed in position requiring specialized knowledge. 
The petitioner subsequently filed an appeal. On the Form I-290B appeal submitted on June 28, 2004, counsel 
for the petitioner states: 
An appeal may be filed either with new evidence or if there is a misapplication of the law ancl 
the regulations. In the instant case, the Service simply does not understand the specializecl 
nature of the position because of lack of familiarity. We will submit a brief with a more 
detailed exposition of the specialized nature of the job duties of the position and expent 
testimony from India. Since some of the infotmation is coming from abroad we require the 
additional time. 
Counsel indicated that a brief would be submitted to the AAO within 45 days. On August 2, 2005, the AAO 
sent to counsel by facsimile a request for the brief and/or additional evidence in support of the appeal. The 
AAO provided counsel five business days within which to respond. As of this date, the record does not 
contain a supplemental brief or evidence. Therefore, the record will be considered complete. 
To establish eligibility under section 101(a)(15)(L) of the Act, the petitioner must meet certain criteria. 
Specifically, within three years preceding the beneficiary's application for admission into the United States, a 
firm, corporation, or other legal entity, or an affiliate or subsidiary thereof, must have employed the 
beneficiary for one continuous year. Furthermore, the beneficiary must seek to enter the United States 
temporarily to continue rendering his or her services to the same employer or a subsidiary or affiliate thereof 
in a managerial, executive, or specialized knowledge capacity. 
Upon review, the AAO concurs with the director's decision and affirms the denial of the petition. C'ounsel's 
general statement that the director "does not understand the specialized nature of the position because of lack 
of familiarity" fails to adequately address the director's stated grounds for denial of the petition. C'ounsel's 
general objections to the denial of the petition, without specifically identifying any errors on the part of the 
director, are simply insufficient to overcome the well founded and logical conclusions the director reached 
based on the evidence submitted by the petitioner. 
Regulations at 8 C.F.R. 5 103.3(a)(l)(v) state, in pertinent part: 
EAC 04 094 52358 
Page 3 
An officer to whom an appeal is taken shall summarily dismiss any appeal when the party 
concerned fails to identify specifically any erroneous conclusion of law or statement of 
fact for the appeal. 
Inasmuch as counsel has failed to identify specifically an erroneous conclusion of law or a statement of fact in 
this proceeding, the appeal must be summarily dismissed. 
In visa petition proceedings, the burden of proving eligibility for the benefit sought remains entirely with the 
petitioner. Section 291 of the Act, 8 U.S.C. $ 1361. Here, the petitioner has not met this burden. 
ORDER: The appeal is summarily dismissed. 
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