Sunday, November 2, 2014

Migration trend in Russia: more people will leave Russia in 2014 than in 1999. Highly qualified workers, scientists, businessmen are moving abroad.

Interesting migration statistics from Russia. In 8 months of 2014, 203,659 people immigrated from Russia. This is the highest number since 1999, when 214,963 people left Russia permanently to settle abroad.

Rate of immigration from Russia has accelerated because of recent political events.

Saturday, October 25, 2014

DV-2016 (Green Card Lottery) registration period is open until November 03 2014.

DV-2016 (Green Card Lottery) registration period is open until November 03 2014.

The ONLY official website where an entry can be submitted is 
(Please be aware of numerous fraudulent websites promising to submit your entry. Official US government website ends with .GOV - not .COM).

Please remember to spell your names correctly, provide correct date, city and country of birth and don't make mistakes checking your highest educational level. Also, attach correct photos for a correct family members. Please keep in mind that this is a lottery and a person who is initially selected as a winner can be denied a visa for a number of "silly" reasons such as marking a wrong educational level or misplacing family members passport photos.

Good luck!

Luba Smal.
Immigration Attorney.
Note: This information is provided for legal information purposes only and should not be considered a legal advice; it doesn't create an attorney-client relationship. In some jurisdictions it might be considered an attorney advertising. For more information or to schedule a consultation please visit http://www.law-visa-usa.com/contact_us.html or email at Attorney@law-visa-usa.com.          

Monday, September 29, 2014

Russia to Launch Pilot Project to Fingerprint Visa Applicants

Russian embassies and consulates in four countries will soon launch a pilot project requiring visa applicants to submit their fingerprints, Interfax reported Sunday, citing the Foreign Ministry's consular division.
Starting in January 2015, Russian consulates in Britain, Denmark, Myanmar and Namibia will begin implementing fingerprinting technology, the report said.
The initiative will help determine the feasibility of collecting biometric data at other Russian diplomatic and consular facilities, according to Yevgeny Ivanov, the director of the Foreign Ministry's consular department.
Ivanov said that the project had been under consideration for several years and that it was not intended to indicate a tightening of requirements for Russian visa applicants.
He added that Schengen countries are set to begin collecting the biometric data of Russian visa applicants next year.
Read at http://www.themoscowtimes.com/article/507937.html

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Thousands of Americans give up their US citizenship because of restrictive new tax laws.

Thousands of Americans abroad are giving up their citizenship as the implementation of a complex new tax law causes banks to shut down accounts for US expatriates.
Until 2012, Moon was actually an American – albeit one who had lived in Canada for 32 years. She settled in so well that in 2008, she added Canadian citizenship to her US one.
But Moon cut ties with America three years ago, after new banking laws aimed at tax evaders required expats like her to file more thorough US tax returns. She was five years behind on the news. “I was terrified we’d lose all our money,” she says.
After back-filing years of tax returns, Moon renounced her US citizenship in 2012. It was a defiant act she describes as being one of the first canaries to leave the coalmine as US banking laws make life more difficult for American expatriates. She wasn’t pleased she had to do it.
“It was like cutting off my right arm,” to not be American any more, says Moon, who only became a Canadian citizen in 2008. “Now, I’m simply angry.”
In February this year, the US and Canadian governments signed an intergovernmental agreement to co-operate on Fatca. The Foreign Accounts Taxation Compliance Act required all foreign banks to disclose the financial information of any American with assets over $50,000 sitting in banks outside of the US.
Steep penalties add muscle to the law. If a foreign bank – not just in Canada, but anywhere – fails to report even a single US citizen as a customer to the IRS, the US Treasury department would withhold 30% of the banks’ US income as penalty.
Foreign banks, some of whom earned a reputation as tax scofflaws, are now deeply afraid of the Internal Revenue Service. Scared of running afoul of US banking laws, foreign banks are taking extreme steps to limit US citizens to a narrow range of services. 
The complications have become so prevalent that, as a last resort, thousands of Americans have asked US Consulates abroad to cancel their citizenship. In 2013, 2,999 Americans renounced their citizenship; in 2014 so far, it’s a little more than 1,500 people. 
Possibly to stem the tide, the state department raised the fee for citizenship renunciation fourfold on September 12, from $450 to $2,350. Officials seem to be hoping the steep fee will discourage more people from giving up their passports.