Federal immigration laws require employers to verify the identity and work eligibility of their new hires by completing what is known as a Form I-9, Employment Eligibility Verification, for every employee. Forms I-9 must be completed for every new hire within his/her first three days of employment. During the I-9 process, employees must present to the individual completing the I-9 (such as human resources personnel) documents to verify their identity and to prove that they have authorization to work in the United States.

The Form I-9 provides three categories of documents that must be presented in order to complete the verification. The new hire must submit either:

  • One “List A” document which establishes BOTH their identity and work authorization in the U.S. List A documents can include a U.S. passport, green card or Employment Authorization Document (EAD) issued by the USCIS
  • One “List B” document that establishes the new hire’s identity such as a driver’s license or a military ID card AND one “List C” document which establishes work authorization in the U.S. such as a Social Security Number card or a U.S. birth certificate

Employers charged with verifying employees’ status in the U.S. for I-9 purposes are only required to determine whether the documents presented to them reasonably appear to be valid and belong to the individual who submits them. If the employer believes that the documentation presented to them is acceptable, then they do not have to take other measures to verify the employee’s work eligibility and identity. In fact, the Department of Justice (DOJ) has repeatedly cautioned employers against “pre-screening” applicants or over-documenting on the Form I-9, as it is considered to be discriminatory.

For employers concerned about compliance with I-9 requirements given the increase in audits and investigations by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), there is an option to use a voluntary Internet-based system developed by the Department of Homeland Security in conjunction with the Social Security Administration, known as E-Verify. This system allows employers to run the information provided to them by new hires in the I-9 process against a variety of governmental databases. The system will confirm to the employer whether or not the employee is work authorized or if there is a discrepancy in information that needs to be resolved known as a “tentative non-confirmation.”

So why are I-9s relevant in the context of the EB-5 immigrant investor visa? For individual EB-5 applicants who must create 10 U.S. jobs per employee, USCIS often requests the I-9s of the new commercial enterprise to determine whether or not the investor has satisfied the 10 job per investor requirement of the EB-5 program. In the regional center context, certain centers may rely on direct employment by the project company. This is common in certain industries such as manufacturing, hospitality, assisted living or restaurants where the project company may hire a number of direct employees for operations. Although these jobs are considered “indirect” by USCIS because they are not employees of the new commercial enterprise, if the underlying economic model uses the direct project jobs to calculate total jobs (including indirect and induced employment) employment by the project company must be proven at the I-829 stage, often through the use of I-9s.

Once I-9s get into the hands of USCIS at the I-829 level we have seen that the Service itself has run employees through E-Verify. In instances where it was determined that the employees were not U.S. workers in the EB-5 context, i.e. U.S. citizens or permanent residents, even if all reasonable measures have been taken by the employer in accordance with the procedures outlined by USCIS, those jobs have still been excluded from the job count for I-829 purposes. This causes a conflict for employers who follow the procedures outlined for them in their employment verification practices in accordance with federal guidance, including the M-274 Handbook for Employers. Employers may also find themselves between a rock and a hard place in proving the immigration status of the employee to satisfy USCIS EB-5 requirements while taking care to not violate the anti-discrimination provisions of the Immigration and Nationality Act found at §274B.

Moreover, turning I-9s over to the USCIS fraught with technical or substantive violations could also bring unwanted scrutiny by its sister agency ICE on the company’s documents. Those with violations could face civil penalties. Likewise, employers who knowingly hire or continue to employ unauthorized workers can face criminal and civil liability. Since taking office the Obama Administration has made an example of many companies by issuing Notices of Inspection for their I-9s and imposing civil fines for substantive and technical violations. As more and more investors reach the I-829 stage, it is expected that I-9s submitted to show job creation will receive more scrutiny in an effort to ensure compliance.

This article was originally posted on www.eb5investors.com and is reprinted with permission.

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Photo of Kate Kalmykov Kate Kalmykov

Kate Kalmykov is based in our New York and New Jersey offices and has over two decades of experience in business immigration matters. Kate currently Co-Chairs the Global Immigration & Compliance Practice at Greenberg Traurig. In this role, she works with employers of

Kate Kalmykov is based in our New York and New Jersey offices and has over two decades of experience in business immigration matters. Kate currently Co-Chairs the Global Immigration & Compliance Practice at Greenberg Traurig. In this role, she works with employers of all sizes across a variety of industries in understanding and complying with the immigration laws relating to the hiring and retention of foreign talent. Specifically, her practice focuses on supporting clients and advising them on temporary and permanent residency immigration options for multi-national executive, business, scientific, and information technology personnel. In addition, her practice provides support to companies in the global transfer of personnel. Known by her clients for her out-of-the-box thinking, responsiveness and hands-on approach, Kate is often called upon to assist in developing immigration options and strategies in the most unique circumstances and to respond to complex Requests for Evidence (RFEs), Notices of Intent to Deny (NOIDs) or to appeal denied cases. Likewise, she has also been instrumental in developing employer compliance programs for DOL related filings including H-1Bs and PERMs, as well as for I-9 employment eligibility verification. To this end, she develops and conducts nationwide I-9 compliance trainings and policy manuals for human resources personnel, advises on best practices for E-Verify employers, provides guidance on avoiding immigration-related unfair employment practices claims and has defended and minimized penalties in immigration-related government audits. Kate regularly works with professionals from the firm’s labor, employment, tax and benefits groups, to provide strategic planning on immigration issues within a cross-border framework.

Kate also has deep experience working on all aspects of the EB-5 immigrant investor program. Kate has worked with real estate developers, private equity funds, and other organizations on applications to designate new EB-5 Regional Centers, applications for pre-approval of EB-5 projects; having projects adopted by existing EB-5 Regional Centers; structuring projects to be EB-5 compliant, the sale of existing EB-5 Regional Centers, preparing template I-526 petitions and advice on structuring direct EB-5 projects. Pursuant to the requirements introduced under the EB-5 Reform and Integrity Act, Kate works with EB-5 Regional Centers, EB-5 Projects, Overseas Migration Agents and Broker/ Dealers to develop internal programs for ongoing compliance and to prepare USCIS I-956, I-956F, I-956,G, I-956H, I-956K submissions. Kate has represented thousands of investors in obtaining their green cards through EB-5 regional center projects, as well as direct EB-5 investment opportunities. She also represented and structured the largest EB-5 offering in the Program’s history and has over the course of her career structured over $12 billion in EB-5 deals.

Within the field of immigration law, Kate is a well-known speaker and author. She is often called upon by various media outlets to comment on topics of business immigration law including the Real Deal, the Wall Street Journal, and Law360. Kate has appeared on numerous TV programs related to immigration law including CNN, the Stoler Report, Vietface TV, and China Business Network. Kate is also a prolific writer on the topic of immigration and has been published in immigration practice handbooks for the American Bar Association, American Immigration Lawyers Association, ILW, and in news periodicals that include the New Jersey Lawyer, the New York Law Journal, the New Jersey Law Journal, USA Today, GlobeSt.com, and the Commercial Observer. At the request of the American Bar Association, Kate co-authored the book “What Every Lawyer Needs to Know About Immigration Law,” a guide for non-lawyers on immigration law practice. She has sat on numerous bar association related committees including the American Immigration Lawyers Association EB-5 Practice Committee, the New Jersey Business Immigration Coalition and has chaired the American Bar Association’s, Committee on Immigration and Naturalization, Section of Administrative Law since 2011. Kate has been recognized in various legal surveys including Chambers Global, New York Super Lawyers, the New Jersey Law Journal who ranked as her as a “New Leader of the Bar,” (formerly 40 under 40) in 2012, NJBIZ “Best 50 Women in Business,” 2019, National Law Review, “Go-To Thought Leader: Immigration Law,” 2022, and Lawdragon 500, Leading U.S. Corporate Employment Lawyers, 2020-2022.

Kate is devoted to pro bono matters and has spent extensive time helping clients fleeing conflict and persecution with asylum applications, applying for and obtaining Temporary Protected Status and Humanitarian Parole.