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Physicist Loses Bid For Visa Based On Ability

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  • Physicist Loses Bid For Visa Based On Ability

    PHYSICIST LOSES BID FOR VISA BASED ON ABILITY
    By TIM HULL

    Courthouse News Service
    Sept 9 2009

    (CN) - An Armenian theoretical physicist who self-published a text
    book and lectures at a California community college does not qualify
    as an "alien of extraordinary ability" for visa purposes, the 9th
    circuit ruled.

    In a 2-1 decision, the Pasadena-based appellate panel upheld a lower
    court's decision to deny 34-year-old Poghos Kazarian an immigration
    visa.

    The court said Kazarian, a tutor and adjunct instructor at Glendale
    Community College, is "not yet of the caliber that qualifies him as
    'an alien with extraordinary ability.'" Kazarian applied for an
    employment-based immigrant visa in 2003, claiming that his work as a
    theoretical physicist qualified him for a visa. A district court ruled
    for the Citizenship and Immigration Service, denying Kazarian a visa.

    The Armenian appealed, and the 9th Circuit affirmed the lower court's
    ruling.

    Though Kazarian submitted several letters of recommendation from
    colleagues, the court said they were vague and lacked convincing
    details.

    Judge Dorothy Nelson wrote that "although Kazarian is well-respected
    by his colleagues, he has not yet attained the stature required by
    the statutory scheme."

    The bar for "extraordinary ability" includes only those with "a level
    of expertise indicating that the individual is one of that small
    percentage who have risen to the very top of the field of endeavor,"
    Nelson added.

    Though Kazarian, a specialist in "non-Einsteinian theories of
    gravitation" is a promising young scientist, Nelson wrote, his
    accomplishments thus far do not meet that standard.

    Nelson added that Kazarian may well qualify for an "exceptional
    ability" visa, for which the bar is set significantly lower, though he
    would have to show evidence that he was sought after by U.S. employers.

    In the dissenting opinion, Judge Harry Pregerson wrote that "forcing
    Dr. Kazarian to depart from our country would be undoubtedly wasteful
    and make one think that there is something haywire in our system."
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