Immigration · AR

U-Visa for Crime Victims in Arkansas

Arkansas crime victims who are non-citizens may qualify for a U-visa — federal immigration status for victims of qualifying crimes who help law enforcement.

Published May 7, 2026
## U-visa for crime victims in Arkansas The **U-visa** (created by the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000) provides immigration status to non-citizen crime victims who suffered substantial physical or mental abuse and who are helpful to law enforcement. ## Eligibility **1. Victim of qualifying criminal activity** — full list at 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(15)(U)(iii). Major categories: - Domestic violence - Sexual assault / rape - Trafficking - Murder / manslaughter - Felonious assault - Kidnapping / abduction - Extortion - Witness tampering / obstruction - Stalking - Female genital mutilation - Forced labor / involuntary servitude - Peonage / slavery - Torture **2. Substantial physical or mental abuse** suffered as a result. **3. Possess information** about the criminal activity. **4. Has been, is being, or is likely to be helpful** to law enforcement / prosecutor / judge in investigating or prosecuting the crime. **5. The crime occurred in the U.S.** or violated U.S. law. **6. Admissible to the U.S.** OR eligible for waiver of inadmissibility (§ 212(d)(14) — broader than other waivers). ## Law enforcement certification — Form I-918, Supplement B **Critical requirement:** the crime victim must obtain a **certification of helpfulness** from a qualifying agency: - Police department - District attorney / prosecutor - State or federal court - Child welfare agency (for child abuse cases) - Department of Labor (for labor trafficking) - EEOC (for employment discrimination crimes) Certification states that the victim cooperated and was a victim. Without certification, no U-visa. ## Process 1. **Become victim** of qualifying crime 2. **Report to law enforcement / cooperate** 3. **Obtain Form I-918 Supplement B certification** — within 6 months 4. **File Form I-918** with USCIS (no filing fee) 5. **Wait** — currently 5-10+ year backlog due to 10,000/year cap on principal U-visas 6. **Bona Fide Determination (BFD) / Deferred Action** — interim relief during wait 7. **Approval / denial** 8. **4-year U status + work authorization** 9. **3 years later, eligible to apply for green card** ## Annual cap Federal law caps **principal** U-visas at 10,000 per year. **Derivatives** (spouse, children, parents under certain circumstances) are not capped. Due to the cap, USCIS implemented **Bona Fide Determination (BFD)**: applicants with apparently approvable cases get **deferred action + work authorization** while waiting in the cap queue. BFD effectively provides interim status during the 5-10+ year wait. ## Derivatives U-visa derivatives include: - Spouse of principal - Children under 21 of principal - Parents of victim (if victim is under 21) - Unmarried siblings under 18 of victim (if victim is under 21) Derivatives apply via Form I-918 Supplement A. ## What U-visa provides - **4 years of legal U status** in the U.S. - **Employment authorization (EAD)** - **Travel** with a valid passport (advance parole sometimes needed) - **Path to green card** after 3 years of U status (if continued cooperation) - **Eventual U.S. citizenship** through normal naturalization after 5 years as LPR - **Inadmissibility waivers** — broader than other immigration waivers ## What U-visa does NOT provide - Immediate work authorization (must wait for adjudication or BFD) - Coverage for ALL family members (only certain derivatives) - Any rights for the perpetrator (separate issue) - Federal benefits during U status (limited; some state benefits available) ## Strategy considerations - **Don't delay reporting** — even if you're undocumented, prompt reporting strengthens the case - **Document the abuse** — medical records, photos, police reports, statements, therapy records - **Build relationship with prosecutor / detective** — certification is discretionary - **Don't be deterred by status concerns** — local police in many cities have policies favoring victim cooperation regardless of immigration status - **Get specialized counsel** — U-visa law is technical ## Consider also **T-visa** for trafficking victims — separate program with similar structure but for victims of severe forms of human trafficking. **VAWA self-petition** for spouses, parents, or children of U.S. citizens or LPRs who suffered abuse — separate path that doesn't require law enforcement cooperation. **Asylum** for victims of persecution — different framework but may apply to gender-based violence cases. **SIJS** (Special Immigrant Juvenile Status) for abused / neglected / abandoned children. ## What you should do If you're a non-citizen crime victim in Arkansas: report the crime, document everything, and contact a U-visa specialist immediately. Many Arkansas non-profit organizations provide FREE U-visa representation (Catholic Charities, Tahirih Justice Center, Human Rights Initiative, local immigration clinics). For-profit immigration attorneys also handle U-visas; many will work pro bono or low-fee. --- *This guide is general information about U.S. federal immigration law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. U-visa law is technical with significant cap-related delays. Talk to a licensed immigration attorney or qualified non-profit immigration program about your specific case.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.