Connecticut immigrants who are abused spouses, children, or parents of U.S. citizens / LPRs may self-petition for immigration status under VAWA without abuser's involvement.
Published May 7, 2026
## VAWA self-petition for Connecticut immigrants
**VAWA (Violence Against Women Act)** lets abused immigrants file for immigration status WITHOUT the abuser's knowledge, cooperation, or signature. Despite the name, VAWA applies to all genders.
## Who qualifies
**1. Abused spouses of U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents:**
- Married to abuser (now or within last 2 years)
- Subjected to battery or extreme cruelty
- Married in good faith (not for immigration)
- Resided with abuser
- Person of good moral character
**2. Abused children of U.S. citizens or LPRs** (under 21, or under 25 with delayed filing).
**3. Abused parents of adult (21+) U.S. citizens.**
## What "battery or extreme cruelty" includes
VAWA has a broad definition:
- Physical violence
- Sexual abuse / forced sex acts
- Threats of physical violence
- Psychological / emotional abuse
- Forced isolation
- Economic abuse / financial control
- Forced sex work / labor
- Threatening immigration status to control
- Threatening to take children
- Verbal abuse / humiliation that causes fear
Single severe incident OR pattern of less-severe incidents both qualify.
## Critical advantage: confidentiality
VAWA self-petitions are **confidential**:
- Abuser is NOT notified
- USCIS cannot use information from abuser's source against petitioner
- Address kept confidential
- 8 U.S.C. § 1367 confidentiality protections
This is a fundamental difference from traditional family-based petitions where the U.S. citizen / LPR sponsors the immigrant and controls the process.
## What VAWA provides
- **Approved I-360 self-petition** = immediate path
- **Deferred action** for many self-petitioners while awaiting visa availability
- **Work authorization (EAD)** based on deferred action or pending I-360
- **Path to green card** — eligible for adjustment of status if visa available
- **Public benefits** — VAWA self-petitioners qualify for many federal benefits
- **Children covered** as derivative beneficiaries
## VAWA cancellation of removal
Separate from self-petition: VAWA also provides **cancellation of removal** for immigrants in deportation proceedings who can show:
- Battered or subjected to extreme cruelty by U.S. citizen / LPR spouse, parent, or child
- Continuous physical presence in U.S. for 3 years
- Good moral character
- Not inadmissible / deportable on certain grounds
- Removal would cause extreme hardship
## VAWA suspension of deportation
Older provision still applies to some pre-1997 cases.
## Process
1. **Document abuse** — police reports, medical records, photos, witness statements, journal entries, threatening texts / emails
2. **Document marriage** (for spouse cases) — wedding photos, joint accounts, lease, tax returns
3. **Document abuser's status** — copy of green card / passport / naturalization certificate (without abuser's knowledge if possible)
4. **File Form I-360 self-petition** with USCIS Vermont Service Center (handles all VAWA cases)
5. **Receive prima facie determination** — interim recognition while case is processed
6. **Get deferred action + work authorization** when prima facie established
7. **Final approval / denial**
8. **Adjust status to LPR** if eligible (concurrently or after I-360 approval)
## Evidence — what helps
**Abuse evidence:**
- Police reports (any reports of any violence)
- Medical records / photos of injuries
- Court orders (protective orders, divorce papers mentioning abuse)
- Therapy / counseling records
- Witness statements (friends, family, neighbors, coworkers)
- Photos / texts / emails / voicemails of threatening behavior
- Journal entries with dates
- 911 call records
- Domestic-violence shelter records
**Marriage evidence (spouse cases):**
- Marriage certificate
- Wedding photos
- Joint lease / utilities / bank accounts
- Joint tax returns
- Birth certificates of joint children
- Photos as couple over time
**Good moral character:**
- Letters from clergy, employers, friends
- Tax returns (filed even when not required)
- Volunteer work documentation
- Police clearance
- Education records
## What if you don't have all the evidence
VAWA explicitly recognizes that abused immigrants often LACK access to traditional documents. Sworn declarations from the petitioner + supporting affidavits from anyone with knowledge can substitute. USCIS officers receive specialized training on VAWA cases.
## Common challenges
- **Fear of abuser finding out** — VAWA's confidentiality protections address this
- **Fear of deportation if reported** — VAWA-eligible petitioners get protection from removal
- **Loss of housing / financial support** — many state DV shelters and federal programs help VAWA filers
- **Children with abuser** — derivative status; planning needed
- **Limited English** — many DV organizations have multilingual advocates
- **Cultural / religious pressures** — confidential process protects
## Resources
- **National Domestic Violence Hotline:** 1-800-799-7233
- **Immigration legal aid** — Catholic Charities, Tahirih Justice Center, ASISTA, local immigration clinics — many work pro bono on VAWA cases
- **Local DV shelters** — many have immigration-specific advocates
- **State DV coalitions** — every state has one; they can refer
## What you should do
If you're an abused immigrant in Connecticut: you're not alone, and there's a legal path that doesn't require your abuser's cooperation. Contact a non-profit immigration legal-aid organization (most provide FREE help with VAWA cases). If you can afford private counsel, find an immigration attorney with VAWA experience. Document the abuse safely (consider trusted friend / family / shelter for evidence storage). Most Connecticut VAWA attorneys offer free initial consultations.
---
*This guide is general information about U.S. federal immigration law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. VAWA cases are complex and time-sensitive. Talk to a licensed immigration attorney or qualified non-profit 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.