I'm Suing US Immigration

4,988,639
0
Published 2024-05-03

All Comments (21)
  • @koelee
    "Florida man sues US immigration over professional video games" sounds like a real Florida man headline.
  • @thepapschmearmd
    My dad was a prosecutor for the immigration department and left to become an immigration defense attorney because of how shitty the department is.
  • @NovaxDS
    “You are under an esport group called moist… nah you can’t go through… oh ur under a esport team that isn’t moist… ok ur good”
  • @Cpach27
    I was born in TX but my parents are from Mexico. Years ago, My parents applied to get residency through me. We had an interview at the Immigration office and my god, was it a sad sight. Seeing and hearing alot of families cry cause they were denied put me in this really weird scared state of mind that i hadn't felt before in my life. We had to do 2 interviews. One for my dad and one for my mom. My dad's interview felt like a straight up interrogation. My mom's was actually the complete opposite. My mom's interviewer was this really nice American guy who spoke perfect spanish. We didn't even need our translator for her interview
  • @fabiopauli420
    "We have investigated ourselves and found nothing wrong" - US Immigration
  • @fall1n1gr
    Charlie found corruption in a government. I found water on sea.
  • @DrWestlake
    Hey Charlie, You should find out who specifically was not doing their job using the freedom of information act you could get them to release the documents and find out the person/people behind the visa rejections. Then as part of your lawsuit require the settlement to include having the person/people terminated who were behind this situation, as just one form of relief (the second and main one being financial). Furthermore, have US Imigration blacklist them from any future government positions on the grounds they violated their oath of office, failed to perform the duties of their position fairly and without bias, as well as maliciously chose to reject a VISA request without reasonable cause... You can then sue the employee for intentionally acting in bad faith while performing the duties of their job. Since they used bias and acted outside the scope of the their position, they then are no longer subject to the protection of the government, and would as such not be able to receive protections normally afforded government employees. While the government does have laws that protect them from paying out in a lawsuit, they usually do not invoke those rights, epecially in the event of an egregious mistake or a widely publicized/viewed situation. As a way to save face, they will often offer money. The point being they will usually use money to make a case go away. Without a law forcing financial compensation, they typically leverage that into giving a lesser amount. Hopefully this helps and good luck!
  • @louislee7
    MoistCritikal vs US Immigration (The Series): Episode 1: I don't get this mad often Episode 2: You've never seen me this mad Episode 3: I'm suing US immigration
  • @labellebryce
    Florida man vs the government. They don't stand a chance
  • It's finally time for Charlie to fulfill his destiny as a Florida man
  • @AW-tx5jg
    As an international student with a partner who’s been dealing with disability checks I can relate. The levels of ridiculousness and absolute lack of competent assistance we’ve ran into and still run into is insane.
  • Imagine how corrupt you must be when even EA sends someone to convince them that they’re legitimate
  • @ianbattles7290
    "The system is broken when the innocent suffer the same as the guilty."
  • @joenava5683
    I work in a law firm that only takes immigration cases and there is constant problems and confusion with U.S immigration laws and regulations, that shit happens all the time but there is always a solution. Sometimes its just a judge that doesn’t want to deal with the case or just does not give a shit. Usually a good lawyer or paralegal can find a solution
  • @kingwasabi1250
    9:44 never felt so afraid of Charlie. Holy moly that guy is turning to a super Saiyan soon.
  • @CloakAndDonuts
    When my husband and I had to sit down for his marriage green card interview (where a complete stranger decides if we actually love each other) the immigration interviewer told me flat out I must be lying because "No one is nervous when they come in here, so you must be lying" Really? Not one person was nervous about a complete stranger determining their entire future in this country?
  • @Jarfiller
    US Immigration denied my husbands green card application. We had gotten married a year prior, owned a shared bank account, lived together in the same apartment, had sufficient documentation of us being together; as well as had favorable expedited service since I am in the military. We spent 1.3 thousand dollars for the applications, waited 6 months; just to be denied all because “they looked suspicious”. Later down the line I made acquaintances with an individual who worked for USCIS who shared with me that he had denied applications before all because “they looked ugly and gross”. Lost all respect, there’s a reason that immigration lawyers are a thing.
  • @NickHunter
    To perform at a LAN like that after the ordeal they've been through is unreal
  • I used to work on foreign ships that would come into ports along Houston/Galveston/Corpus Christi, etc. Some of the immigration agents were super cool, didn't have an issue with us going on board to do maintenance while they were checking the crews' paperwork. Other ones would point at us before we could even ask if it's ok and scream at us to stay down here until they were done and had exited the ship. Other times they would come back on board and stop us and check our gear, which I am fine with, but what they would do is they want to see the circuit board we took off the ship and check it's serial number on the repair paperwork vs. the hardware want a full explanation of what we did on board what equipment we repaired, one time made us go back on board and open up the panels and show and explain what we did, the ships master wasn't going to allow this and that's where the Mexican standoff happened. The ship's owners in France were back the ship's master, and the immigration/customs guy was getting backing from his office, and we were sitting there for 6 hours before an immigration supervisor finally put a stop to this. When our company submitted the bill they refused to pay for us standing around on the dock, so our company paid us but they lost the extra 6 hours.