A Major EB-1A Court Win Brings New Hope for High-Skill Professionals Facing Long Green Card Delays
If you’re a highly skilled professional working in the U.S.—in software, AI, semiconductors, energy, data, or advanced engineering—you may feel like you’ve done everything right and yet your future still feels uncertain.
You’ve built real expertise.
You’ve contributed to innovation.
You’ve helped move technology, products, or systems forward.
And still, year after year, immigration delays keep your life in limbo.
A new federal court decision issued on January 28, 2026 brings an important—and very real—reason for renewed hope, especially for professionals stuck in long employment-based backlogs or facing discouraging EB-1A denials.
What Just Happened?
In Mukherji v. Miller, a federal judge ruled that USCIS improperly denied an EB-1A petition and went a step further than usual:
The court ordered USCIS to approve the petition.
This wasn’t a technical remand or a procedural reset. The judge found that USCIS relied on a “final merits determination” framework that was never lawfully adopted—and used it to deny an applicant who had already met the required EB-1A criteria.
That finding has serious implications for many professionals who were told:
“You meet the criteria, but you still don’t qualify.”
Why This Matters to So Many High-Skill Workers
Across industries—especially technology and innovation-driven fields—many professionals have faced the same frustration:
- ✦Strong credentials
- ✦Meaningful contributions
- ✦Peer recognition
- ✦Real-world impact
Yet USCIS often dismisses that evidence with vague language at the final stage.
In this case, USCIS acknowledged the applicant met more than the required number of EB-1A criteria, but denied anyway—arguing that her recognition was not sufficiently “sustained.”
The court rejected that reasoning.
The Judge Made Several Critical Points:
USCIS cannot invent new requirements beyond the statute and regulations
- ✦ There is no law requiring someone to remain permanently “at the top” of their field year after year
- ✦ Policy changes that affect eligibility must go through proper rulemaking
- ✦ Courts—not agencies—decide questions of law
And when USCIS fails to explain why strong evidence is supposedly insufficient, that decision can be overturned.
Why This Is Especially Meaningful Right Now
For professionals caught in long employment-based backlogs—many of whom have spent a decade or more on temporary visas—EB-1A often represents the only realistic path forward.
This ruling doesn’t promise automatic approval for everyone. But it does confirm something crucial:
The system is not closed. And denials are not always final.
When USCIS goes beyond the law or applies subjective standards inconsistently, federal courts can and do step in.
If Your EB-1A Was Denied—or Feels Out of Reach
You may want to take a closer look if your case involved:
- ✦Meeting 3 or more EB-1A criteria but still being denied
- ✦“Final merits” language that felt vague or moving-target
- ✦of technical, internal, or innovation-based contributions
- ✦Overemphasis on publicity rather than real-world impact
- ✦Claims that your recognition wasn’t “recent enough”
In the post-Chevron legal landscape, those denials are far more vulnerable than they used to be.
A Note on Hope (Without False Promises)
This decision doesn’t mean every high-skill professional qualifies for EB-1A.
It doesn’t mean litigation is right for everyone.
But it does mean that talented professionals are no longer powerless when the rules are misapplied.
For many people who had begun to lose hope—especially those who’ve built their careers, families, and futures here—this ruling is a reminder:
There is still a lawful path forward.
How Silmi Law Can Help
At Silmi Law, we work with accomplished professionals across fields including:
- ✦software and platform engineering
- ✦AI, data, and applied research
- ✦semiconductors and advanced hardware
- ✦energy, infrastructure, and systems innovation
- ✦cybersecurity, reliability, and large-scale technical leadership
We help clients assess:
- ✦whether EB-1A is viable
- ✦how to structure evidence effectively
- ✦and when challenging a denial in federal court makes strategic sense
If you’ve been waiting, discouraged, or told “no” without a clear explanation—now may be the right time to take a second look.
Schedule a consultation with Silmi Law
Your career didn’t stall. The system did—and courts are starting to correct that.