Khamidova v. Blinken

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedSeptember 27, 2022
DocketCivil Action No. 2022-1990
StatusPublished

This text of Khamidova v. Blinken (Khamidova v. Blinken) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Khamidova v. Blinken, (D.D.C. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

NAFISA BABAMURADOVA, et al., Plaintiffs

v. Civil Action No. 22-1460 (JDB)

ANTONY J. BLINKEN, et al., Defendants.

ZULFIYA KHAMIDOVA, et al., Plaintiffs v. Civil Action No. 22-1990 (JDB)

LEONID FATIKOV, et al., Plaintiffs v. Civil Action No. 22-2428 (JDB)

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Plaintiffs Nafisa Babamuradova, Zulfiya Khamidova, and Leonid Fatikov, along with their

derivative family members, were selected to apply for a diversity visa in fiscal year (“FY”) 2022.

Although they were selected to submit an application and did so in a timely manner, plaintiffs have

not received an interview from the State Department, which is required to be considered for a

diversity visa. In September 2022, each plaintiff filed a motion for temporary restraining order

1 (“TRO”) seeking to compel the State Department to schedule a visa interview before the

September 30, 2022 end of fiscal year. For the reasons set forth below, the Court will deny

plaintiffs’ motions.

Background

I. Diversity Visa Program

Each fiscal year, the State Department allows citizens of certain underrepresented countries

to submit an entry to the Diversity Visa program. Diversity visas are made available under the

Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”) to promote immigration from countries that historically

have had lower rates of immigration to the United States. See 8 U.S.C. § 1153(c)(1). Congress

has capped the annual number of diversity visas at 55,000. Id. § 1151(a)(3), (e). A number of

those are reserved for use under a separate program (established by the Nicaraguan and Central

American Relief Act), so the State Department estimates that only 54,850 diversity visas will

actually be available this year. See Aug. 2021 Visa Bulletin [Babamuradova ECF No. 13-5] at 9.

The number of entries or applicants vastly exceeds the number of spots available. Of the

millions of entries, the Kentucky Consular Center (“KCC”) selects fewer than 150,000

applications each fiscal year and offers those people an opportunity to apply for a diversity visa.

See Aug. 2021 Visa Bulletin at 9 (noting that in FY 2022 “[a]pproximately 119,021 applicants”

out of over seven million entries were selected). KCC holds selected applicants’ cases “until those

selected are entitled to make a formal application for a visa at a U.S. consular office abroad.” 9

Foreign Affs. Manual (“FAM”) § 502.6-4(c)(1)(b). An applicant’s selection by KCC does not

guarantee that they will receive a visa, only that they will be given an opportunity to apply for one.

See P.K. v. Tillerson, 302 F. Supp. 3d 1, 3 (D.D.C. 2017).

KCC selects applicants using a random number system which generates “rank order

number[s]” broken down into six geographic regions. See 9 FAM § 502.6-4(c)(2)(a)–(b). “Within

2 each region, the first entry randomly selected will have a rank order number 00000001, the second

entry selected will be 00000002, etc.” Id. § 502.6-4(c)(2)(b).

Applicants who are selected by KCC “will be instructed to complete Form DS-260, Online

Application for Immigrant Visa and Alien Registration.” 9 FAM § 502.6-4(d)(1)(a). Once

applicants have submitted a DS-260, then “[o]rdinarily . . . the case will be ‘documentarily

qualified’ for purposes of visa appointment scheduling.” Id. § 502.6-4(d)(1)(b). Prior to

December 2021, applicants needed to have submitted the DS-260 and supporting documentation.

See id. § 502.6-4(d)(1)(b). However, updated guidance issued in December 2021 now provides

that “DV-2022 selectees no longer must submit to the KCC any other required supporting

documents for DV-2022 in order to be eligible to be scheduled for an in-person interview at an

embassy or consulate.” Diversity Visa 2022 Update [Babamuradova ECF No. 13-2] (“Dec. 9,

2021 Guidance”) at 1. Instead, applicants now must bring supporting documentation to their

interviews. Id. Under either documentation policy, the fact than an applicant is “documentarily

qualified” does not alone make him or her eligible to schedule an interview: the applicant’s

regional lottery rank number must also be “within the applicable rank cut-off for that month.” 9

FAM § 502.6-4(c)(2)(c).

Under a prior version of the FAM guidelines, KCC would “schedule an appointment for a

‘documentarily qualified’ applicant when their regional lottery rank number is about to become

current.” Archived Version of 9 FAM § 502.6 [Babamuradova ECF No. 13-3] (“Former FAM

Guidelines”) at 12. The current version of the guidelines, implemented in mid-February 2022,

states that KCC will “schedule an appointment for applicants that have completed processing at

KCC around the time their regional program rank number is current.” 9 FAM § 502.6-4(d)(2).

As the government describes it in a series of declarations, when an applicant’s documents

have been submitted and KCC has completed processing them, the case is “reported to the Visa

3 Office,” which “allocates a visa number,” which then makes the case eligible to be scheduled.

Decl. of Brenda Grewe [Babamuradova ECF No. 16-4] (“Babamuradova Grewe Decl. III”) ¶ 2.

At this point, the Office deems them at the “AV” stage and puts them in the “AV queue.” Id.

“When a post provides or updates its capacity and schedule for DV interview to KCC, KCC inputs

the capacity and schedule by post into [the Diversity Visa Information System (“DVIS”)], which

then fills those appointments with cases with consideration of the full case number (i.e., regional

rank order) and the date those cases moved into AV status.” Id. Hence, the schedule for interviews

is not solely dependent on the regional rank order assigned to an applicant. Within each region,

there are a number of posts, each with their own schedule and capacity. An applicant with a lower

regional rank number could nonetheless be scheduled for an interview after a higher-numbered

applicant if, say, the processing of their documents was completed later (either due to the

applicant’s delay or issues with the documents submitted) or if the post to which they are assigned

has more applicants or schedules interviews more slowly than a different post (even one within

the same region). See Decl. of Morgan Miles [Khamidova ECF No. 11-2] (“Khamidova Miles

Decl.”) ¶¶ 9–10 (describing the scheduling process).

There are many reasons why an applicant who was initially selected to apply for a diversity

visa may ultimately not receive one. Selectees are eligible to receive a visa only during the fiscal

year in which they were selected to apply—“consular officers may not issue diversity visas after

midnight on September 30” of the relevant fiscal year. Almaqrami v. Pompeo, 933 F.3d 774, 777

(D.C. Cir. 2019). Further, as described above, the number of diversity visas is statutorily capped

at 55,000, but far more applicants are selected to apply than there are spots. The State Department

could run out of time or spots, or it could determine that an individual applicant does not qualify

under immigration laws. Cf. 9 FAM § 502.6-4(d)(1)(b) (“KCC will . . . flag for consular officers

any apparent inconsistencies or potential fraud indicators.”). Regardless of the reason, when

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