A Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS) psychological evaluation documents the child's trauma history, emotional development, and functioning to support a state-court predicate order finding abuse, neglect, or abandonment by one or both parents under Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) section 101(a)(27)(J). California family, probate, and juvenile courts may issue the predicate order; United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) then adjudicates Form I-360. You must be under 21 and unmarried. The 2026 Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) decision in Matter of Pinzon Rozo, 29 I&N Dec. 507, governs continuance standards when the predicate order is still pending in state court.
A Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS) psychological evaluation translates a child's trauma history into clinical evidence that satisfies both state court judges and federal immigration adjudicators. For abused, neglected, or abandoned immigrant youth under 21, SIJS provides one of the clearest pathways to lawful permanent residency. But the legal framework is split across two forums: state courts make the predicate findings under state law, and United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) decides whether to grant the immigration benefit under federal law. A well-prepared psychological evaluation bridges that gap.
This guide covers everything attorneys and youth advocates need to know about SIJS evaluations in California. We walk through the federal legal framework, the three required court findings, California's specific procedures across family, probate, and juvenile courts, the clinical tools used for children and adolescents, age and timing requirements, the EB-4 visa backlog, and recent developments including the deferred action rescission litigation. And we cover how to work with a psychologist step by step. Here are the questions attorneys and families ask most often.
psych evaluations (PHR 2021)
evaluations
FY2020-2024
In this guide
- What is Special Immigrant Juvenile Status?
- What are the three required court findings?
- How does the California SIJS process work?
- What role does a psychological evaluation play in SIJS cases?
- What conditions qualify? Abuse, neglect, and abandonment
- What clinical tools are used for children and adolescents?
- What are the age and timing requirements?
- What is the EB-4 visa backlog and how does it affect SIJS youth?
- What happened with the SIJS deferred action rescission?
- Step by step: working with a psychologist on an SIJS case
- Real SIJS case examples
- Frequently asked questions
What is Special Immigrant Juvenile Status?
Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS) is a federal immigration classification under INA 101(a)(27)(J) that allows undocumented children who have been abused, neglected, or abandoned by one or both parents to apply for lawful permanent resident status. SIJS requires a state court order with three specific findings before USCIS will adjudicate the Form I-360 self-petition.
Special Immigrant Juvenile Status is a federal immigration classification that protects abused, neglected, or abandoned immigrant children. It was created by the Immigration Act of 1990 and codified at INA 101(a)(27)(J) (8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(27)(J)). Congress designed it as a child welfare remedy, not a traditional immigration benefit. The idea is straightforward: if a state court determines that a child has been abused, neglected, or abandoned by a parent, and it's not in your child's best interest to return to their home country, that child should have a path to stay in the United States legally.
The statute was originally narrow. It covered only children eligible for long-term foster care. But the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act (TVPRA) of 2008 changed everything. The TVPRA removed the long-term foster care requirement, expanded eligibility to children whose reunification with "one or both" parents is not viable, and added age-out protections so that turning 21 during processing wouldn't destroy the case. These changes opened SIJS to a much larger population of vulnerable youth.
Here's how SIJS works in practice. First, a state juvenile court issues an order with three specific findings about your child's welfare. Then your child files Form I-360 (Petition for Amerasian, Widow(er), or Special Immigrant) with USCIS to request SIJ classification. The form page on USCIS.gov has the current edition, the instructions PDF, and the filing-fee schedule. USCIS reviews the petition, exercises its "consent function," and either approves or denies it. If approved, your child becomes a "special immigrant" under the EB-4 visa category and can eventually apply for a green card through adjustment of status under INA 245(h).
The process involves two completely separate legal systems working in sequence. State courts apply state law to your child welfare questions. USCIS applies federal law to the immigration questions. What does the psychologist actually do in an SIJS case? The psychological evaluation sits at the intersection; it gives both forums the clinical evidence they need.
This is about your child, not the parents. SIJS exists because Congress decided that kids who've been abused, neglected, or abandoned shouldn't be deported back to the people who hurt them. It's a child welfare remedy. And to prevent misuse, federal law permanently bars the abusive or abandoning parent from ever getting immigration benefits through that child (INA 101(a)(27)(J)(iii)(II)). The parent who caused the harm can't profit from it.
What are the three required court findings?
All three findings are required for the petition. They may appear in one court order or across separate orders, but all must be documented before USCIS will adjudicate the I-360.
Before anything happens with immigration, you need a state court order first. Every SIJS case starts there. Before USCIS will even look at the I-360 petition, a state juvenile court must issue an order with three distinct findings. These findings form the legal foundation for everything that follows. If the order is missing any one of them, USCIS will deny the petition.
Finding 1: dependency or custody
The court must declare that your child is dependent on the court, or that your child has been legally committed to or placed under the custody of an agency, department, or individual appointed by a state or juvenile court. In California, this can take the form of a custody order in family court, a guardianship order in probate court, or a dependency or delinquency finding in juvenile court. The key is that a court has exercised jurisdiction over the child's care and custody.
Finding 2: reunification is not viable
The court must find that reunification with one or both of the child's parents is not viable due to abuse, neglect, abandonment, or a similar basis found under state law. The word "or" matters here. Thanks to the TVPRA, a child living safely with one parent can still qualify for SIJS based on what the other parent did. California appellate courts confirmed this in Eddie E. v. Superior Court (234 Cal.App.4th 319, 2015) and In re Israel O. (233 Cal.App.4th 279, 2015).
This is where psychological evaluations make the biggest difference. Courts need more than a bare allegation. They need clinical documentation that names the actual psychological harm from the abuse, neglect, or abandonment, and they need to know why a return to that parent would cause more damage.
Finding 3: best interest not to return
The court must determine that it's not in the child's best interest to be returned to their home country. This requires an ecological assessment: what would happen to this specific child if sent back? The psychologist's role is to document the child's current stability, their attachment to caregivers in the United States, the therapeutic progress they've made, and the real risk of retraumatization if they go back to the country where the harm happened. The evaluation also addresses the lack of mental health resources in many home countries.
Under California law, best interest factors are found in Family Code 3011, Probate Code 1514, and Welfare and Institutions Code 202. These include the child's health, safety, welfare, the nature of contact with parents, and the child's need for continuity and stability.
USCIS consent function: Even after the state court issues its order, USCIS must still "consent" to the SIJS classification. Under 8 CFR 204.11(b)(5), USCIS checks whether relief from parental maltreatment was "a primary reason" the court order was sought. Orders that merely recite statutory language without factual detail risk a Request for Evidence or a Notice of Intent to Deny. A detailed psychological evaluation builds the factual foundation that satisfies this consent requirement.
How does the California SIJS process work?
California has one of the most protective SIJS frameworks in the country. The foundation is Code of Civil Procedure 155, which was enacted by SB 873 in 2014 and most recently updated by AB 2224 in 2024 (effective January 1, 2025). This statute does several things that matter for practitioners.
CCP 155 confirms that California superior courts in the juvenile, probate, and family court divisions all have jurisdiction to make SIJS findings. It extends those findings to children up to age 21. It creates a mandatory duty: if the evidence supports the findings, the court "shall" issue the order. And it bars the court from weighing the child's motivation for an SIJS petition. That last point matters, because it means a judge can't deny the findings just because the case involves an immigration goal.
There are three separate court pathways, each with its own forms and procedures.
| Court Division | When to Use | SIJS Forms |
|---|---|---|
| Family Court | One parent seeks sole custody to protect the child from the other parent. Cases involving parental relationship, custody disputes, or domestic violence restraining orders. | FL-356 (Request), FL-357 (Order) |
| Probate Court | A non-parent (aunt, older sibling, family friend) seeks legal guardianship of your child. Also used for 18-to-20-year-olds under Probate Code 1510.1. | GC-220 (Petition), GC-224 (Order) |
| Juvenile Court | The state has already intervened due to abuse or neglect (dependency under WIC 300) or your child is in the delinquency system (WIC 602). | JV-356 (Request), JV-357 (Order) |
AB 900 and 18-to-20-year-olds
One of California's smartest legislative moves was AB 900 (2015), which added Probate Code 1510.1. This allows probate courts to appoint guardians for unmarried 18-to-20-year-olds with your child's consent, specifically for SIJS purposes. It also lets existing guardianships extend past 18. Without this law, many youth would age out of state court jurisdiction before filing the federal petition. AB 900 closes that gap.
Confidentiality protections
AB 899 (2015) added WIC 831, which makes juvenile case files strictly confidential regardless of immigration status. Federal officials, including ICE and CBP, cannot automatically access juvenile court records. They must petition the court for access. CCP 155(c) adds another layer: immigration status information in SIJS proceedings stays confidential and is available only to the court, the child, the parties, their attorneys, and the child's guardian. These protections matter because children won't come forward about abuse if they're afraid the information will be used against them.
Key California appellate decisions
Two California Supreme Court decisions shape current SIJS practice. Bianka M. v. Superior Court (5 Cal.5th 1004, 2018) eliminated two barriers: mandatory joinder of absent parents and the ability of judges to deny findings based on perceived immigration motivation. Guardianship of Saul H. (13 Cal.5th 827, 2022) broadened definitions of abandonment and neglect, held that parental intent to abandon is not required, clarified that poverty-caused harm doesn't preclude a finding, and established that denials of SIJS findings are appealable.
Practice point: Cite California state law (Family Code, WIC, Probate Code) as the basis for findings. Don't cite CCP 155 alone, and don't cite federal immigration law. USCIS may view an order based solely on CCP 155 as having been sought primarily for immigration purposes, which risks a consent function denial. The state court findings should rest on substantive California child welfare law. That's where clinical evidence changes the equation.
What role does a psychological evaluation play in SIJS cases?
A psychological evaluation for SIJS is a forensic assessment, not therapy. The psychologist isn't treating the child. They're answering specific questions for the court: what happened to this child, what is the psychological impact, and why does it matter for the legal findings? This distinction is fundamental. A treating therapist who also is the forensic evaluator creates an irreconcilable appearance of bias that can undermine the entire report.
The evaluation serves both forums in the SIJS process. In state court, it provides expert evidence supporting all three predicate findings. In the federal I-360 proceeding, it strengthens the factual basis for the court's order and shows the petition is bona fide.
What your evaluation documents
The core of the evaluation is a full clinical interview that reconstructs the child's developmental trajectory and trauma history. In the SIJS evaluation, the psychologist documents pre-trauma functioning, the specific traumatic events (the nature of the abuse, neglect, or abandonment in detail), and the psychological and behavioral symptoms that followed. Many immigrant children lack the vocabulary, developmental maturity, or emotional safety to describe severe trauma directly. So the psychologist watches for behavioral markers instead: restricted affect, hypervigilance, dissociation during the interview, somatic complaints, regression, or avoidance behaviors. These observable symptoms corroborate the trauma narrative even when verbal disclosure is limited.
The report then ties clinical findings to each legal element. On reunification, it explains why a return to the abusive or abandoning parent would cause more psychological harm. On best interest, it walks through the child's current stability, their attachment to caregivers here in the United States, their educational and therapeutic progress, and the clinical risks of removal.
Why evaluations matter more now
The USCIS consent function creates real risk for underdocumented cases. After the AAO's 2019 adopted decisions (including Matter of E-A-L-O- and Matter of A-O-C-), USCIS began looking more closely at whether state court orders had sufficient factual basis. The 2022 Final Rule (87 FR 13111) codified a somewhat more deferential standard, but USCIS adjudicators can still issue RFEs or NOIDs when orders lack factual detail. Practitioners should read the consent guidance directly in the USCIS Policy Manual Volume 6, Part J, which walks through the documentation USCIS expects and the questions adjudicators ask when an order looks thin. Aligning the evaluation report to that framework heads off the most common RFE triggers.
A well-done psychological evaluation is the single strongest tool against consent function challenges. It proves the state court stepped in for child welfare reasons, not as a workaround for immigration status. The evaluation builds the factual bedrock that proves two things: the child suffered real psychological damage, and the court order delivers actual therapeutic and protective relief.
And in immigration court, the stakes are even higher. The BIA's 2025 decision in Matter of Cahuec Tzalam (29 I&N Dec. 300) held that a mere I-360 receipt notice is not enough evidence of SIJS eligibility. Immigration judges want more documentation. A clinical report from a licensed psychologist carries real evidentiary weight.
What conditions qualify? Abuse, neglect, and abandonment under California law
Federal SIJS law doesn't define abuse, neglect, or abandonment. It defers to state law. So the definitions that matter in a California SIJS case come from the Family Code, Welfare and Institutions Code, Penal Code, and Probate Code. Each condition has distinct legal criteria and produces different psychological signatures that the evaluator must document.
Abuse
California defines abuse across multiple code sections. Family Code 6203(a) covers intentional or reckless bodily injury, sexual assault, or putting someone in reasonable fear of serious harm. WIC 300(a) covers serious nonaccidental physical harm to a child. WIC 300(d) covers sexual abuse. Penal Code 11165.3 covers willful cruelty or endangerment. And exposing a child to severe domestic violence can count as a failure to protect that meets the abuse or neglect threshold.
Clinically, abuse shows up as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms (intrusive re-experiencing, hyperarousal, avoidance, negative shifts in cognition and mood), complex PTSD (which also brings emotion dysregulation, negative self-concept, and relationship difficulties), depression, anxiety, dissociation, somatic complaints, and disorganized attachment. Physical abuse indicators include hypervigilance, flinching, and fear of physical contact. Sexual abuse indicators include age-inappropriate sexual knowledge and boundary violations.
Neglect
WIC 300(b)(1) covers failure or inability to adequately supervise or protect, provide medical treatment, or provide food, clothing, and shelter. Penal Code 11165.2 distinguishes "severe neglect" from "general neglect" and explicitly provides that a parent's economic disadvantage is not, by itself, a basis for a neglect finding.
Neglect produces a distinct clinical picture. Children who've been neglected often show attachment disorders (reactive attachment disorder or disinhibited social engagement disorder), developmental delays, cognitive deficits, emotional dysregulation, failure to thrive, low self-esteem, and parentification. Research shows that depression is more strongly associated with psychological neglect than with sexual abuse; that's a finding many judges don't expect.
Abandonment
Family Code 3402(a) defines abandonment as the act of leaving a child without provision for reasonable and necessary care or supervision. Family Code 7822(a) covers a parent who leaves a child with another person for six months to one year without support or communication, with intent to abandon. Failure to provide support is presumptive evidence of that intent. WIC 300(g) covers a child left without any provision for support, even when a parent is incarcerated or institutionalized. The California Supreme Court in Guardianship of Saul H. (2022) confirmed that parental intent to abandon is not required.
Abandonment produces abandonment depression (chronic emptiness and worthlessness), attachment disruption, rejection sensitivity, fear of further abandonment, complicated grief, identity disturbance, and trust difficulties. Some children become clingy; others become hyper-independent as a coping mechanism. The psychologist documents the timeline of parental contact and absence, assesses relational patterns, and uses attachment instruments to provide clinical evidence.
The most common SIJS fact pattern involves a father who left the family when the child was young, stopped sending financial support, and cut off all communication. The child then grew up in extreme poverty, was exposed to gang violence or domestic violence, and eventually came to the United States as an unaccompanied minor. The psychological evaluation documents both the original abandonment trauma and how poverty, violence, and a dangerous migration compounded the harm.
What clinical tools are used for children and adolescents?
Standardized psychological tests give the evaluation its empirical backbone. A clinical interview alone, without validated testing, is vulnerable to challenges about objectivity and scientific rigor. But SIJS evaluations present unique challenges: the child may be very young, may not speak English, and may come from a cultural background where Western psychological concepts don't map cleanly. The psychologist selects instruments based on three factors: the child's age, the specific allegations (physical abuse vs. neglect vs. abandonment), and the child's cultural and linguistic background.
Trauma-specific measures
| Instrument | Ages | Use in SIJS |
|---|---|---|
| Trauma Symptom Checklist for Children (TSCC) | 8-16 | Self-report measure of PTSD, anxiety, depression, anger, dissociation, and sexual concerns. Includes validity scales (underresponse and hyperresponse). Available in Spanish. The TSCC-A removes sexual content for sensitive cases. |
| Trauma Symptom Checklist for Young Children (TSCYC) | 3-12 | Caretaker-report with PTSD-specific scales (intrusion, avoidance, arousal). Essential for younger children who can't self-report. |
| UCLA PTSD Reaction Index (UCLA-RI-5) | School-age through 18 | Semi-structured interview plus parent version. The gold standard for complete PTSD assessment in children. Three parts: trauma history, Criterion A assessment, and symptom frequency. Available in Spanish. |
| Child PTSD Symptom Scale (CPSS-5) | 8-18 | Self-report (27 items) and interview versions. Cutoff score of 31 for probable PTSD. Freely available in Spanish. |
Depression and anxiety measures
| Instrument | Ages | Use in SIJS |
|---|---|---|
| Children's Depression Inventory (CDI-2) | 7-17 | 28 items measuring negative mood, negative self-esteem, ineffectiveness, and interpersonal problems. Official Spanish version available. Reliability coefficient of 0.91. |
| Screen for Child Anxiety Related Disorders (SCARED) | 8-18 | 41 items covering panic, generalized anxiety, separation anxiety, social phobia, and school phobia. Freely available and validated across multiple cultures. |
| Revised Children's Manifest Anxiety Scale (RCMAS-2) | 6-19 | 49 items in yes/no format with audio administration for limited-literacy youth. |
Broadband behavioral and specialized measures
The Behavior Assessment System for Children (BASC-3) captures both externalizing and internalizing problems across teacher, parent, and self-report forms (ages 2-25). It's available in English and Spanish. The Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) is a parent-report broadband measure for ages 1.5-18. And the Child Sexual Behavior Inventory (CSBI) is a caretaker-report tool for ages 2-12 that identifies atypical sexual behaviors when sexual abuse is suspected.
For cognitive assessment when language barriers are present, the Complete Test of Nonverbal Intelligence (CTONI-2) reduces linguistic load. The Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Questionnaire catalogs cumulative adversity, though evaluators should supplement it with migration-specific items because the standard ACE doesn't capture journey trauma or border-crossing experiences.
How age affects the evaluation approach
Young children (3-7): Assessment relies on caretaker-report instruments (TSCYC, CBCL, CSBI) and behavioral observation. Play-based techniques and story-stem methods provide narrative data. Children at this age show behavioral symptoms (regression, sleep disturbance, sexualized behavior) rather than verbal reports. Memory is susceptible to suggestion, and temporal sequencing is unreliable, but core traumatic event details may be retained.
Latency-age children (8-12): Self-report instruments become viable. Children can provide coherent narratives but may need simplified language. Loyalty conflicts with parents and shame about family circumstances are common. Multi-informant assessment, which pairs self-report with parent and teacher reports, produces the strongest clinical picture.
Adolescents (13-17): The full range of instruments is available. Identity formation gets complicated by immigration status. Parentification, risk-taking behavior, and minimization of abuse due to cultural or gender norms are common clinical presentations.
Transition-age youth (18-21): Both adolescent and adult measures apply. Assessment of independent functioning is important for the best-interest analysis. Time pressure from aging-out concerns means evaluation scheduling becomes urgent.
Cultural competence and interpreter protocols
Most standardized tests were normed on English-speaking Western populations. Evaluators must interpret scores cautiously and note these limitations. Cultural idioms of distress vary: ataque de nervios (a syndrome that involves uncontrollable crying, trembling, shouting, or dissociation after a stressful event) is recognized among certain Latino populations. Susto and nervios are other culturally recognized expressions of psychological distress. A culturally competent evaluator reads these as genuine manifestations of trauma, not as psychotic or histrionic symptoms.
When interpreters are needed, the evaluator must confirm the interpreter speaks the child's specific dialect. Many Central American youth speak indigenous languages (Mam, K'iche', Q'eqchi') and have only basic Spanish. The interpreter must provide verbatim translation without editorializing, summarizing, or softening the child's language. Evaluations conducted through interpretation typically require 1.5 to 2 times the standard session length. Best practice requires the psychologist to debrief with the interpreter afterward to capture cultural nuances and non-verbal cues that may have been missed.
The DSM-5 Cultural Formulation Interview framework gives evaluators a structured approach to explore how cultural context shapes the child's experience, expression, and interpretation of symptoms.
What are the age and timing requirements?
SIJS operates against an unforgiving biological clock. The youth must be under 21 and unmarried when the Form I-360 is filed with USCIS (8 CFR 204.11(b)). Marriage at any point during the process destroys eligibility. Once the petition is filed, the TVPRA's age-out protection kicks in: the child won't be denied based on age even if they turn 21 during adjudication, as long as filing happened before the 21st birthday.
But there's a gap between federal and state law. Federal law allows filing until 21. California family and probate courts generally lose jurisdiction when your child turns 18. Without intervention, an 18-year-old has no state court venue for the predicate order. California closed this gap with three provisions:
- CCP 155(a)(2) allows superior courts to make SIJS findings for youth up to age 21.
- Probate Code 1510.1 (AB 900) lets probate courts appoint guardians for unmarried 18-to-20-year-olds with your child's consent, specifically for SIJS.
- Existing guardianships can be extended past 18 for SIJS completion.
For practitioners, the timing calculus goes like this. Identify SIJS eligibility as early as possible. Begin the psychological evaluation 6 to 8 weeks before the critical court deadline. Secure the state court order. Attorneys generally file the I-360 immediately rather than waiting for a visa availability date, to lock in the age. USCIS even allows in-person filing at a field office within two weeks of the 21st birthday through an expedite appointment.
The Perez-Olano settlement (CV 05-3604, C.D. Cal.) further protects class members by preventing denial or revocation of SIJS petitions based on age if you were under 21 at filing. These principles were codified in the 2022 Final Rule at 8 CFR 204.11(c)(3)(ii).
Emergency filing: If a youth is about to turn 18 or 21, coordinate state court and immigration filings simultaneously. Some California courts will expedite SIJS hearings when the attorney explains the aging-out risk. Under CCP 155(b)(3), courts must provide a certified copy within three court days when expedited processing is requested.
What is the EB-4 visa backlog and how does it affect SIJS youth?
Approval of the I-360 petition doesn't give the child a green card. It classifies them as a "special immigrant" under the EB-4 (Employment-Based Fourth Preference) visa category. To actually become a lawful permanent resident, the child must apply for adjustment of status, and that requires an available visa number. This is where the system breaks down.
This is the hardest part for many families. The EB-4 category only gets about 7.1% of employment-based visas, somewhere between 9,940 and 11,431 annually. Per-country limits of 7% constrain availability further. Because the overwhelming majority of SIJS petitioners come from El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Mexico, these countries have been severely backlogged for years.
As of the March 2026 Visa Bulletin, the EB-4 Final Action Date stands at July 15, 2021 for most chargeability areas. That means a visa is only available to a petitioner whose I-360 was filed before July 2021. If a child files today, they're looking at a wait of about 3 to 5 or more years before a green card becomes available.
A shift happened in April 2023 when the Department of State stopped listing El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras separately under the EB-4 category. These countries now fall under "All Chargeability Areas." That change simplified the bulletin but didn't end the backlog. The March 2026 bulletin showed some forward movement, and USCIS requires employment-based applicants (EB-4 included) to check which chart applies each month because it varies. The Department of State has warned that retrogression may follow later in FY2026 if filing volumes surge.
new SIJS filers
the visa backlog
filed in FY2024
Between FY2020 and FY2024, USCIS approved 198,414 SIJS petitions. Over 70% of all petitions from FY2014 through 2024 came from Central American nationals. In FY2024 specifically, 92.5% originated from Northern Triangle countries. But here's the demographic shift: 52% of FY2024 petitioners were aged 18 to 20, and only about 11.7% were under 16. These are mostly young adults who've aged through the system, not young children.
The psychological toll of this backlog is real. Youth who've been legally recognized as abuse victims are stuck in limbo. They may lack work authorization. They're vulnerable when enforcement policies shift. And the chronic uncertainty compounds the trauma they've already lived through. The psychological evaluation often has to address two layers of harm: the past abuse, and the ongoing damage from years of legal limbo.
The good news: INA 245(h) provides SIJS youth with exemptions from several inadmissibility grounds that would otherwise block adjustment. Public charge, unlawful presence, entry without inspection, and documentation requirements don't apply. A discretionary waiver under 245(h)(2)(B) covers most remaining grounds for humanitarian purposes or family unity. So once a visa number becomes available, the path to a green card is relatively clear. The statutory definition of a "special immigrant" sits at 8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(27)(J), alongside the SIJS-specific definitional language and the parental immigration-benefit bar.
What happened with the SIJS deferred action rescission?
This is one of the most consequential policy developments for SIJS youth in the past decade. Understanding the timeline matters for every practitioner working these cases.
In March 2022, USCIS implemented a policy that automatically considered granting deferred action and work authorization to youth with approved I-360 petitions who couldn't adjust status because no visa number was available. This policy treated an approved SIJS petition as a "strong positive factor" in favor of granting deferred action. For the roughly 150,000 youth trapped in the EB-4 backlog, this was a lifeline: protection from deportation and the ability to work legally while waiting years for a green card.
On June 6, 2025, USCIS rescinded that policy via Policy Memo PA 2025-07 and pointed to Executive Order 14161 as the reason. Overnight, tens of thousands of vulnerable youth faced uncertainty about their future status (existing deferred action grants and EADs generally remained valid until expiration).
Litigation followed immediately. In A.C.R. et al. v. Noem, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York, plaintiffs secured a stay of the rescission on November 19, 2025. The court ordered USCIS to continue deferred action adjudications under the 2022 policy.
But a January 14, 2026 clarifying order created a split. The court ruled that USCIS must treat an approved SIJS petition as a "strong positive factor" only for youth whose petitions were approved during the narrow window between April 6, 2025, and June 6, 2025. For petitions approved after June 6, 2025, USCIS evaluates deferred action case by case without that favorable presumption.
As of early 2026, the case is on appeal to the Second Circuit. On February 9, 2026, the government informed the district court that USCIS "intends to revisit its deferred action program" within about 60 days, with the option to continue it, revise it, or end it entirely.
Other 2025-2026 policy developments
- $250 filing fee (effective July 22, 2025): A new fee for Form I-360 SIJS petitions, imposed through budget reconciliation. Previously, SIJS petitions had no filing fee.
- SIJS Integrity Report (July 24, 2025): USCIS published a report identifying 853 known or suspected gang members among 300,000+ petitions reviewed (FY2013 through February 2025). The report has been used to justify increased scrutiny across all SIJS cases.
- ICE enforcement against SIJS youth: Between January and December 2025, ICE detained 265 and deported 132 young people with SIJS. DHS terminated deferred action for 990 recipients. Families with SIJS children should review the ACLU Know Your Rights guide for immigrants and the related ICE at Your Door resource so the youth and their caregiver know exactly what to say if officers approach them at home, school, or work.
- BIA precedent decisions: Matter of Cahuec Tzalam (BIA 2025) and Matter of Pinzon Rozo (BIA March 2026) severely limit administrative closure and continuances for SIJS youth in removal proceedings with non-current priority dates. These decisions force immigration judges to keep cases on active dockets toward removal even when youth hold approved I-360 petitions.
The practical takeaway: SIJS cases face more scrutiny, more procedural barriers, and higher stakes than at any point in the past decade. Strong clinical evidence through psychological evaluations is not optional in this environment. It's the difference between a case that survives increased scrutiny and one that gets denied.
How do you work with a psychologist on an SIJS case step by step?
Working with a psychologist on an SIJS case starts with attorney intake, then moves to records collection, child or adolescent interviews, age-appropriate testing, and a forensic report tied to the state court findings. The psychologist documents abuse, neglect, or abandonment with validated tools and connects findings to trauma symptoms. The full process usually takes two to four weeks.
The most effective SIJS evaluations result from close coordination between attorney and psychologist. Here's how that process works in practice.
Step 1: Identify the need for evaluation early
Refer your child for a psychological evaluation as soon as SIJS eligibility is identified. Don't wait until the court hearing is imminent. A rushed evaluation is a weak evaluation. Aim for a referral 6 to 8 weeks before the critical court deadline to allow time for scheduling, sessions, report writing, and any needed revisions.
Step 2: Provide the evaluator with a complete referral packet
The psychologist needs context to conduct a useful evaluation. Send: birth certificates or age evidence, medical records that document injuries, school records that capture behavioral changes, Child Protective Services (CPS) or child welfare records, prior mental health treatment records, police reports (if any), the client's written declaration, court orders or draft pleadings (FL-356, GC-220, or JV-356), the attorney's description of the legal framework and the specific findings the evaluation report needs to support, and country condition information relevant to the best-interest analysis.
Step 3: Brief the evaluator on the legal strategy
Tell the psychologist which court division you're filing in (family, probate, or juvenile), which legal theories you're pursuing, and which parent(s) are the basis for the reunification finding. The evaluator doesn't make legal conclusions, but they need to know what legal elements their clinical findings should address. A report that documents PTSD but never ties it to a specific legal finding is clinically accurate but legally useless.
Step 4: The evaluation sessions
A typical SIJS evaluation involves two clinical sessions (45 to 90 minutes each, often separated by 7 to 10 days), followed by 2 to 3 weeks of report writing. Sessions with interpretation require 1.5 to 2 times standard length. The psychologist conducts a complete clinical interview, administers standardized testing, observes behavioral markers, and may speak with collateral contacts (the current caregiver, a teacher, or a therapist).
Step 5: The report
The final report typically runs 10 to 15 pages and follows a structured format: identifying information, referral context, evaluator qualifications, informed consent documentation, sources of information, background history (pre-migration, migration, post-migration), clinical interview findings, psychological testing results, mental status examination, diagnostic formulation with DSM-5-TR diagnoses, psycholegal analysis addressing each SIJS element, and conclusions with recommendations. The report avoids ultimate legal conclusions ("The father committed statutory abandonment") and instead presents clinical conclusions that support the legal elements ("Your child exhibits severe attachment disruptions and depressive symptoms directly linked to the father's cessation of contact and financial support, consistent with experiences of deep parental rejection").
Step 6: Submission to courts and USCIS
In California state court, the evaluation is submitted as an exhibit at the SIJS hearing or attached to the SIJS petition. In the I-360 filing, it goes in as supporting evidence. A single evaluation can serve both forums when it's properly drafted, but the attorney should discuss both standards with the evaluator beforehand. If the evaluation was conducted through an interpreter, include translator certification. When the attorney retains the evaluator directly, work-product privilege attaches and shields the evaluation materials.
What separates strong evaluations from weak ones: Strong evaluations pull from multiple data sources (clinical interview, standardized testing with validity scales, collateral contacts, records review). They connect clinical findings to legal elements in state law terminology. They hold forensic objectivity even as they document the impact of maltreatment. Weak evaluations rely on interview alone without testing, use advocacy language instead of clinical language, or pick instruments that don't fit the child's age or cultural background. The most damaging red flag of all is a treating therapist who also serves as the forensic evaluator.
What do real SIJS case examples look like?
Real SIJS case examples involve unaccompanied minors who fled abuse, severe neglect, or abandonment in their home country. Strong cases pair a state court order with the three required findings, a forensic psychological evaluation tied to those findings, and corroborating school, medical, or social service records. Weak cases lack documentation linking the abuse to current functioning.
Three composite SIJS cases drawn from California practice. Names and identifying details have been changed. The legal elements, predicate findings, EB-4 priority date status, and clinical instruments are accurate to what real cases require under INA 101(a)(27)(J) and the USCIS Policy Manual Volume 6, Part J.
Esteban, 16, Honduras, abandonment by both parents, predicate order from California probate court
Esteban traveled alone from San Pedro Sula at 13. His mother left him with a maternal grandmother when he was four and never returned; his father had migrated to the United States years earlier and cut off all financial support and contact when Esteban was nine. After his grandmother died, an aunt in Pomona, California filed for legal guardianship under California Probate Code 1510.1. The aunt's attorney referred Esteban for a psychological evaluation to support the SIJS predicate findings.
What the evaluation documented: a 4-session protocol with a Spanish-speaking interpreter, a Trauma Symptom Checklist for Children (TSCC) with significant elevations on anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic distress, and a clinical interview that mapped each concrete instance of parental absence onto the California Family Code definitions of abandonment. The report did not opine that the father had legally abandoned Esteban; it documented the absence of contact, the absence of financial support, and the developmental impact on Esteban's attachment and self-concept. Diagnostic Statistical Manual, Fifth Edition, Text Revision (DSM-5-TR) diagnoses included Persistent Depressive Disorder and Adjustment Disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood. Records review confirmed school records showing chronic absenteeism in Honduras and immigration custody intake notes from the Office of Refugee Resettlement.
Outcome: The probate court issued the predicate order with all three required SIJS findings. Form I-360 was approved by USCIS. Esteban remains in EB-4 backlog with a priority date of October 2024; he is using the SIJS Special Immigrant Juvenile classification to maintain lawful presence and is eligible to apply for employment authorization once deferred action is granted under the current policy.
Yuli, 14, Guatemala, neglect plus physical abuse, dependency court placement and predicate order
Yuli was placed in a Los Angeles County foster home after her uncle (her caregiver of record after entering the United States at age 12) was investigated by the Department of Children and Family Services for repeated physical discipline that left visible bruising and untreated medical neglect. She had also disclosed historical sexual abuse in Guatemala by a stepfather. The County Counsel and minor's counsel jointly referred her for a SIJS-focused psychological evaluation.
What the evaluation documented: the Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Checklist for the DSM-5 modified for children (PCL-5 child version) with a total score of 51, the Children's Depression Inventory, Second Edition (CDI-2) at the very elevated range with a T-score of 78, and the Trauma Symptom Checklist for Children showing clinical-range elevations across all primary scales. The clinical sessions, conducted in Spanish, surfaced disclosures consistent with Yuli's prior CPS records. The evaluator wrote a clear nexus that walked through California Welfare and Institutions Code 300 categories, mapping each documented event onto the dependency court findings. Records review included the Department of Children and Family Services case file, two pediatric medical exams, and school behavioral records. Diagnoses on the report were Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Major Depressive Disorder, and rule-out Attachment Disorder.
Outcome: The Los Angeles County dependency court sustained the WIC 300 petition and issued the predicate order. Form I-360 was approved. Yuli's EB-4 priority date placed her in a country backlog of approximately three years; her attorney filed for SIJS deferred action and employment authorization, and she remains in long-term foster care under the Title IV-E program while she ages into the EB-4 visa availability window.
Marcos, 17, El Salvador, predicate state court order pending and TVPRA age-out timing
Marcos turned 17 four months before retaining counsel. His prior caregiver, an older cousin, had recently re-migrated to El Salvador, leaving him without a stable adult in California. The attorney filed a Probate Code 1510.1 guardianship petition with a maternal aunt as proposed guardian, plus an SIJS-specific predicate order request under California Family Code FL-356 and FL-357. Because of Marcos's age, the attorney prioritized speed: the guardianship petition was filed within three weeks of the initial intake, and the psychological evaluation was scheduled in parallel rather than after the predicate order.
What the evaluation documented: a complete clinical interview in Spanish, the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) PTSD Reaction Index for children and adolescents at a clinical level cutoff, and a Roberts Apperception Test for Children (Roberts-2) showing elevated themes of loss, danger, and instability. The clinical formulation tied Marcos's presenting symptoms to specific events: the abandonment by his mother in 2018, the murder of an older brother in El Salvador in 2020, and the recent loss of his caregiver. The evaluator was explicit about what the report could and could not say: it could document clinical findings consistent with abuse and neglect, and it could provide developmental context. It could not make legal conclusions about reunification viability.
Outcome: The predicate order was issued by the California probate court approximately ten weeks after retainer. Form I-360 was filed two weeks before Marcos's 18th birthday, well inside the William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act (TVPRA) age-out protection window. USCIS issued an initial Request for Evidence (RFE) asking for additional documentation of the cousin's departure; the attorney responded with airline records and a sworn statement, and the I-360 was approved. Marcos is currently in the EB-4 backlog with a priority date in early 2026.
Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Immigration law is complex and changes frequently. Consult a licensed immigration attorney for guidance specific to your case. Dr. Julia Mantonya (PSY28494) provides psychological evaluations for immigration cases but does not provide legal advice.
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Request a ConsultationFrequently asked questions
Is a psychological evaluation required for SIJS?
No. Federal law doesn't require a psychological evaluation for SIJS cases. But evaluations are strongly recommended whenever abuse evidence is primarily testimonial, when emotional abuse or neglect is alleged, or when USCIS issues a Request for Evidence asking for additional factual support. Cases with professional evaluations are granted at 81.6% compared to 42.4% without them (Physicians for Human Rights, 2021).
What is the age limit for SIJS?
The youth must be under 21 and unmarried when the Form I-360 petition is filed with USCIS. Under the TVPRA age-out protection, turning 21 during processing doesn't disqualify the petition as long as filing happened before the birthday. In California, Probate Code 1510.1 allows guardianships for 18-to-20-year-olds specifically for SIJS purposes.
How long does the SIJS process take?
USCIS is supposed to decide I-360 petitions within 180 days, but actual processing often takes 6 to 12 months. After approval, the wait for a green card depends on EB-4 visa availability. As of early 2026, wait times run about 3 to 5 or more years depending on filing volume and country of origin.
Can a child qualify for SIJS if they live with one safe parent?
Yes. The TVPRA of 2008 changed the statute to require that reunification with "one or both" parents is not viable. California appellate courts confirmed this in Eddie E. v. Superior Court (2015) and In re Israel O. (2015). A child living safely with one parent can get SIJS based on abuse, neglect, or abandonment by the other parent.
What clinical tools are used in SIJS evaluations for children?
Common instruments include the Trauma Symptom Checklist for Children (TSCC) for ages 8 to 16, the UCLA PTSD Reaction Index for complete trauma assessment, the Children's Depression Inventory (CDI-2) for mood symptoms, and the BASC-3 for broadband behavioral assessment. For younger children ages 3 to 7, caretaker-report tools like the TSCYC and CBCL are standard. The psychologist selects instruments based on the child's age, presenting concerns, and cultural background.
How much does an SIJS psychological evaluation cost?
Fees vary by provider and complexity. Dr. Mantonya offers immigration psychological evaluations at flat-fee pricing with Spanish interpretation included at no extra cost. Contact the office for a specific quote for your SIJS case. Most evaluations are completed in 5 to 7 business days, with rush turnaround available.
What happened to SIJS deferred action?
USCIS rescinded its SIJS deferred action policy on June 6, 2025, removing work authorization and deportation protection for youth waiting in the EB-4 visa backlog. A federal court in A.C.R. v. Noem stayed the rescission on November 19, 2025, but a January 2026 ruling limited the strongest protections to petitions approved between April and June 2025. The case is on appeal to the Second Circuit as of early 2026.
Can SIJS evaluations be done through telehealth?
Yes. USCIS accepts telehealth evaluations, and the APA supports telepsychology for psychological assessment. Immigration courts have routinely accepted telehealth evaluation reports since 2020. Telehealth lets youth anywhere in California access a qualified evaluator without travel. Dr. Mantonya provides statewide telehealth evaluations.
Which California court handles SIJS cases?
California superior courts in three divisions can issue SIJS findings: family court (using Forms FL-356 and FL-357), probate court (Forms GC-220 and GC-224), and juvenile court (Forms JV-356 and JV-357). The right division depends on the underlying case. Family court handles custody disputes, probate court handles guardianships, and juvenile court handles dependency or delinquency matters.
Does a psychological evaluation help with the USCIS consent function?
Yes. USCIS must consent to SIJS classification by confirming the state court order was sought primarily for relief from maltreatment, not primarily for immigration benefits. A thorough psychological evaluation documents the genuine psychological harm caused by abuse, neglect, or abandonment, providing the factual foundation that satisfies this consent requirement and helps prevent Requests for Evidence or Notices of Intent to Deny.
Can a SIJS evaluation help with the predicate state court findings?
Yes. Before USCIS will consider Form I-360, the youth must obtain three predicate findings from a California superior court: (1) dependency on the court or appointment of a guardian or custodian, (2) reunification with one or both parents is not viable due to abuse, neglect, abandonment, or a similar basis under state law, and (3) it is not in the child's best interest to return to their country of nationality or last habitual residence. Judges making the (2) and (3) findings rely heavily on documentary evidence about the abuse and the child's psychological condition. A forensic evaluation provides admissible expert evidence of trauma symptoms (TSCC, UCLA PTSD-RI, CDI-2 scores), describes the cycle of harm at home, and gives the court a clinical record of why return would damage the child further. California Rules of Court emphasize that the court must make these findings on a sufficient evidentiary record. A complete evaluation gives the judge that record.
What's the difference between SIJS and asylum for unaccompanied minors?
SIJS and asylum protect different harms and use different legal frameworks. SIJS targets abuse, neglect, or abandonment by a parent and depends on a state court predicate order plus USCIS Form I-360 approval. Asylum under INA § 208 targets persecution by a government or a force the government cannot or will not control, on account of race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group, filed on Form I-589. Many unaccompanied children qualify for both and should pursue both in parallel because the bars and timelines differ: SIJS has no one-year filing deadline but is capped by the EB-4 visa backlog (3 to 5 plus years to a green card), while asylum has a one-year filing rule (with exceptions) and grants permanent status faster once approved. Asylum also opens derivative status for a spouse and children at filing, which SIJS does not. A psychological evaluation supports both: trauma documentation strengthens the SIJS predicate findings and the asylum nexus analysis at the same time.
Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal or clinical advice. No therapist-client relationship is established by reading this content. For legal advice specific to your case, consult with a licensed immigration attorney. For a professional psychological evaluation, contact Dr. Mantonya.