Regarding New 8 CFR 204.304--Improper Inducement Prohibited
This definition is very important to this regulation. If there is any type of improper
inducement to have a child released, or the adoption process bypassed, the
entirety of of this Classification will be made ineffective. Bypassing any part of the
process compromises the welfare of the child:
1) the prospective parents could have abusive or subversive intentions for the child;
their willingness to bribe an official would be demonstration that they had
significant underlying motives, and real impatience with a legitimate process
2) the sale of a birth parent of their child would create a retail-like situation on
human life, clearly a violation of human beings as property; in this kind of situation,
a birth parent may later change their mind, and, essentially, want their 'goods,'
i.e., their child, returned to them
Those who engage in these acts of inducement should be permanently banned
from adopting a child in the future, or processing adoptions.
Comment Submitted by Victoria D. Ristaino, Towson University
This is comment on Rule
Classification of Aliens as Children of United States Citizens Based on Intercountry Adoptions Under the Hague Convention
View Comment
Related Comments
View AllPublic Submission Posted: 10/12/2007 ID: USCIS-2007-0008-0005
Dec 03,2007 11:59 PM ET
Public Submission Posted: 10/12/2007 ID: USCIS-2007-0008-0006
Dec 03,2007 11:59 PM ET
Public Submission Posted: 10/12/2007 ID: USCIS-2007-0008-0008
Dec 03,2007 11:59 PM ET
Public Submission Posted: 11/27/2007 ID: USCIS-2007-0008-0009
Dec 03,2007 11:59 PM ET
Public Submission Posted: 11/29/2007 ID: USCIS-2007-0008-0010
Dec 03,2007 11:59 PM ET