The USCIS Memo PM-602-0199 Was Designed to Look Powerful. It Does. Until You Read the Actual Statute. Then, What Remains Is an Agency Claiming Authority Congress Never Gave It
There is a particular kind of legal document more dangerous than an obviously bad one. It accurately cites real cases, quotes real statutes, and then builds from those real foundations a framework none of those sources actually support. It looks authoritative. It reads like settled law. It is designed to make the conclusion feel inevitable when the conclusion does not follow from the premises at all.
PM-602-0199 is that document.
This is not reassurance. It is a plain reading of a policy memo against the actual statute it claims to interpret. The gap between the two is constitutionally significant. And it is the basis on which this memo should be challenged in federal court.
The History They Are Counting On You Not Knowing
Before 1952 there was no Adjustment of Status. If you were inside the United States on a temporary visa and wanted to become a permanent resident the law gave you one option: leave, go home, apply at a US consulate, and wait. Then Congress passed the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 and deliberately changed that. They created Adjustment of Status specifically for people already present in the United States. This was a conscious decision by the branch of government the Constitution gives exclusive authority over immigration law.
In the seventy-four years since Congress expanded AOS, created protections for employment-based applicants under Section 245(k), created derivative rights for spouses and children under Section 203(d), and wrote exactly eight bars to adjustment in Section 245(c). They chose not to add a ninth. A policy memo issued in 2026 cannot undo seventy-four years of deliberate congressional design.
The False Foundation
The memo opens by invoking discretion. Accurate premise. AOS is discretionary. The statute says the Secretary may adjust status. Courts have called it an act of grace. All true.
Then the memo leaves that solid ground entirely and constructs conclusions the premise cannot support: a presumption against AOS, a requirement to justify choosing this pathway, a framework treating consular processing as the default.
None of that follows from the word may. None of it is in the statute. None of it was enacted by Congress.
Three Conditions. Nothing Else.
INA Section 245(a) establishes three conditions for adjustment. Inspected and admitted or paroled. Eligible for an immigrant visa. Visa immediately available. That is the complete list. Congress wrote three. The memo invented a fourth requiring applicants to justify why they chose AOS over consular processing. Congress did not write that. Agencies cannot add what Congress omitted. That is not a technicality. That is the Constitution.
The Most Dangerous Move
The memo notes accurately that nonimmigrant admissions are temporary. Then it constructs from that accurate observation an inference that because your admission was temporary seeking AOS is presumptively problematic.
This destroys the statute completely. Adjustment of Status was created specifically for people who arrived temporarily and want to stay permanently. That is the entire population it serves. Using the defining characteristic of that population as a presumptive adverse factor against them does not interpret the statute. It eliminates it.
What the Guidance Actually Says
Read the operative guidance carefully. It says officers are reminded to consider immigration violations, fraud, and conduct inconsistent with visa purpose in the totality of circumstances.
That is not new. That has always been the standard. The memo even uses the word reminded. You do not remind people of new things. That single word reveals the operative guidance changes nothing legally. What changed is the atmosphere in which existing standards are applied. That gap between atmospheric signal and operative directive is precisely the APA violation courts will recognize.
The Bottom Line
Strip away the legal language. Compare the memo to the statute. What remains is an agency that took two words from a 1952 statute, constructed a policy architecture those words do not authorize, ignored two directly relevant congressional protections, called new policy longstanding law to avoid procedural requirements, and used the defining characteristic of everyone Congress created AOS to serve as a presumptive strike against them.
The courts exist for exactly this moment. The challenge should be brought. And when it is, the gap between what this memo looks like and what the statute actually says will be impossible for any court applying the law faithfully to ignore.
Legal analysis for informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Consult qualified immigration counsel for your specific situation.