The EB-5 visa, employment-based fifth preference category or EB-5 Immigrant Investor Visa Program, created in 1990 by the Immigration Act of 1990, provides a method for eligible Immigrant Investors to become lawful permanent residents -- informally known as "green card" holders -- by investing at least $1,000,000 to finance a business in the United States that will employ at least 10 American workers." Most immigrant investors who use the EB-5 program invest in a targeted employment area (TEA) -- a rural area or area with high unemployment -- which lowers the investment threshold to $500,000. The EB-5 program is intended to encourage both "foreign investments and economic growth". The EB-5 Immigrant Investor Visa Program is one of five employment-based (EB) preference programs in the United States.
Applicants have the choice of investing individually or they can choose to work through a "larger investor pool via regional centers (RC)", which are federally approved third-party intermediaries that "connect foreign investors with developers in need of funding, and take a commission". Regional centers are usually private, for-profit businesses that are approved by the U. S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) which is part of the Department of Homeland Security. By May 1, 2017, there were 883 USCIS-approved regional centers and by 2014 the "vast majority" of EB-5 visas were "granted through regional center[s]". By 2015 the EB-5 program had become an "important source of capital for developers" and for the regional centers. If an EB-5 investment is made in a regional center, the jobs may be created indirectly through economic activity, as opposed to a direct investment, where the investment vehicle must directly employ the 10 U.S. workers.
Most investors -- about 80 percent -- come from four countries: China, South Korea, Taiwan and the United Kingdom. Others have come from Canada, India, Mexico, Iran, and Japan. In 2014 85% of the 10,692 EB-5 visas issued were for Chinese nationals according to a study by Savills Studley, a "real estate services firm". On May 5 President Trump approved a renewal of the EB-5 Visa program as part of the first major piece of legislation of his administration, Bill H.R.244, which extended the spending bill--and Immigrant Investor Visa Program--through September 30, 2017.
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Overview
The EB-5 visa provides a method of obtaining a green card for foreign nationals who invest in a "new commercial enterprise" in the United States. The EB-5 program "affords foreign nationals and their spouses and unmarried children under age 21 the ability to obtain a U.S. visa based solely upon a minimum investment in a for-profit enterprise that creates or retains a specified number of jobs". To obtain the visa, individuals must invest $1,000,000 (or at least $500,000 in a Targeted Employment Area - high unemployment or rural area), creating or preserving at least 10 jobs for U.S. workers excluding the investor and their immediate family.
If the foreign national investor's petition is approved, the investor and their dependents will be granted conditional permanent residence valid for two years. Within the 90-day period before the conditional permanent residence expires, the investor must submit evidence documenting that the full required investment has been made and that 10 jobs have been maintained, or 10 jobs have been created or will be created within a reasonable time period.
Commercial real estate projects result in job creation through construction work at first and eventually in the service industry for example in hotels, restaurants, resorts and/or stadium development. For that reason, many of the EB-5 visa investments "target commercial real estate".
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EB-5 investment projects
Hotel and multi-use developments financed with EB-5 investments include Hilton, Hyatt Hotels, Marriott's, Starwood's SLS Hotel & Casino.
In 2016 Forbes cited Hudson Yards, Manhattan as a "fine example" of one of the "very successful projects" resulting from EB-5 investments.
In southern California, EB-5 projects include Europa Village, in Temecula, the Hilton Garden Inn in El Monte, and the JW Marriott hotel at L.A. Live in downtown Los Angeles.
History
Congress created the employment-based fifth preference category (EB-5) visa program in 1990 to "create jobs for U.S. workers and to infuse new capital into the U.S. economy". At that time the program was directed towards "alien entrepreneurs" who would not only invest $1 million or $500,000 in a "new commercial enterprise" but would also "engage in the management of the new enterprise" creating ten full-time jobs for U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents. In order to make the program more investor-friendly, Congress enacted the 1993 Appropriations Act which amended the EB-5 program to create the "Pilot Immigration Program" -- the Immigrant Investor Pilot Program (IIPP). Under the IIPP, foreign nationals could invest in a pre-approved regional center, or "economic unit [referred to as regional centers], public or private, which is involved with the promotion of economic growth, including increased export sales, improved regional productivity, job creation, or increased domestic capital investment". Investments within a regional center provide foreign nationals the added benefit of allowing them to count jobs created both directly and indirectly for purposes of meeting 10-job creation requirement. This was intended to help potential investors to meet "the program's stringent requirements" through passive investment. With the IIPP, the EB-5 visa became an investors visa as opposed to an entrepreneur's visa.
In c.1995 former Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) officials formed a company called AIS that acted as intermediaries between INS and immigrant entrepreneurs in the EB-5 program. Whereas EB-5 required an investment of 500,000 AIS only required $125,000 cash with the rest -- $375,000 in the form of a promissory note. AIS claimed the promissory note would "be forgiven once the immigrant's permanent residency application was approved". The U.S. immigration agency, which was then known as the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), had interpreted the regulations regarding financial qualifications in a way that accepted this arrangement until c. 1998 when they were under investigation by the Government Accountability Office (GAO). There were allegations that the INS was giving preferential treatment to AIS in EB-5 matters. The INS (now USCIS) changed their "interpretation of regulations regarding financial qualifications" as a result of the probe. In 1997 and 1998 two owner-operators of Interbank, Herndon, Virginia had "filed 320 false [EB-5] applications on behalf of 270 EB-5 immigrant investors. The INS raided Interbank in August 1998. The EB-5 program was temporarily suspended. Although no one in AIS or INS were charged, in 2000 the two Interbank operators were arrested, then convicted and imprisoned on dozens of counts of "money-laundering and fraud" in the largest case of EB-5 fraud. INS District Director Warren A. Lewis said, "Visa fraud whether done on the streets by selling fraudulent cards or through an elaborate financial scheme is against the law and will be investigated and prosecuted." Hundreds of the immigrant investors "lured" to the United States had their permanent residency applications denied. Because of the INS investigation, the processing of 900 EB-5 cases was suspended, leaving immigrant families in limbo for years. When the GAO tabled their report in 2005 they concluded that immigrant investors were not utilizing the program because of the 900 EB-5 suspended files--some of which dated to 1995--as well as the "onerous application process" and "lengthy adjudication periods".
According to a Brookings Institution and Rockefeller Foundation 2014 report, starting in 2008 there was a renewed interest in the "under-utilized" EB-5 visa program as the number of "wealthy investors" and "ultra-wealthy individuals" in emerging markets abroad increased and the access to "traditional domestic financing" in the United States had decreased because of the Great Recession.
By 2010, foreign investors' use of the EB-5 program was far less than Congress had originally anticipated. In 2011, USCIS began making a number of changes to the program in hopes of increasing the number of applicants. By the end of the 2011 fiscal year, more than 3,800 EB-5 applications had been filed, compared to fewer than 800 applications in 2007.
Initially, under the first EB-5 program, the foreign investor was required to create an entirely new commercial enterprise; however, under the Pilot Program investments can be made directly in a job-generating commercial enterprise (new, or existing - "Troubled Business"), or into a regional center - a 3rd party-managed investment vehicle (private or public), which assumes the responsibility of creating the requisite jobs. Regional centers may charge an administration fee for managing the investor's investment and a "percentage of what they raise from the developers" which amounts to millions on large projects.
The program reached capacity for the first time in August 2014 when the State Department stopped issuing EB-5 visas until the beginning of the next fiscal year, October 2014. By 2014, the number of EB-5 visas granted had more than doubled since 2009.
Increased interest from Chinese millionaire families
According to the Savills Studley 2015 report, in 2011 out of a total of 3,463 EB-5 Visas granted, 2,408 of them -- representing 69.5% -- were from Chinese nationals. By 2014 out of a total of 10,692 EB-5 Visas granted, 9,128 of them -- representing 85.4% -- were from Chinese nationals. The authors of the report conclude that the "increase in the number of applicants to the EB-5 program has stemmed from an increase in interest from mainland Chinese". As China's economy flourished, there was an increase in the number of millionaire families in China. In 2012 there were 1.5 million, by 2013 there were 2.4 million which is more than the number of millionaire families in Japan.
Targeted Employment Areas
The original EB-5 law required investment in a Targeted Employment Area. This meant that the area for potential investment had to be either rural or have a "jobless rate" representing "150% of the national average". However, over time regions and states that wanted both the development and the employment, and developers became more skilled in "crafting" an acceptable targeted area (TEA)s, an "essential part of gaining USCIS approval". A June 2014 Fortune article claimed that, "after years of industry pressure, it's now USCIS policy to automatically accept any state designation of a TEA, even though states routinely approve gerrymandered districts that tack on distant high-unemployment tracts to allow EB-5 endeavors in wealthy areas".
By 2011 there were concerns raised about areas in New York that had been "strangely gerrymandered" in order that "relatively upscale and wealthy locations could qualify for TEA status" according to an article in The New York Times in 2011. A proposed China City program in that area received "pushback from locals against an EB-5-funded program" there.
Marriott EB-5-funded construction projects have been criticized for acquiring TEA status for wealthy and well-off regions including in Washington D.C., contradicting the original spirit of the TEA designation. In June 2014 when the $520 million-Marriott Marquis convention center hotel--D.C.'s new largest hotel--was officially opened on June 10, 2014 by Mayor Vince Gray, who announced Air China's maiden first direct flights between D.C. and Beijing. and hoped the Air China passengers would "stay in the Marriott Marquis". In a June 27 article Washington City Paper reported that it was "fitting" that Air China passengers stayed in the Marriott Marquis because they invested $5 million through the federal EB-5 visa program "earning green cards in the process". In the same article, other recent "major D.C. development projects using EB-5 funds" including Shaw's CityMarket at O development that "used $97 million of EB-5 funding" and earned "green cards for nearly 200 foreigners". A top priority of Mayor Gray's administration was to nurture a "stronger business relationship with China, the primary source of EB-5 funding in D.C. and nationally".
By 2014 the process by which an area could qualify for TEA status had eased considerably as reflected in the simplified description of the qualifying requirements published by the American Immigration Lawyers Association, "Each immigrant investor must create 10 US jobs with an investment of $500,000 or more".
If the location of the proposed new business is not a TEA, the investor has the option to gather the relevant publicly available state or federal statistics on their own and submit it with their petition for USCIS to have a new TEA determination made. In California, the investor may petition the state government for designating a particular subdivision of the area as an area of high unemployment (over 150% the national average); however, this designation is not made by USCIS.
There is no centralized list of targeted employment areas. California, Florida, and Washington maintain lists of TEAs. The Washington State Employment Security Department designates which areas have high unemployment rates (HUAS) that qualify for EB-5 visa.
Immigration restrictionists, such as Tea Party supporters, were critical of expansive definitions of targeted employment areas.
EB-5 Regional Centers
"The EB-5 Regional Center Program creates jobs and spurs capital investment in communities across the nation."
The 1993 Appropriations Act amended the EB-5 program to create the Immigrant Investor Pilot Program (IIPP), which allowed foreign nationals to invest in an economic unit called a regional center, or "economic unit" [referred to as regional centers]. RCs promote economic growth, "including increased export sales, improved regional productivity, job creation, or increased domestic capital investment". Private entities or states can apply to become regional centers. Investments within a regional center provide foreign nationals the added benefit of allowing them to count jobs created both directly and indirectly for purposes of meeting the 10-job creation requirement. The EB-5 Regional Center Pilot Program (RC) program, which was "enacted in 1993 for a period of five years", allows investors to "pool their investments into a larger project assembled by a regional center, for which indirect jobs may be counted". The five-year pilot program has been regularly reauthorized ever since. USCIS maintains a list of approved (but not necessarily endorsed or guaranteed) EB-5 regional centers by state, but without specific details.
RCs are USCIS-approved third-party entities, usually for-profit, private intermediaries, that "connect foreign investors with developers in need of funding, and take a commission". The RC approvals are decided by the U. S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) which is part of the Department of Homeland Security. By May 1, 2017 the USCIS 883 RCs were USCIS-approved. The USCIS -- the agency that administers the program, the regional centers and the immigrant investor form the three prongs of the regional center program interaction. The Brookings-Rockefeller report included the program's "missteps" that "illustrate the vulnerability of a system dependent on the relationships between USCIS, regional centers, and investors".
In 1994 the first two regional centers were established and by 2007 there were sixteen. As the banking crisis worsened and access to capital became difficult, the number of approved regional centers proliferated. At the end of FY 2007 there were only 11 USCIS-approved regional centers. In 2008 the RCs "nearly doubled" and their numbers mushroomed since then. By February 2, 2015, there were approximately 630 and by May 1, 2017, there were 883. Many of them operate in multiple states.
By 2015 the RC program had "generated billions of dollars in capital investment and created tens of thousands of jobs across the country". By 2015, RC applications represented over 95% of all EB-5 investments. EB-5 investors who use RC intermediaries are "free of the day-today active management of a business". but they lose on the rate of return. The Savills Studley 2015 report recommended that investors who are concerned about maximizing profits benefit from investing individually.
In June 2015 Senators Patrick Leahy (D-Vt) and Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) introduced legislation to "extend and significantly improve the job-creating immigrant investor visa program" and re-authorize the "EB-5 Regional Center program". Senator Leahy said that, since 2005, the EB-5 program had "create[d] jobs and provide[d] access to capital in communities in Vermont and throughout the country, all at no cost to American taxpayers". Senator Grassley added, "The EB-5 regional center program was created to benefit American communities through investment and job creation. In many instances the program has helped combat a stagnant economy."
Vermont's Regional Center has been a successful private-public partnership between the State of Vermont and an increasing number of Vermont businesses, bringing economic development and job growth to the state since 1997. Vermont's projects have drawn business and tourism to the state, fueling local economies and creating jobs.
EB-5 Funding has helped rebuild the Las Vegas economy. Las Vegas has seen a recent boom in using regional centers and EB-5 funding to build new casino projects. In 2013 the first EB-5 project the Downtown Grand was built followed by SLS formerly the Sahara Hotel. Additional new casino projects obtaining EB-5 funding on the Las Vegas Strip include the Lucky Dragon Hotel and Casino, Dynasty Hotel Casino, Clarion Hotel, and Resorts World Las Vegas. Foreign investors are also being solicited to invest in Las Vegas' SLS Hotel & Casino.
Major developers formed their own regional centers with the goal of soliciting EB-5 investments. Silverstein Properties, for example, has marketed their Downtown Manhattan The Four Seasons Restaurant as an "EB-5 investment opportunity" on their website. Other projects that have received EB-5 regional center funding include the Hudson Yards Redevelopment Project, the George Washington Bridge Bus Terminal, and the New York Wheel.
U.S. Immigration Fund (USIF)
The U.S. Immigration Fund is the parent company for three regional centers owned and operated by Nicholas Mastroianni II, who has been described as a "political booster" and lobbyist for the EB-5 system.
In 2010 Nicholas Mastroianni, II opened the first of his three EB-5 process regional centers. The three are now under the parent company, the U.S. Immigration Fund. As owner-operator of the Florida Regional Center, he sought investors the "$144-million mixed-use project" called Harbourside Place, in Jupiter, north of Palm Beach. By 2014 he was a "political booster" and lobbyist for the EB-5 system. According to his website, his company is involved in development projects worth $14.75 billion "funded with $3 billion in EB-5 money" resulting in the creation of 81,000 jobs. Projects funded by EB-5 visa program with Mastrioni's U.S. Immigration Fund hired to seek investors include HFZ Capital's 76 11th Avenue luxury residential building. Many of the investors--about 80% are Chinese--are more interested in obtaining a green card than actually getting a return on investments, so developers can borrow money at a low interest rate, sometimes as much a fifty percent less than market. In 2017, USIF began its partnership with the Chopras Group, the leading education firm in India, to expand the EB-5 Visa program to potential Indian Investors.
DC Regional Center
In 2008 David Morris, an entrepreneurial immigration lawyer with Visa Law Group and Angel Brunner, an economist and urban planner--formerly of the D.C.'s Neighborhood Development Company and the National Capital Revitalization Corporation--co-founded the DC Regional Center when they partnered on "their first big project, CityMarket at O". By 2014, Morris and Brunner dominated EB-5 projects in D.C. Brunner and Morris introduced EB-5 initiatives to the D.C. District government office administrator Adrian Fenty. Working through the DC Regional Center but separately, Morris and Brunner were the intermediaries for a number of major D.C.'s EB-5-funded development projects. Morris raised $65 million for the Hyatt Place hotel, $55 million in EB-5 funding for Skyland Town Center, representing "110 green cards for foreign investors". Brunner "brought more than $80 million in EB-5 capital to D.C." including a Hilton hotel project "with $39 million in EB-5 investments", and a large residential development near the Navy Yard.
Regulatory bodies
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
The investment remaining at risk throughout conditional residency is a fundamental program requirement, and the petitions of those investors who cannot provide evidence that they met this requirement will be denied.
USIF said the firm was "committed to strict adherence to securities and all applicable laws," The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) considers some "EB-5 offerings" to be securities covered under U.S. securities laws. "[C]ompanies and individuals that sell EB-5 investments cannot "defraud investors, make false claims or fail to mention relevant information". However, the SEC has limited ability to "bring fraud claims where the funds solicited and the investors are based overseas".
U. S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)
The U. S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) sets guidelines for EB-5 projects and monitors compliance with immigration rules. Under EB-5 visa guidelines, "investors must put their capital at risk and the green card is not guaranteed". The USCIS also evaluates approvals for regional centers.
SEC 2013 investor alert
In 2013, the U. S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued an investor alert to warn investors about an increase in fraudulent investment scams that exploit the EB-5 visa program. The SEC listed "warning signs of fraud" such as automatic, timely and/or guaranteed "[p]romises of a visa or permanent resident status" and established the SEC Whistleblower Program to offer a monetary award for "exposing EB-5 fraud". Under the SEC Whistleblower Program, individuals are eligible to receive a reward for providing the SEC with original information about securities fraud, including EB-5 fraud. If the SEC uses the individual's information to bring a successful enforcement action, he or she is eligible to receive 10% to 30% of the monetary sanctions collected as an award. A whistleblower's tip about a $147 million EB-5 scheme has already resulted in a $14.7 million SEC award. Since this SEC alert and inception of the SEC Whistleblower Program, the SEC has enforced actions against individuals and companies responsible for nearly $1 billion worth of fraudulent EB-5 projects.
EB-5 under scrutiny
For a twelve-month period in 2015 and 2016, the SEC successfully brought "enforcement actions against nearly $1 billion worth of EB-5 projects"--a majority of them against "individuals or companies that misuse investors' funds". On August 24, 2015 the SEC filed civil fraud charges against Lobsang Dargey for his misuse of the EB-5 Visa program by misappropriating about $136 million from Chinese investors through his Path America entity. The SEC received a settlement offer in January 2017 that "signaled "a possible resolution to the high-profile case".
By 2016 scrutiny of the EB-5 program had increased as "investigators uncovered numerous cases of fraud, discovered individuals with possible ties to Chinese and Iranian intelligence using fake documents and learned that international fugitives who have laundered money had infiltrated the program." In that year Senator Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa), a longtime critic of EB-5, described the program as one that had "long been riddled with corruption and national security vulnerabilities.
In March 2016 Taylor Johnson, a special agent with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, who had questioned the "vetting of individuals involved in a [EB-5] development project in Las Vegas" was fired. In response to her complaints, the Office of Special Counsel and the Department of Homeland Security's Office of the Inspector General undertook an investigation.
Vermont's EB-5 program was "burned" with the "massive eight-year fraudulent scheme" in which the owners of Jay Peak Ski Resort in Vermont misappropriated funds for a $350 million EB-5 project. It was the "most followed EB-5 fraud case" according to Forbes. Foreign investors lost their investments in "Jay Peak, Burke Mountain and related projects in the NEK".
Jay Peak was one of the original grandfather regional centers that was a very vocal proponent of the program. For this to happen, it's kind of a black eye.
In June 2015 Senators Patrick Leahy (D-Vt) and Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) introduced the "American Job Creation and Investment Promotion Reform Act" to "extend and significantly improve the job-creating immigrant investor visa program" and to "address fraud and national security concerns". In September 2016, House Judiciary Chairman Bob Goodlatte (R-VA) and Ranking Member John Conyers (D-MI) introduced legislation to "reform and reauthorize the EB-5 Regional Center program".
In February 2017 Senators Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) and Grassley, a critic of EB-5, introduced a bill in February 2017 to terminate the program. In a joint statement they claimed that, "The EB-5 program is inherently flawed. It says that U.S. citizenship is for sale. It is wrong to have a special pathway to citizenship for the wealthy while millions wait in line for visas." Grassley and Feinstein say that "there is no reliable or verifiable way to measure how many jobs are created" and that "many of the wealthiest parts of the country have been incorrectly labeled as "high unemployment."
In April 2017 the EB-5 visa "cash-for-residency scheme" was under investigation by the FBI with a specific focus on the California Investment Immigration Fund because of its "[alleg[ed] connection[s] to "abuses of the "controversial" program. The FBI raided a Los Angeles-area business in April, 2017 in which a father and daughter team were suspected of "orchestrating a $50 million" EB-5 visa fraud scheme.
Supporters of the foreign investor visa include Senator Chuck Schumer (D-New York), along with some in the Obama administration. They say that the program "delivered billions of dollars into the American economy: $8.7 billion and 35,140 jobs since October 12". According to federal auditors the numbers were "not valid and reliable".
They "have capitalized on a lucrative government program that critics say has little oversight and loose rules".
Kushner Companies May 2017 controversy
Starting on May 6, 2017, a number of major media outlets began raising concerns about ethical implications regarding the way in which the EB-5 program was promoted to potential Chinese investors by Kushner Companies in May 2017, considering Jared Kushner's pivotal and influential role in the Presidency of Donald Trump, his father-in-law. Chinese investors were shown a photo of Donald Trump in the marketing slide show to suggest the ease of getting a green card. The Independent headlined with "Trump and Kushner exploitation of presidency 'unlike anything we have ever seen before'.
Effects
A 2015 study found that EB-5 investor visa program boosted investment in the United States during the Great Recession of 2008 to 2012. The study found "that Chinese wealthy private business owners are mainly participants in EB-5 for acquiring a U.S. green card on behalf of their young adult children. The rate of return of the EB-5 program for investors is a low-priority item, less important than return of capital."
Source of the article : Wikipedia
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