Hassan v. Dillard

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Hassan v. Dillard

Trial Court Opinion

                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                             
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Samsam Abas Hassan,                       No. 24-cv-1351 (KMM/LIB)       

          Plaintiff,                                                     

v.                                                                       

ORDER

Marc C. Dillard, Deputy Chief of Mission,                                
U.S. Embassy in Kenya; Antony Blinken,                                   
Secretary of the U.S. Department of State;                               

          Defendants.                                                    


    Plaintiff Samsam Abas Hassan is a United States citizen who brings this suit to 
compel Defendants Marc C. Dillard and Antony Blinken to take action on and adjudicate 
her fiancé’s visa application so that the couple can be united in America. This matter is 
before the Court on Defendants’ motion to dismiss Ms. Hassan’s complaint for failure to 
state a claim pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). As discussed below, the 
motion is granted in part and denied in part.                             
                        BACKGROUND1                                      
    Plaintiff Samsam Abas Hassan is a U.S. citizen who resides in Saint Cloud, MN. 
Compl.  ¶ 10.  She  is  engaged  to  be  married  to  Abdikani  Bashier  Hussein.  Id.  ¶ 2. 
Ms. Hassan has brought this action against Marc Dillard, the Deputy Chief of Mission at 
the U.S. Embassy in Kenya, and Secretary of State Antony Blinken. Id. ¶ 11. Ms. Hassan 

1 Because this case is before the Court on a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, the 
following background is drawn from the Plaintiff’s complaint. For purposes of this Order, the 
Court treats the facts alleged in the complaint as true.                  
alleges that Defendants have unreasonably delayed adjudication of her fiancé’s properly-
filed I-129F visa application. Id. ¶ 1.                                   
    Ms. Hassan  hoped  Mr. Hussein  could  join  her  in  the  United  States.  Id.  ¶ 18. 

Ms. Hassan filed a visa application with the United States Citizenship and Immigration 
Services (“USCIS”) in July 2021 on Mr. Hussein’s behalf. Id. ¶¶ 2, 16. USCIS initially 
approved the petition in June 2022, but it remains pending. Id. ¶¶ 3, 17. 
    Mr. Hussein had a consular interview in March 2023 at the U.S. Embassy in Kenya. 
Id. ¶ 19. At the end of the interview, Mr. Hussein was not issued a visa; instead, his 

application was “refused” for further “administrative processing.” Id. ¶¶ 20–21. Since 
Mr. Hussein’s interview, both he and Ms. Hassan have inquired as to the status of the visa 
application, but they have received no meaningful response. Id. ¶ 22. They are unaware of 
what steps, if any, Defendants are taking to complete adjudication of Mr. Hussein’s visa 
application. Id.                                                          

    Ms. Hassan  alleges  that  she  and  Mr. Hassan  have  been  separated  since  2021, 
causing  them  both  personal,  financial,  and  emotional  hardship.  Id.  ¶ 6.  In  the  past, 
Ms. Hassan’s two-year-old son lived with her in the United States, but she has since 
decided  to  have  her  son  live  with  his  father  in  Nairobi  due  to  difficulties  she  has 
encountered paying for monthly costs of childcare. Id. ¶ 7. Ms. Hassan is also pregnant 

again, and she has experienced significant health complications with the pregnancy. Id. 
She would like to have her fiancé with her in America when the newborn arrives. Id. 
Ms. Hassan also had to abandon her pursuit of a master’s degree in political science and 
had to delay opening an ethnic grocery store in the United States because of the stress 
caused  by  the  separation  from  her  family  and  the  delay  in  adjudication  of  the  visa 
application. Id. ¶ 8. The family has incurred financial hardship because of the delay, 
including debt to Ms. Hassan’s sister for the cost Hassan incurred in travelling to Kenya to 

visit her family. In addition, the couple has had to postpone their wedding. Id. ¶ 9. 
    Ms. Hussein asserts three causes of action. First, Ms. Hussein asserts, pursuant to 
the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”), 
5 U.S.C. §§ 555
(b), 706(1), that the State 
Department has unreasonably delayed adjudication of the visa application. 
Id.
 ¶¶ 23–27. 
Second, she seeks relief under the Mandamus Act, 
28 U.S.C. § 1361
, and the All Writs 

Act, 
28 U.S.C. § 1651
, to compel Defendants to perform their nondiscretionary duty to 
finally adjudicate the visa petition. 
Id.
 ¶¶ 28–34. The Court will refer to these APA and 
mandamus claims collectively as the “unreasonable-delay claims.” Finally, Plaintiff argues 
that Defendants’ conduct violates her substantive and procedural due process rights under 
the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. 
Id.
 ¶¶  35–39.              

                          DISCUSSION                                     
    In their motion to dismiss, Defendants argue that the complaint fails to state a claim 
on which relief can be granted. Defendants argue that (1) Ms. Hassan’s due process claim 
fails under recent Supreme Court precedent; (2) the unreasonable-delay claim fails because 
Defendants do not owe Ms. Hassan a nondiscretionary duty; (3) the unreasonable-delay 

claim is barred by the doctrine of consular nonreviewability; and (4) the unreasonable-
delay claim is implausible.                                               
I.   Legal Standard                                                       
    On a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6), courts must 
accept the factual allegations in the complaint as true and draw all reasonable inferences in 

favor of the plaintiff. Carlsen v. GameStop, Inc., 
833 F.3d 903, 910
 (8th Cir. 2016). The 
court can only dismiss a complaint under this Rule where it determines that the plaintiff 
fails to allege a plausible claim. 
Id.
 A claim is plausible if the facts alleged permit “the 
reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.” 
Id.
 (quotation 
omitted). The court may consider only the allegations in the complaint, “materials that are 

necessarily embraced by the pleadings[,] and exhibits attached to the complaint.” 
Id. at 911
 
(quotation omitted).                                                      
II.  Analysis                                                             
 A. Due Process Claim                                                    
    In  her  Third  Cause  of  Action,  Ms. Hassan  alleges  that  Defendants’  delay  in 

adjudicating her fiancé’s visa application has deprived Ms. Hassan of her Fifth Amendment 
rights of substantive and procedural due process. Compl. ¶¶ 35–39; Pl.’s Opp’n 22–23 
(Doc. 17). The Fifth Amendment guarantees that “no person shall be . . . deprived of life, 
liberty, or property, without due process of law.” U.S. Const. amend. V. To state a due 
process claim, a plaintiff must allege a deprivation of a protected interest in life, liberty, or 

property by the government. See Kerry v. Din, 
576 U.S. 86
, 90 (2015) (explaining that, to 
prevail on a due process claim, the plaintiff must establish that she has a protected liberty 
interest  in  the  government  providing  an  adequate  explanation  for  her  spouse’s  visa 
application).                                                             
    Relying on the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Department of State v. Muñoz, 
602 U.S. 899
 (2024), Defendants argue that Ms. Hassan’s due process claim fails as a 
matter of law. In Muñoz, the plaintiff, a U.S. citizen, wished to unite with her spouse, a 

Salvadoran citizen, in America. 602 U.S. at 903. To that end, the couple took steps to obtain 
an immigrant visa for the plaintiff’s husband. Id. at 1818. After several interviews with a 
consular officer in San Salvador, the officer denied the husband’s application because he 
had tattoos that the officer believed signified membership with MS–13, an international 
gang. Id. at 904–905. The State Department did not provide such a detailed explanation to 

the  couple  when  it  informed  them  of  the  denial,  and  simply  cited  
8 U.S.C. § 1182
(a)(3)(A)(ii),  a  section  of  the  Immigration  and  Nationality  Act  (“INA”)  that 
prohibits noncitizens from entering the U.S. with the principal goal of engaging in unlawful 
activity. 
Id.
 at 905 (citing 
8 U.S.C. § 1182
(a)(3)(A)(ii)).               
    The plaintiff alleged that the State Department had “abridged [her] constitutional 

liberty interest in her husband’s visa application by failing to give a sufficient reason why 
[he]  is inadmissible”  under the  cited INA  provision. 
Id. at 906
;  see also 
id. at 909
 
(explaining that the plaintiff “argue[d] that the State Department abridged her fundamental 
right to live with her spouse in her country of citizenship—and that it did so without 
affording her the fair procedure guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment”). The Ninth Circuit 

Court of Appeals agreed that the plaintiff had a protected liberty interest in her husband’s 
visa application and held that the State Department failed to give the plaintiff a “facially 
legitimate and bona fide reason for denying her husband’s visa.” 
Id.
 at 906–907. The State 
Department petitioned for certiorari. 
Id. at 907
.                         
    The Muñoz Court observed that Ms. Muñoz had characterized her claim as one 
based on procedural due process and that she had a fundamental right “to reside with her 
noncitizen spouse in the United States.” 
Id. at 910
 (emphasis in original). The Court held 

“that a citizen does not have a fundamental liberty interest in her noncitizen spouse being 
admitted to the country.” 
Id. at 1821
. The Court further explained that if Ms. Muñoz had 
claimed that the denial of her husband’s visa “violated her substantive due process right to 
bring her noncitizen spouse to the United States,” such a claim “cannot succeed . . . because 
the asserted right is not a longstanding and deeply rooted tradition in this country.” 
Id. at 919
 (internal quotation marks omitted).                                   
    The impact of the Muñoz decision on Ms. Hassan’s due process claim is plain: for 
both the substantive and procedural due process claims, Muñoz precludes relief because 
Ms. Hassan cannot identify a liberty interest protected by the Fifth Amendment. Therefore, 
the Defendants’ motion to dismiss Ms. Hassan’s due process claim is granted. 

 B. Unreasonable Delay Claims                                            
    Defendants also seek to dismiss Ms. Hassan’s unreasonable-delay claims. Under the 
APA, an agency is required to conclude a matter presented to it “within a reasonable time” 
and authorizes courts to “compel agency action . . . unreasonably delayed” (
5 U.S.C. §§ 555
(b), 706(1)), so long as those actions are not “committed to agency discretion by 

law.” See 
5 U.S.C. § 701
(a)(2) (exempting from judicial review agency actions that are 
committed  to  agency  discretion  by  law).  Federal  district  courts  also  have  “original 
jurisdiction of any action in the nature of mandamus to compel an officer or employee of 
the United States or any agency thereof to perform a duty owed to the plaintiff.” 
28 U.S.C. § 1361
. A writ of mandamus may issue where “(1) the petitioner can establish a clear and 
indisputable right to the relief sought, (2) the defendant has a nondiscretionary duty to 
honor that right, and (3) the petitioner has no other adequate remedy.” Castillo v. Ridge, 

445 F.3d 1057
, 1060–61 (8th Cir. 2006).                                   
    In an unreasonable-delay case like this, APA and Mandamus Act analyses are 
considered coextensive, and courts discuss them together. Ali v. Frazier, 
575 F. Supp. 2d 1084, 1090
 (D. Minn. 2008). (“Because in immigration-delay cases like this one, the duty 
to be enforced by way of mandamus is a duty of timeliness established by the APA, there 

is little reason to consider mandamus claims separately from claims under the APA.”). 
    As indicated above, Defendants raise three grounds for dismissal of Plaintiff’s 
unreasonable-delay claims. First, they argue that, where a consular officer has interviewed 
Mr. Hussein  and  “refused”  his  visa  application,  the  Defendants  do  not  owe  any 
nondiscretionary duty to take further action. According to Defendants, placing the petition 

into “administrative processing” does not make the “refusal” of the visa following the 
consular interview a nonfinal agency action. In addition, they contend that § 555(b) of the 
APA does not impose any discrete duty to act with respect to the visa application in this 
case. Second, Defendants argue that Ms. Hassan’s claims are barred by the doctrine of 
consular  nonreviewability.  And  finally,  Defendants  argue  that  Plaintiff’s  claims  fail 

because she does not plausibly allege that the delay in this case is unreasonable. 
    1.   Nondiscretionary Duty                                           
    According to Defendants, neither the immigration laws nor the APA impose on 
them  a  nondiscretionary  obligation  to  take  any  further  action  on  Mr. Hussein’s  visa 
application. A brief discussion of the relevant immigration laws provides useful context 
for a discussion of Defendants’ position.                                 
    A noncitizen needs a visa to enter the United States. Muñoz, 602 U.S. at 903 (citing 

8 U.S.C. § 1181
(a)); Scialabba v. Cuellar De Osorio, 
573 U.S. 41
, 46 (2014) (citing 
8 U.S.C. § 1181
(a)). This case concerns the application for a K-1 fiancé visa for Mr. Hussein. 
As one court explained:                                                   
         [A] K-1 visa permits a foreign-citizen fiancé(e) to travel to the 
         United  States  and  marry  his  or  her  United-States-citizen 
         sponsor within 90 days of arrival. . . . After the wedding, the 
         foreign citizen can then apply for permanent-resident status. To 
         start  the  process,  the  United-States-citizen  sponsor  files  a 
         petition  with  United  States  Citizenship  and  Immigration   
         Services,  and  after  Citizenship  and  Immigration  Services  
         approves the petition, the petition goes to the Department of   
         State’s National Visa Center. The National Visa Center then     
         sends the petition to the appropriate embassy for a consular    
         officer to conduct a visa interview.                            

Wilkes v. Blinken, No. 4:21-CV-01148-SRC, 
2022 WL 1288402
, at *1 (E.D. Mo. Apr. 29, 
2022) (citations omitted). The noncitizen has the burden to establish eligibility for a visa, 
8 U.S.C. § 1361
, and the consular officer has discretion to grant or deny a visa, 
8 U.S.C. § 1201
(a)(1); 
22 C.F.R. §§ 42.71
, 42.81.                                  
    The consular officer either issues the visa or refuses to do so at the conclusion of 
the interview. The applicable regulation provides:                        
         When a visa application has been properly completed and         
         executed  before  a  consular  officer  in  accordance  with  the 
         provisions of the INA and the implementing regulations, the     
         consular officer must issue the visa, refuse the visa under INA 
         212(a) or 221(g) or other applicable law or, pursuant to an     
         outstanding order under INA 423(d), discontinue granting the    
         visa.                                                           
22 C.F.R. § 42.81
(a). However, “[i]f the ground of ineligibility may be overcome by the 
presentation of additional evidence and the applicant indicates an intention to submit such 
evidence,” the consulate will retain the documentation originally filed for a year, during 
which time the visa applicant can try to overcome the refusal. 
22 C.F.R. § 42.81
(b); 
id.
 
§ 42.81(e) (providing that a case shall be reconsidered if the applicant provides further 

evidence tending to overcome the ground of ineligibility within a year from the date of 
refusal).                                                                 
    Defendants’ position is that once a consular official refuses to issue a visa at the 
conclusion of a consular interview, which is what occurred after Mr. Hussein’s interview 
here, the agency has made a final decision. According to Defendants, the fact that the 

agency has placed the application in “administrative processing” does not change the fact 
that the applicant failed to meet their burden to show that a visa should issue. Because no 
further agency action is required by law, there is no nondiscretionary duty to further 
adjudicate the petition, and the Plaintiff’s claim that agency action has been unreasonably 
delayed fails as a matter of law. In support of this argument, Defendants rely on a recent 

decision from the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia—Karimova v. Abate, No. 
23-5178, 
2024 WL 3517852
 (D.C. Cir. July 24, 2024).                       
    In Karimova, the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia Circuit found a 
plaintiff failed to adequately state a claim that a consular officer had a duty to act where 
she did not receive a visa upon the completion of her consular interview. The plaintiff, 

Gulshana Karimova, an Azerbaijani citizen and resident, applied for a visa to enter the 
United States in October 2019, and she had an interview with a consular officer at the U.S. 
Embassy in Georgia in 2020. Karimova, 
2024 WL 3517852
, at *2. Following the interview, 
the consular “officer officially ‘refused’ her application,” and “then placed her application 

in ‘administrative processing in order to verify qualifications for her requested visa.’” 
Id.
 
(brackets omitted). A year later, Ms. Karimova filed a suit in federal court alleging that the 
consular officer unreasonably delayed adjudication of her visa application under the APA. 
Id.
 The district court granted the government’s motion to dismiss her APA claim, and on 
appeal, the D.C. Circuit affirmed the dismissal. 
Id.
 at *2–3. Essentially, the Karimova court 

reasoned that a federal court can only compel agency action under the APA where the 
agency is required by law to take some discrete action, and once the consular officer 
decided not to issue the visa at the conclusion of Ms. Karimova’s interview, the officer no 
longer owed her any duty. 
Id. at *2
, *3–6.                                
    Based on Karimova, Defendants ask the Court to draw the conclusion that if a visa 

applicant (like Mr. Hussein) has had a consular interview, and his application is “refused” 
for “administrative processing,” then there can be no claim for unreasonable delay under 
the APA because the State Department no longer has a legal obligation to adjudicate the 
petition. For several reasons, the Court will not reach that conclusion here. First, there is 
no Eighth Circuit precedent with the same holding as Karimova; nor does there appear to 

be any binding precedent adopting the Karimova court’s reasoning or its interpretation of 
§ 555(b). Instead, Karimova is an unpublished decision that does not control the outcome 
here, and this Court is not required to follow its holding or its reasoning. 
    Second, and more importantly, this Court is not persuaded on the record before it in 
this case that a consular officer’s purported “refusal” of a visa application operates as a 
final  agency  decision  that  concludes  the  agency’s  legal  obligation  to  adjudicate  the 

application when the officer places the application in administrative processing. The 
Karimova decision does not identify a statutory provision that plainly states a consular 
officer’s “refusal” at the conclusion of the interview concludes the agency’s obligation to 
finally adjudicate the decision. And although the State Department’s regulations state that 
a “consular officer must issue the visa, or refuse the visa,” 
22 C.F.R. § 42.81
, Defendant 

does not point to a regulation stating that such a “refusal” constitutes the final agency 
action. It appears that the Karimova court reached that conclusion based primarily on the 
provisions of the State Department’s Foreign Affairs Manual. See 
2024 WL 3517852
, at 
*1–2 & n.1 (citing provisions in the Manual).2 However, it is far from clear whether the 
Foreign Affairs Manual has any legally binding effect, and Karimova does not illustrate 

how the interpretation reflected in the Manual is consistent with the language of any Act 
of Congress. Cf. Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, 
144 S. Ct. 2244
 (2024) (overruling 
Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 
467 U.S. 837
 (1984) and 
emphasizing that courts are obligated to declare what the law is without deferring to 
agency’s interpretations of ambiguous laws).                              

    Moreover, even under the Karimova court’s description, the function served by the 
“administrative processing” limbo into which Mr. Hussein’s application has been placed 


2 9 Foreign Affairs Manual, Visas, https://fam.state.gov/Volumes/Details/09FAM. 
appears,  practically  speaking,  to  be  that  he  still  can  overcome  the  “refusal”  of  his 
application through the submission of additional information to the consular officer. See 
Karimova, 
2024 WL 3517852
, at *2 (citing 9 Foreign Affairs Manual § 306.2-2(A)(a)). 

Here, both the complaint and a declaration filed by Defendants indicate that the consular 
officer believed “additional security screening was required” and “additional screening is 
ongoing.” McNeil Decl. ¶¶ 7–8 (Doc. 13); Compl. ¶¶ 20–21. With respect to the Karimova 
court, this is the opposite of the agency having already “conclude[d] a matter presented to 
it.” 
5 U.S.C. § 555
(b). Simply describing the decision as final does not make it so. 

    This conclusion is further buttressed by the results of a case status review on the 
State Department’s website using Mr. Hussein’s Immigrant Visa Case Number. The result 
reveals that the agency lists his application as “Refused,” but it also states: 
         A U.S. consular officer has adjudicated and refused your visa   
         application. Please follow any instructions provided by the     
         consular officer. If you were informed by the consular officer  
         that your case was refused for administrative processing, your  
         case will remain refused while undergoing such processing.      
         You will receive another adjudication once such processing      
         is complete. Please be advised that the processing time varies  
         and that you will be contacted if additional information is     
         needed.  For  more   information,  please  visit                
         TRAVEL.STATE.GOV or the website for the Embassy or              
         Consulate at which you made your visa application.              
         For more information, please visit TRAVEL.STATE.GOV.            

U.S.  Dep’t  of  State,  Consular  Electronic  Application  Center,  Visa  Status  Check, 
https://ceac.state.gov/ceacstattracker/status.aspx  (emphasis  added).3  If  the  State 

3 With this link, an internet user who has the relevant visa case number can locate the State 
Department’s status update.                                               
Department informs an applicant that he “will receive another adjudication” when the 
administrative processing is complete, then the State Department is essentially taking the 
position  that  the  matter  submitted  to  the  agency  has  not  been  concluded  while 

administrative processing is ongoing. Ebrahimi v. Blinken, No. 23 C 3867, 
2024 WL 2020038
,  at  *5  (N.D.  Ill.  May  3,  2024)  (“As  other  courts  have  noted,  the  State 
Department’s use of ‘will’ in this communication all but guarantees the applicant another 
adjudication once administrative processing is complete.”) (cleaned up); Billoo v. Baran, 
No. 2:21-cv-05401-CBM-(JPRx), 
2022 WL 1841611
, at *4 (C.D. Cal. Mar. 18, 2022) 

(“Pursuant to the Department of State’s own statements and instructions on their website, 
the Court finds that these facts demonstrate that Mr. Ahmadzai has not received a final 
determination on his visa application.”).                                 
    Other courts have similarly concluded that when an application is in administrative 
processing, there has been no final decision, and the agency still has an obligation to 

adjudicate the application in a timely manner. See Jafarzadeh v. Blinken, No. 1:23-CV-
00770-KJM-CDB, 
2024 WL 3937417
, at *4 (E.D. Cal. Aug. 26, 2024) (declining to follow 
Karimova  as  inconsistent  with  prior  caselaw  and  rejecting  as  “unpersuasive”  the 
government’s argument that a final decision had been made despite ongoing administrative 
processing);  Sharifi  v.  Blinken,  No.  1:23-CV-5112-OEM,  
2024 WL 1798185
,  at  *3 

(E.D.N.Y.  Apr.  25,  2024)  (“Here,  in  refusing  Mahin’s  visa  application  for  further 
administrative processing under Section 221(g), consular officials have taken no final 
action: though nominally ‘refused,’ Mahin’s visa application remains under consideration 
in a state of administrative limbo that cannot fairly be described as a final determination.”); 
Farahani v. Laitinen, No. 1:23-CV-922, 
2024 WL 2785043
, at *4 (M.D.N.C. May 30, 
2024) (“Courts have held that refusals entered for administrative processing are not final, 
and thus that consular non-reviewability does not bar judicial review of unreasonable delay 

claims for such visa applications.”); see also Asresash B.T. v. Blinken, No. 22-cv-1300 
(WMW/JFD), 
2023 WL 2273158
, at *2 (D. Minn. Feb. 28, 2023) (noting that the doctrine 
of  consular  non-reviewability  only  prevents  courts  from  reviewing  final  visa 
determinations,  and  that  “[c]ases  in  administrative  processing  have  not  been  finally 
refused”); Osman v. Clinton, 
2012 WL 1060053
, at *2 (D. Minn. Mar. 29, 2012) (finding 

that the doctrine of consular nonreviewability barred judicial review of agency action on a 
visa application where, after the motion to dismiss was briefed, the State Department 
“concluded  the  administrative  processing  for  which  [plaintiff’s  visa  application  was 
originally refused”).                                                     
    Finally,  interpreting  a  refusal-for-administrative-processing  approach  as  the 

conclusion of the matter before the agency, when in fact it appears often to be just a step 
in the process has the potential to shield from judicial review unreasonable delays that are 
prohibited by the APA. If the approach in cases like this constitutes a final agency action, 
the State Department could, in effect, refuse every visa application as a matter of course, 
place them into the administrative processing queue, and then take far more time than is 

reasonable to adjudicate the petition. Nothing in the INA or the relevant implementing 
regulations suggests that Congress intended such a result.                
    2.   Consular Nonreviewability                                       
    Defendants  next  argue  that  the  doctrine  of  consular  nonreviewability  bars 
consideration of Ms. Hassan’s claims. Under the doctrine of consular nonreviewability, 

“Congress  may  delegate  to  executive  officials  the  discretionary  authority  to  admit 
noncitizens  immune  from  judicial  inquiry  or  interference.”  Muñoz,  602  U.S.  at  907 
(quotations omitted). When such a delegation has occurred, the executive officer’s decision 
whether to admit or exclude a noncitizen “is final and conclusive.” Id. (quotation omitted). 
Courts do not play a role in these decision except where “expressly authorized by law.” Id. 

at 908 (quotation omitted). Under this doctrine, “federal courts cannot review” a “consular 
officer’s denial of a visa.” Id.; see also Asresash B.T., 
2023 WL 2273158
, at *2 (D. Minn. 
Feb. 28, 2023) (discussing doctrine of consular nonreviewability). “[T]he doctrine of 
consular nonreviewability is not jurisdictional.” Muñoz, 144 at 1820 n.4. 
    Defendants argue that the consular doctrine of nonreviewability bars consideration 

of Plaintiff’s claims in this case because her claims ask the State Department to change its 
decision to refuse Mr. Hussein’s visa. They characterize her request for relief as asking the 
Court to “compel consular officers to revisit the ultimate question on the existing records, 
which a consular officer has already found to be inadequate to support issuing the visa.” 
Defs.’ Mem. 16 (Doc. 12). The Court disagrees. The doctrine of consular nonreviewability 

does not require the Court to find Ms. Hassan’s unreasonable-delay claims fail as a matter 
of  law.  Defendants’  argument  rests  on  the  flawed  premise  that  Mr. Hussein’s  visa 
application has been finally resolved and Ms. Hassan seeks to overturn that decision or 
have the Court order reconsideration of it. But the Court rejects that premise of finality—
the matter before the agency has not been concluded because the application remains in 
administrative processing and the State Department has indicated that the application is 
awaiting a final adjudication. Asresash B.T., 
2023 WL 2273158
, at *2 (“[T]he doctrine of 

consular non-reviewability precludes review only of ‘final visa determinations’ and ‘does 
not apply to challenges regarding decisions that are not yet final.’”) (quoting Sawareh v. 
U.S. Dep’t of State, No. 22-1456 (JEB), 
2022 WL 4365746
, at *3 (D.D.C. Sept. 21, 2022)). 
Ms. Hassan is not challenging the outcome, but only the delay.            
    Accordingly,  the  Defendants’  motion  to  dismiss  Plaintiff’s  unreasonable-delay 

claims based on the doctrine of consular reviewability is denied.         
    3.   Plausibility of Unreasonable Delay                              
    Finally, Defendants argue that on the face of the complaint, Plaintiff fails to state a 
claim of unreasonable delay. In evaluating whether an agency has unreasonably delayed 
making a final decision on a plaintiff’s application, courts frequently apply a multi-factor 

test  established  in  Telecommunications  Research  and  Action  Center  v.  Federal 
Communications Commission, 
750 F.2d 70
 (D.C. Cir. 1984) (“TRAC”). Defendants argue 
that Ms. Hassan fails to state a plausible unreasonable-delay claim based on application of 
the TRAC factors. The TRAC factors include:                               
         (1) the time agencies take to make decisions must be governed   
           by a rule of reason;                                          
         (2) where  Congress  has  provided  a  timetable  or  other     
           indication of the speed with which it expects the agency to   
           proceed in the enabling statute, that statutory scheme may    
           supply content for this rule of reason;                       
         (3) delays that might be reasonable in the sphere of economic   
           regulation  are  less  tolerable  when  human  health  and    
           welfare are at stake;                                         
         (4) the court should consider the effect of expediting delayed  
           action  on  agency  activities  of  a  higher  or  competing  
           priority;                                                     
         (5) the court should also consider the nature and extent of the 
           interests prejudiced by the delay; and                        
         (6) the court need not find any impropriety lurking behind      
           agency lassitude to hold that agency action is unreasonably   
           delayed.                                                      

TRAC, 
750 F.2d at 80
; Rambang v. Mayorkas, No. 11-cv-3454 (JRT/JJK), 
2012 WL 2449927
, at *5–6 (quoting TRAC, 
750 F.2d at 80
).                          
    Defendants argue that application of the  TRAC  factors to facts  alleged in the 
complaint demonstrates that any alleged delay in this case is not unreasonable as a matter 
of law. Defs.’ Mem. at 15–21. Having reviewed the complaint and the entire record in this 
case, the Court concludes that it cannot resolve the question of whether the delay alleged 
is unreasonable as a matter of law at the motion-to-dismiss stage. While it is true that some 
courts have found unreasonable-delay claims capable of resolution based on the TRAC 
factors on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, e.g., Oduor v. Blinken, No. 1:23-cv-00908, 
2024 WL 1406548
, at *3–5 (D.D.C. Mar. 29, 2024), here, the Court finds that the determination of 
the merits of the unreasonable-delay claim would be premature without the benefit of a 
more fully developed record.                                              
    As other courts have observed, “[r]esolution of a claim of unreasonable delay is 
ordinarily a complicated and nuanced task requiring consideration of the particular facts 
and circumstances before the court.” Barrios Garcia v. U.S. Dep’t of Homeland Sec., 
25 F.4th 430
, 451 (6th Cir. 2022) (quoting Mashpee Wampanoag Tribal Council, Inc. v. 
Norton, ,
336 F.3d 1094, 1100
 (D.C. Cir. 2003)). Here, Mr. Hussein’s interview took place 
in March 2023. Defendants point to no binding authority establishing that a delay of twenty 
months can never, as a matter of law, constitute unreasonable delay. And the Court cannot 
resolve, on this limited record, whether the twenty-month delay is attributable to a “rule of 

reason.” There is no information in the record about what principles, if any, Defendants 
apply  in  determining  how  quickly  or  slowly  to  adjudicate  a  visa  application  like 
Mr. Hussein’s. The Court also is not able to assess, on this record, how to balance the 
“nature and extent of the interests prejudiced by the delay,” or the “effect of expediting 
delayed action on agency activities of a higher or competing priority.” TRAC, 
750 F.2d at 80
. The final determination of such issues should await a more fully developed record. See 
Sawad v. Frazier, No. 07-cv-1721, 
2007 WL 2973833
, at *5 (D. Minn. Oct. 9, 2007) 
(“What  constitutes an unreasonable delay in the  context of immigration  applications 
depends to a great extent on the facts of a particular case.”) (quoting Yu v. Brown, 
36 F. Supp. 2d 922, 935
 (D.N.M. 1999)); Feng v. Beers, No. 2:13-cv-2396 (JAM/DAD), 
2014 WL 1028371
, at *8 (E.D. Cal. Mar. 14, 2014) (declining to dismiss based on application 
of TRAC factors at the motion to dismiss stage because the record was insufficiently 
developed); Rodriguez v. Nielsen, No. 16-cv-7092 (MKB), 
2018 WL 4783977
, at *21 
(E.D.N.Y. Sept. 30, 2018) (“The Court has insufficient information upon which to identify 
the source of delay, the agency’s allocation of its resources, and the extent to which 

Defendants may have participated in delaying the proceedings.”) (quotations omitted). 
    Accordingly,  Defendants’  motion  to  dismiss  Ms. Hassan’s  unreasonable-delay 
claim is denied to the extent it relies on application of the TRAC factors. 

ORDER

    For the reasons set forth above, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT Defendants’ 
Motion to Dismiss (Doc. 11) is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART as follows. 

Plaintiff’s due process claim in her Third Cause of Action is dismissed. The motion is 
otherwise denied.                                                         

Date: December 4, 2024          s/Katherine Menendez                     
                                Katherine Menendez                       
                                United States District Judge             

Trial Court Opinion

                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                             
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Samsam Abas Hassan,                       No. 24-cv-1351 (KMM/LIB)       

          Plaintiff,                                                     

v.                                                                       

ORDER

Marc C. Dillard, Deputy Chief of Mission,                                
U.S. Embassy in Kenya; Antony Blinken,                                   
Secretary of the U.S. Department of State;                               

          Defendants.                                                    


    Plaintiff Samsam Abas Hassan is a United States citizen who brings this suit to 
compel Defendants Marc C. Dillard and Antony Blinken to take action on and adjudicate 
her fiancé’s visa application so that the couple can be united in America. This matter is 
before the Court on Defendants’ motion to dismiss Ms. Hassan’s complaint for failure to 
state a claim pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). As discussed below, the 
motion is granted in part and denied in part.                             
                        BACKGROUND1                                      
    Plaintiff Samsam Abas Hassan is a U.S. citizen who resides in Saint Cloud, MN. 
Compl.  ¶ 10.  She  is  engaged  to  be  married  to  Abdikani  Bashier  Hussein.  Id.  ¶ 2. 
Ms. Hassan has brought this action against Marc Dillard, the Deputy Chief of Mission at 
the U.S. Embassy in Kenya, and Secretary of State Antony Blinken. Id. ¶ 11. Ms. Hassan 

1 Because this case is before the Court on a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, the 
following background is drawn from the Plaintiff’s complaint. For purposes of this Order, the 
Court treats the facts alleged in the complaint as true.                  
alleges that Defendants have unreasonably delayed adjudication of her fiancé’s properly-
filed I-129F visa application. Id. ¶ 1.                                   
    Ms. Hassan  hoped  Mr. Hussein  could  join  her  in  the  United  States.  Id.  ¶ 18. 

Ms. Hassan filed a visa application with the United States Citizenship and Immigration 
Services (“USCIS”) in July 2021 on Mr. Hussein’s behalf. Id. ¶¶ 2, 16. USCIS initially 
approved the petition in June 2022, but it remains pending. Id. ¶¶ 3, 17. 
    Mr. Hussein had a consular interview in March 2023 at the U.S. Embassy in Kenya. 
Id. ¶ 19. At the end of the interview, Mr. Hussein was not issued a visa; instead, his 

application was “refused” for further “administrative processing.” Id. ¶¶ 20–21. Since 
Mr. Hussein’s interview, both he and Ms. Hassan have inquired as to the status of the visa 
application, but they have received no meaningful response. Id. ¶ 22. They are unaware of 
what steps, if any, Defendants are taking to complete adjudication of Mr. Hussein’s visa 
application. Id.                                                          

    Ms. Hassan  alleges  that  she  and  Mr. Hassan  have  been  separated  since  2021, 
causing  them  both  personal,  financial,  and  emotional  hardship.  Id.  ¶ 6.  In  the  past, 
Ms. Hassan’s two-year-old son lived with her in the United States, but she has since 
decided  to  have  her  son  live  with  his  father  in  Nairobi  due  to  difficulties  she  has 
encountered paying for monthly costs of childcare. Id. ¶ 7. Ms. Hassan is also pregnant 

again, and she has experienced significant health complications with the pregnancy. Id. 
She would like to have her fiancé with her in America when the newborn arrives. Id. 
Ms. Hassan also had to abandon her pursuit of a master’s degree in political science and 
had to delay opening an ethnic grocery store in the United States because of the stress 
caused  by  the  separation  from  her  family  and  the  delay  in  adjudication  of  the  visa 
application. Id. ¶ 8. The family has incurred financial hardship because of the delay, 
including debt to Ms. Hassan’s sister for the cost Hassan incurred in travelling to Kenya to 

visit her family. In addition, the couple has had to postpone their wedding. Id. ¶ 9. 
    Ms. Hussein asserts three causes of action. First, Ms. Hussein asserts, pursuant to 
the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”), 
5 U.S.C. §§ 555
(b), 706(1), that the State 
Department has unreasonably delayed adjudication of the visa application. 
Id.
 ¶¶ 23–27. 
Second, she seeks relief under the Mandamus Act, 
28 U.S.C. § 1361
, and the All Writs 

Act, 
28 U.S.C. § 1651
, to compel Defendants to perform their nondiscretionary duty to 
finally adjudicate the visa petition. 
Id.
 ¶¶ 28–34. The Court will refer to these APA and 
mandamus claims collectively as the “unreasonable-delay claims.” Finally, Plaintiff argues 
that Defendants’ conduct violates her substantive and procedural due process rights under 
the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. 
Id.
 ¶¶  35–39.              

                          DISCUSSION                                     
    In their motion to dismiss, Defendants argue that the complaint fails to state a claim 
on which relief can be granted. Defendants argue that (1) Ms. Hassan’s due process claim 
fails under recent Supreme Court precedent; (2) the unreasonable-delay claim fails because 
Defendants do not owe Ms. Hassan a nondiscretionary duty; (3) the unreasonable-delay 

claim is barred by the doctrine of consular nonreviewability; and (4) the unreasonable-
delay claim is implausible.                                               
I.   Legal Standard                                                       
    On a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6), courts must 
accept the factual allegations in the complaint as true and draw all reasonable inferences in 

favor of the plaintiff. Carlsen v. GameStop, Inc., 
833 F.3d 903, 910
 (8th Cir. 2016). The 
court can only dismiss a complaint under this Rule where it determines that the plaintiff 
fails to allege a plausible claim. 
Id.
 A claim is plausible if the facts alleged permit “the 
reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.” 
Id.
 (quotation 
omitted). The court may consider only the allegations in the complaint, “materials that are 

necessarily embraced by the pleadings[,] and exhibits attached to the complaint.” 
Id. at 911
 
(quotation omitted).                                                      
II.  Analysis                                                             
 A. Due Process Claim                                                    
    In  her  Third  Cause  of  Action,  Ms. Hassan  alleges  that  Defendants’  delay  in 

adjudicating her fiancé’s visa application has deprived Ms. Hassan of her Fifth Amendment 
rights of substantive and procedural due process. Compl. ¶¶ 35–39; Pl.’s Opp’n 22–23 
(Doc. 17). The Fifth Amendment guarantees that “no person shall be . . . deprived of life, 
liberty, or property, without due process of law.” U.S. Const. amend. V. To state a due 
process claim, a plaintiff must allege a deprivation of a protected interest in life, liberty, or 

property by the government. See Kerry v. Din, 
576 U.S. 86
, 90 (2015) (explaining that, to 
prevail on a due process claim, the plaintiff must establish that she has a protected liberty 
interest  in  the  government  providing  an  adequate  explanation  for  her  spouse’s  visa 
application).                                                             
    Relying on the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Department of State v. Muñoz, 
602 U.S. 899
 (2024), Defendants argue that Ms. Hassan’s due process claim fails as a 
matter of law. In Muñoz, the plaintiff, a U.S. citizen, wished to unite with her spouse, a 

Salvadoran citizen, in America. 602 U.S. at 903. To that end, the couple took steps to obtain 
an immigrant visa for the plaintiff’s husband. Id. at 1818. After several interviews with a 
consular officer in San Salvador, the officer denied the husband’s application because he 
had tattoos that the officer believed signified membership with MS–13, an international 
gang. Id. at 904–905. The State Department did not provide such a detailed explanation to 

the  couple  when  it  informed  them  of  the  denial,  and  simply  cited  
8 U.S.C. § 1182
(a)(3)(A)(ii),  a  section  of  the  Immigration  and  Nationality  Act  (“INA”)  that 
prohibits noncitizens from entering the U.S. with the principal goal of engaging in unlawful 
activity. 
Id.
 at 905 (citing 
8 U.S.C. § 1182
(a)(3)(A)(ii)).               
    The plaintiff alleged that the State Department had “abridged [her] constitutional 

liberty interest in her husband’s visa application by failing to give a sufficient reason why 
[he]  is inadmissible”  under the  cited INA  provision. 
Id. at 906
;  see also 
id. at 909
 
(explaining that the plaintiff “argue[d] that the State Department abridged her fundamental 
right to live with her spouse in her country of citizenship—and that it did so without 
affording her the fair procedure guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment”). The Ninth Circuit 

Court of Appeals agreed that the plaintiff had a protected liberty interest in her husband’s 
visa application and held that the State Department failed to give the plaintiff a “facially 
legitimate and bona fide reason for denying her husband’s visa.” 
Id.
 at 906–907. The State 
Department petitioned for certiorari. 
Id. at 907
.                         
    The Muñoz Court observed that Ms. Muñoz had characterized her claim as one 
based on procedural due process and that she had a fundamental right “to reside with her 
noncitizen spouse in the United States.” 
Id. at 910
 (emphasis in original). The Court held 

“that a citizen does not have a fundamental liberty interest in her noncitizen spouse being 
admitted to the country.” 
Id. at 1821
. The Court further explained that if Ms. Muñoz had 
claimed that the denial of her husband’s visa “violated her substantive due process right to 
bring her noncitizen spouse to the United States,” such a claim “cannot succeed . . . because 
the asserted right is not a longstanding and deeply rooted tradition in this country.” 
Id. at 919
 (internal quotation marks omitted).                                   
    The impact of the Muñoz decision on Ms. Hassan’s due process claim is plain: for 
both the substantive and procedural due process claims, Muñoz precludes relief because 
Ms. Hassan cannot identify a liberty interest protected by the Fifth Amendment. Therefore, 
the Defendants’ motion to dismiss Ms. Hassan’s due process claim is granted. 

 B. Unreasonable Delay Claims                                            
    Defendants also seek to dismiss Ms. Hassan’s unreasonable-delay claims. Under the 
APA, an agency is required to conclude a matter presented to it “within a reasonable time” 
and authorizes courts to “compel agency action . . . unreasonably delayed” (
5 U.S.C. §§ 555
(b), 706(1)), so long as those actions are not “committed to agency discretion by 

law.” See 
5 U.S.C. § 701
(a)(2) (exempting from judicial review agency actions that are 
committed  to  agency  discretion  by  law).  Federal  district  courts  also  have  “original 
jurisdiction of any action in the nature of mandamus to compel an officer or employee of 
the United States or any agency thereof to perform a duty owed to the plaintiff.” 
28 U.S.C. § 1361
. A writ of mandamus may issue where “(1) the petitioner can establish a clear and 
indisputable right to the relief sought, (2) the defendant has a nondiscretionary duty to 
honor that right, and (3) the petitioner has no other adequate remedy.” Castillo v. Ridge, 

445 F.3d 1057
, 1060–61 (8th Cir. 2006).                                   
    In an unreasonable-delay case like this, APA and Mandamus Act analyses are 
considered coextensive, and courts discuss them together. Ali v. Frazier, 
575 F. Supp. 2d 1084, 1090
 (D. Minn. 2008). (“Because in immigration-delay cases like this one, the duty 
to be enforced by way of mandamus is a duty of timeliness established by the APA, there 

is little reason to consider mandamus claims separately from claims under the APA.”). 
    As indicated above, Defendants raise three grounds for dismissal of Plaintiff’s 
unreasonable-delay claims. First, they argue that, where a consular officer has interviewed 
Mr. Hussein  and  “refused”  his  visa  application,  the  Defendants  do  not  owe  any 
nondiscretionary duty to take further action. According to Defendants, placing the petition 

into “administrative processing” does not make the “refusal” of the visa following the 
consular interview a nonfinal agency action. In addition, they contend that § 555(b) of the 
APA does not impose any discrete duty to act with respect to the visa application in this 
case. Second, Defendants argue that Ms. Hassan’s claims are barred by the doctrine of 
consular  nonreviewability.  And  finally,  Defendants  argue  that  Plaintiff’s  claims  fail 

because she does not plausibly allege that the delay in this case is unreasonable. 
    1.   Nondiscretionary Duty                                           
    According to Defendants, neither the immigration laws nor the APA impose on 
them  a  nondiscretionary  obligation  to  take  any  further  action  on  Mr. Hussein’s  visa 
application. A brief discussion of the relevant immigration laws provides useful context 
for a discussion of Defendants’ position.                                 
    A noncitizen needs a visa to enter the United States. Muñoz, 602 U.S. at 903 (citing 

8 U.S.C. § 1181
(a)); Scialabba v. Cuellar De Osorio, 
573 U.S. 41
, 46 (2014) (citing 
8 U.S.C. § 1181
(a)). This case concerns the application for a K-1 fiancé visa for Mr. Hussein. 
As one court explained:                                                   
         [A] K-1 visa permits a foreign-citizen fiancé(e) to travel to the 
         United  States  and  marry  his  or  her  United-States-citizen 
         sponsor within 90 days of arrival. . . . After the wedding, the 
         foreign citizen can then apply for permanent-resident status. To 
         start  the  process,  the  United-States-citizen  sponsor  files  a 
         petition  with  United  States  Citizenship  and  Immigration   
         Services,  and  after  Citizenship  and  Immigration  Services  
         approves the petition, the petition goes to the Department of   
         State’s National Visa Center. The National Visa Center then     
         sends the petition to the appropriate embassy for a consular    
         officer to conduct a visa interview.                            

Wilkes v. Blinken, No. 4:21-CV-01148-SRC, 
2022 WL 1288402
, at *1 (E.D. Mo. Apr. 29, 
2022) (citations omitted). The noncitizen has the burden to establish eligibility for a visa, 
8 U.S.C. § 1361
, and the consular officer has discretion to grant or deny a visa, 
8 U.S.C. § 1201
(a)(1); 
22 C.F.R. §§ 42.71
, 42.81.                                  
    The consular officer either issues the visa or refuses to do so at the conclusion of 
the interview. The applicable regulation provides:                        
         When a visa application has been properly completed and         
         executed  before  a  consular  officer  in  accordance  with  the 
         provisions of the INA and the implementing regulations, the     
         consular officer must issue the visa, refuse the visa under INA 
         212(a) or 221(g) or other applicable law or, pursuant to an     
         outstanding order under INA 423(d), discontinue granting the    
         visa.                                                           
22 C.F.R. § 42.81
(a). However, “[i]f the ground of ineligibility may be overcome by the 
presentation of additional evidence and the applicant indicates an intention to submit such 
evidence,” the consulate will retain the documentation originally filed for a year, during 
which time the visa applicant can try to overcome the refusal. 
22 C.F.R. § 42.81
(b); 
id.
 
§ 42.81(e) (providing that a case shall be reconsidered if the applicant provides further 

evidence tending to overcome the ground of ineligibility within a year from the date of 
refusal).                                                                 
    Defendants’ position is that once a consular official refuses to issue a visa at the 
conclusion of a consular interview, which is what occurred after Mr. Hussein’s interview 
here, the agency has made a final decision. According to Defendants, the fact that the 

agency has placed the application in “administrative processing” does not change the fact 
that the applicant failed to meet their burden to show that a visa should issue. Because no 
further agency action is required by law, there is no nondiscretionary duty to further 
adjudicate the petition, and the Plaintiff’s claim that agency action has been unreasonably 
delayed fails as a matter of law. In support of this argument, Defendants rely on a recent 

decision from the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia—Karimova v. Abate, No. 
23-5178, 
2024 WL 3517852
 (D.C. Cir. July 24, 2024).                       
    In Karimova, the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia Circuit found a 
plaintiff failed to adequately state a claim that a consular officer had a duty to act where 
she did not receive a visa upon the completion of her consular interview. The plaintiff, 

Gulshana Karimova, an Azerbaijani citizen and resident, applied for a visa to enter the 
United States in October 2019, and she had an interview with a consular officer at the U.S. 
Embassy in Georgia in 2020. Karimova, 
2024 WL 3517852
, at *2. Following the interview, 
the consular “officer officially ‘refused’ her application,” and “then placed her application 

in ‘administrative processing in order to verify qualifications for her requested visa.’” 
Id.
 
(brackets omitted). A year later, Ms. Karimova filed a suit in federal court alleging that the 
consular officer unreasonably delayed adjudication of her visa application under the APA. 
Id.
 The district court granted the government’s motion to dismiss her APA claim, and on 
appeal, the D.C. Circuit affirmed the dismissal. 
Id.
 at *2–3. Essentially, the Karimova court 

reasoned that a federal court can only compel agency action under the APA where the 
agency is required by law to take some discrete action, and once the consular officer 
decided not to issue the visa at the conclusion of Ms. Karimova’s interview, the officer no 
longer owed her any duty. 
Id. at *2
, *3–6.                                
    Based on Karimova, Defendants ask the Court to draw the conclusion that if a visa 

applicant (like Mr. Hussein) has had a consular interview, and his application is “refused” 
for “administrative processing,” then there can be no claim for unreasonable delay under 
the APA because the State Department no longer has a legal obligation to adjudicate the 
petition. For several reasons, the Court will not reach that conclusion here. First, there is 
no Eighth Circuit precedent with the same holding as Karimova; nor does there appear to 

be any binding precedent adopting the Karimova court’s reasoning or its interpretation of 
§ 555(b). Instead, Karimova is an unpublished decision that does not control the outcome 
here, and this Court is not required to follow its holding or its reasoning. 
    Second, and more importantly, this Court is not persuaded on the record before it in 
this case that a consular officer’s purported “refusal” of a visa application operates as a 
final  agency  decision  that  concludes  the  agency’s  legal  obligation  to  adjudicate  the 

application when the officer places the application in administrative processing. The 
Karimova decision does not identify a statutory provision that plainly states a consular 
officer’s “refusal” at the conclusion of the interview concludes the agency’s obligation to 
finally adjudicate the decision. And although the State Department’s regulations state that 
a “consular officer must issue the visa, or refuse the visa,” 
22 C.F.R. § 42.81
, Defendant 

does not point to a regulation stating that such a “refusal” constitutes the final agency 
action. It appears that the Karimova court reached that conclusion based primarily on the 
provisions of the State Department’s Foreign Affairs Manual. See 
2024 WL 3517852
, at 
*1–2 & n.1 (citing provisions in the Manual).2 However, it is far from clear whether the 
Foreign Affairs Manual has any legally binding effect, and Karimova does not illustrate 

how the interpretation reflected in the Manual is consistent with the language of any Act 
of Congress. Cf. Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, 
144 S. Ct. 2244
 (2024) (overruling 
Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 
467 U.S. 837
 (1984) and 
emphasizing that courts are obligated to declare what the law is without deferring to 
agency’s interpretations of ambiguous laws).                              

    Moreover, even under the Karimova court’s description, the function served by the 
“administrative processing” limbo into which Mr. Hussein’s application has been placed 


2 9 Foreign Affairs Manual, Visas, https://fam.state.gov/Volumes/Details/09FAM. 
appears,  practically  speaking,  to  be  that  he  still  can  overcome  the  “refusal”  of  his 
application through the submission of additional information to the consular officer. See 
Karimova, 
2024 WL 3517852
, at *2 (citing 9 Foreign Affairs Manual § 306.2-2(A)(a)). 

Here, both the complaint and a declaration filed by Defendants indicate that the consular 
officer believed “additional security screening was required” and “additional screening is 
ongoing.” McNeil Decl. ¶¶ 7–8 (Doc. 13); Compl. ¶¶ 20–21. With respect to the Karimova 
court, this is the opposite of the agency having already “conclude[d] a matter presented to 
it.” 
5 U.S.C. § 555
(b). Simply describing the decision as final does not make it so. 

    This conclusion is further buttressed by the results of a case status review on the 
State Department’s website using Mr. Hussein’s Immigrant Visa Case Number. The result 
reveals that the agency lists his application as “Refused,” but it also states: 
         A U.S. consular officer has adjudicated and refused your visa   
         application. Please follow any instructions provided by the     
         consular officer. If you were informed by the consular officer  
         that your case was refused for administrative processing, your  
         case will remain refused while undergoing such processing.      
         You will receive another adjudication once such processing      
         is complete. Please be advised that the processing time varies  
         and that you will be contacted if additional information is     
         needed.  For  more   information,  please  visit                
         TRAVEL.STATE.GOV or the website for the Embassy or              
         Consulate at which you made your visa application.              
         For more information, please visit TRAVEL.STATE.GOV.            

U.S.  Dep’t  of  State,  Consular  Electronic  Application  Center,  Visa  Status  Check, 
https://ceac.state.gov/ceacstattracker/status.aspx  (emphasis  added).3  If  the  State 

3 With this link, an internet user who has the relevant visa case number can locate the State 
Department’s status update.                                               
Department informs an applicant that he “will receive another adjudication” when the 
administrative processing is complete, then the State Department is essentially taking the 
position  that  the  matter  submitted  to  the  agency  has  not  been  concluded  while 

administrative processing is ongoing. Ebrahimi v. Blinken, No. 23 C 3867, 
2024 WL 2020038
,  at  *5  (N.D.  Ill.  May  3,  2024)  (“As  other  courts  have  noted,  the  State 
Department’s use of ‘will’ in this communication all but guarantees the applicant another 
adjudication once administrative processing is complete.”) (cleaned up); Billoo v. Baran, 
No. 2:21-cv-05401-CBM-(JPRx), 
2022 WL 1841611
, at *4 (C.D. Cal. Mar. 18, 2022) 

(“Pursuant to the Department of State’s own statements and instructions on their website, 
the Court finds that these facts demonstrate that Mr. Ahmadzai has not received a final 
determination on his visa application.”).                                 
    Other courts have similarly concluded that when an application is in administrative 
processing, there has been no final decision, and the agency still has an obligation to 

adjudicate the application in a timely manner. See Jafarzadeh v. Blinken, No. 1:23-CV-
00770-KJM-CDB, 
2024 WL 3937417
, at *4 (E.D. Cal. Aug. 26, 2024) (declining to follow 
Karimova  as  inconsistent  with  prior  caselaw  and  rejecting  as  “unpersuasive”  the 
government’s argument that a final decision had been made despite ongoing administrative 
processing);  Sharifi  v.  Blinken,  No.  1:23-CV-5112-OEM,  
2024 WL 1798185
,  at  *3 

(E.D.N.Y.  Apr.  25,  2024)  (“Here,  in  refusing  Mahin’s  visa  application  for  further 
administrative processing under Section 221(g), consular officials have taken no final 
action: though nominally ‘refused,’ Mahin’s visa application remains under consideration 
in a state of administrative limbo that cannot fairly be described as a final determination.”); 
Farahani v. Laitinen, No. 1:23-CV-922, 
2024 WL 2785043
, at *4 (M.D.N.C. May 30, 
2024) (“Courts have held that refusals entered for administrative processing are not final, 
and thus that consular non-reviewability does not bar judicial review of unreasonable delay 

claims for such visa applications.”); see also Asresash B.T. v. Blinken, No. 22-cv-1300 
(WMW/JFD), 
2023 WL 2273158
, at *2 (D. Minn. Feb. 28, 2023) (noting that the doctrine 
of  consular  non-reviewability  only  prevents  courts  from  reviewing  final  visa 
determinations,  and  that  “[c]ases  in  administrative  processing  have  not  been  finally 
refused”); Osman v. Clinton, 
2012 WL 1060053
, at *2 (D. Minn. Mar. 29, 2012) (finding 

that the doctrine of consular nonreviewability barred judicial review of agency action on a 
visa application where, after the motion to dismiss was briefed, the State Department 
“concluded  the  administrative  processing  for  which  [plaintiff’s  visa  application  was 
originally refused”).                                                     
    Finally,  interpreting  a  refusal-for-administrative-processing  approach  as  the 

conclusion of the matter before the agency, when in fact it appears often to be just a step 
in the process has the potential to shield from judicial review unreasonable delays that are 
prohibited by the APA. If the approach in cases like this constitutes a final agency action, 
the State Department could, in effect, refuse every visa application as a matter of course, 
place them into the administrative processing queue, and then take far more time than is 

reasonable to adjudicate the petition. Nothing in the INA or the relevant implementing 
regulations suggests that Congress intended such a result.                
    2.   Consular Nonreviewability                                       
    Defendants  next  argue  that  the  doctrine  of  consular  nonreviewability  bars 
consideration of Ms. Hassan’s claims. Under the doctrine of consular nonreviewability, 

“Congress  may  delegate  to  executive  officials  the  discretionary  authority  to  admit 
noncitizens  immune  from  judicial  inquiry  or  interference.”  Muñoz,  602  U.S.  at  907 
(quotations omitted). When such a delegation has occurred, the executive officer’s decision 
whether to admit or exclude a noncitizen “is final and conclusive.” Id. (quotation omitted). 
Courts do not play a role in these decision except where “expressly authorized by law.” Id. 

at 908 (quotation omitted). Under this doctrine, “federal courts cannot review” a “consular 
officer’s denial of a visa.” Id.; see also Asresash B.T., 
2023 WL 2273158
, at *2 (D. Minn. 
Feb. 28, 2023) (discussing doctrine of consular nonreviewability). “[T]he doctrine of 
consular nonreviewability is not jurisdictional.” Muñoz, 144 at 1820 n.4. 
    Defendants argue that the consular doctrine of nonreviewability bars consideration 

of Plaintiff’s claims in this case because her claims ask the State Department to change its 
decision to refuse Mr. Hussein’s visa. They characterize her request for relief as asking the 
Court to “compel consular officers to revisit the ultimate question on the existing records, 
which a consular officer has already found to be inadequate to support issuing the visa.” 
Defs.’ Mem. 16 (Doc. 12). The Court disagrees. The doctrine of consular nonreviewability 

does not require the Court to find Ms. Hassan’s unreasonable-delay claims fail as a matter 
of  law.  Defendants’  argument  rests  on  the  flawed  premise  that  Mr. Hussein’s  visa 
application has been finally resolved and Ms. Hassan seeks to overturn that decision or 
have the Court order reconsideration of it. But the Court rejects that premise of finality—
the matter before the agency has not been concluded because the application remains in 
administrative processing and the State Department has indicated that the application is 
awaiting a final adjudication. Asresash B.T., 
2023 WL 2273158
, at *2 (“[T]he doctrine of 

consular non-reviewability precludes review only of ‘final visa determinations’ and ‘does 
not apply to challenges regarding decisions that are not yet final.’”) (quoting Sawareh v. 
U.S. Dep’t of State, No. 22-1456 (JEB), 
2022 WL 4365746
, at *3 (D.D.C. Sept. 21, 2022)). 
Ms. Hassan is not challenging the outcome, but only the delay.            
    Accordingly,  the  Defendants’  motion  to  dismiss  Plaintiff’s  unreasonable-delay 

claims based on the doctrine of consular reviewability is denied.         
    3.   Plausibility of Unreasonable Delay                              
    Finally, Defendants argue that on the face of the complaint, Plaintiff fails to state a 
claim of unreasonable delay. In evaluating whether an agency has unreasonably delayed 
making a final decision on a plaintiff’s application, courts frequently apply a multi-factor 

test  established  in  Telecommunications  Research  and  Action  Center  v.  Federal 
Communications Commission, 
750 F.2d 70
 (D.C. Cir. 1984) (“TRAC”). Defendants argue 
that Ms. Hassan fails to state a plausible unreasonable-delay claim based on application of 
the TRAC factors. The TRAC factors include:                               
         (1) the time agencies take to make decisions must be governed   
           by a rule of reason;                                          
         (2) where  Congress  has  provided  a  timetable  or  other     
           indication of the speed with which it expects the agency to   
           proceed in the enabling statute, that statutory scheme may    
           supply content for this rule of reason;                       
         (3) delays that might be reasonable in the sphere of economic   
           regulation  are  less  tolerable  when  human  health  and    
           welfare are at stake;                                         
         (4) the court should consider the effect of expediting delayed  
           action  on  agency  activities  of  a  higher  or  competing  
           priority;                                                     
         (5) the court should also consider the nature and extent of the 
           interests prejudiced by the delay; and                        
         (6) the court need not find any impropriety lurking behind      
           agency lassitude to hold that agency action is unreasonably   
           delayed.                                                      

TRAC, 
750 F.2d at 80
; Rambang v. Mayorkas, No. 11-cv-3454 (JRT/JJK), 
2012 WL 2449927
, at *5–6 (quoting TRAC, 
750 F.2d at 80
).                          
    Defendants argue that application of the  TRAC  factors to facts  alleged in the 
complaint demonstrates that any alleged delay in this case is not unreasonable as a matter 
of law. Defs.’ Mem. at 15–21. Having reviewed the complaint and the entire record in this 
case, the Court concludes that it cannot resolve the question of whether the delay alleged 
is unreasonable as a matter of law at the motion-to-dismiss stage. While it is true that some 
courts have found unreasonable-delay claims capable of resolution based on the TRAC 
factors on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, e.g., Oduor v. Blinken, No. 1:23-cv-00908, 
2024 WL 1406548
, at *3–5 (D.D.C. Mar. 29, 2024), here, the Court finds that the determination of 
the merits of the unreasonable-delay claim would be premature without the benefit of a 
more fully developed record.                                              
    As other courts have observed, “[r]esolution of a claim of unreasonable delay is 
ordinarily a complicated and nuanced task requiring consideration of the particular facts 
and circumstances before the court.” Barrios Garcia v. U.S. Dep’t of Homeland Sec., 
25 F.4th 430
, 451 (6th Cir. 2022) (quoting Mashpee Wampanoag Tribal Council, Inc. v. 
Norton, ,
336 F.3d 1094, 1100
 (D.C. Cir. 2003)). Here, Mr. Hussein’s interview took place 
in March 2023. Defendants point to no binding authority establishing that a delay of twenty 
months can never, as a matter of law, constitute unreasonable delay. And the Court cannot 
resolve, on this limited record, whether the twenty-month delay is attributable to a “rule of 

reason.” There is no information in the record about what principles, if any, Defendants 
apply  in  determining  how  quickly  or  slowly  to  adjudicate  a  visa  application  like 
Mr. Hussein’s. The Court also is not able to assess, on this record, how to balance the 
“nature and extent of the interests prejudiced by the delay,” or the “effect of expediting 
delayed action on agency activities of a higher or competing priority.” TRAC, 
750 F.2d at 80
. The final determination of such issues should await a more fully developed record. See 
Sawad v. Frazier, No. 07-cv-1721, 
2007 WL 2973833
, at *5 (D. Minn. Oct. 9, 2007) 
(“What  constitutes an unreasonable delay in the  context of immigration  applications 
depends to a great extent on the facts of a particular case.”) (quoting Yu v. Brown, 
36 F. Supp. 2d 922, 935
 (D.N.M. 1999)); Feng v. Beers, No. 2:13-cv-2396 (JAM/DAD), 
2014 WL 1028371
, at *8 (E.D. Cal. Mar. 14, 2014) (declining to dismiss based on application 
of TRAC factors at the motion to dismiss stage because the record was insufficiently 
developed); Rodriguez v. Nielsen, No. 16-cv-7092 (MKB), 
2018 WL 4783977
, at *21 
(E.D.N.Y. Sept. 30, 2018) (“The Court has insufficient information upon which to identify 
the source of delay, the agency’s allocation of its resources, and the extent to which 

Defendants may have participated in delaying the proceedings.”) (quotations omitted). 
    Accordingly,  Defendants’  motion  to  dismiss  Ms. Hassan’s  unreasonable-delay 
claim is denied to the extent it relies on application of the TRAC factors. 

ORDER

    For the reasons set forth above, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT Defendants’ 
Motion to Dismiss (Doc. 11) is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART as follows. 

Plaintiff’s due process claim in her Third Cause of Action is dismissed. The motion is 
otherwise denied.                                                         

Date: December 4, 2024          s/Katherine Menendez                     
                                Katherine Menendez                       
                                United States District Judge             

Reference

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