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June 2, 20264 min read

Why "Narrative" Is the Missing Element in Most EB-1A Cases

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Most EB-1A petitions fail — or get hit with an RFE — not because the evidence is weak, but because it's unassembled.

You can have publications, citations, press, judging roles, original contributions, and high-salary documentation… and still get a denial. Why? Because USCIS isn't just counting criteria. Under the two-step Kazarian framework, they're asking a bigger question in the final merits determination: does this person actually sit at the small percentage at the very top of their field?

That question is answered by a narrative — not a checklist.

A strong EB-1A narrative does three things:

1. It tells the officer who you are in one sentence.

"A computational biologist whose work on protein folding is now cited in FDA drug-approval pipelines" lands. "Beneficiary has 47 citations" does not.

2. It connects the evidence.

Citations aren't just numbers — they're proof that other top scientists rely on your work. Press isn't just clippings — it's external validation. Judging isn't a line item — it's the field asking you to gatekeep. Without a narrative, each exhibit is an island.

3. It frames sustained acclaim.

EB-1A requires that you've risen to the top and stayed there. A narrative shows the arc — early recognition, growing influence, current standing — instead of a flat pile of documents.

In my own practice, this is one of the most common gaps I see when reviewing prospective or previously denied cases — strong candidates with strong evidence, but no through-line tying it together. It's something I work on from the very first intake call, because by the time the petition is being drafted, it's often too late to retrofit a story onto the exhibits.

When I review a case that was previously denied, the evidence is usually already there. What's missing is the narrative that makes an adjudicator — who has 15 minutes and no background in your field — understand why you qualify.

Build the narrative first. Then let the exhibits prove it.

If you're weighing an EB-1A filing — or rebuilding after a denial — I'd welcome the conversation.

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About the Author
Keith Kee Wan Lee, Esq.
Keith Kee Wan Lee Law PLLC · Austin, Texas

Keith Kee Wan Lee is the principal of Keith Kee Wan Lee Law PLLC, a boutique U.S. immigration practice focused exclusively on EB-1, O-1, and NIW petitions for scientists, founders, executives, performers, and religious workers. Every matter is led personally by Keith — no paralegal-driven petitions.

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Attorney Advertising. This post is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or create an attorney-client relationship. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. For advice on your specific circumstances, consult a qualified immigration attorney.