200K DACA applications filed so far
English: Official portrait of United States Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano Español: Retrato oficial de Secretaria de Seguridad Interna de los Estados Unidos Janet Napolitano (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Per The Hill: DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano indicates that more than 3,000 have applied for DACA every day, about 200,000 applications overall.
Video Answers: Do I need a special permit or license to open an office or store in the United States?
Do I need a special permit or license to open an office or store in the United States?
DHS Announces Taiwan’s Designation into the Visa Waiver Program
USCIS announces Workload Transfer from Service Centers to Field Operations
Via USCIS.gov
USCIS wants to notify customers and stakeholders that some work that USCIS performs at the four USCIS service centers (Vermont, Nebraska, Texas and California) will be transferred to a Field Office or the National Benefits Center (NBC) in order to balance the overall workload with processing capacity. The chart below summarizes these changes.

U.S. Citizen client calls on U.S. Department of State to review overbroad and erroneous Terrorism allegation against her husband
Attorney Ashwin Sharma is defending a client wrongly deemed permanently inadmissible to the U.S. under the Terrorism Related Inadmissibility Grounds (“TRIG”) section in the INA. TRIG is the same overbroad regulation that many innocent individuals have been unjustly subject to. For example, an asylee from Burundi was named a terrorist and jailed for 20 months by the U.S. because he was found to have financially supported the Rebel group that robbed him of $4.00 and a bagged lunch. Similarly, Mr. Nelson Mandela was subject to this regulation for having fought against apartheid. He required a special waiver from the then Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to enter the U.S.
Opponents of TRIG’s overbroad reach have pointed out that even America’s first President George Washington would have been subject to Terrorism Related Grounds of Inadmissibility, as the law stands today, for having fought in the Revolutionary War against the British.