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Posted (edited)

well guys frustration got the better of me last night to tell the truth i would be to frightened to commit the crime even if someone came up with a good plan i was just venting . but to answer a question of someone back there

i was reading the us embassy site and came across what they had to say about allowing a over the age limit person to study in the usa when there family has just recently immigrated to the usa not allowed . and it was my last legal idea to get her here no doubt she will have to stay or i will have to move there its just very sad that they wont make exceptions to the rules

The daughter will be okay, it will be just like she is away at college. The mother will have to visit her daughter more than once a year maybe until the daughter gets use to being away from her mother. But, are saying your wife has no other immediate reletives still in the Phil?

Many a people have built new families out of strangers and have live productive life. The daughter might be looking foward to being on her own, this will be a new beginning for her. If she was raised well, then she will be okay. The aprons strings will have to be cut sometime, why not now.

Let the daughter find her own husband, don't get invovle with the daghter love life.

Edited by LIFE'SJOURNEY
Posted (edited)

The daughter will be okay, it will be just like she is away at college. The daughter might be looking foward to being on her own, this will be a new beginning for her. If she was raised well, then she will be okay. The aprons strings will have to be cut sometime, why not now.

My dad said something similar to that when he took the family dog for a final "ride" in the country. Always wonder what happened to that dog? :blink: Somehow I would like to think the dog found a new family, or emigrated to another country on a student visa.

Edited by brian_n_phuong
Posted

My dad said something similar to that when he took the family dog for a final "ride" in the country. Always wonder what happened to that dog? :blink: Somehow I would like to think the dog found a new family, or emigrated to another country on a student visa.

If the dog wS SMART he found a new family and continue living. If life give you lemons you make lemonade. The mother made the decision for the daughter when she agreed to marry a man in a another country. The mother could have said NO.

Posted

If the dog wS SMART he found a new family and continue living. If life give you lemons you make lemonade. The mother made the decision for the daughter when she agreed to marry a man in a another country. The mother could have said NO.

Oh, I'm sure the dog made lemonade when he saw the hunting rifle.

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Philippines
Timeline
Posted

opps brian seem to be making alot of mistakes lately by the way the age of the daughter is 22 not 24 i guess i have alot on my mind . anyway again very sorry for saying those things last night guys i was just a bit over whelmed after learning about the student visa .

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Laos
Timeline
Posted

seeing how uncle sam is putting more control on the net, OP shouldn't be going arnd stating some stuff, =D

but yeah, plz do it legally

Every minute felt like an eternity time, clearly as if it had malicious intent, slowly ebbing away from me. I clenched my teeth, and keeping myself from crying was the only thing I could do…

-5cm/s

Filed: Lift. Cond. (pnd) Country: Iran
Timeline
Posted

what can I tell you marines have the lowest morals BUT THEY GET THINGS DONE

As a marine wife, I really hope you get caught

Can someone report this douchebag to ucis?

Keep on whining about the processing times and AP people. People Omer is guy are the reason they even exist

Filed: Lift. Cond. (pnd) Country: Iran
Timeline
Posted

I am sorry that you are in this situation. You have 3 legitimate choices:

1. Wait 10 years or so after she gets her citizenship to petition her daughter

2. Live in the Phils.

3. Find some one else.

Her daughter is not a child but an adult and should be living her own life at this point. If mama's main concern is her daughter, to the point of contemplating doing something illegal as to jeopardize her living in the US and therefore your life as well, then maybe you need to reevaluate this relationship.

5

Posted

opps brian seem to be making alot of mistakes lately by the way the age of the daughter is 22 not 24 i guess i have alot on my mind . anyway again very sorry for saying those things last night guys i was just a bit over whelmed after learning about the student visa .

Thats ok, no harm done. It didn't jive being a Marine, sworn to protect the Constitution, and then to consider fraud. I thought maybe you were lying about being a marine. Being a stand-up guy and providing an plausible explanation as you did was a sincere gesture, so Welcome!

Anything even remotely resembling immigration fraud is usually received with contempt on this website. 99% of the people are here because they are honest people that want to follow the rules. We do occasionally get that 1% that uses the forum for deceptive purposes and are usually met with hostility as you experienced.

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Russia
Timeline
Posted

I have a similar question about my step daughter who is now 22 I filed for her when she was 20 with her mom. Now married to her mom and she has green card. I have a document about children that was signed in 2002 which reads the following:

On August 6, 2002, the President signed into law the Child Stutus Protection Act (CSPA), Public Law 107-208,116 Stat. 927 which amends the Immigration and Nationality Act (Act) by permitting an applicant for certain benefits to retain classification as a "child" under the Act, even if he or she has reached the age of 21.

I was told by USCIS that the wait for Russia was 9 years for her mom to petition but after I called and asked my wife had friend do some digging and found this information and she has been told that I had the daughter on my original petition and I am still able to get her here.

Does anyone know the details if this is TRUE or UN-TRUE

Thanks

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Posted (edited)

I have a similar question about my step daughter who is now 22 I filed for her when she was 20 with her mom. Now married to her mom and she has green card. I have a document about children that was signed in 2002 which reads the following:

On August 6, 2002, the President signed into law the Child Stutus Protection Act (CSPA), Public Law 107-208,116 Stat. 927 which amends the Immigration and Nationality Act (Act) by permitting an applicant for certain benefits to retain classification as a "child" under the Act, even if he or she has reached the age of 21.

I was told by USCIS that the wait for Russia was 9 years for her mom to petition but after I called and asked my wife had friend do some digging and found this information and she has been told that I had the daughter on my original petition and I am still able to get her here.

Does anyone know the details if this is TRUE or UN-TRUE

Thanks

Why don't you read up on why the law was put in place and then come back and tell us if it applies to your situation;

The Child Status Protection Act (CSPA), Pub. L. 107-208 (Aug. 6, 2002), was enacted to provide relief to children who “age-out” as a result of delays by the Citizenship and Immigration Services (CIS) in processing visa petitions and asylum and refugee applications. The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) defines a “child” as an unmarried individual under 21 years of age. 8 U.S.C. § 1101(b)(1). The CSPA does not change this definition, but instead changes the point at which the child’s age is calculated.

Prior to the CSPA, an application for permanent residency as a direct or derivative beneficiary child would be approved only if adjudicated prior to the child turning 21.3 Upon turning 21, a child would “age out” and lose the preferential status of a child. As the result of agency backlogs and delays, many children aged out before their cases were complete. For cases to which it pertains, the CSPA now locks in the age of the child at an earlier date in the process, and in this way will preserve the status of “child” for many individuals who otherwise would age out.

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Edited by LIFE'SJOURNEY
 
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