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Posted

This post involves questions about travel in to the US on the Visa Waiver program while our I-130 is in process.

Please excuse me if this post is a bit scattered brained... our circumstances are complicated and I'm going to do my best explain them AND make sense at the same time.

Long story short... I was hit by a car while crossing the street at 27 weeks pregant in July and had massive damage done to my ankle. (Damn traffic coming from the wrong direction!) Spent 20 days in hospital... recovering with a cast and reconstructive surgery while heavily pregnant, etc... Had our beautiful baby boy on October 20th... of course, still recovering from surgery and the injury... and just had another surgery on the 29th of Jan (the final one). By the way, Baby is absolutely perfect... a true blessing.

My husband hasn't been able to work outside the home since the accident because he's had to take care of me and our wee one. His family is no help in this matter. My family is heartbroken because they can't be there for us when we need them most - so we are going to the US on March 2nd to be with them and start the moving process BEFORE we have a finalised visa for my husband. We will be sending all our worldly posessions in boxes on the slow boat over the atlantic TOMORROW! (yikes...) The boxes will take 6 weeks to arrive. We'll beat them by 2 weeks even after they've had a 1 month head start! hehe. So we will be flying with 1 gimp (me), a 3 month old, 1 dog, 1 cat, 2 guitars and 3 suitcases. My poor husband!

We have return tickets for the 7th of May (changable dates, and tickets purchased). We will then return to the UK to complete the interview (and go to a wedding). From my research and lots of case details on this site I've seen that DCF in the USCIS London office takes about 5mo if all the paperwork is in order right away... so we expect that the general progress of the Visa would bring us to an interview in May... conveniently when my husband's brother is getting married... so we have return tickets to the UK in May. We are, however, emotionally prepared for delays if my husband to need to stay in the UK until his interview is done.

So after all this... here are my questions:

1) Has anyone ever been refused entry in to the US because they have a visa in process?

...We plan to explain our situation in full to the immigration officer if neccessary. The visa waiver program states that you must not intend to come and stay in the US... My husband doesn't intend to stay in the US at that time... we have plans to return to the UK to complete the Visa process. It also inicates that he must have a return ticket within 90 days (which we do). Although we will not have a house in the UK and neither of us have full time employment, my husband owns a company in the UK that will continue to trade no matter where we are, and we have 2 UK bank accounts, which gives us ties back to the UK. The people at the USCIS London aren't very helpful when I ask if there will be any problems. They say "there are no policies against travel in to the US on the Visa Waiver program, but your husband's entry will be at the discretion of the Immigration Officer". These words strike fear in to my heart!

2) Is there any reason that they will need my husband's passport before the interview date?

... since we will be "on holiday", his passport won't be available for them to see until we're in the country... unless a certified copy will do.

I know... I know... it's risky. I'm losing my mind about the possibility of us arriving in Minneapolis and having my husband be turned away. But surely the immigration officer will see the humanity side of our circumstances and give us the benefit of the doubt!

Anyone have any words of wisdom? Any relevant experiences?

Thank you all,

Theresa

  • January 15 2005 - Met Online through HotorNot.com (haha, I know)
  • April 17th 2005 - Met Face to Face
  • April 24th 2005 - Got Engaged!
  • June 21st 2005 - Theresa Moved to England on Fiance Visa
  • September 3rd 2005 - Married in Harrogate, UK
  • January 28 2006 - Limited Leave to Remain Granted
  • October 20 2006 - Gave birth to our beautiful Son
  • January 2nd 2007 - Mailed I-130 with USCIS London
  • January 5th 2007 - Credit Card Charged for $190
  • January 10th 2007 - Notice of Reciept of Petition
  • January 20th 2007 - Received 7 boxes to fill and send on the slow boat
  • February 2nd 2007 - Signed lease for our house in the US
  • February 28th 2007 - Moved out of our house to stay with Parents until we leave!
  • March 2nd 2007 - Flight cancelled due to Blizzard Conditions in Minneapolis!
  • March 3rd 2007 - We entered the US in MPLS with Visa Waiver for 2 Months
  • March 26th 2007 - I-130 Approval Letter! Hurray!
Posted

Hi Tang

Sorry to hear of your misfortune...you couldn't make it up !!

I asked a similar question and have indeed read lately on this site that you can visit the US on the visa waiver program whilst a visa application is been processed providing you can prove that your husband is not planning to move there permanantly during that visit. I'm sure that the documentary evidence you have mentioned will be suffificient however it is ultimately down to the guy at the immigratrion desk ...............

Hope things work out for you....I know how depressing Hull can be at this time of year, Good Luck !

16/5/2002 Met on Line through YAHOO !!!!!!!!!!!!!

26/9/2002 Travelled to Montana and met in person - decided this is for real !

10/10/2002 Both returned to UK , Melissa travelled on Tourist Visa

19/5/2003 Got married in UK

7/7/2003 Melissa got LR in UK for 2 years

July 2005 Melissa got ILR in UK

2 Feb 2007 Filed I 130 with USCIS in London

2 Feb 2007 Requested Police Report

6 Feb 2007 Visa Card charged for I 130 petition

17 Feb 2007 Receive Police Certificate

10 May 2007 I 130 Approved !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

16 May 2007 Received Packet 3

16 May Sent Off Packet 3 & Booked Medical for the 30th May

24 May 2007 Received Packet 4 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Only 8 Daysssssss

19 June 2007 Interview & APPROVED !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

27 Aug 2007 Travel to JFK then on to SLC via Houston OMG what a trip !!!!!!

Posted

Sorry to hear about your accident *hugs*

I came into the USA 2 times with my daughter who is 4, they where fine and did not ask to see any evidence.... i said i was visiting my fiance. I brought along lots of evidence of my ties to the UK. It was all fine.

No your husband will just need the passport to hand in after you have been approved at interview.

Good Luck, if you need anymore advice, please feel free to IM me!

Mel

K1

September 15 - 2005: NOA1

October: Waiting

November: Waiting

December: In Security checks

January 2006: Waiting

February: Waiting..Contacted Congress

March 4th: APPROVED

March 17th: NVC posted file to London

March 20th: London Receives file

March 29th: Receive package 3

April 13th: London Receives package

April 19th: Medical - June 13th: INTERVIEW......APPROVED!!!!

June 20th: ARRIVE IN USA

Time taken for whole process 9 Months

~~~~~ * ~~~~~

AOS

October: 13th: Sent off AOS Package

November 3rd: NOA1

November 14th: Snail mail ~ NOA1 ~ Case moved to the CSC for faster processing.

November 14th : CSC has petition for me and my daughter.

December 14th: Biometrics completed.

January 17th: APPROVED AOS!

January 22nd: Green card arrives in the mail:))

Time taken for AOS - 3.5 Months

Finished for 2 years.

dev015pb___.png

Posted (edited)

Aw, what a ####### situation! I feel awful for you guys. I'm afraid I can't offer any advice. The only thing I could think of in that situation would be a letter from an employer and/or tenancy agreement, and you don't have either. :( I know it would be horrible, but what's the possibility of someone in your family helping you for a bit while he stays behind?

Also, I hope you don't mind me asking, how were you able to do DCF when (according to your signature) you've only lived here for a year and a half? I've been in the UK for a year and some months now (first on student visa living with hubby (then fiance) and now on limited leave to remain). We would love to do DCF, but it says on the London embassy website that I'd have to have lived here for two years. How did you get around it? Or is there something else to your situation? :)

EDITED: Okay, I think I'm doing some pretty bad calendar math. To make it clear, I've been here since the end of July 2005 and it looks like you've been here since the end of June 2005. :)

Edited by MargotDarko

My Crafting Blog - On a Roll - Blogspot

3179788211_95b93e62af_t.jpg3179788215_6a1e497e9b_t.jpg3165849344_f296789fd3_t.jpg

_______________________________________________________

US Immigration Timeline

-------------------------

24 Feb 2007 - Sent I-130 to London USCIS office (I'm the petitioner)

25 May 2007 - NOA2

2 June 2007 - Received Packet 3

12 Oct 2007 - Sent Packet 3 back by special delivery

5 Nov 2007 - Interview in London - Approved without any hitches!

7 Nov 2007 - Visa and MBE arrived by SMS! :)

30 Jan 2008 - Fly to Michigan!! :)

*Note: Any delays in our case are only due to us taking things slowly

Posted

Hi, again. I looked at your profile and found your previous post. Looks like you just lucked out! Would you mind sharing what sort of package you put together and what your cover letter was like? PM me instead of replying if you'd like to share privately! :)

Aw, what a ####### situation! I feel awful for you guys. I'm afraid I can't offer any advice. The only thing I could think of in that situation would be a letter from an employer and/or tenancy agreement, and you don't have either. :( I know it would be horrible, but what's the possibility of someone in your family helping you for a bit while he stays behind?

Also, I hope you don't mind me asking, how were you able to do DCF when (according to your signature) you've only lived here for a year and a half? I've been in the UK for a year and some months now (first on student visa living with hubby (then fiance) and now on limited leave to remain). We would love to do DCF, but it says on the London embassy website that I'd have to have lived here for two years. How did you get around it? Or is there something else to your situation? :)

EDITED: Okay, I think I'm doing some pretty bad calendar math. To make it clear, I've been here since the end of July 2005 and it looks like you've been here since the end of June 2005. :)

My Crafting Blog - On a Roll - Blogspot

3179788211_95b93e62af_t.jpg3179788215_6a1e497e9b_t.jpg3165849344_f296789fd3_t.jpg

_______________________________________________________

US Immigration Timeline

-------------------------

24 Feb 2007 - Sent I-130 to London USCIS office (I'm the petitioner)

25 May 2007 - NOA2

2 June 2007 - Received Packet 3

12 Oct 2007 - Sent Packet 3 back by special delivery

5 Nov 2007 - Interview in London - Approved without any hitches!

7 Nov 2007 - Visa and MBE arrived by SMS! :)

30 Jan 2008 - Fly to Michigan!! :)

*Note: Any delays in our case are only due to us taking things slowly

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: England
Timeline
Posted

Tang and Margodarko - you are the two other cases which are so similar to ours as we live in the UK too and are doing the same as you except that we are not doing k3 - just I-130..

I suppose Tangy that you filed just before this thing about no more DCF - although everyone is confused about London as it has a USCIS office and not just an embassy or consulate...

and you were allowed to use a credit card whereas the email i got from USCIS London today says we cant use credit card - presumably ours will be just sent to Nebraska where the check (cheque) will be cashed - who knows - i don't...

and will the new ruling on consular filing affect an ongoing petition ? who knows ...

It's a bit weird as I have been on visa journey a couple of years now and by surfing around you can usually get a definitive answer from someone nearly always- but this present situation seems murky to everyone - so I guess we 3 (and maybe 1 or 2 more) are the test bed for this new directive on DCF...

ok - your question - I went in on visa waiver just after our AOS was abandoned and had no problem although I had misplaced my abandonment paperwork- I just told him quickly what happened and showed him my return ticket and all the times I had entered and gone back and been a good boy - he just shrugged and stamped me for 90 days -

If you are travelling together and both go through 'visitors' and he sees your uk residency and return tickets then I would bet heavily against you having a problem...

I don't know how well linked their computers are to USCIS petitions anyway - I suspect it's only red flagged people and overstayers - though I may be wrong...

I really thought I would be refused but it was a breeze... yes the risk is that you get refused and then next time you have to answer 'yes' to have you been refused ? - but I would bet on you getting through at this stage of the process - don't volunteer any information if it's not asked for but then answer it quickly and truthfully..

but it's for you to weigh the size of the risk and not me

alan

moresheep400100.jpg

Filed: Country: United Kingdom
Timeline
Posted
1) Has anyone ever been refused entry in to the US because they have a visa in process?

Theresa,

The major difference you are not allowing for here, between your story and others' experiences? That you are immigrating on this trip.

I think your circumstances are also different from the average person who actually IS immigrating. Bring plenty of evidence that he will be returning to finish his process, and hope for the best.

Now That You Are A Permanent Resident

How Do I Remove The Conditions On Permanent Residence Based On Marriage?

Welcome to the United States: A Guide For New Immigrants

Yes, even this last one.. stuff in there that not even your USC knows.....

Here are more links that I love:

Arriving in America, The POE Drill

Dual Citizenship FAQ

Other Fora I Post To:

alt.visa.us.marriage-based http://britishexpats.com/ and www.***removed***.com

censored link = *family based immigration* website

Inertia. Is that the Greek god of 'can't be bothered'?

Met, married, immigrated, naturalized.

I-130 filed Aug02

USC Jul06

No Deje Piedras Sobre El Pavimento!

Posted
1) Has anyone ever been refused entry in to the US because they have a visa in process?

Theresa,

The major difference you are not allowing for here, between your story and others' experiences? That you are immigrating on this trip.

I think your circumstances are also different from the average person who actually IS immigrating. Bring plenty of evidence that he will be returning to finish his process, and hope for the best.

Thank you all for your responses. I do feel a bit better about entry in to the US now.

We will be bringing details from my husband's business and completed paperwork (DS-2001 and DS-230) to show the officers that we fully intend to return to the UK... Maybe we'll also have at hand the invitation for the wedding on May 11th that we plan to attend. (67 days from when we arrive) Plus, of course, we have the return tickets. But I can see how that would be less convincing with no supporting documents. We don't have any property in the UK and will be staying with my in-laws in the UK until we move... And my husband doesn't have employment other than his own business.

Can anyone think of any other documents we could show?

I guess we're telling ourselves that we're not actually "immigrating" until we return from the UK in May, once Roger has his Visa... but it's sort of silly for us to do so. I think it may be easier for us to wrap it around our brains that we're just going over in March to get things set up and ready for us for when we move for good in May. Ahhh the things we tell ourselves to keep us sane.

  • January 15 2005 - Met Online through HotorNot.com (haha, I know)
  • April 17th 2005 - Met Face to Face
  • April 24th 2005 - Got Engaged!
  • June 21st 2005 - Theresa Moved to England on Fiance Visa
  • September 3rd 2005 - Married in Harrogate, UK
  • January 28 2006 - Limited Leave to Remain Granted
  • October 20 2006 - Gave birth to our beautiful Son
  • January 2nd 2007 - Mailed I-130 with USCIS London
  • January 5th 2007 - Credit Card Charged for $190
  • January 10th 2007 - Notice of Reciept of Petition
  • January 20th 2007 - Received 7 boxes to fill and send on the slow boat
  • February 2nd 2007 - Signed lease for our house in the US
  • February 28th 2007 - Moved out of our house to stay with Parents until we leave!
  • March 2nd 2007 - Flight cancelled due to Blizzard Conditions in Minneapolis!
  • March 3rd 2007 - We entered the US in MPLS with Visa Waiver for 2 Months
  • March 26th 2007 - I-130 Approval Letter! Hurray!
Posted

Hi Tang - I have been asking much the same question of late. Here's one thread on the issue:

http://www.visajourney.com/forums/index.ph...mp;#entry704658

It seems like the consensus is that you should bring proof to return if possible, don't ever lie, but also don't offer more info than necessary. Do you know where you will stay when you return to England for the wedding and interview? If you have lodging set up already for when you go back, you could bring evidence of that.

Posted

I would gather LOTS of evidence to prove your husband has no immigration intent. Forgive me for saying but I would think that convincing an officer when you have with you 1 dog, 1 cat, 2 guitars and 3 suitcases that you have no immigration intent will be pretty tough. I dont suppose there are many that take all that with them on vacation.

However, I wish you good luck!!

DCF - London

18 Jul 04 - Police Certificate Requested

19 Jul 04 - I-130 sent

22 Jul 04 - NOA I-130 logged with INS

29 Jul 04 - DS230 sent

29 Jul 04 - Had vaccinations

14 Aug 04 - Police Certificate Received

30 Sept 04 - I-130 approved

30 Nov 04 - Received I-864 from co sponsor

04 Dec 04 - Sent DS2001

13 Jan 05 - Interview date 04 Feb 05

04 Feb 05 - VISA APPROVED!!!

08 Feb 05 - Proud owner of IR-1 Visa

09 Jun 05 - Arrived in the USA

24 April 09 - US Citizen

26551rm8.th.jpg

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline
Posted
1) Has anyone ever been refused entry in to the US because they have a visa in process?

Theresa,

The major difference you are not allowing for here, between your story and others' experiences? That you are immigrating on this trip.

I think your circumstances are also different from the average person who actually IS immigrating. Bring plenty of evidence that he will be returning to finish his process, and hope for the best.

Thank you all for your responses. I do feel a bit better about entry in to the US now.

We will be bringing details from my husband's business and completed paperwork (DS-2001 and DS-230) to show the officers that we fully intend to return to the UK... Maybe we'll also have at hand the invitation for the wedding on May 11th that we plan to attend. (67 days from when we arrive) Plus, of course, we have the return tickets. But I can see how that would be less convincing with no supporting documents. We don't have any property in the UK and will be staying with my in-laws in the UK until we move... And my husband doesn't have employment other than his own business.

Can anyone think of any other documents we could show?

I guess we're telling ourselves that we're not actually "immigrating" until we return from the UK in May, once Roger has his Visa... but it's sort of silly for us to do so. I think it may be easier for us to wrap it around our brains that we're just going over in March to get things set up and ready for us for when we move for good in May. Ahhh the things we tell ourselves to keep us sane.

Other documents i can see are the invitation letters from US inlaws who want you there. Medical papers of your opperations, etc...And, as an important argument in my opinion, is the fact that because of the accident, and now, the convalescence, your husband's place is with you and the baby...Good luck and great convalescence!!!

CR-1, VT- Canada

I-130:

25 Aug 06 - Sent I-130 (a Friday)

28 Aug 06 - NOA1 & Certif. receipt returned ( a Monday) Day 1

29 Aug 06 - USCIS cashes check

30 Aug 06 - check cleared & 1ST TOUCH.

01 Sept 06 - NOA1 recvd by Mail

09 Sept 06 - 2ND TOUCH (a Saturday)

09 Mai 07 - NOA2 (2 e-mails)

Note: were told the long delay due to huge backlog and internal changes in VT

NVC :

04-June-07 - NVC generates DS-3032 & AOS bill

12-June-07 - AOS Bill payment sent/ alien receives DS-3032 form (by mail, dated 4th June)

13-June-07 - Alien sends back completed DS-3032 (by mail)/ rcvd 19th of June approx.

To mid July-07 - I-864 form sent completed and IV fee bill

19-July-07 NVC rcv I-864 form; mail signature rcvd.

22-Aug-07 Ds-230 with documents sent to NVC.

20-Sep - 07 Alien sends NVC Missing document. NVC receives it the 25th.

05-Oct - 07 NVC completed.

16-Jan - 08 Interview, 3 questions asked, visa approved same day, received 1week later approx.

Note: delay due to internal delay, missing document (not rfe) and self procrastination of understanding some abstract terms. C Post not at all reliable (delivery duration, delivery with signature (did not deliver personnaly), and delivery of interview letter rcvd after the interview).

In USA:

01-03-08 POE Entry in USA

...-03-08 2 Welcome in America letters and green card received.

"What I know is that I know nothing"

Filed: Country: Australia
Timeline
Posted (edited)

Just to add to this...

My wife arrived this morning at LAX from Australia. The POE Officer asked her, her reason for visiting. She said... "To Visit my husband" exact words.

The POE Officer saw that she had been here in September, and since that time, why haven't I filed for her visa. My wife told her the situation and said that we did file and it's we're just awaiting word on what Sydney will do to pending approvals. The POE Officer asked her how long she'll be here for and she said 3 months. The POE Officer asked her what she does and my wife told her she does Accounting and showed her leave of absence. The POE Officer stamped her passport and said, "ok, remember, you can't work here". And that was it

My wife also had copies of both her mortgages (she has rental property in Australia), but they didn't ask for anything more. So if anybody has any questions whether they can travel with the VWP while waiting for their approvals... Yes, you can... but you definitely have to prove that you will return.

I live in Florida and she's flying from Los Angeles and I've already talked to her once she got out of Customs Inspection so she'l on her way here. I pick her up in an hour.

Edited by David A.

04 January 2004 : Met Stephanie in Las Vegas.

15 May 2006 : Joined visajourney

16 September 2006: Got married in Las Vegas.

03 October 2006 : Stephanie applies for certificate of name change.

12 October 2006 : Stephanie recieved certificate of name change.

16 October 2006 : Stephanie applies for NPC, recieves a couple weeks later.

29 November 2006 : Arrived in Sydney, stayed in 4Points Sheraton Darling Harbor.

30 November 2006 : DCF. Submitted I-130 Sydney US Consulate "walk-in Thursday". Packet 3 in hand.

11 December 2006 : Final Medical Appointment with Dr Miller and immunizations. Approved.

11 December 2006 : Sent off DS-230 Parts I and II, and DS-2001 overnight priority.

27 December 2006 : Received RFE in the mail, returned RFE same day.

24 January 2007 : New Legislation preventing approvals of I-130s at Consulate.

30 January 2007 : Final Visa Interview in Sydney.

22 February 2007: Sydney called for my wife to send her passport to issue the visa.

04 March 2007: Stephanie flies back to Australia to post her passport.

14 March 2007: Stephanie Recieves passport and visa.

18 March 2007: Stephanie is in Florida. Journey is over.

30 March 2007: Stephanie gets Social Security Card.

02 April 2007: Stephanie gets Green Card.

"what happens in Vegas, doesn't always stay in Vegas" - david

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Australia
Timeline
Posted
Just to add to this...

My wife arrived this morning at LAX from Australia. The POE Officer asked her, her reason for visiting. She said... "To Visit my husband" exact words.

The POE Officer saw that she had been here in September, and since that time, why haven't I filed for her visa. My wife told her the situation and said that we did file and it's we're just awaiting word on what Sydney will do to pending approvals. The POE Officer asked her how long she'll be here for and she said 3 months. The POE Officer asked her what she does and my wife told her she does Accounting and showed her leave of absence. The POE Officer stamped her passport and said, "ok, remember, you can't work here". And that was it

My wife also had copies of both her mortgages (she has rental property in Australia), but they didn't ask for anything more. So if anybody has any questions whether they can travel with the VWP while waiting for their approvals... Yes, you can... but you definitely have to prove that you will return.

I live in Florida and she's flying from Los Angeles and I've already talked to her once she got out of Customs Inspection so she'l on her way here. I pick her up in an hour.

AWESOME! Glad to hear she got through ok. Best of luck!

I-130

02/17/2007 - I-130 Express Mailed to VSC via USPS. (ETA 2/19/2007)

02/22/2007 - I-130 received by VSC.

06/12/2007 - NOA2 approval email received!!!

06/15/2007 - NOA2 letter received in the mail.

NVC

06/19/2007 - NVC receives case and assigns a case number!

08/27/2007 - CASE COMPLETE!!!!

09/06/2007 - Case forwarded to Sydney

09/14/2007 - Wife receives Packet 3. Received NVC letter confirming case forward to Sydney.

10/26/2007 - Interview - VISA GRANTED!!!!! WOOO WOOO!!!!!!

11/18/2007 - Enter the US via LAX (POE). No issues thankfully. 20 minutes of processing.

11/30/2007 - Welcome letter (two of them) received.

12/19/2007 - CR-1 Green Card received.

USCIS - I-751

09/23/2009 - Express Mailed Removal of Conditions application

09/24/2009 - USPS confirmed delivery to VSC

09/29/2009 - Check cashed by USCIS

10/01/2009 - Received NOA I-797C dated 09/25/2009

10/10/2009 - Received Biometric appt letter for 10/29/2009

10/29/2009 - Biometrics taken. Whole process took about 40 min including the wait

12/22/2009 - Approved for ROC!

01/08/2010 - Received text and email: Card production ordered

01/15/2010 - Received Green Card in the mail!

USCIS - N-400

04/22/2011 - Express Mailed Application for Naturalization

04/27/2011 - Check cashed by USCIS

04/28/2011 - Received NOA I-797C dated 04/26/2011

05/27/2011 - Biometrics taken. Process took approx 35 min with wait

07/29/2011 - Received Interview Appt letter scheduled for 09/01/2011 dated 07/26/2011

09/01/2011 - Interview and Oath. Now a USC! The VJ is over!

Filed: Timeline
Posted (edited)

My wife (U.S. citizen) and I are planning visiting the U.S. for a few weeks while we are waiting for our I-130 to be processed in Frankfurt. We got married in January.

What I was wondering, at passport control they have a section for U.S. citizens and one for foreigners. Last time we travelled together I explained to the POE officer that my (back then) girlfriend was travelling with me but had to go through the U.S. citizen section. Since we are married, would it perhaps be a better idea to walk up to a POE officer in the 'foreigners' section together? We are both living in The Netherlands currently, my wife has been here for the past 3.5 years (legal resident). I thought together we might be able to ease the mind of the POE officer more easily in case he/she thinks I want to become an illegal immigrant.

I'm sure most of the POE officers understand that it's not very likely that people from Western Europe (or other countries with a quality of life comparable to that of the U.S.) would want to become an illegal immigrant in the U.S. without any rights, benefits, medical care, insurance and so on.

Edited by dinmir
Filed: Country: Australia
Timeline
Posted
My wife (U.S. citizen) and I are planning visiting the U.S. for a few weeks while we are waiting for our I-130 to be processed in Frankfurt. We got married in January.

What I was wondering, at passport control they have a section for U.S. citizens and one for foreigners. Last time we travelled together I explained to the POE officer that my (back then) girlfriend was travelling with me but had to go through the U.S. citizen section. Since we are married, would it perhaps be a better idea to walk up to a POE officer in the 'foreigners' section together? We are both living in The Netherlands currently, my wife has been here for the past 3.5 years (legal resident). I thought together we might be able to ease the mind of the POE officer more easily in case he/she thinks I want to become an illegal immigrant.

I'm sure most of the POE officers understand that it's not very likely that people from Western Europe (or other countries with a quality of life comparable to that of the U.S.) would want to become an illegal immigrant in the U.S. without any rights, benefits, medical care, insurance and so on.

I don't believe she can enter through the US Citizens line because she does not hold a US Greencard or US passport. Maybe someone else can enlighten us on this situation.

04 January 2004 : Met Stephanie in Las Vegas.

15 May 2006 : Joined visajourney

16 September 2006: Got married in Las Vegas.

03 October 2006 : Stephanie applies for certificate of name change.

12 October 2006 : Stephanie recieved certificate of name change.

16 October 2006 : Stephanie applies for NPC, recieves a couple weeks later.

29 November 2006 : Arrived in Sydney, stayed in 4Points Sheraton Darling Harbor.

30 November 2006 : DCF. Submitted I-130 Sydney US Consulate "walk-in Thursday". Packet 3 in hand.

11 December 2006 : Final Medical Appointment with Dr Miller and immunizations. Approved.

11 December 2006 : Sent off DS-230 Parts I and II, and DS-2001 overnight priority.

27 December 2006 : Received RFE in the mail, returned RFE same day.

24 January 2007 : New Legislation preventing approvals of I-130s at Consulate.

30 January 2007 : Final Visa Interview in Sydney.

22 February 2007: Sydney called for my wife to send her passport to issue the visa.

04 March 2007: Stephanie flies back to Australia to post her passport.

14 March 2007: Stephanie Recieves passport and visa.

18 March 2007: Stephanie is in Florida. Journey is over.

30 March 2007: Stephanie gets Social Security Card.

02 April 2007: Stephanie gets Green Card.

"what happens in Vegas, doesn't always stay in Vegas" - david

 
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Important Disclaimer: Please read carefully the Visajourney.com Terms of Service. If you do not agree to the Terms of Service you should not access or view any page (including this page) on VisaJourney.com. Answers and comments provided on Visajourney.com Forums are general information, and are not intended to substitute for informed professional medical, psychiatric, psychological, tax, legal, investment, accounting, or other professional advice. Visajourney.com does not endorse, and expressly disclaims liability for any product, manufacturer, distributor, service or service provider mentioned or any opinion expressed in answers or comments. VisaJourney.com does not condone immigration fraud in any way, shape or manner. VisaJourney.com recommends that if any member or user knows directly of someone involved in fraudulent or illegal activity, that they report such activity directly to the Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement. You can contact ICE via email at Immigration.Reply@dhs.gov or you can telephone ICE at 1-866-347-2423. All reported threads/posts containing reference to immigration fraud or illegal activities will be removed from this board. If you feel that you have found inappropriate content, please let us know by contacting us here with a url link to that content. Thank you.
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