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DCF Spain problem

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Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Spain
Timeline

Hi everyone,

Here´s the issue:

I am a U.S. citizen and my fiancee´is Spanish. After months of gathering the documents to get married in Spain, we are told that we have to wait six months to get married in Valencia because they have to verify the documents with the U.S., we have to meet with the judge, etc. Although I called various times asking questions including how long the wait time was, they never told me there was a longer wait time for U.S. citizens. Additionally, when we went to turn in our documents, they told us that if we wanted to marry in the U.S. it would be a wait time of a year or longer!!

The problem is that I assumed that we would definitely be married in time for when I leave in late July. I planned on returning to the U.S. for good in order to apply to graduate school and get everything ready. Now, I have to come back to Spain in October to get married. This creates an issue because I would be gone for about three months. The embassy told me to call back when we are married but that since I only have a certificate of empadronamiento and not a visa we probably don´t qualify for the six month residence required.

Now I´m not sure what to do because the paperwork to get married in Valencia is already in process. Should I look back into getting the fiancee´visa instead?

Thanks in advance!

Sonia

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It is a hard situation you are in now, God, it takes too long to get married there....have you considered getting married in other country? Like Denmark ? You can make a trip there and in 3 days you married. Just a thought! :D

See which path is faster for you:

1. wait 6 month and get married and then do DCF (I do not know how fast it is in Spain this process), the advantage is that everything is faster for your future wife when she gets in to the States, she gets her GC and SSN in 2-3 weeks. But the residence in Spain it is an issue for you to can start DCF soooooo.

2. start the fiance visa and probably you'll be done in 8-9 months...or more

Good luck! :thumbs:

"Daca voi nu ma vreti, io va vreau"

DCF Frankfurt Germany

01/12/2007 I-130 filed in person at the Consulate in Frankfurt

01/17/2007 Faxed the checklist to the Immigrant Visa Unit in Frankfurt

03/29/2007 Got letter from USCIS to provide evidence that our marriage is bona fide

04/02/2007 Sent to USCIS lots of evidence

05/03/2007 I have an unofficial "PETITION APPROVED" ...waiting for confirmation from Consulate

05/07/2007 Received email from USCIS ROME confirming that our petition was approved (why Rome? because we complained to the District Office Rome about the Sub-Office Frankfurt..it took too long for our petition to be approved)...now waiting for the interview letter from the Consulate

05/18/2007 E-mail from IV Frankfurt, our interview was scheduled for May 29th

05/19/2007 Packet 4 in the mail: ja ja ja interview letter

05/29/2007 Interview at 7.30 a.m. APPROVED Thank you, God!

06/01/2007 Visa arrived !

06/03/2007 Mayday on the plane POE Cincinnati

Living in Maryland

06/21/2007 Welcome Notice from USCIS

06/29/2007 Applied for SSN at the local Office

07/07/2007 Green Card arrived

07/09/2007 Another 2 Welcome Letters from USCIS...God, they really love me! :D

07/20/2007 Social Security Card arrived

Living@working in Maryland :)

01/18/2009 PCS-ing to Stuttgart Germany

Feb 2009 Received letter from VSC to start removing conditions.

Getting ready the packet for Removing Conditions I-751

03/12/2009 Mailed the I-751 packet to Vermont Service Center

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Spain
Timeline

Hi Sonia,

I can verify this, I am a spanish citizen married to a US citizen. It took us about 5-6 months to get married after submitting our paper-work, Spain is terrible in burocracy, really really slow... We were also in a hurry at the beginning but then we took our time and I am glad we did now because the DCF process seems to be a fast and straightforward one. I would suggest to wait and get married in Valencia, this will make much easier the DCF process. If you can prove you have been living in Spain for the last 6 months then it shuould be easy.

Kitten

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I echo maydaydas advice to marry in Denmark.. it's super easy

you can still celebrate in Spain afterwards and then you can file at the embassy in Spain

here's a link (though it's mostly in German, but also English)

http://www.expressheirat.de/index.html

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here's another link

http://www.heiraten-leicht-gemacht.de/english/service.html

even though these services cost money, it's also possible to figure things out without going through such a service and save the money

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Filed: Timeline

Here's my story--we went through exactly the same drama a few months ago. We gathered all the necessary information to get married (don't forget you need to have your birth certificate apostilled in the US), which included going to Barcelona to get a sworn affivdavit on a number of issues; namely, that i had lived in Spain for the last year (cause I had no proof) and that I was single (in the US, we have marriage certificates, but no single certificates). Well, we finally turned it all in to our civil registry and the woman told us that even though we have everything in order, that the attorney general could veto us thinking we are a marriage of convenience. Well, all in all, there was no problem, he signed us off and we got married. Start to finish was 3 full months (we decided to get married after Christmas and were married 3/31). So immediately afterwards, we went to Madrid to DCF (on April 18th) and my husband's interview is next wednesday (5/23) Will be just over a month for DCF if all goes well. As for proof of residence, I had an empadronamiento from only February of this year (didn't know it was necessary), a library card from march 2006, and a joint bank account (that we just set up and it didn't show the date that I was added--so that was a plus---do this!). The lady at the embassy was sold on the bank account. I would advise against doing the fiance visa because when you are married and do DCF, my understanding is that you get all the priviledges in one shot, as opposed to contiually applying for work permit, and whatever else. I might suggest that the government officials are just planning for worst case scenario by saying 6 months. That's what they did to us. So we just waited on the planning and planned our wedding in 3 weeks. They did no checking with the US on anything. Not conveniant but....

let me know if you have any more questions.

Hi everyone,

Here´s the issue:

I am a U.S. citizen and my fiancee´is Spanish. After months of gathering the documents to get married in Spain, we are told that we have to wait six months to get married in Valencia because they have to verify the documents with the U.S., we have to meet with the judge, etc. Although I called various times asking questions including how long the wait time was, they never told me there was a longer wait time for U.S. citizens. Additionally, when we went to turn in our documents, they told us that if we wanted to marry in the U.S. it would be a wait time of a year or longer!!

The problem is that I assumed that we would definitely be married in time for when I leave in late July. I planned on returning to the U.S. for good in order to apply to graduate school and get everything ready. Now, I have to come back to Spain in October to get married. This creates an issue because I would be gone for about three months. The embassy told me to call back when we are married but that since I only have a certificate of empadronamiento and not a visa we probably don´t qualify for the six month residence required.

Now I´m not sure what to do because the paperwork to get married in Valencia is already in process. Should I look back into getting the fiancee´visa instead?

Thanks in advance!

Sonia

Married 3/31/07

DCF Madrid-04/22/07

Green Card Granted 5/29/07

DH arrived in USA to live with me for good! 6/3/07

Filing for removal of conditions by 5/29/09

Baby girl due on 5/17/09

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Filed: Timeline

One more thing....I just wanted to emphasize....residence (at least here) means living here, not having a visa. I never had a visa, and lived there for 1.5 years just illegally. I think they had better things to worry about than arresting me.

Hi everyone,

Here´s the issue:

I am a U.S. citizen and my fiancee´is Spanish. After months of gathering the documents to get married in Spain, we are told that we have to wait six months to get married in Valencia because they have to verify the documents with the U.S., we have to meet with the judge, etc. Although I called various times asking questions including how long the wait time was, they never told me there was a longer wait time for U.S. citizens. Additionally, when we went to turn in our documents, they told us that if we wanted to marry in the U.S. it would be a wait time of a year or longer!!

The problem is that I assumed that we would definitely be married in time for when I leave in late July. I planned on returning to the U.S. for good in order to apply to graduate school and get everything ready. Now, I have to come back to Spain in October to get married. This creates an issue because I would be gone for about three months. The embassy told me to call back when we are married but that since I only have a certificate of empadronamiento and not a visa we probably don´t qualify for the six month residence required.

Now I´m not sure what to do because the paperwork to get married in Valencia is already in process. Should I look back into getting the fiancee´visa instead?

Thanks in advance!

Sonia

Married 3/31/07

DCF Madrid-04/22/07

Green Card Granted 5/29/07

DH arrived in USA to live with me for good! 6/3/07

Filing for removal of conditions by 5/29/09

Baby girl due on 5/17/09

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Spain
Timeline

HI. My girlfriend was living here for 4 years, then she moved to the USA to study (3 years ago). Does anyone know if she needs to live here those 6 month before the wedding in spain or those 4 years that she did spend here are enough to apply for the direct consular filing? Thank u

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Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Spain
Timeline

Thanks for the responses! I am waiting for next week when our papers are confirmed to see when they give us a date with the judge to verify we are not a marriage of convenience. I truly hope it takes shorter than six months (three months would be great :) We are definitely going to do the joint bank account thing. Thanks girlafraid7 for the advice.

If it really is a long wait time, the Denwark wedding is an option. So wish me luck guys!

In response to mdc, the six-month residence in Spain before filing DCF is what counts. I had a student visa for a year, lived here another 2.5 years without a visa and leaving for 3 months before applying for DCF is an issue. Proof of residency could be certificate of empadronamiento, work visa, apartment contract, light bill, etc.

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