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How and where to mail your I-485/I-767/I-131

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Nicaragua
Timeline

is there a specific reason for delaying filing those? I filed about a month after my husband and I got hitched after adding him to as many things as I could, just to get the ball rolling and to stand in the immigration line for Green cards.

 

My opinion is to file as soon as possible

Edited by YecaCruz

A Tale of Two Dakotaraguans

K1 Journey - 78 Days

 

Sent I-129F - 11/16/15 [Day 1]
NOA1 - 11/18 (Hard copy: 11/24) [Day 2, Day 8]
NOA2 - 12/18 (Hard copy: 12/26) [Day 32, Day 40]
NVC received file: 1/05/2016 [Day 50] Obtained NVC invoice number, paid visa fee, filled out DS-160: 1/06 [Day 51]
Fiancé's medical: 1/12 9:00am [Day 57]
Interview: 1/22 9:30am, Approved! [67 days] (F)
Visa status on ceac site= "AP": 1/25, "Issued":01/27, "In Transit: 2/02", Visa packet in hand: 2/03 [Day 78]
POE: (Houston) 2/04, North Dakota arrival: 2/05

Married (civil): 2/05/16 (L)

AOS - 55 Days

 

I-485, AP, EAD sent : 3/03/2016 [Day 1]

Delivered: 3/04 [Day 2]

Electronic NOA1: 3/08 [Day 5]  NOA1 Hardcopy rcv'd in mail: 3/12 [Day 9]; Biometric Notification rcv'd in mail: 3/26 [Day 23]; Biometrics Appt: 4/06 in Fargo, ND [Day 33]

Notification(s): "Your new card is being produced" 4/23 [Day 48] ; "Your case was approved" 4/26 [Day 51]; "Your card was mailed on 4/27" 4/28 [Day 53]

Green Card in Hand: 4/30 [Day 55]

D-day ("Dress day"/I do...again Day/wedding reception): 9/10/16

ROC - 390 days 

Spoiler

Window opens: 1/24/2018

Package sent: 1/26, Delivered on 1/29 at 11:17am to CSC - [Day 1]

Check cashed: 1/31 [Day 3]

NOA1: 1/29 [Day 1]; NOA rcv'd in mail: 2/02 [Day 4]

Biometrics  Sent 5/5, rcv'd in mail 5/12 [Day 107]

Biometrics appt: Not required

18 Month extension letter received, dated 8/18: 8/24/18 [Day 211]

"New Card Being Produced" - 2/11/19 [Day 382], email "we mailed your card on 2/14" - 2/15

Card arrived: 2/19/19 [Day 390]

Citizenship - 643 Days

Spoiler

Window opens: 01/24/2019

E-file: 01/28/2019 [Day 1]

Biometrics = scheduled: 02/01 [Day 4], view uploaded document: 02/05 [Day 8], appointment day: 02/19 [Day 22] In Fargo, ND

Interview scheduled notification online: 9/3/20 [Day 585]

Interview in Minneapolis, MN: 10/20/20 [Day 632] at 12:15 PM: passed/approved

Oath Ceremony: scheduled 10/20, view letter online 10/21

Oath : Fargo, ND 2:15pm at sanctuary events center. No guests allowed

 

1808 total days of thinking about/waiting for immigrations!

Applied for US Passport 11/4/2020, application approved 1/26/21, passport and naturalization cert received in mailbox: 1/28/21 📘

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Taiwan
Timeline

There are NO benefits in waiting to file the I-485...none.  When you delay filing, you endanger yourself, delay working, delay being able to leave the US, delay applying for citizenship.

 

Just as others have said, ANY non-immigrant is out of status and subject to removal after the expiration of their I-94.  I would do whatever it takes to get a PROPER I-485 filed prior to I-94 expiration.

 

A truly successful immigration process requires a lot of knowledge, planning, time, patience, and money.  

Edited by Crazy Cat

"The US immigration process requires a great deal of knowledge, planning, time, patience, and a significant amount of money.  It is quite a journey!"

- Some old child of the 50's & 60's on his laptop 

 

Senior Master Sergeant, US Air Force- Retired (after 20+ years)- Missile Systems Maintenance & Titan 2 ICBM Launch Crew Duty (200+ Alert tours)

Registered Nurse- Retired- I practiced in the areas of Labor & Delivery, Home Health, Adolescent Psych, & Adult Psych.

IT Professional- Retired- Web Site Design, Hardware Maintenance, Compound Pharmacy Software Trainer, On-site go live support, Database Manager, App Designer.

______________________________________

In summary, it took 13 months for approval of the CR-1.  It took 44 months for approval of the I-751.  It took 4 months for approval of the N-400.   It took 172 days from N-400 application to Oath Ceremony.   It took 6 weeks for Passport, then 7 additional weeks for return of wife's Naturalization Certificate.. 
 

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5 hours ago, Mike E said:

SpaceAge stopped posting to visa journey and I presume her immigration journey ended, even after she bonded out of jail. Once ICE gets involved, the legal expenses are prohibitive.

 

SpaceAge made the same mistake others make: she was waiting for that one extra document to file. She did not need to wait.

 

ICE does not have to forgive unauthorized presence and unauthorized work.

She filed for AOS through court after 5 weeks in jail. Posted twice after that but no one answered.

Edited by Allaboutwaiting
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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Australia
Timeline
20 minutes ago, Allaboutwaiting said:

She filed for AOS through court after 5 weeks in jail. Posted twice after that but no one answered.

I remember that thread vividly and even if everything is perfectly fine now...what an awful experience. 5 weeks in jail and so much extra money down the drain as well - AOS is already pretty expensive as it is. 

K1 to AOS                                                                                   AOS/EAD/AP                                                                      N-400

03/01/2018 - I-129F Mailed                                              06/19/2019 - NOA1 Date                                              01/27/2023 - N-400 Filed Online

03/08/2018 - NOA1 Date                                                    07/11/2019 - Biometrics Appt                                   02/23/2023 - Biometrics Appt
09/14/2018 - NOA2 Date                                                    12/13/2019 - EAD/AP Approved                               04/03/2023 - Interview Scheduled

10/16/2018 - NVC Received                                              12/17/2019 - Interview Scheduled                          05/10/2023 - Interview - APPROVED!

10/21/2018 - Packet 3 Received                                      01/29/2020 - Interview - APPROVED!                  OFFICIALLY A U.S. CITIZEN! 

12/30/2018 - Packet 3 Sent                                               02/04/2020 - Green Card Received! 

01/06/2019 - Packet 4 Received                                     ROC - I-751

01/29/2019 - Interview - APPROVED!                           11/02/2021 - Mailed ROC Packet

02/05/2019 - Visa Received                                             11/04/2021 - NOA1 Date

05/17/2019 - U.S. Arrival                                                     01/19/2022 - Biometrics Waived

05/24/2019 - Married ❤️                                                    02/04/2023 - Transferred to New Office

06/14/2019 - Mailed AOS Packet                                    05/10/2023 - APPROVED!

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Just now, beloved_dingo said:

I remember that thread vividly and even if everything is perfectly fine now...what an awful experience. 5 weeks in jail and so much extra money down the drain as well - AOS is already pretty expensive as it is. 

It was beyond horrifying! She said back then her emotional state was rock bottom.

 

What seemed like an innocuous thing transformed into a real life nightmare: they had to pay 5k for bail plus whatever the lawyer charged; and the whole experience of 5 weeks in jail!

Can't even fathom. 

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Sweden
Timeline
4 hours ago, Caligirl1 said:

Depends on the state you're living in, too: in California the officer isn't allowed to ask for your immigration status during a traffic stop.

It's enough to drive through and be stopped at one of the check points in southern CA to get in trouble. I myself have been stopped there, between San Diego and Los Angeles, and had to show my greencard and all. But obviously that's not a regular "traffic" stop, that's an actual "border protection" stop. Regular police doesn't ask, like you said. I bet all the states bordering to Mexico (and Canada?) have these check points. 

K-1: 12-22-2015 - 09-07-2016

AP: 12-20-2016 - 04-07-2017

EAD: 01-18-2017 - 05-30-2017

AOS: 12-20-2016 - 07-26-2017

ROC: 04-22-2019 - 04-22-2020
Naturalization: 05-01-2020 - 03-16-2021

U.S. passport: 03-30-2021 - 05-08-2021

En livstid i krig. Göteborg killed it. Epic:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBs3G1PvyfM&ab_channel=Sabaton

 

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1 minute ago, Scandi said:

It's enough to drive through and be stopped at one of the check points in southern CA to get in trouble. I myself have been stopped there, between San Diego and Los Angeles, and had to show my greencard and all. But obviously that's not a regular "traffic" stop, that's an actual "border protection" stop. Regular police doesn't ask, like you said. I bet all the states bordering to Mexico (and Canada?) have these check points. 

Where and when exactly were you stopped? The only check point I know, has not been working in ages.

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Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Germany
Timeline
7 minutes ago, Scandi said:

It's enough to drive through and be stopped at one of the check points in southern CA to get in trouble. I myself have been stopped there, between San Diego and Los Angeles, and had to show my greencard and all. But obviously that's not a regular "traffic" stop, that's an actual "border protection" stop. Regular police doesn't ask, like you said. I bet all the states bordering to Mexico (and Canada?) have these check points. 

True. like I said, I was talking about a traffic stop- not actual border protection stop😉

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Myanmar
Timeline
11 minutes ago, Allaboutwaiting said:

Where and when exactly were you stopped? The only check point I know, has not been working in ages.

GAO-05-435_Figure_10.gif

 

I have never been stopped in southern California, but I have seen BP patrol vehicles on I-10 in California. I assume it is denser on I-8. 
 

If you live south of I-10 or you drive on I-10 or I-8, you either carry evidence of lawful presence or you stay home. 
 

I have had stops where I had to produce my gc.
 

 

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Sweden
Timeline
26 minutes ago, Allaboutwaiting said:

Where and when exactly were you stopped? The only check point I know, has not been working in ages.

We were stopped at the one just south of San Clemente in 2017, I had just received my greencard, luckily. We pass there often but have only been stopped once. There's always a ton of border protection cars parked all over the place there but have only seen them stop traffic once, so doesn't appear to be common. It should be a warning though, it CAN happen and does happen to some, evidently. So that's something for OP to take into consideration too, especially if living in a southern border state. 

K-1: 12-22-2015 - 09-07-2016

AP: 12-20-2016 - 04-07-2017

EAD: 01-18-2017 - 05-30-2017

AOS: 12-20-2016 - 07-26-2017

ROC: 04-22-2019 - 04-22-2020
Naturalization: 05-01-2020 - 03-16-2021

U.S. passport: 03-30-2021 - 05-08-2021

En livstid i krig. Göteborg killed it. Epic:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBs3G1PvyfM&ab_channel=Sabaton

 

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5 minutes ago, Mike E said:

GAO-05-435_Figure_10.gif

 

I have never been stopped in southern California, but I have seen BP patrol vehicles on I-10 in California. I assume it is denser on I-8. 
 

If you live south of I-10 or you drive on I-10 or I-8, you either carry evidence of lawful presence or you stay home. 
 

I have had stops where I had to produce my gc.
 

 

The one we pass by often -on the I-5 near San Clemente-, has vehicles around but I have never seen it working as a check point. Therefore my curiosity regarding @Scandibeing checked on the way from San Diego to LA.

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1 minute ago, Scandi said:

We were stopped at the one just south of San Clemente in 2017, I had just received my greencard, luckily. We pass there often but have only been stopped once. There's always a ton of border protection cars parked all over the place there but have only seen them stop traffic once, so doesn't appear to be common. It should be a warning though, it CAN happen and does happen to some, evidently. So that's something for OP to take into consideration too, especially if living in a southern border state. 

Regardless of border check points, LPR's must always carry proof of status -though we know that is not necessarily the case-.

 

And in the many years we have lived around the area, we have never seen that check point working. Thought it was just for "decor". 🤣

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Sweden
Timeline
2 minutes ago, Allaboutwaiting said:

Regardless of border check points, LPR's must always carry proof of status -though we know that is not necessarily the case-.

 

And in the many years we have lived around the area, we have never seen that check point working. Thought it was just for "decor". 🤣

It's very much open, they are certainly working there. But they don't appear to be stopping the actual freeway very often at all. You also see their cars parked in random places all along that part of the freeway, "hiding" in the little bush that is there. That station is permanent and operating 24/7 I believe. We drive past at least once a week and have only been stopped once. 

 

It was so crazy to see how they stop the entire freeway going north, with traffic lights, large signs (yes that little "bridge" you drive under have large signs on it that they light up when they need traffic to stop) and temporary stop signs on the street. A little intimidating but cool experience, but maybe not so much if you don't have any documentation.

 

Not sure if you're sad or glad you haven't had to experience it. 😁

K-1: 12-22-2015 - 09-07-2016

AP: 12-20-2016 - 04-07-2017

EAD: 01-18-2017 - 05-30-2017

AOS: 12-20-2016 - 07-26-2017

ROC: 04-22-2019 - 04-22-2020
Naturalization: 05-01-2020 - 03-16-2021

U.S. passport: 03-30-2021 - 05-08-2021

En livstid i krig. Göteborg killed it. Epic:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBs3G1PvyfM&ab_channel=Sabaton

 

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Canada
Timeline

I wonder how her case panned out.  Horrifying, for sure. I can't imagine...

 

We estimate immi has cost us over $100K because I had to leave to prevent visa overstay, which meant 18mo paying for living expenses, properties, etc in 2 countries and essentially biweekly airfare for hubs to visit.  There was also no close civil surgeon, so we had additional costs for 3 of us to traipse cross country to complete the medicals and interview.  Immi is definitely not cheap.  Far from it, in fact.  You really gotta want it and I feel like there's a lot of rose coloured glasses on people's faces.  

 

It also grinds my gears when people do boast that they didn't adjust for 5 years and didn't get caught.  Honestly, there should be repercussions for these people because those that spend the time, effort and energy to do it correctly should be able to take some solace in the process working when you follow the rules.  Bad behaviour and blissful ignorance shouldn't be rewarded.  I left to prevent visa overstay myself because I wanted to follow the rules!  I had 5 and a half years of paying taxes, filing taxes, contributing to the economy and my community and I was rewarded with having to leave and spend over 600 days to get through the immigration process. If you're playing by the rules, you shouldn't be punished.  If anything, that history should count for something.  

Montreal IR-1/CR-1 FAQ

 

Montreal IR-1/CR-1 Visa spreadsheet: follow directions at top of page for data to be added

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