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Staying out the US more than 1 year, if CBP request to face an immigration judge, how long is the wait? |
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6:39 pm July 8, 2020 | |
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ivantran85
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Read 1163 Times 15 Replies
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My mom is 60 years old, 10 yeard green card, has a house in the US under her name, bank account, filed tax. She left US on November 2019, and stuck in Vietnam due to Corona. Right now she doesnt want to go back to the US due to surging of corona cases. If she stay out of the US more than a year, wait until the corona vaccine develop and come back to the US, if the CBP let her in but request her to face immigrant judge, how long is that wait? I know that she could apply for SB-1 visa, but its 50/50 chance, and she doesnt want to take that chance. If she just go with green card without SB-1 Visa, she still has 70% chance of getting in. - You enter without being questioned - Good
- You are questioned, but let in with a lecture - Good
- You are questioned and paroled in to go and face an immigration judge who determines you have not abandoned status - Good
- You are questioned and paroled in to go and face an immigration judge who determines you have abandoned status and deports you. - Bad
Thanks guy
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Submitting our final package! What I've learned in 2 months |
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1:07 am June 27, 2020 | |
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lazylady
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Read 2242 Times 7 Replies
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Hello fellow visajourney members, We finally completed assembling our package for AOS from F-1 visa to green card yesterday after 2 months prepping and sent it out just this morning. I want to shout out a huge THANK YOU to all the mods and everyone on this forum, you have been so helpful, so understanding, and the info I found here is precious! Hoping this submission will go well Just want to share few things I found after spending days on this forum and hundreds of dollars consulting with various immigration attorneys before I forget anything - If you are about to start your application: plan your travels abroad ahead. For non-immigrant visas, leaving the country while AOS is in process and without advanced parole and then come back under non-immigrant visa can mean you abandon your AOS. H1B is dual intent so should be fine.
- If you are not married yet:
- Be aware of 90-day guidance by DOS. Info here and here. In short this means if you came to the US under a non-immigrant visa and then proceed to get married within 90 days of your latest entry, there will be a bias of visa fraud or misrepresentation on you at consular processing and point of entry. If you go back to your country and then try to enter the US on non-immigrant visa again, it could be a lot of headache, in worst case you might not be able to enter the US. Since this is a guidance for DOS and not-binding on USCIS officers, so just file AOS from within the US (see Matter of Battista and Cavazos). According to my attorney, in the interview, USCIS officer might not mention the 90 day rule explicitly, but might ask related questions like "When did you decide to get married", "When did you buy your rings", etc.
- Things that will help your application:
- If you move in together, make sure both of your names are on the lease
- Have a joint bank account/brokerage account with both of you as holders and both names appear on account statements.
- Save your photos together. Know when/where it was taken.
- Routinely note down your physical addresses along with dates if you move often (Yes, I have 18 addresses within the last 5 years)
- If you are in the US, open a credit card to have credit score (take 6 month - 1 year to have score) and/or have your spouse add you as authorized user of his/her card
- Save your flight ticket confirmation and other proof that you visited each other.
- If you think about having a prenup, that's fine but consult with a good attorney. Prenups can't have terms that bypass immigration laws, especially not bypassing the affidavit of support.
- When you get married:
- Save photos of the wedding and celebration
- Ask your spouse to add you as beneficiary on his/her life insurance, retirement account and vice versa - this can be used as proof of co-mingling financial resources in a bona fide marriage.
- If you are married to a US citizen and are starting your application:
- Check out the basic steps and example forms on visajourney's guides. I started with the forum first but could have saved more time to start with the guides
- Make sure you have to correct form version
- Why? Because the links for old versions of many forms still float around and, this happened to us, we googled for I-485 when we first started and ended up with an outdated form, outdated instructions and almost missed the new requirement for I-944. I saw that happened to other folks here too. That could have resulted in a rejection.
- How? Always start here https://www.uscis.gov/forms, click on the form you need, and see edition date
- Read the instructions carefully. I know many parts of the forms seem simple enough and it's daunting because some instructions are longer than the form itself, but USCIS can be very specific about what they want, and the instructions help explain many questions I see on this forum (e.g: where to get tax transcript and credit report, renewal vs new application for I-765; need to fill out "N/A" for prior spouses info even though you already fill you are married only once above)
- Working with attorneys:
- Immigration is federal law so you can hire attorneys with active bar from any state. It's better to work with someone local who you can meet face-to-face and go with you to the interview (yes you can bring an immigration attorney into the interview to defend/explain on your behalf should the questions turn into unfavorable directions), but hiring someone in another state and work online can save a lot of money. I've been quoted between $2000 - $5000 flat fee for attorneys in CT, NY and OH. Hourly rate I've seen range from $200 - $300/hr. I also know someone who spent $7000 - $10,000 on their case, with $2000 - $3000 added for every addition complication the attorney found.
- Check out your attorney's reputation and reviews before doing a first consultation. I used avoo and martindale hubbell
- Take advantage of you consultation sessions, especially if you are charged for it. Try filling out the forms on your own first, have a list of questions and be ready to fire these in consultation. Some attorneys offer free consultation, some will charge hourly rate for it ($200 - $300). Free consultation typically sounds like a sales pitch, attorneys will go over what's included in their service, explain the process, payment terms, and give you a retainer/list of info/document they need. You can present your case, ask general questions like timeline, how to communicate, and just a few question specific to your own case. Some charge even for their first session, but will include that fee in the flat fee whole package if you choose to retain their service. This is when you want to take advantage of every minute, explain your case precisely, make sure the attorney hears all the important details, fire your questions, take good notes, know what page/part on the form you are referring to. A good attorney should be able to answer most of your questions about how to fill out forms, or at least point out where you can look for information. Some attorneys will use scare tactics to woo you into hiring them, so be careful.
- Use reputable free resources online: we found attorney Carl Shusterman Youtube channel helpful, and if you are Vietnamese like me, there's a live Q&A with attorney Huy Tuan on Youtube every week. I was suspect of how useful a live Q&A can be, but hey it was free, and turns out attorney Huy-Tuan is very knowledgeable and experienced. There could be other great attorneys online too, so please put them in the comments if you know one. There are also terrible ones that give terrible/outdated advice too.
- Most attorneys will tell you it's either you hire them to do everything, or you do everything and there is no in-between option. But what worked for us is we found a great attorney, we prepped our application on our own and do a consultation session with her whenever we have gathered a long list of questions. I felt confident and had all of my questions answered after 3 sessions. What usually happens is that our attorney is so good she answered what I thought would take an hour in about 30 minutes, and then we can chit chat a bit and I can email 1-2 questions if I come up with more at no cost because of the extra time. What I fear with this approach is that I don't know what I don't know... But I count on combing through visajourney forum because if something is an issue for me, most likely it would have happened to other people here too
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- Tips and tricks I learned:
- USCIS official tips here . Black ink, print 1-sided, no staple, make 2 copies of your entire application
- PDF form won't let you fill letter/number/specific characters in a field? Try disabling Acrobat Javascript like Esya did here. Still can't fill what you want? Just print out form and hand-write in black ink
- What USCIS officers look for (in short):
- Your spouse is a real US citizen (or greencard holder)
- Marriage is legal
- Marriage is bona fide
- All questions on I-485 are applicable in interview
- Third party affidavits as proof of bona fide marriage: according to my attorney she won't add this to straight forward case, unless there is something to explain. The reasoning behind this is most third party affidavits are too short for their purpose and could be asked about in interview. Therefore it is not included in my case, but hey maybe someone might need it.
- What are the worst cases and what to do: hopefully this won't happen but just know what you can do:
- I-130 denied: you can appeal
- I-130 approved but I-485 denied: Motion to reopen your AOS
- I-130 denied and I-485 approved: No such case
- Know the difference between "denied" and "rejected". Our attorney explained that "rejected" means that USCIS doesn't take your fee and send back your application. "Denied" means USCIS take your fee and you have to file again.
- Document certified translation: you can have a friend do it - just follow USCIS requirements, but there are also plenty of good online service that will return in 24 - 48 hrs for $25/page. Personally I like Rushtranslate - super fast turnaround, easy to send review and ask them to fix things here and there.
- Education Evaluation: I used SpanTran because they allow submitting scanned documents online. Paid extra for 5 days, took 3 weeks. They are hard to contact - but I got the evaluation finally. Please share if you know better service
Good luck to everyone! If you have more tips or tricks, please share below. I would really appreciate your input and I think it will help people who are starting this journey.
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Police certificate from Taiwan by Vietnam |
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12:48 pm June 24, 2020 | |
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stringpuller
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Read 389 Times 8 Replies
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Hi everyone, Ill make this as simple as i can. I'm USC in the states my wife is in Vietnam. She will need a police certificate from Taiwan. I have googled it and it seems there is 2 websites that have instructions. Anyone here from Taiwan or went through this can help me verify were to send? I have this address. I don't see a zipcode? New Taipei City Police Department at No. 32, Fuzhong Rd., Banqiao District, New Taipei City. 2nd part of my question is. I understand the mailing system in SE asia is not always reliable. Can any VJ members from Vietnam tell me the best carrier to use to mail outside the country? Is there a choice? Any help or advice is appreciated and sorry if this sounds like a dumb question. Thanks
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Should we prepare for K1 interview as if Public Charge rules apply? |
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7:14 pm June 23, 2020 | |
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TinNhi
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Read 922 Times 7 Replies
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Starting to get really nervous about our anticipated K1 interview in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Although the Public Charge rules shouldn't affect the K1 (interview stage), should we just assume that the CO is looking ahead at our future to calculate our risk level of being a Public Charge? For example, should we assume and prepare as if the CO is looking for: - DS-5540 form
- 250% of the minimum income level (future household of 2)
- Education documents (E.g. degree from a Vietnam university)
- English language proficiency certificate (E.g. IELTS)
- Private United States medical insurance coverage
Thank you,
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