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Danielle Silva

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Posts posted by Danielle Silva

  1. Hi Jr,

    If you are not finding that information on her passport, you can use the flight tickets.

    Do you have the flight tickets of her? Even the boarding pass should work for her.

    I hope it can help you.

    Regards,

    Danielle

    Greetings!

    I am currently filling out form DS-230 for my mother that is soon to be immigrating from Brazil and was wondering what to do in regards to the departure dates on question 35 (List dates of all previous visits to or residence in the United States). Her passport does not show a departure stamp from the US nor a arrival stamp in Brazil so we are kind of stuck. She has entered the country multiple times and only remembers a couple of dates. What should we do about the others?

    Any help would be greatly appreciated!

  2. Technically isn't a K-1 (Fiancee) considered a non-immigrant visa?

    According to the uscis.gov site, http://travel.state.gov/visa/immigrants/types/types_2994.html

    it seems:

    What Is a “Fiancé(e)”?

    Under U.S. immigration law, a foreign-citizen fiancé(e) of a U.S. citizen is the recipient of an approved Petition for Alien Fiancé(e), Form I-129F, who has been issued a nonimmigrant K-1 visa for travel to the United States in order to marry his or her U.S. citizen fiancé(e). Both the U.S. citizen and the K-1 visa applicant must have been legally free to marry at the time the petition was filed and must have remained so thereafter. The marriage must be legally possible according to laws of the U.S. state in which the marriage will take place.

    In general, the foreign-citizen fiancé(e) and U.S. citizen sponsor must have met in person within the past two years. USCIS may grant an exception to this requirement, based on extreme hardship for the U.S. citizen sponsor to personally meet the foreign-citizen fiancé(e), or, for example, if it is contrary in the U.S. citizen sponsor’s or foreign-citizen fiancé(e)’s culture for a man and woman to meet before marriage.

    According to the uscis.gov site http://travel.state.gov/visa/immigrants/types/types_2994.html

    it seems that the K1 visa isn't a immigration visa.

    What Is a “Fiancé(e)”?

    Under U.S. immigration law, a foreign-citizen fiancé(e) of a U.S. citizen is the recipient of an approved Petition for Alien Fiancé(e), Form I-129F, who has been issued a nonimmigrant K-1 visa for travel to the United States in order to marry his or her U.S. citizen fiancé(e). Both the U.S. citizen and the K-1 visa applicant must have been legally free to marry at the time the petition was filed and must have remained so thereafter. The marriage must be legally possible according to laws of the U.S. state in which the marriage will take place.

    In general, the foreign-citizen fiancé(e) and U.S. citizen sponsor must have met in person within the past two years. USCIS may grant an exception to this requirement, based on extreme hardship for the U.S. citizen sponsor to personally meet the foreign-citizen fiancé(e), or, for example, if it is contrary in the U.S. citizen sponsor’s or foreign-citizen fiancé(e)’s culture for a man and woman to meet before marriage.

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