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Mike E

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Everything posted by Mike E

  1. You will likely have to pay the I-90 fee to get the stamp.
  2. That is the problem. Read the entire question again: The beneficiary is in the United States and will apply for adjustment of status to that of a lawful permanent resident at the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) office in: 61.a. City or Town 61.b. State When you put in an answer for 61a and 61b, you were saying the beneficiary was in the U.S. and will adjust status in the U.S. For your mother, the ISO reading the petition saw that you meant to answer: The beneficiary will not apply for adjustment of status in the United States, but he or she will apply for an immigrant visa abroad at the U.S. Embassy or U.S. Consulate in: 62.a. City or Town 62.b. Province 62.c. Country For your father, the ISO did not give you that concession. That ISO held you to your error. Hire an immigration attorney to handle these cases moving forward.
  3. What were the answers in each I-130 to: The beneficiary is in the United States and will apply for adjustment of status to that of a lawful permanent resident at the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) office in: 61.a. City or Town 61.b. State The beneficiary will not apply for adjustment of status in the United States, but he or she will apply for an immigrant visa abroad at the U.S. Embassy or U.S. Consulate in: 62.a. City or Town 62.b. Province 62.c. Country
  4. Did your current wife know your first wife before or during your marriage to your first wife?
  5. The process varies by embassy. As others have noted, typically the beneficiary brings it to interview. Some embassies require it to be uploaded to a web site (not always a .gov website). Others might require it to be delivered to a lock box. The more recent the signature and date the better. Signing the day of interview is ideal, assuming that is the process. Filling out your timeline, identifying the embassy, and/or posting in the appropriate regional forum will give you better answers.
  6. Quite the opposite I think. Congratulations. Hopefully it is approval and not a spare 48 month letter.
  7. Pretty sure that in PH, a biological father of a child born out of wedlock has no rights. The Philippines forum on visajourney will know for sure.
  8. You will keep it, but won’t able to use when entering the U.S. the first time on your CR-1 visa. After you get your green card, you will need to visit a global entry office to upgrade your status in the system to an LPR. Thereafter, whenever a kiosk asks for a passport, you will use your green card instead.
  9. If the beneficiary arrived on a visa waiver, no I-485 is possible if the petitioner is an LPR spouse. Otherwise you can file I-485 if the spouse is an LPR. This is true even though the final action date in the visa bulletin is not current for the F2A category. This is because the filing date in the visa bulletin for F2A is current and for April, USCIS has said family based petitions can use the filing date chart.
  10. Probably not. Sounds like your spouse filed as married filing separately (MFS) You need to include those tax returns. You should file your own MFS returns for those years.
  11. ESTA was not around in 1998. But 90 day VWP was.
  12. If U.S. citizen petitioners or alien beneficiaries wish to let the beneficiaries adjust status with another spouse, then K-1 is a poor choice of visa. This topic has derailed. Out.
  13. Waste of time imho. Do this instead: https://www.uscis.gov/newsroom/alerts/uscis-announces-additional-mail-delivery-process-for-receiving-adit-stamp
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