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Mike E

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Everything posted by Mike E

  1. List all 3 children. Include divorce filing in evidence.
  2. “If you are the beneficiary and are filing Form I-134 on your own behalf, complete and sign Part 4.” It could not be clearer. The petitioner is filing. So leave it blank. “NOTE: Read the Penalties section of the Form I-134 Instructions before completing this section.” Complex: filling out this section unnecessarily risks penalties. If the beneficiary remains unconvinced have her make a copy of what you send her, and then fill out part 4 on that copy. Then bring both I-134s to interview. If the CO rejects the first, show the second.
  3. There is so much demand now for ai chat bots that they are rationing use. So it looks like rich people will use them to fleece other rich people. I am ok with that. I suggest they be used to target billionaires most likely to flee reparations
  4. Good. I think it is a glitch but if enough people call USCIS on this nonsense maybe there will be less of it
  5. As a former resident of California, I support this idea. 1. Living in California is a choice. 2. The rich have means to leave a state that over taxes 3. There are over 1 million millionaires in California. 4. Math time: 10^6 * 10^6 = 10^12 = 1 trillion 5. So simply extract an average of $1M from each California millionaire, and California can put reparations behind it. 6. 5 percent of Californians are black. This is roughly equal to the number of millionaires in California. When the dust settles, California should have at least 2 million millionaires, more than before. California can then tax this broader base of wealthy people to make future reparations to other oppressed groups in the future. 7. Most California millionaires voted for politicians who support reparations so there is nothing unfair about this. I am really not seeing a problem here. I expect Oregon, Washingtons (both of them), Illinois, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Massachusetts, Colorado, New Mexico, Hawaii, Wisconsin, Michigan, Virginia to follow and that is OK. There is plenty of room for millionaires of other states to migrate to before the reparation laws establish a date of registry for repairers to leave or pay.
  6. With few exceptions every man who was in the U.S. before age 26, or was a U.S. citizen or LPR before age 26, must register with sss.gov . Ask specific questions on specific questions you do not understand yes Not required for you then.
  7. I disagree with your claim that that is what the guides are saying. What you have screenshot does not say what you claim it is saying. https://www.visajourney.com/guides/us-immigration-guide-for-children/ “Married sons and daughters (any age) - Your son or daughter’s spouse and/or child(ren) may be included on this petition.” Child has a specific meaning in U.S. immigration law. You needed to (and need to) read the companion guide: https://www.visajourney.com/guides/us-immigration-for-children/ “The immigration law defines a 'child' as an unmarried person under the age of 21 (a minor) who is” But let’s set aside visajourney guides and go to a primary source: https://www.uscis.gov/green-card/green-card-eligibility/green-card-for-family-preference-immigrants “If you are the spouse or unmarried child (under 21 years of age) of a family-based principal applicant, you may apply for a Green Card as a derivative applicant. For more information on derivatives and eligibility for adjustment of status, please see USCIS Policy Manual Volume 7, Part A, Chapter 6, Section C, Subsection C - Derivatives.” Your grand children are too old to be derivatives. Realistically, if your son gets a green card through you, and then applies for his children, they might get immigration visas in 30 years from now. NVC takes over case, and visa application, I-864 must be submitted, police certificates NVC then schedules interview. Applicants get medical examinations, ideally before interview After interview and approval, visa issued. Applicant has 6 months from date of medical to use visa. After getting visa, pay immigrant fee (aka green card fee) Enter U.S. Apply for SSN, DL, health insurance Receive green card Read https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/legal/visa-law0/visa-bulletin/2023/visa-bulletin-for-april-2023.html
  8. assuming he is not a U.S. citizen (are you sure he is not?), file I-130 no. Too old. Yes
  9. Generally not. Last 5 years of tax return transcripts. Or you can carry to interview. Or get an rfe. Selective service registration Since you have all the records, you say “yes” to the question about citations. If speeding is a crime in your state you say yes to relevant questions. Upload all the documents
  10. Also do an FOiA of your I-485 record, and I-131 record. If the record shows you * never applied for I-131 or never received an advance parole document, then this means between the day you applied for I-485 and your “resident since” date, you were in the U.S. * received an advance parole document, then this means between the day you applied for I-485 and the day I-131 was approved, you were in the U.S.
  11. Your N-400 thus shows at least 4.25 years of physical presence. This is a record that USCIS accepted as gospel. Since filing N-400, you just needed 0.75years of physical presence. It is hard for me believe that between filing N-400 and when your child was born, you did not have at least 0.75 years of physical presence. I would get a FOiA of your N-400 and take one more run at this while filing I-130 for your child.
  12. So this means you were a green card holder for at least 5 years, then naturalized. What was the “resident since” date on your green card?
  13. The child will be a U.S. citizen as soon as the child’s visa is stamped by a cbp officer (probably at yyz).
  14. Wow the plot thickens. 1. Did you get your green card after age 18? 2. Just before you got your green card, what type of visa did you have to enter the U.S.? 3. For how many years have you been a U.S. citizen?
  15. I doubt you will need a certificate of citizenship (cofc) for I-129F approval. Similarly doubt you need it for K-1 approval. I-485, N-400: the interview letters will demand your cofc. Most of the time the ISO conducting the interview will be happy with your passport. If I were you, I would be * doing an FOIA of my USCIS ans Department of State records. * getting my parents’ U.S. birth certificates and marriage certificate * getting a passport card
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