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Mike E

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Everything posted by Mike E

  1. No it dies not happen always. Some primary inspectors are comfortable, competent, and authorized to process CR-1 visas. That is what they would do in secondary too Bad and incorrect advice. Nothing good comes from unneeded encounters with police.
  2. File a tax return and find out. Japanese income tac rates are higher than U.S. rates, IRS does not double tax. You will be fine.
  3. On Apple Macintosh computers, there is an app called preview which can edit PDF files.
  4. Congrats! Crossing my fingers its USCIS receipt date is September 1, 2023 or earlier!
  5. You need to line up a joint sponsor. If the baby was born outside the U.S., * assess whether was born a U.S. citizen. * if so, get an appointment for a CRBA and U.S. passport at the consulate * if not, ask NVC now to put the case back to NVC so that an I-130 can be filed for baby to get an IR-2 visa
  6. There was an ugly case posted on reddit over the past weekend where entry was granted but CBP/ICE took the LPR into custody. Unfortunately, OP deleted most of the content. But before that happened, OP reported that I-751 was denied. https://www.reveddit.com/v/immigration/comments/15pfmt4/conditional_green_card_holder_entering_us_and/ Based on an (apparently deleted) thread of yours from today, I would not travel.
  7. @reey Do you have a lease, deed, job?
  8. You might need DNA testing to prove that the man with two names was your father. 1. DNA testing proves that their siblings are your aunts/uncles 2. Their birth certificates and your father's birth certificate proves that they were siblings because they had the same parents. 3. Your birth certificate proves that your father used a different name at the time you were born. So logically the man with two names was your father.
  9. Per the following it does not matter, but it is a good idea in the memo of the check to write the names of the I-130 petitioner and beneficiary. Yes, this is permitted.
  10. Stages of grief on your part about USCIS consistency and prowess in information technology. You are in the Denial stage.
  11. CBP was hoping for a big catch. If the travelers had said a number over $10,000, in absence of a pro-active declaration, CBP would keep it. Those blue uniforms and side arms don’t pay for themselves.
  12. Then I would not expect any of the evidence to be posted online. That some was not posted is not an indication USCIS lost any of your evidence.
  13. No because you are going to disclose at interfere.
  14. Question mooted then. Try to intercept. If successful, go to each post office.
  15. https://www.uscis.gov/citizenship-resource-center/find-study-materials-and-resources/study-for-the-test/citizenship-resources-in-text-only-format https://www.uscis.gov/tools/uscis-tools-and-resources “Practice Civics Test Mobile App Download our free civics study app at Google Play or the App Store. Search “USCIS civics test” and make sure USCIS is the developer.” How old was he when you became a U.S. citizen?
  16. Given it is AA, I suspect connecting from one of the Tokyo airports, and so POE could be DFW.
  17. I have not. But I have read of cases where wayward GCs and EADs were recovered this way Will there be any occupants your old address after you leave? I have seen mixed success usps forwarding USCIS mail. I am so old that I am perplexed by this statement. For some reason, no matter where I live in the U.S., I know the location of the post office that serves my address. So on Monday drive in a spiral pattern to all usps post offices near you and ask the clerks if their post office serves your current address.
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