Jump to content

Allaboutwaiting

Members
  • Posts

    3,169
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    8

Everything posted by Allaboutwaiting

  1. The ADIT stamp is just a temporary proof of legal presence in the US - valid for one year- for those who currently don't have permanent residence and it just requires checking if people filed a form and evidence -AOS or ROC-. Approval requires an agent reviewing ALL the documents in depth and it is then when people become a legal permanent resident.
  2. I don't think you'll get an RFE. And definitely don't pay the lawyer; your wife can get it.
  3. I guess you've already checked this link: https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/us-visas/Visa-Reciprocity-and-Civil-Documents-by-Country/Honduras.html The documents must be exactly as the website describes.
  4. Check the links @beloved_dingo just posted. Instead of making you schedule an appointment to stamp your passport they are already mailing paper I-94's as a stand alone proof of permanent residence - with photo included, which is pretty cool-.
  5. We have all been receiving the 48 month extension - which we personally welcomed as the 24 one would expire this July-. Glad to know we're not alone waiting for almost two years: we filed April 2021, thought the case would be approved with no issue, but over a year ago we received an RFE, responded immediately, got the case transferred to another office and then status changed to "Case is ready to be scheduled for an interview"; all that in a single week. In October last year the status changed to "Fingerprints were taken" and recently learnt from the forum that was just a glitch; there is no movement since then. 😕 Instead of using the USCIS account, we check our status here on a daily basis since we received the new extension: https://egov.uscis.gov/casestatus/landing.do
  6. I would do exactly the same. Hopefully it will suffice. Just as a "funny" story: a few years ago, USCIS sent an RFE requesting for a translation to English of a UK birth certificate. Go figure.
  7. We were transferred to our local office back in February 2022. In October, the status changed to "Fingerprints were taken" (learnt from other posts it was just a glitch). We did not file an N-400 and we're still waiting for an interview to be scheduled. 😕 In your case it could be just to "expedite" things and there is a chance that the case will be approved soon. BTW, every case around us was approved back when we were transferred.
  8. Well, hopefully the double filing works - though it is sad that people have to resort to this sort of thing just because the system is not efficient-.
  9. I have never seen people filing an I-129f to speed up an I-130. Whenever someone inquires about the K3, the forum members that reply are very emphatic about that visa category being practically obsolete. Maybe you checked really old threads from when filing both was actually a thing? There is almost a 100% chance the K3 won't be approved.
  10. The OP does not need help to travel to and within the European Union - as a Spanish citizen he is a seasoned EU traveler-. His question is regarding a third country and the possible issues with the airline and his mismatched passports.
  11. Beginning next year, every US traveler will need an ETIAS to travel through the Schengen area, which means 20 visa/passport free European countries less than the Spanish passport.
  12. The Spanish passport allows entry visa free to more countries than the US one.
  13. What's the name difference? Maiden vs. married? And the easiest way would be buying tickets separately in order to match each passport.
  14. On a quick Google search you can actually see that she can apply for a waiver - they would not state she is eligible for a waiver if she wasn't-.
  15. She needs the very expensive boarding foil. https://do.usembassy.gov/boarding-foils/#:~:text=If you are a lawful,as a “boarding foil.”
  16. As said before: the more information you provide, the easier will be for the members of the forum to help you. At minimum, share your whole timeline from when you entered the US to when you filed for removal of conditions plus an image of the denial letter - without any personal information-.
×
×
  • Create New...