Jump to content

Rocio0010

Members
  • Posts

    5,762
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    15

Everything posted by Rocio0010

  1. Correct. And that is why you submit Form I-864 As long as father is a USC or a PR and makes above the poverty guideline to support himself, you, your spouse and any other dependents, then you should be fine.
  2. I’m sure you had a good heart on this one. But you actually hurt yourself because you allowed the petition to proceed even though you knew that you were no longer married. He got his green card through a sham marriage that you were part of. Did you also know that you’re on the hook for the I-864 until he becomes a citizen, works 40 quarters, or naturalizes? This is bigamy in the US. In a lot of States it is a crime. forget About k1. That ship has sailed. You’re too married. Firdt of all, most visit visas are denied, especially to a man of a marriage age from Syria. That in and of itself is a factor. The other factor against your case is that he’s married to a USC. So, he’s not going to get one. But even if he did, coming to the US with a visit visa with the intent of adjusting status is fraud. Don’t do it. That would definitely, definitely complicate your case even more. I think this is a Jim Hacking question.
  3. You have to download the form, fill it out, take it to the office. Ask them to issue a new one without the legend. Just in case, take her "old" SS card because you're not supposed to have two. Some offices require an appt, some take walk-ins.
  4. The answer is simple: just tell the truth. Don't try to accommodate or make up facts just to get an immigrant visa The case will not be stronger based on who pays for the trip. That's irrelevant. The case will be made stronger by showing ties your mom has to Pakistan. If an aunt can come and take care of dad, his illness is not such a strong tie. You can try, but don't bank on it. Rental properties might work (though one can argue that she can receive the payment wirelessly from anywhere in the world) so also, don't bank on it. I am assuming she doesn't work, right? Bills on her name could help.
  5. Im assuming they confused "non resident" for tax purposes versus immigration. Since their green card was not approved for Dec 2023, I think they are confused and they thought they meant for immigration. Either way this is confusing, and it's hard to help someone with an incomplete timeline.
  6. Just to make sure I got this right: Your spouse had a K1, and you guys got married in 2023. So, for 2023 taxes you filed MFJ? If so, it is way easier and actually preferred to create an online account with the IRS, and download your tax return transcript instead of sending them the tax forms.
  7. Stick around some more and you'll see how people come here with cases that took a turn for the worse after an immigration lawyer made some very rookie mistake..
  8. That's because USCIS does not govern the embassies. It's the Department of Homeland Security the one that grants/denies visas. Check their website.
  9. What a gem. So sorry for you and for your child. I would definitely do that! Good luck. Keep us posted.
  10. This might be too far off, but I would contact a CPA (not H&R, Liberty, etc) and see if they can help you draft an explanation for USCIS together with some documentation to back up your statement.
  11. Back to your question, it might cause problems if he can't show compliance of payments towards the taxes he owes. I would definitely try to sort that out first prior to spending money on the N400. Being current on taxes is a key requirement to naturalize.
  12. Is he in a rush to apply for citizenship?
  13. Very similar situation to mine -other than the fact that my stepson does not live with me. But my husband is on child support. I consulted with attorney Hacking and he told me I did not need to prove child support because I am not the one responsible for it. I had zero issues and I am now a USC. So no, you DO NOT need to show evidence of child support payments.
  14. Source? Are you talking about staying in the US? If so, his company can't do anything to help you stay... True What makes you think that a mandamus lawsuit will not work, but the Ombudsman will?
  15. It's not advisable to use highlighters, because they scan the documents.
  16. Correct statement would be: it CAN be done during the interview IF you have one. Chances are they won't have one, so no opoortunity to inform USCIS under your premises. Waiting until they have the decree is also dangerous. Some divorces take long, and so they might approve it under the premises of a joint filing when they have already separated. Best course of action is to notify uscis of the divorce if they know that's the course of action. Down the road USCIS will request for the divorce decree, which they can provide then. If it is denied, one can refile for a new 751.
  17. Your timeline in your account is still incomplete. Please complete it. Did you include a copy of the receipt for the I-130 with your AOS package? What do you mean "restart"? I thought you had already sent the AOS package...
  18. Please complete your timeline. We can't tell you what to do without knowing if you're inside our outside the US!
  19. It seems really odd and extreme that they failed her English test because she messed up on her phone number, and then on the trips taken and the reason to become a citizen… can you post the letter, blurring out personal info?
  20. We sent about 10-15 pictures scanned into a Word document with a caption that stated the date, the event, and who was in the picture. We made sure it covered the whole span of the marriage. We were approved without RFEs or interviews. As @OldUserhas stated, with more "concrete" evidence, send ALL pages. Not worth risking an RFE just to save some printing $$. Here is a copy of our cover letter. Feel free to include what you want.
×
×
  • Create New...