SteveInBostonI130
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Everything posted by SteveInBostonI130
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What does the court document actually say, verbatim? 1. Current date for the court document and it states separation occurred on Date X. 2. Current date for the court document and it states divorce occurred on Date X. If it is 1, then as others have said your current marriage is not recognizable: you need to remarry. If it is 2, then you should be ok. I'd consult an immigration lawyer familiar with your country just to be sure.
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Sister can submit and I-130 for him and his family for consulate processing. He will need to return to Mexico (or his home country if not Mexico) with his family to complete the process, barring any issues with bans due to overstay or illegal entry. If he is Mexican, it will take over 22 years to get an immigration visa, at which time his children would most likely age out. Is he is from another Latin American country it will take over 15 years, at which point his children may or may not age out.
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The I-864 is between you and USCIS. It has definitive conditions for releasing you from your signed obligations. No other condition will "remove" or "withdraw" it. Even if your wife gets another sponsor, you will remain the primary sponsor.
- 67 replies
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- infidelity
- cheating
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@Worldismine03, what are your chances, per your plan? Pretty good? A member here went through a similar ordeal. She was engaged to someone from a muslim country, she was older than him, their K1 was denied, they married and spent as much time together as they could, and their CR1 was approved. I believe this member is @Jeanne Adil
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CR1. Aside from the immediate benefits over the K1, some more things to consider: - If the CR1 takes 2+years, then upside: spouse will get a 10 yr greencard. - If the K1 takes 2+ years, you would still need to get married and then adjust status. If the AOS then takes 12-23 months, then your spouse will still have a 2 yr conditional greencard. 2 yrs later you will have to go through the removal of conditions, which may take another 18 months. Total time from now (as soon as you can marry) to your spouse getting a 10 yr GC is 24 months to about 62 months (assuming 18 months for ROC) when doing CR1/IR1. Total time from now to your future spouse getting a 10 yr GC is about 44 months (20 months for K1) to 82 months.
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Typically they would want court records on the conviction. If you cannot obtain it or if it doesn't exist, then provide as much detail as possible, both of the event and conviction, and the attempts of obtaining court records, including who you contacted and their responses.
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Yes
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If you have an A-number, enter it. It does not matter if you are a citizen now. You will always have a record under your A-number, and USCIS needs it to run some checks. When I submitted the I-129F for my fiance, I was a newby and didn't know I had an A-number - my parents naturalized me when I was a child. I left that field blank, and USCIS entered it for me (they sent my fiance a scanned copy of the processed and approved I-129F). USCIS having to look up my A-number may have delayed my petition a bit: our I-129F took slightly longer than average in my tracking group. Or it was just a coincidence.
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Who is "they" that you are referring in the sentence I bolded? Your interview was set by the NVC. That letter you quoted at top is your interview confirmation letter. I suspect when you logged into USTraveldocs with your old account and attempted to schedule an interview, it probably resumed from your last session - old tourist visa application, student visa, whatever. That has no bearing to your CR1. If you still have doubts, email the embassy to confirm the date set by NVC. Forward the NVC email for reference. Do not confuse matters with the UStraveldocs issues in that email.
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- interview
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inquiry for the authenticity of the content of this email
SteveInBostonI130 replied to Imbhe77's topic in Work Visas
It is an authentic scam. -
There is no additional fee for the interview appointment. For CR1, you payed to the NVC the AOS and IV fees previously. I am 99.9% sure that you do not need to confirm your appointment. The 0.1% is the uncertainty that Prague may do something different than most embassies. Do you have the exact wording from the interview appointment email? The last 3 fees you need to pay are the Medical, the document delivery (passport) by courrier, and the USCIS immigration fee after you get approved and you receive the CR1 visa.
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First, if this is for a IR1/CR1, the NVC schedules your interview. Second, the "new application/schedule appointment" section wants the receipt number from the bank or payment method IF you filled out and payed for the DS-160 fees, which does not apply to IR1/CR1.
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- interview
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Transfer from one embassy to another
SteveInBostonI130 replied to Billie's topic in US Embassy and Consulate Discussion
Will you be in the UK for the next 6+ months? If so, then email NVC and ask them to change the embassy. I believe nowadays it starts with an inquiry form. -
Go over the entire entry process with your fiance. Verify that CBP didn't ask him to declare that he will not stay and try to adjust status. @Crazy Cat mentioned that there was a case a while ago where a couple's AOS was denied because the spouse was specifically asked about the intent to adjust status and he/she declared that he/she would not.
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Travelling and taxes...confused!
SteveInBostonI130 replied to oat12's topic in Working & Traveling During US Immigration
I would consult a tax professional. You do have to file taxes as a married LPR if you earned over some ridiculously low amount ($5, I think). Filing taxes is different from owing taxes - that is where a tax professional could help. -
NVC Case # ended with 01
SteveInBostonI130 replied to Legend of Summer's topic in National Visa Center (Dept of State)
I would assume it means your case number's last two digits are 01. One of 100 possibilities.