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Posts posted by Russ & Lana
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My step-daughter's visa shows a 10 year expiration date. I think it should be two years.
Marriage date: 8/18/2020
I-130 Sent for wife and step-daughter: 9/14/2020
Wife approved and entered US: 8/11/2021 Visa expires: 8/11/2023
Step-daughter approved a few months later and entered US: 2/9/2022 Visa expires: 2/9/2032
She entered less than 2 years after the marriage, so from my understanding, her Visa should expire on 2/9/2024.
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1 minute ago, payxibka said:
That is for the affidavit of support and is asking about a principal immigrant and any possible derivative immigrants.
You have TWO principal immigrants.
That is correct, and I checked number two. The discussion here is regarding if we go ahead and activate my wife's visa, and have her come back to Ukraine while this court process plays out. The problem still remains that i checked box #2 that the "derivative" immigrate will migrate within six months. If it is as simple as completing a new affidavit of support, then no problem. The additional problem remains, that if my wife "abandons" her intent to immigrate because she must leave the US for an extended period if this process takes too long.
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9 minutes ago, payxibka said:
Nope. That is a K2 requirement, not IR2
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5 minutes ago, Letspaintcookies said:
Go to the interview. If it takes longer for the childs case to be resolved then your wife can fly to the US, activate her visa and fly back to finish everything up.
We have considered this, and it would give us a good opportunity to prep for school in the fall. My concern is I have no frame of reference for how long this process could take. If my wife activates her visa, my understanding is her daughter must come within six months of her since I filed for them together. If it takes longer than six months, I think I will have to start over with a separate application. Then my wife would be out of the US for an extended period, and be at risk of "abandoning" her intent to immigrate and lose her visa as well. I know this is worse case scenario, but I don't want to find myself in a predicament like this.
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4 minutes ago, payxibka said:
I had a similar situation years back. The father was agreeable to sign the document after some hryvnia encouragement.
In our case, this will not work. He is not lacking in the finance department, and making things difficult would be of greater value than anything we could even think to offer.
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I applied together for CR1/CR2 for my wife and her 9 year old daughter. We have just received the interview data from NVC for next month. However, the father of the child refuses to give permission for his daughter to leave the country, and we had our first court appearance yesterday to get the court's permission instead. We have no idea how long this process will take, but the next court date is set coincidentally a few days after the scheduled embassy interview date.
Should we cancel the interview and get a later date while we wait for this court case to resolve?
What will happen if we go to the interview without this permission from the court? Will both applications be put in Administrative Processing? or they will issue visa for my wife and AP the child?
I understand the medical exam determines the six-month clock for entry into the US...but what happens if the case sits in AP for six or more months while this court case is resolved? Do we simply take another medical exam?
Does anyone else have experience with getting this court permission if the father refuses?
USCIS mistake on CR-2 Visa expiration date
in IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & Procedures
Posted
1. My step-daughter was 10 years old upon entry. Now she is 12.
2. Yes, my wife will naturalize. Would that change my course of action in some way?
3. My Step-daughter's GC shows a type of IR2. Probably should have been CR2. My wife's GC shows CR1 with the correct expiration.