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jackiegringa

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Everything posted by jackiegringa

  1. Does it really matter? Will there be an answer that will satisfy you? Every time you interact with immigration, including CBP they take your biometrics, as an immigrant you don't get a lot of say of when and how your image and fingerprints are going to be used. Since your at the end of your journey, with a couple a weeks until the end, just focus on the light at the end of the tunnel and let the rest fall away. You're done!
  2. Another less stressful explanation is that they need you to send updated evidence from date of filing until now, it's been a year or so. I'd take that as sign that the I-751 could be approved soon after they receive the RFE.
  3. No one is coming over to ask you about it. You're the one that need to file an application with evidence of continuous residency.
  4. Processing times for VSC are 26 months so you're well within that. I don't think your representative can do much at this point. If citizenship is the end goal there's no reason to wait until is done. The processes can run in parallel and lots of people get scheduled for their N-400 way before the I-751 gets adjudicated, give or take a couple of weeks for the approval if it's not a combo interview.
  5. Ok, this is a great thing to learn when dealing with immigration: answer what was asked. Don't say anything extra. It will make things straightforward. This is advice you pick up by hanging around forums and people sharing their experiences, so find the AOS monthly thread for your process and read the posts. I'm mentioning this because I stated some examples of standard questions you might be asked and you replied with both families backgrounds and issues. The answer to "have you met family?" is yes/no if yes, when. Nothing else is needed and might save you extra questioning for volunteering information. The more financial mingling the better, photos and affidavits are secondary evidence. Treat it as a job interview where you need to put your best foot forward. The immigration officer doesn't care about your love language and anxiety, they care if you got married to get a green card or not - this is very matter of fact what is being probbed in the AOS process. Good luck!
  6. Not really, interviews are part of the immigration process. Understand the forms your filling, have a conversation with your spouse about the answers you both have for basic questions like where did you meet, habe you met family, names and dates for important things etc. You don't have to worry if your relationship is genuine. After AOS you will have ROC and possibly naturalization if desired. Get comfortable with immigration forms, norms and procedures. You can't let anxiety ruin a straight forward process, even if it's stress inducing and infuriating as times.
  7. Considering they all have 10 year green cards and there are no long trips (6 months) outside of the us, your husband should be already eligible. You check it yourself here https://www.uscis.gov/citizenship-resource-center/learn-about-citizenship/naturalization-eligibility-tool
  8. Yeah that's bs. You had all past three returns as expected, it's not April 15, there is no reason for it to be the one piece of evidence that will approve or not your application. Someone just needed to feel important, it will delay but it won't stop you, it's the home stretch! Good luck
  9. Please clarify with your husband exactly what happened during the interview. "Reading and writing" IS the English test, so what is going on? You can't pass reading and writing and fail the English test. What is the box checked on the form your husband got from the officer?
  10. (B) BUT DHS says certified copy is fine: https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/passports/need-passport/apply-in-person.html#:~:text=ALL%20%2F%20ALL%20%2F-,Get%20evidence%20of%20U.S.%20citizenship%20(and%20a%20photocopy),of%20the%20official%20issuing%20authority. Your evidence must be an original or certified, physical copy. A certified copy is any document that has the seal or stamp of the official issuing authority. I've seen a lot of discussion on this and there are two main sticking points: the person accepting your passport application might not accept the copy, regardless of what the DHS says and that getting the certified copy from USCIS might as well be impossible. I think it's worth the try but I wouldn't hold my breath on it. Yes there's a chance of the certificate to get lost but most people get them back.
  11. This is a green card granted from parents/step parents and not marriage, her temporary green card is the stamp on the passport while the plastic card doesn't come - no I-751 will be necessary OP, do file for FOIA on her case and do the AR-11 to change the address for the green card delivery. All the other issues will be easier to deal with after the plastic card is in hands. Talk to the embassy again to ask what's the procedure when there are no documents available, maybe she can get another birth certificate first? Or the police report on lost documents if comes to that. Try to exhaust all options to get her documents from the parents first, she is a permanent resident and will continue to be even when the temporary stamp expires.
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