Yes, they filed both applications concurrently and both the I-130 and I-485 were denied on 05/21/2021. It looks like the ex-wife applied for public benefits using another address (maybe a parent or relative) and listed herself as “single” in order to qualify for said benefit. The address she used was nowhere to be found in the documentation she submitted to USCIS. The W-4 they obtained from her workplace had the same address (parent or relative) and her marital status listed as “single” even though they were legally married at that time. Her ex/children’s father reported a car stolen (registered in her name) and he provided yet another address for her residence, which had never been mentioned anywhere in her address history. Their lease was another issue, as it had been edited (a different phone number for herself and an additional occupant) — lease they provided didn’t match leasing agent’s. It was also mentioned that some of their answers during the interview were inconsistent. Example: ex-wife had five tattoos and they gave different descriptions of what was written on them. USCIS issued a NOID on 11/13/2020 and gave them 33 days, but they did not respond in time; there, the first I-130 was considered abandoned and denied.
On 08/23/2021, his former wife filed the second I-130 application. They were interviewed again on 05/12/2022 and received an NOID on 06/07/2022 stating, “A petitioner must establish eligibility at the time of filing a petition; a petition cannot be approved at a future date after the petitioner becomes eligible under a new set of facts.” It goes on to state they have 33 days to respond. This is the point at which they finally hired a lawyer. The lawyer responded to the NOID on 06/30/2022 — at least that’s what I see on the letterhead. My husband told me the file did not get sent out by the lawyer within the timeframe, and I am guessing that was the reason for the second denial of I-130 (I don’t have a copy for date or actual reason given). But that second denial led to them to appeal by EOIR-29 on 05/01/2023.
In his defense, my husband does not pay close attention to details and does not take life too seriously. His main focus is usually work, education, paying bills and anything food related. He told me himself that he has never been concerned about his grades, just passing. I think he also trusts other people too easily without considering their motives. Lastly, English is his third language and I am correcting him all the time. He will tell me that he has been fasting all day. Then, in the same breath, he will thank me for preparing something that he ate earlier that same day. I tell him it can’t possibly be both, either he ate or has been fasting all day. I feel like, for these reasons alone, he is almost doomed to fail an interview. I told him, unless he wants to be deported, he had better start paying attention and actually think about what he is going to say before just saying something. He is a really good guy — very consistent, dependable and hardworking — just a bit simple.
When I looked over all of the documents they had previously submitted in order for me to complete a new application for I-130 and I-485, I immediately found issues. In the place where the form asked five years of address history and to use additional sheets, they did not do that (less than five years provided). Date of last physical address outside of the US is obviously wrong (maybe transposed). The start dates for employment outside of the US were different, even though they appeared on the exact same page (typed the info twice with two different dates). Even for parent’s place of birth and current residence the city was typed in all fields instead of typing the country where it belonged. It was also noted on a NOID/denial that the petitioner failed to even include a copy of the beneficiary’s driver’s license with its appropriate form. It is frustrating for me to see so many little mistakes, where they clearly didn’t follow directions, at first glance — and he never caught them until I pointed them out.
This is definitely an uphill battle, but I have no reason to suspect anything criminal or another wife abroad. There was never any mention at any point in the documentation questioning the validity of his legal marriage here in the US, just a lack of evidence and some inconsistencies that caused suspicion of bona fide marriage. We are of the same religion and I am aware of how polygyny is practiced in Nigeria, so I know some of the signs to look out for. I am confident that this is not an issue in his case.