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Boiler

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Everything posted by Boiler

  1. That is a shame Unless his wife is a USC
  2. Nope Found somebody else to marry so had to do Consulate processing Happens
  3. He began practicing with a small Washington, DC firm. He then joined the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) in New York, and later Newark, before returning to legal practice with the New York Association for New Americans (NYANA), a New York-based non-profit organization. He subsequently returned to the government, taking positions with US Citizenship & Immigration Services (USCIS) headquarters in Washington, DC. In 2006, he relocated to the UK where, after a brief foray into private client representation with the Brighton solicitors firm of Burt, Brill & Cardens, he rejoined USCIS as an adjudicator at the US Embassy in London. He left USCIS to join the London firm of Gudeon & McFadden, before establishing his own practice on the south coast of England. In addition to being Director of Heller Immigration Law, Ltd., Steven is Of Counsel to Chavin Immigration Law Office in London. Steven has experience in representing individuals and businesses in matters ranging from family- and business-based immigration to inadmissibility waivers and protection issues, as well as citizenship and naturalization. A 1991 graduate of the Georgetown University Law Center and a member of the New York Bar, he has spoken on US immigration matters before various groups and associations, including the American Bar Association, the American Academy of Adoption Attorneys, the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA), and community groups. He has been quoted in UK media and appeared on CNN as an expert in US immigration law. He has published articles on US immigration including articles in Benders Immigration Bulletin, Immigration Briefings, AILA’s Immigration Today, and the Solicitor’s Journal (UK). Steven D. Heller is a member of the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA) and the New York City Bar Association. Dividing his time between his family in New York and his office in Lewes, he is currently co-chair of the AILA National Department of State Liaison Committee. Contact Steven directly: sheller@us-visa.co.uk
  4. There are US Immigration Lawyers based in the UK, makes sense when you think of it. One based in Brighton does a lot of Family cases, the London based ones are probably more Business orientated. https://www.us-visa.co.uk/
  5. She can try, how long did she overstay?
  6. Most people on here go the marriage route
  7. To petition your spouse you need to marry in this case you to adopt and have custody for 2 years
  8. Ideally this should have been sorted years ago Now I know the words but do not know what the Consulate will accept Most of the cases on here are either clear cut, child has been living with us for years and now we are moving back or let's say vague, and very few vague ones come back and tell us what happened
  9. It is physical custody and you need to evidence it. That is why I suggested a lawyer most cases are different. Legal well to have the adoption papers s
  10. https://www.uscis.gov/adoption/bringing-your-internationally-adopted-child-to-the-united-states I always think these are Lawyer type cases but you have some time before you can file.
  11. Different questions different answers.
  12. That is more a VJ thing than a reality thing
  13. $10k for both is not out of the ordinary and this is not ordinary.
  14. I would normally say 2 years but saw one just over a year recently
  15. A second Doctor visit is not normal, very unusual.
  16. She needs to apply for a B2 Tourist Visa
  17. When I went there was a petitioner, seemed to be a bot of a waste sitting there, might as well stayed in the pub.
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