QUOTE(Angel7422 @ Jun 24 2008, 10:39 PM)

Hi Everyone,
My husband and I are preparing his N400 documents but I have a question. Do/Should I include copies of bills with both of our names on it? I send stuff like this when we filed for removal of conditions and I am wondering if I need to send copies of joint phone bills, cable bills, etc. with the N400 documents. Also do I need to include a copy of a joint mortgage deed? I am sure these questions have been asked over and over but I cant seem to find those posts. So if anyone could please answer you could save me the trouble of not sending a novel if i dont have to. Thanks.
It's that three year thingy, if you wait five years, you don't have to send all that stuff in. With marriage to bring our loved one here, we had to go through a pile of crap for lack of a better word to get that conditional green card if we were married less than two years. Then had to go through all that again with the I-751, but could send in a couple extra copies. At first with the American Patriot Act, and believe me, we don't have 25 million bucks to pay off a terrorist family, couldn't even add my wife to my two buck checking account or even as a beneficiary on my savings account that seemed totally ridiculous as this country of ours encourages foreign investments. Hell, even Fox is owned by a foreigner as well as RCA and a bunch of other former American countries. But since my wife got an EAD almost instantly, got her an SS card so she could work and pay taxes. That was okay, and by the time they played around issuing her first conditional green card, we could submit three joint tax returns for the I-751 application along with other proof that we share the same address.
At our initial interview, I could show a joint tax return, but when asked about savings and checking accounts, I just told her to check with Bush and his APA, she dropped that question instantly. But could show that with the I-751.
Point is, if you have already went through the I-751, you already proved your marriage, so with the N-400, you just did whatever you did for the I-751, again. So you already have experience in what to send. But apparently the USCIS doesn't know what they put you through to get that ten year card, but shouldn't that be proof enough? With my long winded over priced divorce attorneys for a divorce that occurred over 14 years ago, had to dig out that original and copy 55 pages all over again, that teed me off. Then I guess I have to bring that original with me to my wife's interview as well as hers.
In her country the man is favored in the courts and in this country, the woman and even though we both got full custody, we got screwed and are trying to forget that. But the USCIS won't let us do that.