QUOTE(imisshimmuch @ Aug 6 2007, 06:12 PM)

QUOTE(Nate @ Aug 6 2007, 04:28 PM)

I would like my example I-601 letter posted on VJ.com where it can help other people. I have tried multiple times to contact the VJ site so they would host it, to no avail. Here it is...
http://www.mediafire.com/?fkgwh9fjgx3I would love if it could be posted on the Example Forms page here...
http://www.visajourney.com/forums/index.ph...p;page=examplesWe went through a lot for my wife to come to the US because she had previously overstayed a tourist visa. I think others going through the 601 waiver process could benefit greatly from our letter.
Thanks!
Could you tell us a little bit about your story ? When was this approved ? I only ask b/c we will need to file a waiver and I'm really nervous about them approving/denying it. My husband is in Bolivia, but the waiver will go thur Peru I believe.
Thanks much

Sure.

I am male and the USC. My wife visited the US on a tourist visa. I met her on a bus (public transportation), sat near her, asked her name, where she was from, etc. Luckily we both got off on the same stop and I summoned the balls to ask her if she wanted to get lunch. We dated for about 8 months. Meanwhile, her vis expired and she overstayed 7 months. We were young, I was 22 and she was 20. We weren't ready to be married, we felt like it was being forced by the visa status. She decided to go back to school for a year in Peru, her home country. She finished her year and we kept in touch. We filed for a K1 visa and were denied because she received a three year ban for the 7 month overstay. I visited Peru and we got married there. We filed for a K3 visa and a 601 waiver. I visited Peru a total of four times during the wait. It took 2.5 years from when she left the US, to when she came back to the US. She has been here since 2003 and we are having a great time! She is working and we just bought our first home.

It took something like a year and a half for the waiver and K3 visa to get approved. Make sure you spend a LOT of time on your waiver letter and accompaning proof. Take every minor non-emotional hardship and expand upon it as much as possible to highlight how much it affects you. Remember, NON-EMOTIONAL hardship. It isn't enough that you love your spouse and miss them. It has to negatively affect your life.
One thing I did was I visited a psychologist. I explained my situation and told her I was depressed. It turns out that the psychologist I randomly picked had moved to the UK to live with her husband, and they had a daughter. Her husband was killed in an accident and the UK forced her and her daughter to go back to the US. She was sympathetic to my cause and gave me "severe depression" when I probably deserved "light depression". I was very grateful! I sent the psychologist a basket of flowers with a thank you note after my wife reached the US.

Chances are extremely slim that this happens for you, but if you can convince a psychologist you are depressed from missing your spouse, then even a diagnosis of "light depression" will be a great aid to your case.
Good luck!