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duraaraa

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Filed: Timeline

She is older than you,with 4 children and from a poor district as you said. I would not choose K1 visa at all, but go back there get married and apply for CR1 visa.Good luck.

She being older than I am, having four children, and living in a poor district are all evidence that I've submitted on my I-129F. Therefore, if the USCIS approves this, I don't think that the embassy can use it as a reason not to issue the visa. From what I can tell, the denial must be based on new evidence, not seen by the USCIS.

Am I mistaken?

What would Xenu do?

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Denmark
Timeline

She being older than I am, having four children, and living in a poor district are all evidence that I've submitted on my I-129F. Therefore, if the USCIS approves this, I don't think that the embassy can use it as a reason not to issue the visa. From what I can tell, the denial must be based on new evidence, not seen by the USCIS.

Am I mistaken?

Yes, but it might not apply in your case. There are a fair number of older American women on VJ that have been denied K1 visas for their younger male partners from high-fraud countries just based on the embassy's feelings on their case.

3/2/18  E-filed N-400 under 5 year rule

3/26/18 Biometrics

7/2019-12/2019 (Yes, 16- 21 months) Estimated time to interview MSP office.

 

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Filed: Timeline

Your finances should be ok for the K1 if you submit current pay stubs and a letter from your employer. (if you had a co-sponsor you could send her with one from them as well just in case) The 134s are tricky. its up to the consulates discretion. You can do a google search or a forum search for info about other users experience with the consulate youre going to be using.

Have you looked forward to the AOS process though? the financial requirements for it are different (the 864 form) They require 3 years of tax returns. If your last years return was not sufficient and you havent yet been in your current job for a year, you may not qualify w/o a sponsor.

As for proving the relationship is legitimate, that burden is going to fall on your fiance, not you. Normally theyre not going to have much interest in a letter explaining the reasons why you love her, theyd rather make that determination themselves by doing their own investigation, but you could 'creatively' insert things like that. When you make your video showing you can speak the language speak about your love for her. When you write your letter showing you know the language, write a basic paragraph explaining the purpose of the letter, then take advantage and blab on showing off your language skills by detailing the reasons you love her.

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Filed: Timeline

Yes, but it might not apply in your case. There are a fair number of older American women on VJ that have been denied K1 visas for their younger male partners from high-fraud countries just based on the embassy's feelings on their case.

I can understand that, but our case is kind of the opposite... I (the American petitioner) am the younger male, and the beneficiary is the older woman. We lived together for nine months in Mongolia, and I have a three-year visa. I don't know if Mongolia is considered a very high-fraud country at this point, although I know they are tough on B visas.

I will try my best for the K-1, and let you know the results. I still have a lot of waiting ahead of me, unfortunately.

Edited by duraaraa

What would Xenu do?

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Filed: Timeline

Your finances should be ok for the K1 if you submit current pay stubs and a letter from your employer. (if you had a co-sponsor you could send her with one from them as well just in case) The 134s are tricky. its up to the consulates discretion. You can do a google search or a forum search for info about other users experience with the consulate youre going to be using.

Have you looked forward to the AOS process though? the financial requirements for it are different (the 864 form) They require 3 years of tax returns. If your last years return was not sufficient and you havent yet been in your current job for a year, you may not qualify w/o a sponsor.

As for proving the relationship is legitimate, that burden is going to fall on your fiance, not you. Normally theyre not going to have much interest in a letter explaining the reasons why you love her, theyd rather make that determination themselves by doing their own investigation, but you could 'creatively' insert things like that. When you make your video showing you can speak the language speak about your love for her. When you write your letter showing you know the language, write a basic paragraph explaining the purpose of the letter, then take advantage and blab on showing off your language skills by detailing the reasons you love her.

I don't have three years of tax returns, so I will need a sponsor for the AOS. My parents would be willing, so I think it should be fine.

What would Xenu do?

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Filed: Timeline

She being older than I am, having four children, and living in a poor district are all evidence that I've submitted on my I-129F. Therefore, if the USCIS approves this, I don't think that the embassy can use it as a reason not to issue the visa. From what I can tell, the denial must be based on new evidence, not seen by the USCIS.

Am I mistaken?

I think youre slightly mistaken. Basically you submit the initial petition to USCIS. It gets approved based on the fact that you are a citizen and eligible to petition someone for a K1 visa. But thats about it. It then gets forwarded to the embassy.

The embassy is the one that actually decides if the visa is to be issued or not. The USCIS didnt review anything you sent in in regards to evidence of the relationship being genuine, where she lives, the age difference, etc. Thats all done at the embassy. If the embassy decides theres something 'off' about you two, they wont approve her visa.

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Guinea
Timeline

We just went through the whole K1 process with our "unconventional" relationship, and hopefully I can ease your worries.

I flew to Senegal to attended the interview for the K1 visa, and we "sailed" though it, despite so-called "Red Flags".

Common language was one of our concerns - though he speaks french, my french is very basic. But we were able to demonstrate at the interview that we can communicate quite well with each other. I think our body language alone spoke volumes.

We also have a large age difference, religion, social status, education - I was driving myself crazy with worry. None of it came up in the interview. We had four visits lasting several weeks under our belt, so that probably helped as well.

I am sure you will be fine and neither age difference nor language will be a problem. You have plenty of evidence of a bonafide relationship. Especially if you can prove that you lived together for 9 months in Mongolia.

Do your homework, frontload your application with lots of evidence and then relax. :thumbs:

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Filed: Timeline

The other two posters are suggesting (and I honestly dont know if they are correct or not, but they are both veteran members who have seen plenty of cases pass through here) but they are suggesting that based on the fact that your fiance is 10+ yrs older, has multiple children and lives in a poor area, the embassy may take the position that your relationship is NOT genuine regardless of the amount of evidence you have to the contrary, and deny the visa.

If that happens there is nothing you can do except get married and file for a spousal visa, so they are suggesting you abandon the K1 now and switch to the spousal before investing any more time into the K1.

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Filed: Timeline

I think youre slightly mistaken. Basically you submit the initial petition to USCIS. It gets approved based on the fact that you are a citizen and eligible to petition someone for a K1 visa. But thats about it. It then gets forwarded to the embassy.

The embassy is the one that actually decides if the visa is to be issued or not. The USCIS didnt review anything you sent in in regards to evidence of the relationship being genuine, where she lives, the age difference, etc. Thats all done at the embassy. If the embassy decides theres something 'off' about you two, they wont approve her visa.

Well, that's what I'm worried about. So I spend a lot of time thinking how to prove that there isn't anything 'off.'

I read something sent to the embassies by Colin Powell, I think, which read that officers should not fail to approve a family-related visa without substantial evidence. That evidence would then need to be submitted back to the USCIS as a reason to revoke. In the case of the older women petitioning for younger men, I wonder what the verbatim reason was of the denials. Being completely stereotypical here, perhaps it's 'he's using his youth and good looks to lure the sponsor into giving him a visa without a real relationship' or something of that nature. I wonder what reason they could give for assuming something is off in our case. She wouldn't have been able to bribe me or anything, I hold a good job, I lived in her country, and she and her kids love and know everything about me. Would anyone play devil's advocate here and think of a possible reason they could think of for assuming fraud? That way, I could try to prepare evidence to counter it.

Thanks.

What would Xenu do?

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Filed: Timeline

We just went through the whole K1 process with our "unconventional" relationship, and hopefully I can ease your worries.

I flew to Senegal to attended the interview for the K1 visa, and we "sailed" though it, despite so-called "Red Flags".

Common language was one of our concerns - though he speaks french, my french is very basic. But we were able to demonstrate at the interview that we can communicate quite well with each other. I think our body language alone spoke volumes.

We also have a large age difference, religion, social status, education - I was driving myself crazy with worry. None of it came up in the interview. We had four visits lasting several weeks under our belt, so that probably helped as well.

I am sure you will be fine and neither age difference nor language will be a problem. You have plenty of evidence of a bonafide relationship. Especially if you can prove that you lived together for 9 months in Mongolia.

Do your homework, frontload your application with lots of evidence and then relax. :thumbs:

Thanks! Could you be more specific about the differences you were worried about?

I will do my best to relax. I should probably go back to Mongolia for the interview, as well.

What would Xenu do?

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Filed: Timeline

You should not count on being allowed in to the interview and forgo collecting any other evidence of your ability to speak the same language. Whether or not you will be allowed in will be at the discretion of the person conducting the interview.

As for why they could assume fraud? Um, its rather simple. She lives in a poor area with many children. America is the 'land of opportunity'. Marrying you will give her and her children GCs and a better life. The only proof that you can offer to counteract that shes marrying you for the GC is her verbal statement that she is not. (which is why the other posters suggested going the spousal route- its a lot to put on the CO believing her)

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Jordan
Timeline

She being older than I am, having four children, and living in a poor district are all evidence that I've submitted on my I-129F. Therefore, if the USCIS approves this, I don't think that the embassy can use it as a reason not to issue the visa. From what I can tell, the denial must be based on new evidence, not seen by the USCIS.

Am I mistaken?

The ultimate decision is up to the CO . An approved petition merely means you are qualified to apply for the visa. I can tell you from experience(I attended the interview with my husband) I am considerably older, we applied for the CR1 spouse visa, age was brought up several times to my husband and to myself by the CO at the embassy. The CO has 100% discretion to deny a visa, even with an approved petition, if he does not think the relationship is bona fide. If you don;t mind my asking, how much older is she? As I said I am considerably older than my husband, 21 years, and the interview was not by any means easy for us, even with my husband being 100% fluent in English, reading writing and speaking. Just make sure you have all of your bases covered. Good luck!

Edited by mimolicious


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Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Ecuador
Timeline

I would think the fact that you lived together for 9 months, especially if you have evidence of that, should really help your overall case. As far as the language goes, my husband and I communicated only in Spanish (there's some English mixed in now that he's been here a year, but at the time he spoke none) and it wasn't a problem. At one of the interviews, I can't remember if it was the visa interview (since fiancee is expected to be present in the Ecuador consulate) or the adjustment of status, but one of them did ask what language we communicated in and then some general questions about where I learned Spanish and how well I spoke it. Spanish is probably easier than Mongolian of course, but from your description it sounds like you are probably more fluent than I was, and we had no problems because of it.

ALFREDO KIDS

2009-12-10: Met 2013-7-23: Filed I-130
2010-9-29: Engaged 2013-7-26: NOA1
2011-5-31: Filed I-129 2014-1-22 (2 of them), 2014-1-28 (1 of them): NOA2
2011-6-6: NOA1 2014-2-08 (2 of them) 2014-2-14 (1 of them): NVC received packet
2011-10-18: NOA2 2014-3-19 (2 of them), 2013-2-25 (1 of them): AOS fee bill generated
2011-10-26: Left NVC 2014-3-26: DS-261 filed, called for cases to be re-linked since one was
2011-10-31: Consulate received separated from the others to only pay one AOS fee
2011-12-1: Interview 2014-3-27: Cases are linked, paid AOS fee
2011-12-20: Visa received 2014-3-28: IV fees generated, paid
2011-12-27: Entered US 2014-4-1: Fees listed as paid
2012-1-20: Married 2014-4-2: AOS and IV packages sent
2012-1-23: Filed AOS/EAD 2014-4-3: DS-260 filled out
2012-1-27: AOS/EAD NOA 2014-4-4: Packages received by NVC

2012-2-6: Biometrics (appointment scheduled 2-14, but we had a trip 2014-4-25: Got checklist for AOS paperwork (they didn't actually want my

planned then and showed up early, they allowed it). income/his income where indicated on 864/864a, they wanted our
2012-3-26: EAD approval combined income for each, even though that's not what it says and
2012-3-29: AOS Interview and approval makes no sense whatsoever, also must put N/A in residence on
2012-4-2: EAD received 864a even though it says that nowhere and on 864 specifically says
2012-4-7: Greencard received to not use N/A but leave blank)

2013-12-31: Filed I-751 2014-4-26: Sent new AOS forms

2014-1-6: NOA1 2014-4-28: Package received by NVC

2014-1-31: Biometrics 2014-5-23: Told case complete over phone

2014-4-17: Approval 2014-5-29: Received case complete emails

2014-4-23: 10yr Green Card received 2014-5-31: Received interview date

2014-7-14: Interview

2014-7-24: Packets/Passports/Visas arrived at DHL (but tracking never said "waiting for pickup", on US website said "in transit", only found out by calling DHL in Ecuador)

2014-8-13: Entered US

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