Jump to content

24 posts in this topic

Recommended Posts

Filed: EB-1 Visa Country: Philippines
Timeline

Hi everyone! I just joined recently in this community, I just have a question, any information would be a great help. I am from the Philippines. I got here in the United States last September 2013 using the B1/B2 visa. It expired after a month. This January 30, me and my fiancé is getting married, he is an American citizen based in California. I plan to adjust my status right away I just don't know where to start? What are the forms and will I have a problem since my visa expired 3months before we get married? Thank you very much in advance..

Mariz

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Lift. Cond. (apr) Country: China
Timeline

~Moved from Family-based AOS to WST-based Forum~

~Adjusting from visitor visa~

Completed: K1/K2 (271 days) - AOS/EAD/AP (134 days) - ROC (279 days)

"Si vis amari, ama" - Seneca

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Brazil
Timeline

Hi there

Did you meet your fiancée when you arrived in the USA or did you know him before you arrived? If you knew him before you arrived and came in on a b1/b2 visa, it is fraud to get married on that visa with an intent to adjust status, and you could be deported (and banned from USA forever) and your fiancée could go to jail. Being as you overstayed your visa, it could raise some red flags in a visa if you wish to do this the correct way. It is fine to get married on B2 visa but if you came with intent to get married, you must leave and file for CR-1. It is also OK if you by chance met in the US just RANDOMLY and by CHANCE (with no pre made plans) and decided to get married and adjust status, but that must be very hard to prove (or fake) and I might not take any chances with that, because they will ask you to answer under oath in interviews, and if you already knew your fiancée with intent to immigrate, it would be lying if you said you didn't. Safest route is getting married and returning to your home country and filing the CR-1. You can also go back to your home country now, without getting married, and file for K-1 Fiancee visa. that generally takes less time than the CR-1 then you can come to the USA and legally get married and stay with your fiancée. Being that you overstayed your visa, that could mean trouble at an interview stage, but that doesn't necessary mean you will be denied.

Service Center: California Service Center

Embassy: Rio de Janeiro

Met: August 22, 2005

First Visit: March-April 2011

Second Visit: August-October 2012

Third Visit: August-September 2013

I-129F Sent: 09/14/2013

Package Received: 09/17/2013

NOA1: 09/19/2013

Alien Registration Number Changed: 09/28/2013

NOA2:10/08/2013

NOA2 Hard Copy: 10/12/2013

18 Days From NOA1 until NOA2

NVC Received: 11/07/2013

Case Number Received: 11/08/2013

Sent to Embassy: 11/12/2013

Emailed Embassy asking if they got case: 11/10/2013

Response, not received yet: 11/13/2013

Emailed embassy again: 11/17/2013

Response, received but no interview date yet: 11/18/2013

Case Touched by Consulate: 11/22/2013

Interview Date: 01/23/2014

Visa Issued: 2/7/2014

POE: Detroit, Michigan. 5/17/2014

This is going so fast and we are so blessed. You will be in my arms soon, My Love.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Timeline

GusandCrys just to correct a few things in hat you said and to add clarity, it is NOT a problem if you come to the US with a B1/B2 visa, overstay and marry. No, the USCIS forgives overstays in spouse based visas. The issue has to do with intent to marry and immigrate prior to arrival in the US. So as long as she is able to prove that there was no intent to marry and immigrate prior to her arrival, she is entirely fine to adjust status. They do not have to have met prior to her coming here. She could have come over to her boyfriend, fiancé etc and that is entirely fine. It is the prior intent to marry and migrate which USCIS pries into. As long as she is able to show that any decision regarding their marriage only came after she came to the US they should be perfectly okay.

And in this case, if there was no intent to marry and immigrate prior to her coming, leaving the country now would rather be more harmful than good to her as she has overstayed by over 3 months and she would face an automatic ban of some years. So again IF there was NO intent to marry and immigrate prior to her arrival, then the best thing now would be for her to adjust her status here in the US. She should just be truthful and indicate there was no intent and she would be perfectly okay.

Now to answer your question. Please read the guide suggested by Merrytooth. It contains all the information you need.

You talk you teach, you listen you learn

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi everyone! I just joined recently in this community, I just have a question, any information would be a great help. I am from the Philippines. I got here in the United States last September 2013 using the B1/B2 visa. It expired after a month. This January 30, me and my fiancé is getting married, he is an American citizen based in California. I plan to adjust my status right away I just don't know where to start? What are the forms and will I have a problem since my visa expired 3months before we get married? Thank you very much in advance..

Mariz

Did you plan to marry BEFORE you came to the United States? If yes, then you can get in trouble with the USCIS and sent back home without being able to come back for 10 years or more.

However, if you decided to get married AFTER you came to the US, then you can get married and file for the Adjustment of Status following this guide very carefully:

http://www.visajourney.com/content/i130guide2

My wife and I did this and she now has her green card. You have to have patience because the process can take many months. Good luck!

AOS Journey

-------------------

2013-06-04 Day 00 - AOS packet sent via UPS (I-130, I-485, I-765, I-131)

2013-06-06 Day 02 - AOS packet received at Chicago Lockbox (left at DOCK, signed by JOHN)

2013-06-11 Day 07 - Text and email confirmation (x4) of acceptance (received at 11:53PM MT)

2013-06-12 Day 08 - I-485 ($1070) and I-130 ($420) checks cashed

2013-06-15 Day 11 - NOA (x4) and biometrics appointment letter received in mail (appointment date 2013/07/03)

2013-06-17 Day 13 - Completed walk-in biometrics

2013-07-03 Day 29 - Original biometrics appointment date

2013-07-08 Day 34 - Status Update: I-485 status changed to "Testing and Interview"

2013-08-12 Day 69 - Status Update: EAD approved and status set to "Card/Document Production", AP approved - status set to "Post Decision Activity"

2013-08-15 Day 72 - Status Update: Second text/email notifying that EAD is in "Card/Document Production" status

2013-08-19 Day 76 - Status Update: EAD card shipped and USPS tracking number received

2013-08-22 Day 80 - USPS "Mis-Shipped" EAD, delivery delayed

2013-08-23 Day 81 - Status Update: I-485 AOS interview scheduled for 2012-09-25

2013-08-26 Day 84 - EAD/AP combo card received in mail

2013-09-25 Day 114 - Interview - Approved on the spot! USCIS Case Status updated to Card/Document Production

2013-10-06 Day 125 - Green Card Arrived!

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ROC Journey

-------------------

2015-07-06 - ROC packet sent via USPS (I-751)

2015-07-08 - ROC packet received via USPS

2015-07-13 - NOA received

2015-07-22 - Biometrics appointment letter received

2015-08-10 - Biometrics appointment completed

2015-02-05 - Approved!



Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Brazil
Timeline

You can get married and file for AOS, but it becomes a lot trickier to prove that you did not have intent to get married prior to the foreign national arriving in the U.S if you were already in a relationship. I'd say this is very tricky to prove in an interview that you had no intention of being married before you came to US.

If any foreign fiancee could come to the US and file for AOS and simply say they only decided to get married after the foreign national arrived, wouldn't everyone go this route instead of bothering to go back to their country and spend months away from their fiancée as the k-1 is processed, or if you did get married the cr-1.

Service Center: California Service Center

Embassy: Rio de Janeiro

Met: August 22, 2005

First Visit: March-April 2011

Second Visit: August-October 2012

Third Visit: August-September 2013

I-129F Sent: 09/14/2013

Package Received: 09/17/2013

NOA1: 09/19/2013

Alien Registration Number Changed: 09/28/2013

NOA2:10/08/2013

NOA2 Hard Copy: 10/12/2013

18 Days From NOA1 until NOA2

NVC Received: 11/07/2013

Case Number Received: 11/08/2013

Sent to Embassy: 11/12/2013

Emailed Embassy asking if they got case: 11/10/2013

Response, not received yet: 11/13/2013

Emailed embassy again: 11/17/2013

Response, received but no interview date yet: 11/18/2013

Case Touched by Consulate: 11/22/2013

Interview Date: 01/23/2014

Visa Issued: 2/7/2014

POE: Detroit, Michigan. 5/17/2014

This is going so fast and we are so blessed. You will be in my arms soon, My Love.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Timeline

GusandCrys I understand what you are saying and it's true but when USCIS is making their decisions they consider so many things not just on one thing. An example would be someone with a B1/B2 visa who is in a relationship with someone here in the US. She might have visited the fiance on about 5x and on the 6th time here they decide to get married and she adjusts her status. Despite the fact that they were in a prior relationship, the question is, if she wanted to game the system she wouldn't have waited for the 6th time to marry and adjust status. She would have done it the very first time she was here but looking at her immigration history trend, it is evident that in the previous times there was no such intent but on the 6th time something came up and they decided to get married. So yes, that's why USCIS conducts interviews and looks at the matter as a WHOLE not just base their decisions on one factor. I know immigration is tricky and while the rules are not well defined, it benefits others who seem not to use the correct route and is quite unfavorable to others who use the right channel..but hey that's how the world is lol.

That was just an example though..The whole point is she just needs to show that there was no prior intent to marry and immigrate and that's all. She would be PERFECTLY okay. There have been tons and tons of such cases here and they have all been approved.

You talk you teach, you listen you learn

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Italy
Timeline

Technically SHE does not have to prove no intent, rather it is USCIS that mut Prove she DID have intent... The loophole in the law easily allowes for people to change their minds and decide to get married, the burden of proof lies with the govt to prove otherwise. Overstays are forgiven al long as the petitioner does NOT exit the USA and adjusts status in the USA ... Good luck

10/14/2000 - Met Aboard a Cruise ship

06/14/2003 - Married Savona Italy

I-130

03/21/2009 - I-130 Mailed to Chicago lockbox

11-30-09: GOT GREEN CARD in mail!!!!!!

Citizenship Process;

1/11/2013: Mailed N400 to Dallas Texas

3/11/2013: interview.. Approved

4/4/2013. : Oath! Now a U.S. citizen!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Brazil
Timeline

I'm no immigration expert. All my advice is based on personal experience and search over the last few months. The k-1 is obviously there for a reason. While AOS are within the scope of the law, those cases are approached with a skeptical eye by the USCIS adjudicators. Its up to you to decide whether its worth risking your relationship over AOS. My fiancé and I could have gotten married in the US but we just wouldn't take the chances of running into trouble at AOS. The k-1 takes longer, and it requires a lot of documentation, but in the end its the best path for fiancés. I know ALL cases are different, and I'm not sure about this one, but I would not advise anyone to come here with a pre meditated plan of marriage.

Service Center: California Service Center

Embassy: Rio de Janeiro

Met: August 22, 2005

First Visit: March-April 2011

Second Visit: August-October 2012

Third Visit: August-September 2013

I-129F Sent: 09/14/2013

Package Received: 09/17/2013

NOA1: 09/19/2013

Alien Registration Number Changed: 09/28/2013

NOA2:10/08/2013

NOA2 Hard Copy: 10/12/2013

18 Days From NOA1 until NOA2

NVC Received: 11/07/2013

Case Number Received: 11/08/2013

Sent to Embassy: 11/12/2013

Emailed Embassy asking if they got case: 11/10/2013

Response, not received yet: 11/13/2013

Emailed embassy again: 11/17/2013

Response, received but no interview date yet: 11/18/2013

Case Touched by Consulate: 11/22/2013

Interview Date: 01/23/2014

Visa Issued: 2/7/2014

POE: Detroit, Michigan. 5/17/2014

This is going so fast and we are so blessed. You will be in my arms soon, My Love.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Italy
Timeline

I would never recommend coming with the intent of marrying and adjusting, that would be illegal. However, she is already here, and they decided to get married... She is on an expired visa so if she goes back she would have a ban (waiver able). However, if they decided spontaneously now to have her stay and adjust status, that overstay would be forgiven. So as long as they did not have the intent to marry and adjust, they are perfectly legal to do so now... The law allows for people to change their minds and plans... Depends on the situation. But in years and years here n VJ, I have yet to see a denial or lifetime ban being enforced (although I am sure that there are cases) as I said, the burden of proof is on the govt to prove they planned to enter and adjust... Which is a difficult threshold...

10/14/2000 - Met Aboard a Cruise ship

06/14/2003 - Married Savona Italy

I-130

03/21/2009 - I-130 Mailed to Chicago lockbox

11-30-09: GOT GREEN CARD in mail!!!!!!

Citizenship Process;

1/11/2013: Mailed N400 to Dallas Texas

3/11/2013: interview.. Approved

4/4/2013. : Oath! Now a U.S. citizen!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
Didn't find the answer you were looking for? Ask our VJ Immigration Lawyers.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
- Back to Top -

Important Disclaimer: Please read carefully the Visajourney.com Terms of Service. If you do not agree to the Terms of Service you should not access or view any page (including this page) on VisaJourney.com. Answers and comments provided on Visajourney.com Forums are general information, and are not intended to substitute for informed professional medical, psychiatric, psychological, tax, legal, investment, accounting, or other professional advice. Visajourney.com does not endorse, and expressly disclaims liability for any product, manufacturer, distributor, service or service provider mentioned or any opinion expressed in answers or comments. VisaJourney.com does not condone immigration fraud in any way, shape or manner. VisaJourney.com recommends that if any member or user knows directly of someone involved in fraudulent or illegal activity, that they report such activity directly to the Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement. You can contact ICE via email at Immigration.Reply@dhs.gov or you can telephone ICE at 1-866-347-2423. All reported threads/posts containing reference to immigration fraud or illegal activities will be removed from this board. If you feel that you have found inappropriate content, please let us know by contacting us here with a url link to that content. Thank you.
“;}
×
×
  • Create New...