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I485Applicant

Is it possible to prevent I-485 from being withdrawn?

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1 hour ago, SalishSea said:

No, grandma can’t step in to be the petitioner.

Well my first 4 years in the US were in the swamps of South Louisiana; in some cases marriage was literally a family affair. 

USA via Scotland, South Africa, Rhodesia, Brazil, Qatar & India

 

2000. H1B…

2014. L1A…

2017. LPR…

2021. N400

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4 minutes ago, Crazy Cat said:

If the I-485 is denied, you will be.  Your options are very limited.

Thank you for the lesson. 

Edited by Old_Glory

USA via Scotland, South Africa, Rhodesia, Brazil, Qatar & India

 

2000. H1B…

2014. L1A…

2017. LPR…

2021. N400

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1 minute ago, Crazy Cat said:

Has it been 90 days since you entered the US?

I think you’re quoting the wrong person. I’m a citizen. 

USA via Scotland, South Africa, Rhodesia, Brazil, Qatar & India

 

2000. H1B…

2014. L1A…

2017. LPR…

2021. N400

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Taiwan
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4 minutes ago, Old_Glory said:

I think you’re quoting the wrong person. I’m a citizen. 

Oh...Ok.  Sorry.  I had other tabs open.  quoted wrong comment....LOL....My mistake.

Edited by Crazy Cat

"The US immigration process requires a great deal of knowledge, planning, time, patience, and a significant amount of money.  It is quite a journey!"

- Some old child of the 50's & 60's on his laptop 

 

Senior Master Sergeant, US Air Force- Retired (after 20+ years)- Missile Systems Maintenance & Titan 2 ICBM Launch Crew Duty (200+ Alert tours)

Registered Nurse- Retired- I practiced in the areas of Labor & Delivery, Home Health, Adolescent Psych, & Adult Psych.

IT Professional- Retired- Web Site Design, Hardware Maintenance, Compound Pharmacy Software Trainer, On-site go live support, Database Manager, App Designer.

______________________________________

August 7, 2022: Wife filed N-400 Online under 5 year rule.

November 10, 2022: Received "Interview is scheduled" letter.

December 12, 2022:  Received email from Dallas office informing me (spouse) to be there for combo interview.

December 14, 2022: Combo Interview for I-751 and N-400 Conducted.

January 26, 2023: Wife's Oath Ceremony completed at the Plano Event Center, Plano, Texas!!!😁

February 6, 2023: Wife's Passport Application submitted in Dallas, Texas.

March 21, 2023:   Wife's Passport Delivered!!!!

May 15, 2023 (about):  Naturalization Certificate returned from Passport agency!!

 

In summary, it took 13 months for approval of the CR-1.  It took 44 months for approval of the I-751.  It took 4 months for approval of the N-400.   It took 172 days from N-400 application to Oath Ceremony.   It took 6 weeks for Passport, then 7 additional weeks for return of wife's Naturalization Certificate.. 
 

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Myanmar
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1 hour ago, SalishSea said:

Bottom line is that it is a jointly filed petition

it is not. 

1 hour ago, SalishSea said:

and the applicant can only adjust through the petitioner named on the visa.

Complete agree with that part.

 

U.S. citizen sponsor can cause I-485 to be canceled by withdrawing I-864. Or,  refuse to attend an I-485 interview, assuming there is one.

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Kenya
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1 hour ago, Old_Glory said:

Well my first 4 years in the US were in the swamps of South Louisiana; in some cases marriage was literally a family affair. 

 

You are missing the other 6 southern states. 

Immigration journey is not: fast, for the faint at heart, easy, cheap, for the impatient nor right away. If more than 50% of this applies to you, best get off the bus.

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Philippines
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3 hours ago, Mike E said:

Or,  refuse to attend an I-485 interview, assuming there is one.

According to Matter of Sesay I do not believe that part is true. As long as I-864 was not withdrawn by original petitioner, LPR status can be granted evenimage.png.0814bde4e294c04c7c093e20afc5eff9.png

if couple is divorced as long as marriage within 90 days did happen.
 

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Myanmar
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1 minute ago, SneakyPete said:

According to Matter of Sesay I do not believe that part is true. As long as I-864 was not withdrawn by original petitioner, LPR status can be granted evenimage.png.0814bde4e294c04c7c093e20afc5eff9.png

if couple is divorced as long as marriage within 90 days did happen.
 

I am well aware of that case.

 

I missed the part where OP is divorced. OP referred to a spouse not an ex.

 

I’ve contributed all I can, and I don’t wish to argue or bicker, so I won’t post more in this thread. 

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7 hours ago, I485Applicant said:

If I came here on a K1 Visa, got married to a US citizen, and am going to apply for an I-485 with my spouse - I heard it is possible for my spouse to withdraw my application. Is there any way to prevent that? Can I prevent my US citizen spouse from withdrawing my I-485 application before I get my green card

Since you say “ I am going to file I-485..” I will assume you came in to US very recently…

Is your husband refusing to help you file ? ( as in pay USCS filing fee, sign I-864 and give his tax returns and financials…?)
 

Is your relationship/ marriage in trouble ( ex USC wants to send you back to home country) ..or are you just worried?

 

If you have not filed the I-485 yet and husband wants out of the marriage already, he can still contact/write USCIS and withdraw his I-129 F , tell them marriage won’t survive ….maybe claim he  was used for a green card or other such stories.

 

So are you still living together ?
Is husband threatening divorce?

When did your I-94 expire?
Most importantly, did you already prepare the I-485 packet and send it out?

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52 minutes ago, SneakyPete said:

According to Matter of Sesay I do not believe that part is true. As long as I-864 was not withdrawn by original petitioner, LPR status can be granted even

As I understand it, K-1 spouse  need a new basis to adjust ( a new USC husband)..a bit premature since OP just married ..and not sure bonafides would pass either @Timona’s infamous test or USCIS threshold…for what I presume is a very short lived marriage. Add to that the fact that when a USC pet/spouse “ withdraws “ anything ( I-130 , I-129 F) ..the first thing they pull is financial support…

Hopefully OP clears up a few details.

 

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17 hours ago, I485Applicant said:

Hello friends!

 

I have a question from a family member.

 

If I came here on a K1 Visa, got married to a US citizen, and am going to apply for an I-485 with my spouse - I heard it is possible for my spouse to withdraw my application. Is there any way to prevent that? Can I prevent my US citizen spouse from withdrawing my I-485 application before I get my green card?

Spouse can withdraw I-864 and without that the AOS is toast and you can't really replace that. Like you can't have some other sponsor take it over.

 

Still, I need to ask what prompted this question? Are you worried about something specific?

 

9 hours ago, Family said:

As I understand it, K-1 spouse  need a new basis to adjust ( a new USC husband)..a bit premature since OP just married ..and not sure bonafides would pass either @Timona’s infamous test or USCIS threshold…for what I presume is a very short lived marriage. Add to that the fact that when a USC pet/spouse “ withdraws “ anything ( I-130 , I-129 F) ..the first thing they pull is financial support…

Hopefully OP clears up a few details.

 

K-1s can actually adjust via the marriage to the original petitioner despite a divorce if the basis for adjustment is the I-129F (Matter of Sesay), the thing is that would still require cooperation from the original petitioner in not pulling the I-864. Getting a new husband actually won't work for AOS since K-1s and K-2s can only adjust via marriage to the original petitioner (this can be the original I-129F, an I-130, or a widow(er) or VAWA I-360).

In cases where K-1 enters and ends up marrying someone else you actually have to proceed as if you entered without inspection with the caveat that a VAWA I-360 still wouldn't let you adjust and you'd need to do consular and seek exemption from the unlawful presence bar if applicable. Same thing with K-2s, just for parent's marriage.

Edited by Demise

Contradictions without citations only make you look dumb.

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1 hour ago, Demise said:

K-1s can actually adjust via the marriage to the original petitioner despite a divorce if the basis for adjustment is the I-129F (Matter of Sesay), the thing is that would still require cooperation from the original petitioner in not pulling the I-864. Getting a new husband actually won't work for AOS since K-1s and K-2s can only adjust via marriage to the original petitioner (this can be the original I-129F, an I-130, or a widow(er) or VAWA I-360).

In cases where K-1 enters and ends up marrying someone else you actually have to proceed as if you entered without inspection with the caveat that a VAWA I-360 still wouldn't let you adjust and you'd need to do consular and seek exemption from the unlawful presence bar if applicable. Same thing with K-2s, just for parent's marriage.

Edited 1 hour ago by Demise

Both you and previous poster are right . ..and  new basis won’t help a divorced K-1 spouse. Thanks for refresher..nothing is possible with an uncooperative USC ex, as @Mike E pointed out.

 

If OP has not filed yet..she is out of luck anyway 

 

Divorce Prior to Filing Form I-485 While in K-1 Status

The likelihood of losing residence in the U.S. increases dramatically if a K-1 visa holder divorces their sponsoring spouse before filing Form I-485. The fiancé must leave the country, as there is no way to apply for a green card in this circumstance.


 

https://www.prideimmigration.com/what-happens-if-i-am-divorced-on-a-k1-visa/

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Ghana
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In all events, matter of Sesay or not, all roads still lead to the I-864. Whether in marriage or in divorce, it doesn't matter. If petitioner pulls the I-864, the K1 beneficiary is toast, they won't be able to adjust. 

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  • Captain Ewok changed the title to Is it possible to prevent I-485 from being withdrawn?
 
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