Jump to content
brocku00

Another denial! Long story...I'm sorry!!

 Share

11 posts in this topic

Recommended Posts

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline

Hello everyone! It's been a very long time since I've been on here and it's all because I was so bummed about my interview in AUGUST!!!

Quick History - I married my husband in 2001 and I've always lived in Canada and my spouse stays up here for a few months and then goes home (back and forth all year/every year) due to his work. Anyways, we applied in March 2008 for I130 and it was finally sent to California, approved, NVC this past March 09 and interview in August.

August 12 Interview - weird experience! He denied me that day for three reasons:

a)Didn't believe my marriage certificate was real!!!

B) Wanted a certain American tax form from my husband, which I explained he doesn't get because he is self employed

c) proof of domicile

So I was totally upset and left Montreal the same day. On the way home, I called my home answering machine and there was a message from the officer that interviwed me saying:

a) He did his own "independant" research and found out the marriage certificate was real (could have done that on the spot but any hoo)

B) And, yeah, about the tax form, I did a little more research and it seems your husband doesn't need that form (DUH, I just told you that at interview)

c) no need for proof of domicle

So then he says, we can issue you a visa, either just come back to the embassy or just mail back your passport. He left his name and number and said, "IF you have any questions please feel free to call me.

So, the next day when I got home I send my passport back. Four weeks later, I get it back with a letter stating that they now need proof of domicile!!!!! #######!!!! excuse my french

So, I had my husband send me the following: lease agreement, bank account statements, vehicle registrations, auto insurance, video store card, grocery store card, utility bills, etc (all of these were suggested by the officer) and I then sent them in. 8 weeks later I hadn't heard from them (emailed them twice...no response) so husband and I contacted Senator. The Senator sent an email and one week later I received my passport back with NO VISA and a letter saying "AMCITS MUST return to the US and establish domicile." Send in proof of re-domicile when you have it.

ARGHHHHHH!!!! I don't understand, I know my husband is up here a lot but he is just a visitor! Does the US consolute think that I want a US VISA to REMAIN IN CANADA!!! NO, I want to be with my family in the US!!!

I don't know if I said this before but the officer left me his name and number on my answering maching (when he left me the original message on August 12) and said to call him if I have any questions. Well when I called and asked him a question....he got mad at me for calling and said "This is why I don't give out my number, I have 25 cases to work on and by talking to you, I am not working on those cases!!!!" Why did he tell me to call if I had any questions??

So this has now resulted in the following: my husband has permanently left Canada (today) and will not return until my VISA is approved, he had to find employment (even though he is self employed - was told by consolute he needed a contract by another employer), he has to rent/lease a new apartment (extra costs that we don't need), open new accounts (even though he has existing ones), and establish anything possible to add to proof of domicile. I don't know what else they could want. We've been married for almost 8 years, we have three kids (who are dual citizens) and we can't be together!!

I need help, support, advice....anything! Sorry about the length and hope to hear from all of you.

Sent I130 to Chicago - March 1, 2008

NOA 1- April, 2008

Transferred to California - April, 2008

NOA 2 - March 13, 2009 (lost for awhile)

NVC case number given - March 30, 2009

NVC case complete - April 25, 2009

Email for interview - July 3, 2009

Interview - August 12, 2009 DENIED!!

PROOF OF DOMICILE:

Package 1: sent August 13, 2009

Package 1: sent back August 23, 2009 -more proof needed

Package 2: sent September 3, 2009

Package 2: sent back Nov. 1, 2009 - more proof needed

Package 3: sent January 14, 2010

Package 3: APPROVED

Received VISA: MARCH 3, 2010!!!!!!

POE: Lewiston Bridge NY, March 4, 2010

SSN: ordered March 4, 2010

SSN: received March 17, 2010

GC Welcome Letter: March 16, 2010

GC Arrived: March 22, 2010

Citizenship Application Start Date: September 2011!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline

OH My this the third Denial on the Canadian side today regarding proof of Domicile, This is becaming a trend with montreal, they should give u guys Precise provision on how to go by providing proof of domicile that they will accept, Im truly sorry for u and your family to go thru this not havin any type of Ease, just be cool and calm and hope for the best.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline

Thank you for your advice...I'll try to stay cool and calm! LOL When I was first told on the interview day to send in proof of domicile, I asked the officer specifically what he wanted and it was like pulling a tooth to get an answer. He just said send in what you think is right!!! He seemed to be annoyed when I kept asking for specifics so I politely said, "I just want to know these answers because once I leave this office, there is no one that I can call and ask". THen when I got my first denial in the mail, I phoned him and asked what other kind of domicile proof I needed, and agian is was a painful answer, but everything that he asked for, I sent in. I do know for a fact that they have access to the border computer system that can tell you when a particular person has entered Canada and when they entered back into the states. So I think since my husband visits for a month or two here and there (fortunetly he can afford this), they consider him 'living' here and not in the States. So, our goal is for him not to come back to Canada at all and send in new proof of domicile...kind of like starting a new life over!! LOL So hopefully this helps.

Sent I130 to Chicago - March 1, 2008

NOA 1- April, 2008

Transferred to California - April, 2008

NOA 2 - March 13, 2009 (lost for awhile)

NVC case number given - March 30, 2009

NVC case complete - April 25, 2009

Email for interview - July 3, 2009

Interview - August 12, 2009 DENIED!!

PROOF OF DOMICILE:

Package 1: sent August 13, 2009

Package 1: sent back August 23, 2009 -more proof needed

Package 2: sent September 3, 2009

Package 2: sent back Nov. 1, 2009 - more proof needed

Package 3: sent January 14, 2010

Package 3: APPROVED

Received VISA: MARCH 3, 2010!!!!!!

POE: Lewiston Bridge NY, March 4, 2010

SSN: ordered March 4, 2010

SSN: received March 17, 2010

GC Welcome Letter: March 16, 2010

GC Arrived: March 22, 2010

Citizenship Application Start Date: September 2011!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline

This is terrible, what use is Montreal trying to fix the backlog if they're just going to deny "everyone" for lack of domicile? They're just creating more backlog. :( I hope they resolve this soon and that you are granted your visa so you can be reunited with your husband.

(My own question, not to hijack the thread but is a job in the US Army considered domicile? >_<)

dev356pr___.png

Removal of Conditions - January 6, 2012

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline

Wow Brocku, i'm so sorry to hear this! That's terrible that he told you that you didn't need to submit more information and then turns around and asks you for more. I'm also sorry to hear you were treated so rudely by the CO, why someone would give you his phone number and when you call him he tells you off, I have no idea.

There seems to be a common theme here between your interview/denial and Dalenes - I'm sure you have already read her thread.

The common thread, of course, is that your Husband spends time in Canada and the U.S. - therefore he decided to deny it based on not enough proof of residence in the U.S.

So, now he has returned to the U.S. and is not leaving until he has established that. I don't know when that 'magic' date is. If you can prove that he has spent far more time in the U.S. than in Canada over, say, the last year, that is perhaps the approach you should take.

Since you have decided to go this route, there is, obviously, no going back to proving 'reestablishing' domicile.

If you read the guidelines below, you will see that you are on the right track. It also says there is no particular 'time' of living in the U.S. that will prove domicile.

Personally I would contact the CO again, by mail. I would explain that your Husband has now permanently moved back to the U.S., I would submit the letter from the employer. Where is he staying now? With family or friends? I would get a lease made up with them to prove he is living there now.

(by the way I am going to provide a link to this document I keep referring to - just have to find the URL again)

9 FAM 40.41 N6.1-2 Establishing U.S. Domicile

(CT:VISA-823; 07-14-2006)

a. A petitioner living abroad not meeting the criteria in 9 FAM 40.41 N6.1-1

who wishes to qualify as a sponsor must satisfy you:

(1) That he or she has taken steps to establish a domicile in the United

States;

(2) That he or she has either already taken up physical residence in the

United States or will do so currently with the applicant;

(3) The sponsor does not have to precede the applicant to the United

States but, if he or she does not do so, he or she must at least

arrive in the United States concurrently with the applicant;

(4) The sponsor must establish an address (a house, an apartment, or

arrangements for accommodations with family or friend) and either

must have already taken up physical residence in the United States;

or

(5) Must at a minimum to satisfy you that he or she intends to take up

residence there no later than the time of the applicant’s

immigration to the United States.

b. Although there is no time frame for the resident to establish residence,

you must be satisfied that the sponsor has, in fact, taken up residence in

the United States. Evidence that the sponsor has established a domicile

in the United States and is either physically residing there or intends to

do so before or concurrently with the applicant include the following:

(1) Opening a bank account;

(2) Transferring funds to the United States;

(3) Making investments in the United States;

(4) Seeking employment in the United States;

(5) Registering children in U.S. schools;

(6) Applying for a social security number; and

(7) Voting in local, state or federal elections.

Edited by trailmix
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sounds to me as if you already had all evidence of providing domicile. Personally, I would've contacted your Senator again, explained the denial and stupidity going on, and had them re-enforce your diligence.

For your husband to get a new place to live, open new accounts despite having existing ones, and to establish employment with someone else's letterhead, simply to satisfy whatever the COs issue was seems a little ridiculous. For you to feel as if your husband cannot visit you in Canada is also ridiculous.

All of this talk about visas being there to "reunite" families is fine and dandy... The visa process being one to FORCE separation is not.

01/08/2010 - Applied for SSN in maiden name.

01/09/2010 - Married! Officially a Missis.

01/19/2010 - Received SSN in mail.

02/10/2010 - Sent I-485/I-131/I-765 to Chicago.

02/19/2010 - NOA dates for all applications.

02/22/2010 - Received NOAs in mail.

02/23/2010 - Applied for SSN for married name.

03/04/2010 - Applied for Florida DL in married name.

03/09/2010 - Biometrics appointment.

04/18/2010 - AP received.

04/23/2010 - EAD approved.

04/27/2010 - AOS Interview at Orlando USCIS (decision pending).

04/28/2010 - Card production ordered!

05/03/2010 - EAD received.

05/03/2010 - Welcome letter received.

05/28/2010 - Green Card received in mail.

01/26/2012 - Mailed RoC packet to VSC.

01/30/2012 - NOA date on application.

02/01/2012 - Cheque cashed.

02/05/2012 - Received NOA in mail.

02/10/2012 - Touch.

02/24/2012 - ASC Appointment Notice dated.

02/27/2012 - ASC Appointment Notice received.

03/23/2012 - Biometrics appointment.

09/20/2012 - Touch. Card Production ordered!

09/21/2012 - Touch.

09/24/2012 - Touch. Card mailed.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline
Thank you for your advice...I'll try to stay cool and calm! LOL When I was first told on the interview day to send in proof of domicile, I asked the officer specifically what he wanted and it was like pulling a tooth to get an answer. He just said send in what you think is right!!! He seemed to be annoyed when I kept asking for specifics so I politely said, "I just want to know these answers because once I leave this office, there is no one that I can call and ask". THen when I got my first denial in the mail, I phoned him and asked what other kind of domicile proof I needed, and agian is was a painful answer, but everything that he asked for, I sent in. I do know for a fact that they have access to the border computer system that can tell you when a particular person has entered Canada and when they entered back into the states. So I think since my husband visits for a month or two here and there (fortunetly he can afford this), they consider him 'living' here and not in the States. So, our goal is for him not to come back to Canada at all and send in new proof of domicile...kind of like starting a new life over!! LOL So hopefully this helps.

That's funny because he kept telling me that the "law is clear" on domicile, so I asked him where I could find the law and he got mad and defensive. The only thing that is clear is that the CO can do whatever they want.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline

Thanks, Trailmix. I think the guy must be confused because he kept saying to me that he BELIEVES that I want to move back to the U.S. but still didn't want to issue the visa. I definitely satisfy number 5 on that list. Oh well. This list is way better than the one he gave me as it is more explicit. It seems like this is going to be a long slog....

Wow Brocku, i'm so sorry to hear this! That's terrible that he told you that you didn't need to submit more information and then turns around and asks you for more. I'm also sorry to hear you were treated so rudely by the CO, why someone would give you his phone number and when you call him he tells you off, I have no idea.

There seems to be a common theme here between your interview/denial and Dalenes - I'm sure you have already read her thread.

The common thread, of course, is that your Husband spends time in Canada and the U.S. - therefore he decided to deny it based on not enough proof of residence in the U.S.

So, now he has returned to the U.S. and is not leaving until he has established that. I don't know when that 'magic' date is. If you can prove that he has spent far more time in the U.S. than in Canada over, say, the last year, that is perhaps the approach you should take.

Since you have decided to go this route, there is, obviously, no going back to proving 'reestablishing' domicile.

If you read the guidelines below, you will see that you are on the right track. It also says there is no particular 'time' of living in the U.S. that will prove domicile.

Personally I would contact the CO again, by mail. I would explain that your Husband has now permanently moved back to the U.S., I would submit the letter from the employer. Where is he staying now? With family or friends? I would get a lease made up with them to prove he is living there now.

(by the way I am going to provide a link to this document I keep referring to - just have to find the URL again)

9 FAM 40.41 N6.1-2 Establishing U.S. Domicile

(CT:VISA-823; 07-14-2006)

a. A petitioner living abroad not meeting the criteria in 9 FAM 40.41 N6.1-1

who wishes to qualify as a sponsor must satisfy you:

(1) That he or she has taken steps to establish a domicile in the United

States;

(2) That he or she has either already taken up physical residence in the

United States or will do so currently with the applicant;

(3) The sponsor does not have to precede the applicant to the United

States but, if he or she does not do so, he or she must at least

arrive in the United States concurrently with the applicant;

(4) The sponsor must establish an address (a house, an apartment, or

arrangements for accommodations with family or friend) and either

must have already taken up physical residence in the United States;

or

(5) Must at a minimum to satisfy you that he or she intends to take up

residence there no later than the time of the applicant’s

immigration to the United States.

b. Although there is no time frame for the resident to establish residence,

you must be satisfied that the sponsor has, in fact, taken up residence in

the United States. Evidence that the sponsor has established a domicile

in the United States and is either physically residing there or intends to

do so before or concurrently with the applicant include the following:

(1) Opening a bank account;

(2) Transferring funds to the United States;

(3) Making investments in the United States;

(4) Seeking employment in the United States;

(5) Registering children in U.S. schools;

(6) Applying for a social security number; and

(7) Voting in local, state or federal elections.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline

Does contacting your senator help? I'm wondering if that might send the CO off and cause a denial since he has the final say.

Sounds to me as if you already had all evidence of providing domicile. Personally, I would've contacted your Senator again, explained the denial and stupidity going on, and had them re-enforce your diligence.

For your husband to get a new place to live, open new accounts despite having existing ones, and to establish employment with someone else's letterhead, simply to satisfy whatever the COs issue was seems a little ridiculous. For you to feel as if your husband cannot visit you in Canada is also ridiculous.

All of this talk about visas being there to "reunite" families is fine and dandy... The visa process being one to FORCE separation is not.

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...