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Joon

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  1. I actually was just in the same position as well, but was told to handle it differently. :wacko:

    I am currently awaiting an NOA2 for a I-129F and my fiance, the beneficiary, just moved from one apartment in London to another (I am the petitioning USC). When I called USCIS to ask how to handle the change, they said that I should write a letter to my service center (in this case it is the CSC) including my NOA1 receipt number, my full name and the beneficiary's full name. They said I should detail the change I want made, including the old address and the address we want to change to.

    They also mentioned that when he is approved for an interview with his embassy he needs to bring supporting documents to the interview for the change.

  2. Okay, I SCOURED the forums before asking this so hopefully I'm not asking a question that's been answered 10 times before. It such a tiny technicality I'm a little embarrassed to ask, but I'd rather post this now than a cautionary tale 6 months from now!

    On I-134, Section 7, it asks for my employer's name ("Name of Concern") but my company's name is too long to fit here. An example: if the company's name is Happy Hippy Dog Food Company - I can only fit "Happy Hippy Do-". No more space.

    It says in the instructions that if more room is needed to attach additional pages, but I assume they are referring to needing more space to list dependents, etc.

    My gut tells me I should write "See attachment" then attach another sheet referencing the question with the full company name given, then sign and date the additional page. I wanted to see what the VJers thought, though?

  3. Whether with the petition or in materials for the interview, present NOTHING that's redacted or blanked out. Someone recently posted, or I heard about it outside of here, that a CO issued a 221g (formal hold on visa-issuance) until a couple presented the unredacted version of an e-mail that they'd presented in which a line had been blacked out. Fortunately, they had it and the original text was nothing untoward, and they then got the visa.

    We followed the step-by-step guide here on VJ (found here: http://www.visajourney.com/content/k1guide) and it says "The following items will not typically show proof of having met in the last two years however will show proof of an ongoing relationship: Copies of phone bills, cell phone bills, emails (you can edit personal info with a marker), letters (edit personal info also)" so we blacked out a few things in emails and letters. But we shouldn't have blacked out anything?

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