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Texxon

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Posts posted by Texxon

  1. And do NOT use a lawyer: they're not even aware that this special queue exists, and they'll most probably insist on writing a US address on the forms, sending you in for the long wait.

    This is my experience: I nearly hired a lawyer last Thursday but walked out of his office when he told me it would take 2 weeks to file the I-130s for my wife and stepson. He knew nothing of this queue; he said it would take a year (+2 weeks) and over $5,000 to re-unite my family.

  2. I will submit two I-130s--one for my wife and a second for my 7-yr-old stepson--on Monday June 18th from the Czech Republic; I am a USC & legal resident of the Czech Republic.

    1. Anyone happen to know whether or not I-130s filed for step-children are as likely to be auto-expedited as those filed for spouses? This would be a problem if my wife's casefile was auto-expedited but my stepson's wasn't.

    2. On Monday June 25th--the following week--I will fly to Texas and establish residency there. From what I've read in this thread this won't be a problem: I need to be a resident abroad (and use only my foreign/Czech address on I-130 and G-325A forms) at the time I submit these forms, but can live in the USA afterward. Is this correct? (...or should I say, the "consensus" :) )

  3. if it's financially feasible for you to 'move back' to the Czech Republic, then file from there, showing yer Czech residency, the turn around time at USCIS is about 20 days, tops. Is a special queue for 'filed from abroad' casefiles.

    Otherwise, you get into the regular queue. Figure 6 months till the casefile is adjudicated.

    REALLY??? I was just told at the American Embassy in Prague last month that it might be better to wait and file our petitions in America!!! We went to the embassy with our Direct Consular Filing paperwork in hand, only to be told that the embassy in Czech doesn't do this sort of thing. When I told them that I was returning to America soon, they said I should just file the I-130 petitions from America so I won't have to worry about change-of-address issues.

    But from what you're saying, it seems I was given horrible advice: if I had submitted the paperwork from the Czech Republic to the appropriate International Lockbox, we might have cut 6 months off our processing time?

    Perhaps I can still do this? I closed on a house here in Texas June 1st; I essentially found/purchased the house from the Czech Republic and arrived here just in time for the final closing. Though I technically live here in Texas now, I could return to the Czech Republic for a week--we are still renting an apartment there--and send the paperwork in from there. By the end of June, however: there's really no way I could claim residency in the Czech Republic anymore; I have to live in Texas and will have to claim Texas residency. But that should be fine, shouldn't it? As long as I was a resident of the Czech Republic at the time we initially file the I-130 forms, I should be OK, right? Later I could fly back to the Czech Republic again--in a few weeks or months--to take care of any additional paperwork or meetings that have to take place there in Czech. (Again: I wouldn't at those times claim to be a Czech resident, but a Texas resident who filed initially from the Czech Republic as a Czech resident at that time.)

    Would this work?

  4. they might be handled by separate officers, but in the end even if one of them had the interview before the other, the first one has up to 6 months to enter the country, and I'm sure that the other interview would only be days or a few weeks of difference, if even. All cases are not the same and they might have the same day as well.

    Thanks for the info!!

    And thank you, Darnell!!

  5. you have to make two separate packets or envelopes and you can mail them in one big package to the same place. They are separate petitions.

    does mailing them in one big package accomplish anything besides saving money on postage? Will their petitions be handled by the same person and processed along side one another? Or does USCIS consider these two cases wholly independent from each other? Is it possible that my wife would be approved before our son and have to leave him in Czech for weeks or months until his final application is approved?

  6. Hello,

    I am putting together two I-130 packets this weekend, one for my wife and one for my stepson. My wife and I have been married for 4 years; we were married and living in the Czech Republic (a visa-waiver country); she and stepson are both Czech. My stepson is 7 years old. Two weeks ago I moved back to the USA thinking that my wife and stepson would be able to join me this summer and live here with me while we awaited for their permanent residency statuses to be approved. I now realize this is not possible--that we will have to be separated for a whole year--and I am now trying to do everything possible to expedite their eventual arrival here.

    This VisaJourney.com page does a great job explaining how to bring one's wife over:

    http://www.visajourney.com/content/i130guide1

    but what about my stepson?? Do I create a completely separate packet for him and mail it separately? Or do I write a single cover letter and single table of contents and include all the documents for both my wife and stepson's cases in this single packet/envelope? My wife and stepson are inseparable: she cannot come here without him, so their cases need to be considered jointly if at all possible. Is this possible?

    I'm an American citizen, by the way, born in the USA. Thanks for any advice/assistance.

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