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pushbrk

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Everything posted by pushbrk

  1. That and being a US/Canada relationship should carry the day just fine.
  2. OK. Yes, your response confused me. Unless it's Canada or maybe Mexico, the US Citizen most likely has passport stamps for entry to the foreign spouse's country, and the foreign spouse's passport would be stamped OR an I-94 would be available for any visits to the US. Also, if the OP would complete their profile, it would be helpful.
  3. Contacting the Consulate might help, but you cannot add your daughter to your interview through normal means. Two separate cases, need two interviews. Worst case, your daughter needs a new medical.
  4. Then you use boarding passes and/or receipts. Please complete your profile. If it shows Canada, you'll get different answers. Relationship bona fides are not really a big issue for US Canada cases anyway.
  5. You seem to have a good plan. Whether you need professional help or not depends on your aptitude, attitude, diligent study, and attention to detail. Think in terms of an 18+ months process though. She needs interview either in her country of citizenship or country of residence. In this context "Europe" is not "a country".
  6. My magic number is 27, and 9 per page. Photos are secondary evidence though. Your primary evidence of being together are passport stamps.
  7. You will upload a scan of it while logged in to file the I-130.
  8. The I-130 instructions tell you what to include for a child. Note, this child will never have a green card. Becomes a citizen upon arrival in your custody.
  9. If it's an Embassy it's an Embassy. If it's a Consulate it's a Consulate....BUT....If you want to always be right, Immigrant Visa Units are part of Consular Services. In many countries the IV unit is not only not in the Capital City but also not at the same location as the actual Consulate. Here are some examples. Guangzhou, Cuidad Juarez, Montreal, Frankfurt, Mumbai and on and on. Visa interviews are conducted by "Consular Officers".
  10. I'll be contrary here. I say skip the affidavits altogether. Actually that is the most common advice here on VJ regarding affidavits. At best they are useless, but more likely to simply make you look desperate. You are seeing this as one of many options listed after these words, "In addition to the required...." (so not required) and "one or more of...." Newlyweds are wise to concentrate on actual evidence of time spent together in person, and examples of how and how frequently you communicate.
  11. I mean you have two choices, not zero choices. I understand you don't like either of them.
  12. Sounds like you have two choices and you've made one. That's not "no choices".
  13. It costs nothing to try except time and a little postage.
  14. Make sure not to leave any spaces blank. If there's a province, enter it. If not, enter Not Applicable
  15. Missed the they. My other question is still applicable.
  16. If they don't have W2 form, they should submit the Tax Return Transcript from their latest tax return. I would NOT submit assets instead of income, and in this case, there is no need to add assets anyway. Yes, you'll need to submit evidence of current income in the form of 1 recent pay stub for each. Note, they at least HAD W2 forms if they are employed. Maybe they've misplaced them.
  17. Your first post says you are seeking a CR1 visa. Where is the daughter now? Is she also in the USA? Are their circumstances such that they can remain in the USA at least six to nine months without leaving and without working?
  18. I-485 will never be filed in a spouse visa case, so no.
  19. You are sponsoring only one immigrant per affidavit, so don't check any boxes or add any names in part 3. I told you that using different words. If you follow my instructions, you'll get the same result. Now I've told you in the exact words you want to hear. This is covered very well in the step by step instructions.
  20. It's life. Sometimes you just gotta do what you just gotta do.
  21. It's a few days. Avoid checkpoints in the meantime. Putting a visa in a passport is not "instant". It's printed on a special secure machine and glued permantly to a page. Once the visa is approved, you'll be without your passport for a few days.
  22. The correct information is at the link provided in the above quoted post. Ignore all the "I think" statements, and just go with exactly what is explained in the link. If you go through the process again, don't worry about them "questioning your intent....". Be ready to explain though.
  23. Yes, as long as they otherwise qualify. Time to become an A-Student of the I-864 instructions and the form itself.
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