They told me from the beginning of November 2025 to get all docs including the police certificates! And we worked on it from that very day! The Australian police clearance required finger prints, and doing it overseas took us a few days, then it took over a week for the application to arrive via DHL, and about 3-4 extra weeks for processing, as it's a much more comprehensive check than the standard online check), the other police certificate from my original EU country took 5 weeks as we had to order it by mail, with witnessed signatures and there is a separate queue for those requesting it via mail. For online requests, they require digital IDs which we don't have.
I don't want to go behind the back of my attorney, in fact it is an agent who works with the attorney. They are getting paid to complete the entire process, including the NVC stage. Moreover, I don't have the document checklist/cover sheet anyway.
There is no step to skip as I already sent them the missing docs. I have sent them another follow-up email now.
"Adding extra documents puts you at the back of the line again, it's the same amount of time as anybody else waiting to be DQ'ed. "
No, that's not entirely true. There is a difference between getting the initial document review done and being DQ'ed. If they require the additional docs, it is supposed to take as long as the original document review, i.e. I have heard quite a few people state that once missing docs were received by them, it took another week or two to get DQ'ed.
What is your time line then between mailing off your docs/submitting your DS-260 and getting DQ'ed?
How long did it take them to review and get back to you....and did they report back to you following the alleged 2-week document review timeframe that this is all they require from you and that they would now process your application? Or how does that work?