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f f

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Posts posted by f f

  1. congratulations on the baby.

     

    nothing Is preventing you from going to the us to give birth since you are a usc. so you are staying there by choice and you can not force thier hand by choosing to put yourself in a situation you do not want to be in.

     

    besides if that were a reason to expedite every wife would get pregnant to get thier spouse to the us faster. and we live in a world where pregnancy is a choice since there are plenty of options available to prevent or stop pregnancy if it is not a good time for you to be pregnant, so again you chose to become and stay pregnant in full knowledge of what would happen.

  2. 11 hours ago, Happyfamily03 said:

    You already got an RFE, so I would suggest you to get an official translator and have it notarize. There should be some company in your country who does it and shouldnt be that expensive. Better be safe then getting another RFE

    notarized means nothing for this.

     

    my wife translated her documents no issues with a state like the one above. the hardest part was making sure it was formatted the same as the original. so it was a bit of time in ms word to format.

  3. 17 minutes ago, Boiler said:

    If they were in the US and PR's when he naturalised I think they would to?

     

    Certainly something to look into, otherwise the logical call is for him to move.

    if they were under 18 and permanent residents in thier father's custody when thier father became a usc then they are also usc.

    may need to file n600 to get proof of citizenship though.

  4. 12 minutes ago, Wei Ling Hsu said:

    Hi, I need some advises, thanksss

     

    My fiancé sent the k1 file to USCIS in March.2017, but till now, We got nothing, no receipt and no case number. Now we want to cancel K1 visa so that could apply another visa to immigration to the U.S.

     

    Is any possible to cancel this case? We already cancel the check number, is the correct way to cancel the visa in this situation? Thank you 

    was the packet sent in?

    the usc should get a receipt within a month of sending it in.

     

    canceling the checks is pointless since they would have been cashed already.

     

    just have the usc wrote a letter to uscis asking to cancel the petition.

     

    what visa is being applied for now?

  5. 4 hours ago, britinusa said:

    He is a US citizen, his kids had green cards but they stayed out of the USA for too long due to work and school. I am not sure what choice we have other than a visitors visa.

    are his kids still in the us? they can not enter for the purpose of doing this but if they are still here it is legal to switch to it.

     

    if he has the money to sponsor them he can apply for them to adjust status so they can remain while it processes and if they do not want to stay permanently they can relinquish the greencards on the way out. to use vwp again.

  6. photos aren't that important. anything over one is just showing the same evidence. hotel statements, credit card statements. boarding passes and passport stamps are more important since they show you were both in the same place. photos can be altered with Photoshop and Facebook check ins can be faked by spoofing the GPS but money spent is much harder to fake. 

    chat logs are good showing communication but again a determined person could write a years worth of them over a weekend. 

  7. 23 hours ago, noraliz73 said:

    As far as his family and friends are concerned, we are already married I'm our religion

    you are too married for a k1 but not married enough for a cr1. which date are you going to use for your anniversary? if that is even a question you have to think of you are in gray area where neither visa will work for you and you need to get fully marriedand apply for a cr1.

     

    when did your divorce become final and you week able to marry? also when did you submit the i129f?

  8. 8 minutes ago, kgill said:

      I am bringing my parents (mom and dad) here i130 is  approved .I am the only who work we file jointly on my tax i have my wife two daughters and my inlaws.in 2015 my income was 42,672. i am going to file tax for 2016 this week cuz i got extention ,now i am thinking if i don't claim my inlaws to last year tax return is my income is be ok for my parents , then my family be myself ,wife and two daughters. Do i still need a joint sponsor .last year my gross income was 45000. Thanks for help 

    how are you able to claim them as dependents if they are not in the us? there is a substantial presence test for not residents to be claimed on taxes. the required incone for 6 people is at least $41200.  to be able to claim the inlaws as dependents they have to make less than 4500 I think.

     

    it is going to be very hard to care for them when you make do little money. they will not be eligible for Medicare so they e ill have to pay out of pocket for things or get an expensive high deductible plan. I strongly recommend you look at all the costs involved for when they are here to see if you can manage it. also people will get sick so planning on perfect health is going to hurt you bad.

  9. 1 hour ago, Dianacm said:

    I don't need it as a form of ID. I need to for AOS. my lawyer is worried that during my interview, they will question if the passport is actually even mine, since the bio page tore off. 

    well yeah of course they will question it. the passport is altered and they will want to know how that happened. which is wierd that only that page was damaged.

     

    also the passport number should be on the bio page as well as the other pages in the book. which ties them together.

  10. bring evidence to show the charges were politically motivated and you should be fine. they have an exemption for people who are persecuted for thier religious and political views as well as a few other areas. below is an excerpt from the uscis rule book. and personally I would think that those Israeli courts would fall under this exemption since you were found guilty of membership in a group and not an actual crime.

     

    9 FAM 302.3-2(B)(9)  (U) Political Offenses

    (CT:VISA-352;   04-24-2017)

    a. (U) 22 CFR 40.21(a) states that the term political offenses includes “offenses that resulted in convictions obviously based on fabricated charges or predicated upon repressive measures against racial, religious, or political minorities.”  This regulation incorporates language from the legislative history of the 1952 Act, and therefore reflects to some extent the original Congressional intent in adopting the political offense exemption.  Based on this regulation, most political offense exemptions will involve cases where you determined that the alien was not guilty of the charges but was wrongly prosecuted because of political repression against racial, religious, or political minorities.

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