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JKLSemicolon

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Everything posted by JKLSemicolon

  1. Just looked back through this thread and it looks like no one has received a paper biometrics appointment notice in the mail yet. We’re still waiting on that, too.
  2. A couple thoughts since others have already given good advice: 1) It could be slightly less than 4 years depending on various factors (exactly how far along you are now with the residency requirement, whether you file as soon as the 90-day window opens, what your local field office is, how long it takes to process the case, etc.). Of course, it could be longer, too; no guarantees in this process. 2) Many of us on this site, myself included, waited or have waited for a lot longer than 4 years to be together full-time with loved ones. That’s a reality of immigration. Some things are worth the wait, but you’ll have to decide for yourself if naturalization is one of those.
  3. Your experience is not the norm since the I-751 is supposed to be adjudicated before a decision can be made on the N-400. Did you follow up with USCIS about the status of the I-751 or did this come up at the interview?
  4. Like @top_secret, myUSCIS is also showing the case status as Biometrics Appointment was Scheduled as of today (9/22). The notice appears in the Documents tab and is scheduled for 10/11 and the notice date is also today, 9/22, so we will see when the physical letter arrives. 9/11/2023 Package delivered to Phoenix lockbox 9/13/2023 myUSCIS status update: Case Was Received And A Receipt Notice Was Sent 9/15/2023 Check cashed 9/22/2023 Extension Letter received (dated 9/16); myUSCIS status update: Biometrics Appointment was Scheduled 10/11/2023 Biometrics appointment
  5. Extension letter arrived in the mail today. Current recap: 9/11 Package delivered to Phoenix lockbox 9/13 myUSCIS status update: Case Was Received And A Receipt Notice Was Sent 9/15 Check cashed 9/22 Extension Letter received (dated 9/16)
  6. I would just say send what you can. My approach in general is to try to connect the dots for whoever is reviewing the file. So for example, we had a couple of shared credit cards where statements weren’t generated during certain months because we didn’t spend anything on them. I still made sure to put a placeholder in the packet explaining that no statement was generated that month. Your explanation of why the transcript is not available would be along the same lines. FWIW, when you do get the transcript it would probably be useful to upload to the unsolicited evidence section in myUSCIS (assuming you don’t get it until after you file the I-751).
  7. Same with us for the G-1145, no text or email was ever sent.
  8. The PDF of the extension letter just showed up in the Documents section of myUSCIS for us as well (no physical letter received yet). Curiously, there is one scanned .tif file in the Your Uploads section right now which only includes 25 of the more than 800 pages of evidence we sent with our packet. Will be interesting to see if that is ever updated.
  9. Check was cashed (technically processed as an electronic funds transfer) today. Current recap: 9/11 package delivered to Phoenix lockbox 9/13 myUSCIS status update: Case Was Received And A Receipt Notice Was Sent 9/15 check cashed We will be awaiting the arrival of the extension letter in the mail.
  10. We created my wife’s myUSCIS account to pay the immigrant fee before entering on her CR-1. No online access code at any point that I can recall. Interesting how things are happening in a different order though. We also submitted the G-1145 and nothing there, although there was an email notification that came from myUSCIS today about a case update (just the same update I already saw last night).
  11. MyUSCIS just updated and shows "Case Was Received And A Receipt Notice Was Sent" with an IOE receipt number. Check hasn't been cashed yet but I expect it will be soon.
  12. Joining the thread. Package was delivered via USPS to the Phoenix lockbox on 9/11. No other updates yet.
  13. Have you read this page? https://www.uscis.gov/newsroom/alerts/uscis-announces-additional-mail-delivery-process-for-receiving-adit-stamp @mindthegap and others will have more experience with the ADIT stamp process, but if you spoke to a Tier 1 officer on the phone they likely did not give you accurate information. Edit: did you receive an extension letter for the new filing?
  14. I believe @BaiBlueberry may have written AOS when they actually meant ROC.
  15. Sounds like you are doing Adjustment of Status and not Removal of Conditions (which is where you posted this)?
  16. Was the green card that has the maiden name issued after marriage? If that’s the case (and someone else can correct me if I’m wrong), my understanding was that you would need to go through the court-ordered name change process in order to use the married name on a permanent resident card. The reason is that the proof of name change has to be from after the original GC was issued, so the marriage certificate would not count. The other option is to wait until citizenship to do the name change.
  17. Can you elaborate on what you see as the part requiring legal advice? I have read the USCIS chapter related to continuous residence as it relates to naturalization (https://www.uscis.gov/policy-manual/volume-12-part-d-chapter-3) and, as mentioned, we will take that into account when the time comes. As far as conditional permanent residence, the USCIS policy manual (https://www.uscis.gov/policy-manual/volume-12-part-g-chapter-5) states: In order for USCIS to approve the petition to remove conditions, the CPR must establish that: The marriage upon which the CPR admitted to the United States was valid; The marriage has not been terminated; and The marriage was not entered into for purposes of evading the immigration laws of the United States None of those points explicitly has to do with the question of time spent outside of the country, although if anyone has another reference to look through I will gladly do it.
  18. Thanks. For our purposes right now we are planning to count 3 years from last month when considering citizenship to avoid any grey areas.
  19. Hi all, We are getting ready to file for removal of conditions and I would like others' opinions on the best way to answer Part 2, Question 22 on Form I-751. The question reads: My wife got her conditional permanent residency in September 2021. However, during the past two years she has spent a significant amount of time in her home country due to a complicated situation that was only finally resolved last month (July 2023). The situation had to do with being able to leave her former employer (a university) without them clawing back a large sum of money that was given in financial aid during an arrangement made years earlier. We of course did not anticipate this taking as long as it did, otherwise we might have opted to let the case sit at NVC for longer during the spousal visa process. So for much of the time since she became a permanent resident, she was still working in Ecuador and returning to the U.S. as frequently as possible until coming back full-time in July. Throughout, she has maintained significant ties to the U.S. including being on our shared lease, shared insurance plans, shared bank and credit card accounts, joint tax returns, etc. Given all this, my inclination in answering the question above is to say "Yes", list the family address in Ecuador in the Additional Information section along with a brief explanation, and find ways in the rest of the package to put this into greater context. That could be through a cover letter, timeline, and perhaps even relevant translated documents/correspondence related to the employer situation. From this group I am trying to get a sense of whether this sounds like a good approach and how much of this information is truly relevant for USCIS. We have been together for 13 years now and I don't doubt our ability to demonstrate that this is a bona fide marriage, but at the same time these circumstances are different from a lot of cases out there and I want to be able to present them in an appropriate way.
  20. Congratulations! If you could take a few minutes to fill out your VisaJourney timeline, that will help many other users on this site.
  21. I would add that I-751 interviews are often waived if the beneficiary previously completed an interview with USCIS - for example, during the AOS process as would have happened with the OP of this thread. By contrast, those who enter on a CR1 after having done only a consular interview will most likely have to complete an interview with USCIS during the ROC process (unless things have changed?).
  22. If the ITIN is issued, that is a positive sign since the return can be filed by the IRS after that. In my experience we got no further notification after receiving the ITIN letter and returned original documents in the mail. Although we were owed a refund, the "Where's my Refund?" page did not show anything until right before the refund arrived, ˜9 months after getting the ITIN. However, the IRS was working through a significant backlog at the time that may (?) be slightly better now. There may be a way to call to check the status of the return, but the only call I made at the time was to check the status of the ITIN once it was past the published processing time from the IRS website (currently 7 weeks).
  23. For your first question, when submitting the paper 1040 with form W-7, I left my wife's SSN blank as the IRS will fill in the ITIN once assigned. Edited to add: I would certainly not put "NRA" instead of her first name. Remember that you are also required to submit a statement indicating the choice be considered a U.S. resident for tax purposes, so putting NRA (=Non-Resident Alien) anywhere does not make sense in this case. For the second question, in 2021 I sent the return and W-7 to Austin before the filing deadline and without filing an extension, and had no problems in spite of the rest of the process taking over a year. Not sure about your third question.
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