
crb3
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Posts posted by crb3
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This is my thinking too, but we just wanted to make sure my husband won't have to serve time or be fined for me having lived with him for a while.
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Hello,
I have a question on behalf of my now-husband, a US citizen. I came on a k-1 visa and married a man in the US, but our marriage did not work out. When I realized that, I left him and stayed with friends for some time, then with the man that is my husband now. I was living with him while I was waiting for the divorce from my first husband to be finalized. I filed for the divorce myself, and I didn't care if I had to leave the country because living in the US wasn't my goal, but I stayed there until the divorce was finalized, then I married my new husband and then promptly left the US. We are now planning to go through the CR-1 process, and I have this question:
I know there's a law concerning US citizens who harbour/help/employ illegal aliens, and it's pretty severe. My husband and I are wondering if this law will apply to him, because I lived with him for 8 months while I was out of status. (My K-1 visa ran out, and my ex-husband never filed AOS for me, so I was in that grey area. I was out of status for almost a year.) When I was filling out g-325a I saw that I need to state where I lived in the past 5 years, and one of the addresses is my husband's current address. Is it going to mean a bad thing for my husband - i.e. that he was harbouring me or something - if the INS sees that our addresses match and i was out of status then? Mind you, I did not work at all and had no troubles with the law. Could he be potentially charged with harbouring or are we worried unnecessarily? Are there any known cases that would be similar to that? A lawyer that we saw a long time ago didn't seem to think it was a problem, but I don't know if he could be trusted. It does seem like the INS would have a bigger fish to fry if they wanted to, what with all the illegal workers...
Thank you for your insight!
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I'm kind of on the other end of the spectrum... I came on a k-1 visa and married a man in the US, but our marriage did not work out. We did not lie to each other or embelish the truth, I just wasn't as happy as i thought I would be, and my husband didn't spend any time with me. When I realized that, I left him and stayed with friends for some time, then with the man who is my husband now. I was living with him while I was waiting for the divorce from my first husband to be finalized. I filed for the divorce myself, and I didn't care if I had to leave the country because living in the US wasn't my goal, but I stayed there until the divorce was finalized, then I married my new husband and then promptly left the US. My ex-husband never applied for my AOS. Contrary to someone's assertion above, it's the responsibility of the US Citizen to file for his/her foreign spouse. From the time my K-1 lapsed until I left the US it's been little less than a year. From what i've been told by the lawyer a person like me or your husband can't have another person other than the original fiance/husband wife file for them. He won't be able to adjust his status with anyone else but you. He has to leave. The longer he stays the bigger the ban he'll have. After a year's overstay the ban is 10 years. It can be waived but not for certain. The only way he could file AOS for hiself and stay would be if he could prove abuse from you. It would be pretty hard for him to prove, especially because you're a woman, but just keep that in mind, if he likes to lie and is determined to stay he might try to... Anyway, good luck to you, and don't lose faith.
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My K-1 ran out on June 5, 2006, and I left the US on June 3, 2007, so it was less than a year overstay.
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Hello,
I have a question on behalf of my now-husband, a US citizen. I came on a k-1 visa and married a man in the US, but our marriage did not work out. When I realized that, I left him and stayed with friends for some time, then with the man that is my husband now. I was living with him while I was waiting for the divorce from my first husband to be finalized. I filed for the divorce myself, and I didn't care if I had to leave the country because living in the US wasn't my goal, but I stayed there until the divorce was finalized, then I married my new husband and then promptly left the US. We are now planning to go through the CR-1 process, and I have this question:
I know there's a law concerning US citizens who harbour/help/employ illegal aliens, and it's pretty severe. My husband and I are wondering if this law will apply to him, because I lived with him for 8 months while I was out of status. (My K-1 visa ran out, and my ex-husband never filed AOS for me, so I was in that grey area.) When I was filling out g-325a I saw that I need to state where I lived in the past 5 years, and one of the addresses is my husband's current address. Is it going to mean a bad thing for my husband - i.e. that he was harbouring me or something - if the INS sees that our addresses match and i was out of status then? Mind you, I did not work at all and had no troubles with the law. Could he be potentially charged with harbouring or are we worried unnecessarily? Are there any known cases that would be similar to that? A lawyer that we saw a long time ago didn't seem to think it was a problem, but I don't know if he could be trusted. It does seem like the INS would have a bigger fish to fry if they wanted to, what with all the illegal workers...
Thank you for your insight!
harbouring an overstayed alien
in IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & Procedures
Posted
MargotDarko, thank you for your concern. Like you said, I'm probably facing a 3 year ban and we will do the waiver, but for now we will just have to bounce around overseas, thankfully my husband is willing to relocate for me, the main thing for us is to be together no matter where. I just didn't want him to have legal problems in the US because of me, but is seems that since I left the country and didn't break any laws, he wasn't "harbouring" me anyway, right?
When i was leaving the country I thought they would put some kind of a stamp in my passport saying i overstayed or something, I've heard about something like that before, but nobody even looked at it, except for when i was getting the ticket at the airport the airline person took out my I-94. Is that a good thing or does it not matter because they'll see I overstated during my new CR-1 process anyway?