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Demise

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    Female
  • State
    Minnesota

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  • Immigration Status
    Adjustment of Status (approved)
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    Nebraska Service Center

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  1. It really won't matter. That question is really only meant to verify that you gave the surgeon some ID, and they looked it over and verified that the ID matches you. If they interview you, just bring your passport with you and in the unlikely event they ask just say "yeah I think they copied the wrong number off my passport". USCIS in general isn't too picky about how the I-693 is filled out as long as it is mostly correct. When I did mine I just put it in an envelope with the RFE notice and threw it into a mailbox. Looked over the copy after I got home and some of the vaccinations weren't done completely right (missing a few of checkboxes for insufficient time interval) and USCIS took it just fine.
  2. Give the requirements and the list provided I'd stick that under "evidence of child's U.S. citizenship", since the derivation does hinge on the child residing in US in your physical and legal custody, or alternatively put it under Secondary evidence.
  3. Yeah I wouldn't really treat this as gospel since if this was a mistake then USCIS can give you a hard time when it comes to AOS. You obviously entered legally so you'll be able to adjust, but they might decide that the K-1 went poof the moment you left and demand an I-130 from you instead, of course they might as well honor it. So you know, plan accordingly. If you want to test it: marry within the I-94 period and file I-485 based on the I-129F. If you want to play it safe marry and file I-130/I-485 as a spouse instead. In any case include I-765 (category (c)(9)) for a work permit and I-131 for advance parole and don't travel abroad until the I-131 is approved.
  4. So N-400 does ask, but the question is solely in the context of "good moral character" which only looks 5 or 3 years back depending on the basis for naturalization. This is similar to how example failure to register for selective service makes you ineligible to naturalize until you turn 31 or 29, but all in itself it doesn't make you inadmissible, or deportable, or barred from naturalization. So my take on it is: disclose it, continue working towards resolving this with the IRS (and any state department of revenue, if applicable), explain the circumstances, and you'll be fine.
  5. Yeah you pay on the USCIS website. Overview: https://www.uscis.gov/forms/filing-fees/uscis-immigrant-fee Payment page: https://my.uscis.gov/accounts/uscis-immigrant-fee/start/overview In the meantime her stamped immigrant visa is a proof of status until June 14, 2026. So you know, get this out of the way ASAP but if it takes a few months for it to actually get mailed out it's no big deal.
  6. Well OP, I think you just got a boilerplate response email. Here's the problem, the AVR is specifically only for F, J, M, and Q visas. If you married, the K-1 is toast, your now spouse will need to file an I-130 for you and you'll need to proceed as a CR1. If you didn't marry, then you could try to have the K-1 reissued but that's strictly discretionary and you should honestly expect to file a new I-129F.
  7. I mean, I don't think this should normally be a problem but then again ICE is ICE. The pending I-485 gives you a period of authorized stay while that's pending. I'd keep your EAD and ideally a copy of the I-485 receipt notice on your person if ICE has been spotted poking around the area.
  8. I need the date the original I-130 was approved to give you a CSPA age. That is not the DQ date, that's when the initial petition your mutual parent filed was approved. They could've approved that in essentially any period of time, normally they sit on backlogged categories for a while to extend CSPA eligibility onto derivative children. In any case - if we presume that the priority date becomes current (chart A as you call it) in December 2025, then the oldest is 20 years and about 3 months old at the time, so I think we can skip the CSPA calculation (because you know, under 21 years minus any timespan will still under 21). As long as the DS-260 was filed or will be filed for her somewhere between Feb 2022 and November 30, 2026 she'll be able to immigrate.
  9. So CSPA works like this: CSPA age = Real age when visa becomes available (generally the 1st of the month when the visa bulletin final action date passes the priority date, or when the petition was approved, whichever is later) MINUS the time the petition was pending. In order words the priority date has to become current before the beneficiary turns 21 + whatever time the petition was pending. Then the beneficiary has to "seek to acquire" permanent residency before 1 year after visa becomes available. Yeah I'm definitely wording this a bit awkwardly, but that's because DOS and (sometimes) USCIS let you file based on the "dates for filing" chart, they can't actually issue you the visa or green card until the final action dates chart passes the priority date, in essence they just let you file early, and such early filed application still works to lock in the age provided the other parts hold. "Seek to acquire" basically just means file I-485, file DS-260, or file I-824. Of note is that the application filed to "seek to acquire" and application that ultimately results in permanent residency does not have to be one and the same. Once locked in the CSPA age doesn't expire and the derivative can immigrate whenever as long as they remain unmarried and the primary beneficiary doesn't naturalize before then (petitions just kinda vanish after naturalization of the principal, so follow to join stops being available). So long story short - in this case the petition was pending roughly 4 years and 3ish months. As long as the priority date becomes current before she's 25 and 3ish months old she'll be able to tag along. She should file DS-260 to lock in the age, and then either go to the interview abroad or when parents enter US file I-485. Note that filing DS-260 does show immigrant intent, so it's best not to travel abroad after filing that and just stick around in US as an F-1 student.
  10. According to Volume 12, Chapter 3, F, 1, of the policy manual, the 3 year provision does apply to bigamous cases. Specifically the "or intended spouse" part which is basically defined as: "who believed that he or she had married a citizen of the United States and with whom a marriage ceremony was actually performed and who otherwise meets any applicable requirements under this chapter to establish the existence of and bona fides of a marriage, but whose marriage is not legitimate solely because of the bigamy of such citizen of the United States". In simple terms: You got married, you believed you were married, you lived as spouses, but the marriage was illegitimate only because of the abusive USC's bigamy. (INA 101(a)(50) and INA 204(a)(1)(A)(iii)(I)(bb)) Digging a bit deeper and looking at INA 319(a) (which is what actually covers VAWA naturalization) "or any person who obtained status as a lawful permanent resident by reason of his or her status as a spouse or child of a United States citizen who battered him or her or subjected him or her to extreme cruelty", now we can definitely debate if an intended spouse obtained their status "as a spouse of a United States Citizen" however reading further into INA 204 it does appear so since it does essentially upgrade intended spouses into immediate relatives. In any case, the policy manual (as noted above) does include intended spouses for the 3 year VAWA naturalization. Like all in all, I don't think it'd really matter if you get a divorce or an annulment but just err on the side of caution and get a divorce.
  11. Generally it's not a problem. Unauthorized work isn't normally something that triggers inadmissibility all in itself, it normally is just a bar to adjustment of status and only adjustment of status, so you generally can still leave and undergo consular processing. Of note is that it's not a bar for AOS for immediate relatives of US Citizens (spouses, parents, unmarried children under 21). Only related things that trigger inadmissibilities are: Fraud in somewhere in the immigration process, like you lie to the DOS during a consular interview, lie at port of entry to the CBP, or lie to USCIS while seeking something in US (which triggers a misrepresentation bar that can be waived with an I-601). Falsely claiming to be a US Citizen in any context, even in a private casual conversation (which triggers a false claim of citizenship bar at point of which you are utterly screwed). Lying otherwise (e.g. falsely claiming to be an LPR on an I-9, or using a wholly made up SSN) do not trigger anything here. So you know, in your case since you just worked under the table, own up to it, file and pay off the back taxes, and you'll be fine.
  12. I got my green card May 2024. Still 2 years to go for citizenship. Celebrating just nobody else needing VAWA I guess.
  13. I think it's just selection bias more than anything else. Most people get approved and go live their lives. The day we don't need this thread anymore will be a day I'll be celebrating.
  14. In family cases the priority date is the day that I-130 was filed. DS-260 generally comes before DQ so at least we can guess that was filed. When in this case ultimately doesn't matter now that I looked at it again. I asked mainly because I didn't see that he was DQ'd and DS-260 has to be filed before 1 year after the priority date becomes current to lock in the CSPA age. So all in all, it will all boil down to if the priority date becomes current before the oldest kid turns 21 + whatever time the I-130 was pending (e.g. if it was pending exactly 2 years then before he turns 23). So we kinda just need the approval date to see how much wiggle room they've got. Also lastly: Both your brother and nephew need to remain unmarried until they're in US as LPRs. Funnily enough a different section of CSPA handles this scenario. An F2B whose petitioning parent has subsequently naturalized can choose which category to go via (either F1 or F2B). The process is pretty simple, he'll provide proof of the parent's naturalization and write a letter to the NVC that's either "My petitioning parent naturalized, please move me to F1", "My petitioning parent naturalized, please keep me in F2B". This can be done at any time, so it's best to just wait until one of the categories crosses or at least is about to cross the cutoff. Only exception for this if the beneficiary married. If parent was still an LPR at the time then the petition is dead. If parent was a citizen at the time then it'd drop to F3 and termination of marriage would move it back to F1 with no option to go back to F2B.
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