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POE Information

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Names Point of Entry Entry Got EAD Stamp? Biometrics Taken? Harassment Comments. List anything unique to your case. Updated Last
Brian & Michael Los Angeles 2014-06-14 - High 2018-09-15
Gugoo A & A Los Angeles 2014-06-13 No - High 2018-08-24
Shanadian Michelle & Lashanna Detroit 2014-06-12 - High 2014-09-25
Al422 Candy & Al JFK 2014-06-12 No Yes - High The officers were courteous and professional. 2014-12-07
Larysa & Brian Houston 2014-06-11 No No - High 2019-02-13
Irwin Sindy & Walter Atlanta 2014-06-11 Yes,Passport Stamp Yes - High 2017-04-05
Zaniar & Eva Los Angeles 2014-06-11 Yes,Passport Stamp Yes - High 2019-04-30
Chris & Blair Detroit 2014-06-11 Yes,Passport Stamp Yes - High My POE experience at the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel in Detroit was very easy. Being a lifelong resident of Windsor, I've crossed that border, it seems, a thousand times, so there were no surprises, nor any confusion. I pulled up to the border, car full of as many of my belongings as I could fit (and an itemized list of what was packed). The officer asked my citizenship. I handed him my passport and said 'Canadian'. He asked where I lived. I told him I was moving to Ohio, and that I was immigrating today. He asked if I had my immigration packet with me, and I said yes. He radioed ahead and said 'Immigration packet, lane 4', and walked my car to secondary inspection. I parked my car, grabbed all my documents and sealed packet (the officer still had my passport at this point) and was escorted into secondary inspection. The 'greeting' officer took my passport and secondary inspection ticket, wrote my name, reason for secondary and intake time on his intake sheet and asked me to have a seat. It wasn't terribly busy this particular day. Only about a half dozen people waiting. After about 25-30 minutes, an officer behind the counter asked the greeting officer what was next. He replied "Want do do an immigrant visa?" The officer said "Sure", and my name was called. I walked around to the counter where my officer was stationed. He was quite friendly, even joked around a little. I handed the officer my packet and passport. He opened the packet and started going through the documents. He kept flipping through and looking at the doctor's comments in my medical exam all confused, flipping back through and going back to the medical. He looked at me and said "Seriously? Why would he put a DUI from 11 years ago on here? That means nothing at all." I said " I know! He tried telling me I would probably be disallowed because of that, even after I told him I've literally crossed a hundred times with it, and was told it isn't of any concern." He and the officer next to him had a little laugh about it. He stamped the documents and my passport with an admission stamp, came around to my side of the counter with a form for me to sign, took my right index to fingerprint and said "Just relax and let me do all the work with this". He looked at the print and said to his neighbouring officer, "Look at that! I think that's one of the best I've seen. It's nearly perfect. Man, I'm good!" and he left to get me a wipe to clean the ink off. After he left, his neighbouring officer flipped the sheet and asked me to fingerprint the other side as well. He told me they're supposed to do both sides, but his buddy probably just didn't know. I fingerprinted the other side myself, and said to the neighbouring officer, "Man, don't tell your buddy, but I think mine is actually better than his..." The officer laughed. My original officer came back, and the two went back and forth for a few minutes on whether the second print was needed (turns out it's just a backup in case the first one doesn't work for the green card; one time - the last time the neighbouring officer didn't take a second print - he had to call a woman all the way back up to Detroit from SOUTHERN FLORIDA just to redo a single index fingerprint). My officer, after being convinced that the second print was a good idea, handed me my passport, complete with endorsed visa (he made it valid for two years instead of the one year the temporary CR-1 supposed to be), and said "You're all set. Have a good one!" The whole process, aside from the half hour or so I waited, took maybe 15 minutes and was painless. I was in and out of customs in under an hour - not the 2-3 hours I had been lead to believe. It was quite painless, and isn't something to get all worked up about. It's purely a formality - a couple questions, some data entry, a fingerprint and signature, and done - at least in my case. 2017-02-24
Krafriend Richard & Kim Miami 2014-06-11 Yes,Passport Stamp Yes - High WHEN HE GOT INTO MIAMI HE SAID THE WAIT WAS LONG BUT THEY DIDN'T ASK HIM ANYTHING THEY JUST TOOK HIS ENVELOPE AND HAD HIM SIT IN A ROOM WHILE THEY CHECKED EVERYTHING. IN PORT AU PRINCE THEY ASKED FOR HIS GREEN CARD WHICH HE DOES NOT HAVE YET SO HE SAID HE HAS THE RECEIPT AND THEY CHECKED IT BUT THAT WAS IT. THANK GOD IT WAS EASY!!! 2014-07-18
Msdynamite D & E Las Vegas 2014-06-10 No Yes - High I was extremely nervous, but for no reason, again! Except for the waiting times( I recommend layover times of 3-4 hours to do this relaxt...I had 5..bit too much)..it was nothing to talk about really.i was guided to a seperate room after I handed the papers to the officer, there had to wait and after 30 mins the other officer asked me when I'm getting married and told me when my K1 expires and "welcome to America and thank you for your patience"...that was it! 2020-10-09
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