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baduk's US Immigration Timeline

blank avatar   Petitioner's Name: Jay
Beneficiary's Name: Kim
VJ Member: baduk
Country: South Korea

Last Updated: 2013-01-20
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Immigration Checklist for Jay & Kim:

USCIS I-130 Petition:      
Dept of State IR-1/CR-1 Visa:    
USCIS I-751 Petition:  
USCIS N-400 Petition:  


IR-1/CR-1 Visa
Event Date
Service Center : Vermont Service Center
Transferred? No
Consulate : Seoul
Marriage (if applicable): 2012-03-12
I-130 Sent : 2012-04-04
I-130 NOA1 : 2012-04-06
I-130 RFE :
I-130 RFE Sent :
I-130 Approved : 2012-10-01
NVC Received : 2012-10-11
Received DS-261 / AOS Bill : 2012-10-11
Pay AOS Bill : 2012-10-11
Receive I-864 Package :
Send AOS Package : 2012-10-15
Submit DS-261 : 2012-10-23
Receive IV Bill : 2012-10-25
Pay IV Bill : 2012-10-25
Send IV Package :
Receive Instruction and Interview appointment letter : 2012-11-02
Case Completed at NVC :
NVC Left :
Consulate Received :
Packet 3 Received :
Packet 3 Sent :
Packet 4 Received : 2012-12-14
Interview Date : 2013-01-17
Interview Result : Approved
Second Interview
(If Required):
Second Interview Result:
Visa Received :
US Entry :
Comments : Took nearly 10 months to get the final visa with my wife separated oversea.
Processing
Estimates/Stats :
Your I-130 was approved in 178 days from your NOA1 date.

Your interview took 286 days from your I-130 NOA1 date.


Member Reviews:

Consulate Review: Korea
Review Topic: IR-1/CR-1 Visa
Event Description
Review Date : January 20, 2013
Embassy Review : The interview was scheduled for 8 am. While the instruction said only my wife need to be there, I decided to fly over and be with her. My case was solid and all paper works were in order, so I am pretty sure she would have been approved anyway, but I went there anyway.

We were knocking at the door at 7:15am, but they told us the door does not open until 7:30 am, so we hung round until 7:30 am. We took the 'number tag' and we were #5. We were called shortly after 8 am and submitted (re-submitted...) all the paper work. Then about 15 min later, my wife was called for fingerprinting. Then at 8:40 am, #1 was called for interview. The interview was not in a separate room, but in the same room where everyone was waiting. The counseler officer was inside the booth and the interviewee was standing in front of the window answering questions. When we were called, I went with my wife. The interview was held in KOREAN ! The officer was an American, but very fluent in Korean. Me, a US citizen being there and taking an oath was definiely helpful, but would not have made the situation better if the paper works were not in order. I took the oath together with my wife. The questions were rather basic. When did you get married? How did you meet your husband? What do you plan to do when you go to US?

The officer was very friendly. He asked me if I was stationed in Korea, and even commented on the romanization of my family name (I spelled differently than the standard version Korea surname). In any case, by 9 am, everything good and we got approved.

One thing, we forgot to sumbit the US embassy form where you have to make arrangement of the shipping company to deliver the VISA to the spouse's address. However, they did not reject us because of this. We had to complete the form on the spot, then told we have to go to the website and submit on-line, which I did after we went back home.

We were 3 weeks delayed for the interview, because I did not submit the 'police record' with the initial NVC form. I thought the 'police record' was needed during interview only, but that was not the case. Had I submitted the police record the first time, the interview date would have been early Jan or late Dec... But this will all be irrelevant, as Obama will overhaul this absurd immigration law this year...
Rating : Very Good


Timeline Comments: None yet, be the first!

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*Notice about estimates: The estimates are based off averages of other members recent experiences
(documented in their timelines) for the same benefit/petition/application at the same filing location.
Individual results may vary as every case is not always 'average'. Past performance does not necessarily
predict future results. The 'as early as date' may change over time based on current reported processing
times from members. There have historically been cases where a benefit/petition/application processing
briefly slows down or stops and this can not be predicted. Use these dates as reference only and do not
rely on them for planning. As always you should check the USCIS processing times to see if your application
is past due.

** Not all cases are transfered

vjTimeline ver 5.0




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