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| Life After The Green Card How soon can you leave your employer. All other issues after the green card. |
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#1
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Family away in home country and want to stay for an year
Hi,
All my family members are GC holders. My family is right now in my home country and would like to stay there for a year. Can I file I-131 for them? If they are requested for finger printing, can that also be sent to the US embassy in my home country? Thanks in advance.
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GC holder since 6/27/2007
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#2
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"They" have to file it for themselves in the US.
__________________
EB2, rest of the world. LC(RIR) PD : 4/29/02 LC(RIR) Approved : 11/17/04 I485/I140/EAD/AP RD : 12/15/04 FP : 1/9/05 AP Approved : 2/17/05 EAD Approved : 3/26/05 I485/I140 Approved : 5/24/05 I-551 stamp : 6/3/05 Plastic Card RD : 6/28/05 |
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#3
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No and no. They must be in the US at the time of filing, and they must be in the US for fingerprinting.
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PD: Jan 2003 (EB3 rest of world) I-485 filed: June 2005 Approved: July 2007 I am a layman, not a lawyer. What I write here is not official or professional legal advice. In addition, my answers on this forum are specific to the scenarios discussed in each thread and should not be generalized to other situations. |
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#4
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for less than a year, they dont need a travel document.
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#5
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So even though they are GC holders, they do not consider the US as their home country?
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Regards, S K Ghori skg@vex.net http://www.vex.net/~skg/ **NOTE** I underwent the immigration process in both Canada and the US. I hold Pakistani, Canadian and US citizenship. **DISCLAIMER** I am neither a lawyer nor an immigration consultant. My comments should NEVER be considered as legal or professional advice as they are not meant to be such. |
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#6
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Lol!!!!
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#7
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Quote:
![]() Thanks
__________________
GC holder since 6/27/2007
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#8
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You are unlikely to become citizens for a while if you do this.
__________________
------------------------------------ IMPORTANT NOTE: I am a Volunteer Moderator - one of you. I am not a lawyer. So act accordingly. PD: 9/12/2000 (EB3/VA/RIR/Canada) I-140 RD: 12/22/2000 I-140 AD: 7/16/2001 RD: 8/28/2001 ND: 10/26/2001 FP1: 1/31/2002 RFE: 8/2/2002 RFE RD: 8/28/2002 TD: 10/22/2002 FP2: 6/19/2004 ID: 07/15/2004 AD: 07/15/2004 CO: 08/18/2004 CR: 08/23/2004 N-400 RD: 05/21/2009 FP: 06/13/2009 CFR: 08/05/2009 IL: 08/21/09 ID: 10/7/09 USC: 10/8/09 |
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#9
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Nlssubbu has a good point. When you're not a citizen, you're living in a place that somebody else controls the keys and they can lock you out because you stayed out too long without permission, and when you get in you are supposed to carry a card just to walk around. That's not really "home" ... you're just a guest.
__________________
PD: Jan 2003 (EB3 rest of world) I-485 filed: June 2005 Approved: July 2007 I am a layman, not a lawyer. What I write here is not official or professional legal advice. In addition, my answers on this forum are specific to the scenarios discussed in each thread and should not be generalized to other situations. |
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#10
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It is all relative to an individual at the end
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__________________
Regards, S K Ghori skg@vex.net http://www.vex.net/~skg/ **NOTE** I underwent the immigration process in both Canada and the US. I hold Pakistani, Canadian and US citizenship. **DISCLAIMER** I am neither a lawyer nor an immigration consultant. My comments should NEVER be considered as legal or professional advice as they are not meant to be such. |
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#11
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Is entering into my own home and living there privilege or right ?
__________________
EB2, rest of the world. LC(RIR) PD : 4/29/02 LC(RIR) Approved : 11/17/04 I485/I140/EAD/AP RD : 12/15/04 FP : 1/9/05 AP Approved : 2/17/05 EAD Approved : 3/26/05 I485/I140 Approved : 5/24/05 I-551 stamp : 6/3/05 Plastic Card RD : 6/28/05 |
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#12
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Quote:
__________________
------------------------------------ IMPORTANT NOTE: I am a Volunteer Moderator - one of you. I am not a lawyer. So act accordingly. PD: 9/12/2000 (EB3/VA/RIR/Canada) I-140 RD: 12/22/2000 I-140 AD: 7/16/2001 RD: 8/28/2001 ND: 10/26/2001 FP1: 1/31/2002 RFE: 8/2/2002 RFE RD: 8/28/2002 TD: 10/22/2002 FP2: 6/19/2004 ID: 07/15/2004 AD: 07/15/2004 CO: 08/18/2004 CR: 08/23/2004 N-400 RD: 05/21/2009 FP: 06/13/2009 CFR: 08/05/2009 IL: 08/21/09 ID: 10/7/09 USC: 10/8/09 |
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#13
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Quote:
, I'm just playing with the definition of "home" for the sake of immigration![]() I consider LPR as a special kind of visa status which doesn't have expiration date and GC holder is still a "guest"(that's why we are called alien). As Being a guest to the US, the US is not my home.
__________________
EB2, rest of the world. LC(RIR) PD : 4/29/02 LC(RIR) Approved : 11/17/04 I485/I140/EAD/AP RD : 12/15/04 FP : 1/9/05 AP Approved : 2/17/05 EAD Approved : 3/26/05 I485/I140 Approved : 5/24/05 I-551 stamp : 6/3/05 Plastic Card RD : 6/28/05 |
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#14
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Who holds the lien?
Are you behind in payments? ![]()
__________________
Regards, S K Ghori skg@vex.net http://www.vex.net/~skg/ **NOTE** I underwent the immigration process in both Canada and the US. I hold Pakistani, Canadian and US citizenship. **DISCLAIMER** I am neither a lawyer nor an immigration consultant. My comments should NEVER be considered as legal or professional advice as they are not meant to be such. |
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#15
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Quote:
If I was born and had lived in Europe for over than 20 years and now have been moving to America where I have no family, friends, etc... Where do I have most of my ties? What do you think? :-) |
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#16
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Quote:
![]() I don't get too concerned with my absolute right to re-entry as a citizen versus the slightly limited one I have as a Permanent Resident, since my family's experience has been that it counts for less than you think at times. I guess it all depends on your outlook - I see the opportunities for me in America far more than the minor limitations.
__________________
------------------------------------ IMPORTANT NOTE: I am a Volunteer Moderator - one of you. I am not a lawyer. So act accordingly. PD: 9/12/2000 (EB3/VA/RIR/Canada) I-140 RD: 12/22/2000 I-140 AD: 7/16/2001 RD: 8/28/2001 ND: 10/26/2001 FP1: 1/31/2002 RFE: 8/2/2002 RFE RD: 8/28/2002 TD: 10/22/2002 FP2: 6/19/2004 ID: 07/15/2004 AD: 07/15/2004 CO: 08/18/2004 CR: 08/23/2004 N-400 RD: 05/21/2009 FP: 06/13/2009 CFR: 08/05/2009 IL: 08/21/09 ID: 10/7/09 USC: 10/8/09 |
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#17
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I strongly believe in the old saying of "Home is where you make it". I have been living in the US for over a decade and just this year I finally received my GC. It was a long journey but given the choices I had, I would do it all over again.
Stoned!
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-------------------------------------------- StonedAnt is NOT an attorney and anything posted by him should not be construed as legal advice! |
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#18
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TheRealCanadian: From my grand-dad I know some people who left Soviet terrirory during communist era. They had to get asylum status and couldn't return to their homes. These people usually left their families and friends for good.
If they returned they would be prisoned! Nowadays the situation is way different, it's freedom. I'd like to make my home in the U.S. , but keeping connections with friends and family in EU. This is not a problem for the short time, but U.S. cannot be real home from the outset. What if I wanted to go traveling around the world for, say, 3 years ? Just traveling for pleasure. This may sound strange for most ordinary people, but I know personally some friends who made such long journeys (expeditions). I may want to arrange something similar in the next 5 years, but then risking loosing my green card in spite of the fact, that I would not establish any residency in a foreign country. Do you think after the president election this gc holder's absence rule may change? |
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#19
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I guess it's all relative. If your original country no longer exists, or won't take you back, or will imprison or kill you if you go back, then having a GC certainly makes the US more of a home than there. But if your non-US country of citizenship gives you an never-ending right to live freely and work and vote and own property there without ever being removed from the country for any legal reason, that is more of a home than living in the US with a GC.
__________________
PD: Jan 2003 (EB3 rest of world) I-485 filed: June 2005 Approved: July 2007 I am a layman, not a lawyer. What I write here is not official or professional legal advice. In addition, my answers on this forum are specific to the scenarios discussed in each thread and should not be generalized to other situations. Last edited by Jackolantern; 23rd August 2008 at 05:56 PM. |
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#20
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Quote:
Quote:
__________________
PD: Jan 2003 (EB3 rest of world) I-485 filed: June 2005 Approved: July 2007 I am a layman, not a lawyer. What I write here is not official or professional legal advice. In addition, my answers on this forum are specific to the scenarios discussed in each thread and should not be generalized to other situations. |
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