To be more specific, if the processing time has reached and passed the priority date of the N400 application then the e-request will go through, otherwise it will not. In my experience, the processing time was closely after the 120 days period.
When were you separated and for how long and when did you meet this new person that you married and when did you get married? Also, is this new person from the same country of origin as you?
It will be at least June 24, 2011 before it clocks 120 days. At that time you can file an e-request, the system will block you form doing that before that time. And I will not suggest doing a 1447(b) off the bat, there are other preceding options that can help you unravel and get a decision to...
Well, obviously this is a clerical error on their part when they printed the visa on his passport. Your birth certificate and passport should be ok to go with since they should bare the same name(s) and point it out that they made an error on the visa.
I recommend registering for text and email updates so you know when your application status chages and when letters are sent to you. Also keep in mind that all conditions of obtaining naturalization have to be maintained until efter the oath, filinf an N400 does not exempt you from any of it. In...
I won't call it "defrauding", its a matter of isolating each government or in other words, compartmentalizing each government. This already happens anyway with tons of people who claim asylum based on stories that cannot be confirmed by one government in the other country. Bottomline is neither...
Before you go about relinquishing USC, the question you should ask is how does/will India know you are also a USC? Or do they have the capability to know or query such information, which I doubt they can from the USCIS or US consulate? Research how all of this is enforced in India, which may be...
Well, it will be great and best to hear it from the horse's mouth as quoted on the document he received because God knows if he is even detailing anything accurately as it seems, for his own sake, we are all trying to pry information he should have provided in the first place from him just to be...
Well, why speculate or embark on professorial research of immigration statutes when the OP can easily provide definite and certain details he has been asked to in order to receive adequate advise. This just shows a prevailing habit that he enjoys witholding vital information even if explicitly...
That's also what I am having some thoughts about; this is not as bad as many crimes people have committed, declared and still got naturalized. However, to help effectively make the legal case a competent attorney is highly recommended.
Okay, I think I might have skipped the details. My advise is not to pursue this on your own because since you did not mention your child on applications as far back as your green card application, it seems like grounds to get you removed. Get a competent attorney, though it might be expensive...
You are still evading the two questions I asked above, which can be the difference in how people can respond to your inquiries. Anyway, since you don't need anyone's insight from continueally witholding vital details (not a good habit), in any case you need a competent attorney. Keep in mind...
Okay, good info. However, you still need to answer the questions;
1. did you exclude the child from the green card application?
2. did you list your child on your N400 application (it seems you said you did not, but detail here anyway)?
I understand that it will cost you but you really need to consult an attorney. This is not one you will file yourself like someone without a history as yours. You can call attorneys and get free consultation over the phone.
By the way, have him file the brief whether it irritates them or not...
Also, be clear on when you filed for your green card; before or after your child was born and did you exclude the child from the green card application? Then also detail if you listed your child on your N400 application, everything you are talking about so far seems unclear.
Keep in mind that some "immigration attorneys" only help file clean/straight forward applications and have NO experience whatsoever with complex immigration cases such as yours, so you don't just need to get an attorney, you need to get a competent immigration attorney. If you ask me, I would...
What you have to expect is that he will be deported. Domestic violence is, according to USCIS, is a crime of violence and an aggravated felony, thus deportable. When you guys call police on each other, think about the consequences, and the spouse could have had them drop the charges and he...
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