IT depends
If you're coming to pay a couple hundred dollars and take 1 course on a part-time basis for a few months then probably. If you want to enroll as a full time student with a full course-load for a BA, masters, or some vocational school, probably not.
Simple rule
People visit where they go to a place for a few weeks and spend a small minority of their time during the year.They permanently reside where they spend the majority of their time. The rule of thumb used by the service to determine where someone probably resides is where they spend...
Thanks for not addressing my point
You entered and immediately ran to the courthouse to get married and you expect me or anyone else to believe it was spontaneous?
He loves me very much and is crazy about me since the day he met me...if you have never been in such a situation or had...
Yes to all questions
When someone stays here for 6 months, goes home for a week, then comes back for another 6 months, they are no longer a tourist. Your mother is not visiting you here and then going back home to live. She lives here and goes back home to visit. She resides here on a tourist...
There is a law
Which states for certain countries, your passport must be valid for at least 6 months beyond the end of your intended trip in the US. The reason for this is if you get deported during your trip, the United States must have a guarentee that your passport is still valid for plenty...
That annotation
Is there because the officer correctly figured that your Mom was representing herself as a tourist when her true intention was to immigrate, but he probably couldn't prove it. So he did the next best thing and put those notes on her I-94 so you'd have no choice to do things the...
Hmmm
And what did you say was your reason for coming to the United States when you applied for the visa? 'TOURISM'! What are you doing now? 'SEEKING TO WORK!' One problem: 'TOURISTS DO NOT WORK WHILE ON VACATION'. Therefore you are not a tourist, and probably never intended to be one...
Sorry
entered the US with a Visa waiver...and he ran with me right away to the court house to get married.
Spontaneous my ass. You entered and then ran straight from the airport to the courthouse but you're trying to spin that as a spur of the moment thing? You entered on the visa waiver...
Actually
If she's here in a B1/B2 she will. Fs, Ms, Js, and Visa waivers get revalidated after returning from contiguous territory if they were there less than 30 days. In other words when they return to the US they get the remainder of the initial period of admission they were given before...
It depends.
If she plans to go home after this and stay there for six months or more, she won't have a problem. If filing for visitor's visa extensions or returning after short absences from the US to request lengthy periods of admission is a pattern, she will have a problem because it will...
Simple
The intent for that specific trip must match the designation of the visa used for entry. If he dropped a resume off in hopes of coming to work and earn money on future trips using the proper documents required for that work, that's fine. If he entered on the visitor's visa with the...
It depends
My prediction: If this the first time she has ever been in the US for more than 6 months in one calendar year, she will get told not to spend so much time here in the future and then get admitted for 6 months. You are Indian, so in all likelihood it is not even close to her first...
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.