AOS Interview Experience in Atlanta

snook

New Member
I came to US on F-1 in 1999 and after three years of dating my gf, I married her. She is a USC and today was our AOS interview. To be honest, the wait for interview was much more stressful than the interview itself.

We arrived around 90 minutes early so spent some time at the McDonalds. 45 minutes before the interview we went in the building. Our interview was called about 20 minutes late. A female officer guided us to her office.

She swore us in and asked for our IDs and passports. Then she asked my wife about when, where and how we met. She asked how long we dated before getting married? When did we actually get married?

Then she asked for proof of shared life, which she filed away. We presented her with:

1. Last year tax returns (MFJ)
2. Health and Car Insurance
3. Utility Bills
4. Bank Statement
5. W2/1099
6. Articles of Incorporation (self employed)
7. Photocopies of degrees
8. Voided Check
9. Photocopy of Car/Boat titles

Then she asked if we had any other proof. We showed some family photos. She asked the standard questions (have you ever ....?).

She asked how many people are living with you. If either of us previous marriage/children.

She then stamped our application as approved. She took my I-94 and said its no longer needed. She also took all my employment authorization cards and told me to get a new Social Security Card. She said if my GC doesn't come in six months I should "be alarmed" and make an INFOPASS appointment.

That was it. We thanked her. Overall a very painless interview.

In total we took over 450 pages of documents (photocopied). We were prepared to hand over much more than we actually gave her.

Our tip to those waiting:

1. Make plenty of photocopies of just about everything you can get hold of to prove you are married and have a shared life.
2. Don't get too stressed waiting for the interview. All they want to do is ensure you are together. They are not trying to trick you.
3. If you can wait after marrying a USC for two years, please do so you won't have a conditional GC.

She did stamp my passport with a temporary GC. I read somewhere that they do not stamp anylonger but that was not the case with us.


Thanks to everyone who has shared their input as it really helped us in preparation.

Good Luck!
 
cherr1980 said:
Congrats! Can you tell me when you file your application for AOS?
Thanks! We filed our complete application as one packet in November 2004. The application was missing my birth certificate for which USCIS wrote us back. Hope it helps.
 
Yeap, since was your first post I didn't know your timeline. There are many of us in ATL too, so I was just checking the date. The website still for Oct 19 indicates June 04, but I was thinking it was by september 04 probably, I think definelty is moving. There are people by Jan 05 that already have notice for interview next Jan.
 
Cherr1980:

I think theyre really moving ahead. I expect to get my interview letter sometime in December, with an interview date in February, maybe March. Hey, I have high expectations! :D
 
Gosh, you guys are optimistic. That is great. I keep looking at the USCIS website's latest update of June'04 and get restless....

Hey, quick question. Our i-130 is in texas, right? Should we see 'action taken' for our 1-130 before an interview letter is sent out?
 
You know, I have the same doubt but I don't think that apply if you file concurrently. Let's see if Qdude receive on December his interview notice, he is from May and right now in TSC they are in May05 for I-130....but I am really not quite sure, who can assure that where the I-130 go or everything is stay in the same file until it goes directly to the DO? I got all confuse now! :)
 
Yes, it is confusing.

QDude and I are very close together (see my timeline below). I have been watching my case online, and have not noticed any changes....

If anyone can shed some light on it, that would be great.

QDude-- do you know if the i-130 needs to be 'actioned on' before the i-485 gets in the que for processing?



______________________________________________________
4/20/2005: Day 01 -- Mailed I-485, I-765 & I-131 to Chicago
4/27/2005: Day 07 -- Receipt Date
5/23/2005: Day 34 -- Notice Date *
6/21/2005: Day 63 -- AP approved on-line
7/05/2005: Day 77 -- Received AP (expiration: June 2006)
7/27/2005: Day 99 -- FP & Biometric Completed
8/09/2005: Day 143 -- EAD Approved on-line
8/15/2005: Day 149 -- EAD Received (expiration: June 2006)
 
e17345: Dont know about the I-130. Your notice date is three days earlier than mine.

The reason for my optimisim is that in May 2005, there was all of a sudden a big jump between the receipt dates and the notice dates; I think there was some type of hiccup. Consequently, I dont think there are a whole lot of applications with notice dates in early May, and with receipt date of 3/31/05 being interviewed in January, I dont think February/March in Atlanta is unrealistic for our notice dates.
 
You should be optimistic...

My husband is adjusting through ATL...here is our timeline:

1/1/2005 Married to Brazilian National
3/10/2005 Filed Paperwork
3/31/2005 NOA I-765, I-485, I-130
4/14/2005 I-765 & I-130 touched
5/17/2005 I-765 touched
5/21/2005 Fingerprints & Biometrics Appt.
5/23/2005 I-765 & I-485 touched
5/23/2005 EAD APPROVED - WOO HOO!!
5/31/2005 EAD Approval Notice mailed
6/02/2005 EAD CARD ARRIVED
6/06/2005 Applied for Social Security
6/13/2005 Received Social Security card
11/3/2005 Got Interview letter in Atlanta 1/18/06

By the way, ZERO "touches" on the website....letter just showed up with the interview date!
 
Gosh, thank you. It is helpful and makes me have hope that it may be around the corner...

CIS is so inconsistent that the only way to have an idea about the timing is through those who have received notices....their website seems to be completely useless.


Good luck with your iterview and let us know how it goes!!!

Thanks again!
 
My paperwork was sent in last Wednesday and my attorney told that her current clients processing times have been 8 months here in ATL.
 
8 months is a good number....thank you for the update.


ATL People: let's continue on sharing our experiences because it really valuable. If you get an update from CIS, please let us know.

THANK YOU ALL!
 
My attorney said that the ATL office was targeting 6 months starting in Oct. '05. It really is amazing considering up until this year we were THE WORST D.O.!!! Our office was cited as the slowest in the country by several news organizations! ATL has had an immigration boom and add that to bureacracy....it is a miracle it isn't taking 5 years for our cases to be settled.

By the way, I am not really sweating the interview. Our marriage is real. My husband is my neice's godfather....we were married in my parent's home for goodness sakes! We had friends that got interviewed and he got worried because he saw the stacks of evidence (videos and crazy amounts of pics) others brought in....his wife calmed him by saying the obvious, "we really are married - period". That attitude does come across in the interviews. Now of course, I will bring our joint insurance policy, pictures, beneficiary print out from IRA and 401(k), etc. However, I refuse to open a joint bank account just for the sake of the interview....my bank (brokerage firm) will only allow Permanent Residents and USC to have accounts. Besides that, we actually don't encourage joint accounts for our clients due to estate planning reasons.
 
That's even better news. 6 months target? Wow,they must be trying to be the best DO from being the worst. So, either way it's only going to get better from here on. My friend got her's done in 14 months when she submitted June 2004 and interview was in September this year.I am really happy that ATL is moving at a fast pace and hopefully in 8 months I will be able to reach my goal too. Let's keep information flowing and thanks for the great news.
 
yeah, but my phylosophy is 'be prepared at all times'. So since their whole job is to confirm that our marriages are realy, then we will give them that with lots of proof....
 
Very true with the statement 'be prepared at all times' and also can add ' you cant be prepared enough. I dated my wife 3 years prior to getting married and we had collections of photos, concert and plane tickets, etc in our scrapbook. Adding more to that the documents like joined accounts,401K,car and life insurance and much more. Not taking any chances even though it's all legit!!
 
I didn't mean to give the impression that you didn't need to be prepared going into the interview - oops. What I meant to convey is that I don't want to open a bank account or anything like that just for the sake of immigration.

I will wait until he is a PR and then will add him to my account if our estate attorney doesn't see any problem with it....I don't use a regular bank and they have very different rules for account holders. Our immigration attorney said that if there are valid reasons for not having joint accounts then they do take that into account...i.e. if one spouse has excellent credit and the loan would be 1-2% higher if they had a joint loan....then that is a no brainer - why would you have a joint loan? 1-2% is a lot of money on a $250k+ mortgage!

Anyways, you get the idea...just food for thought! Good luck and I will keep you posted! :)
 
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