Green Card FINALLY !
Update on my case -
Had an interview yesteday and it lasted all of 7 minutes - a bit of an anti-climax considering the build-up - arrived early at the Newark location; had some coffee in the cafeteria on the second floor and trudged upstairs to the 13th floor - room 1300 - (aren't all those 13s a bit disconcerting for the prospective immigrant?). Minor security check and verification outside to see if we had a legit appointment for the day. Allowed inside and directed to one of 3-4 windows. Fairly occupied waiting area - some 35-45 people and fairly globally represented). Slipped the all-important notice to the lady on the other side of the window and was asked if I had an attorney. Replied in the negative (crossed my mind to mention the access I had to all the attorneys on this forum
as the reason why I did not need one to be present for my interview, but on second thoughts let that pass). Then was asked to take a seat.
Observed that officers kept walking up to the ladies behind the window and picking up notices and announcing the names on a PA system. Following the announcement, the officer appeared at an adjacent door and personally ushered in the immigrant and family (and their attorneys, if present). Seemed to be based on interview times and NOT on a first-come-first serve basis. Got my call in about 10-12 minutes.
THe other side of the door was office space with several cubicles. Several interviews were in process. Seemingly a very relaxed, friendly environment. Our officer walked in and held up his hand and said "Repeat after me - I swear to tell the truth". We mumbled accordingly. There were a couple of chairs in the cubicle across his desk (which was completely covered with several stacks of files) which we eased into.
He confirmed our names from the huge file that represented all the document-flow between me and the USCIS for 2005, and then requested to see our drivers licenses, passports. He added that he would need my EAD and my spouse's citizenship papers.
I commenced retrieving documents from the huge repository of originals and copies that I had carried into the interview. Placed these retrieved documents atop the stacks of files on his desk. He reviewed them and asked us the following questions:
1. Where did you meet (open question)
2. How long have you known each other (again, to neither of us in particular)
3. What is your current salary (posed separately to both of us)
4. Current employment status (again, asked us both)
Point to note - our driver licenses', passports, my EAD and my spouse's citizenship papers were the only documents asked for. Not a single additional document!
Confirmed to a passing colleague that he would be ready to get some coffee in 5 minutes! Gave us first indication that this won't be long. Gave us opening to make polite conversation regarding coffee in the cafeteria. Gave him complete liberty to hold forth on the joys of coffee and how there was a coffee-connossieurs delight across the street (1000 coffee flavors - est. in 1838, the only retail outlet of a coffee collector, visited by the whos who in govt. circles!, etc.)
All the while, he kept working efficiently. Filling out all the "For Office Use only" sections on paperwork already in his possession. Turned to his computer - went online to the USCIS site and verified information on the application and added some of his own. Stamped, sealed, signed the paperwork that he was modifying.
Finally, he turned to my passports - 'cleansed' it of all the other visas that were active - 10 yr business visa, H1-b etc. All these were voided. My EAD that he retained, was stapled to my file in his possession.
And THEN, at approximately, 8:44 a.m. EST, he stamped my passport!! Approval of permanent residency was finally here!
Was informed that this was valid for a year, but the card would follow in a month or so. Stamped a conditional provision (because the marriage was for less than 2 years). Signed it.
And that was it. We shook hands. He wished us luck. We exited. Caught him on our way out. He was on his way for coffee! Creating backlog by taking a break between every case, he explained with a
I just
So folks end of an odyssey. Hopefully. Good luck to all of you and ari4u, thanks for maintaining this link. This was the only indicator that seemed to give some reasonable date insights! Incidentally, online, my case status has made no movement since 6/29/05. Not even updated to suggest that an interview is scheduled!! So much for online, automated status updates...
My Time Line:
Chicago Lockbox
I-130/485/765 - Receipt Date: 04-08-2005
I-130/485/765 - Notice Date: 04-13-2005
Finger Print & Biometrics Date : 6/15/2005
EAD received: 6/21/2005
FP&Bio recvd. by USCIS and resumption of processing: 6/29/2005
DO: Newark
Category: USC spouse
Interview: 12/21/05
Passport stamped: 8:44 a.m. EST - 12/21/05
Project duration: ~330 days
# RFE's: 2
Filing fees: ~750 dollars
Miscellaneous costs: ~400 dollars
Stamp in Passport: