Hi fellow OC slectees, I just wanted to share my experience going through the Sydney consulate today. I was successful, but it wasn't without a lot of convincing from my end, let me explain why.
For reference, I'm an Australian, with Australia as my country of birth, my wife is also an Australian citizen.
Now we had heard of many people saying that it is an easy interview process in Sydney, however, because my wife and I only got married in August, we got hammered HARD by the interviewer.
We provided proof of relationship including: joint bills, previous travel itineraries, photos of our life together, wedding photos, wedding invite, etc but the interviewer absolutely bombarded us for 30 minutes with questions about why we got married so close to the visa date if we had been together for years. (For reference, the dv winners who had interviews before us took maximum 15 minutes).
We did make it clear it wasn't a shotgun wedding by any means, but that didn't seem to matter.
This I found quite surprising as I thought all my documents and evidence would be sufficient proof, but the interviewer kept asking why we hadn't got married prior to applying for the dv lottery in 2021 and just apply together.
I explained that we had no intention of getting married simply for the dv lottery, so we weren't going to get married just so we could apply together, and secondly 2021 was still very much in "covid times" and were never going to get married without interstate family able to come. We were questioned separately at times as well, obviously to see if our stories aligned.
Anyway, after a huge amount of back and forward, and upon checking all our other documents he said "So I'm going to approve your visas". And that was that.
He also quizzed us on how my wife and I met, which I provided proof and photographs of, and also quizzed us on the wedding (where was it held, who was there, who was the flower girl, etc).
In terms of documents required: we needed to provide passports, birth certificates, latest degree (didn't need high school certificate because I showed my university degree), marriage certificate, police certificates, and ds260 barcode pages.
No i134 or any financial documents were asked, (although I had them on me), we were only asked what my wife and I were planning on doing for work once we arrived in the US.
The interviewer also asked for proof of work as well (I'm a writer so lucky I had some copies of my published work in my documents file, which the interviewer analysed).
Additionally, my family (parents included) live overseas and the interviewer asked why they moved overseas, when they moved, and how my parents met. (why was this relevant I have no clue).
So yes, this is a word of warning to anyone in OC who is getting interviewed having recently gotten married, apparently that is a major red flag and you may get quizzed for extended periods of time about it.