In'shallah we are done with this.
We had our interview at the USCIS NYC Federal Plaza office today. Showed up half an our before our appointment time. Security was very quick and easy, and sign-in was also quick.
Interviewer called us about half an hour late. Discussion went as follows:
- Passport, drivers' license, I-94.
- "Employment authorization."
Showed DS-2019 paperwork and authorization from school for J-1 academic training. Interviewer had no idea what a DS-2019 was or what academic training was, and accused us of making fraudulent papers at home and being an overstay student. (No, I am not making this up.) Obviously we said this was not true and explained what academic training was, what a DS-2019 was, who issues it, etc.
Interviewer went away for 15 minutes and came back and asked if the DS-2019 had been "approved" by USCIS. Stated that this was not necessary. Frown from interviewer.
- Tax paperwork. Interviewer asked several questions about our state tax returns. Not quite an audit but it was unexpected. Kept original employee copies of W-2 forms.
- J-1 HRR waiver. Interviewer took our original J-1 waiver paperwork. Skeptical inquiry about why the address on the waiver approval letter was different from our current address. Explained that waiver was sent to school address a year ago and we moved after we graduated. Frown.
Left for another 15 minutes.
- Checked diploma, birth certificate, DV fee receipt and AOS EAD.
- Took phone number. Asked whether the number was a cellphone and where its area code was from. Frown when told her the area code was from where we went to school.
- Stated that we were "mostly approved," that she had had a question about being in status but had verified it in "another system" (most likely SEVIS), and that we would hear in 3-4 weeks.
No discussion of name check and didn't see any benefit to raising additional questions at end of interview. Did not get stamp.
Spent the day wondering wtf "mostly approved" meant.
Late this evening, got "Card Production Ordered" from CRIS.
Suggestions:
- Don't get intimidated by a hostile interviewer. Our theory on her behavior was that she was just trying to see if we would crack under pressure.
- Bring all conceivable paperwork.
- Keep in mind the interviewer has very limited authority and it's less likely that a nonsense reason for a denial would get past a supervisor.
We clearly were very fortunate not to get stuck in name check.
Our timeline:
- 2006: enter lottery
- May 2007: receive DV notification letter
- Summer 2007: J-1 212(e) waiver process, approved (a whole story in itself).
- January 2, 2008: Sent papers to KCC and DV fee payment to Pittsburgh
- January 4, 2008: KCC sent AOS acknowledgement; Pittsburgh sent receipt.
- February 28, 2008: sent I-485 packet UPS Overnight
- March 3, 2008: delivered
- April 21, 2008: receipt generated for I-485/I-765/I-131
- April 23, 2008: biometrics letter generated
- May 9, 2008: biometrics
- May 12, 2008: interview letter sent
- May 14, 2008: advance parole/EAD approved
- June 11, 2008: interview/card production ordered
Good luck to everyone -- hope this is helpful.