overstaying student visa
Al, Thank you very much. If anyone else has any advice - I am more than willing to hear them as well
THANK YOU AGAIN to everyone in advance...
I'm in a same situation like you, but I'm not in U.S. I went to the american embassy in sweden to apply for my I-130. On the form I wrote the places that I worked during my F-1 overstaying. The officer interviewed my wife, and my wife told him I worked with my student visa. The officer said I must talk to your husband . I stepped forward and he told me why I worked and why I didn't do the NSEERS registration. I told him I was scared, and a lot of people went to jail for many weeks.
Then he told me I'm found inadmissible and i have the 10 year bar. Since I been out of U.S 2 year I have 8 year to go. Then he told me I have to apply for the waiver I-601. He told me to go to the next window and the other officer will explain to me how it works. The lady told me after 8 year I can go back, and I can start fresh like nothing happened.
what about the "Anyone who claims to be a US citizen while they are not, is in violation of all existing and future immigration laws. He didn't tell me I'm ban for life
I found this helpful info from this forum that:
"....an F-1 student accrue no unlawful presence until a determination has been made by USCIS that you were out of status. A determination would have been made e.g. if you had applied for reinstatement and been denied for example. There are many references to this on the internet and you can also find the law in the INA. I'm not even sure you need the I-94 copy because all F-1 visas are issued for D/S I believe. But do contact an attorney to ask for the best course of action. By the way, your visa expiration date has nothing to do with it. A visa is only an entry document. What matters is when the status violation occurred, if the I-94 has a specific date, and if it doesn't have a date, if USCIS has determined you're out of status."
I found a international immigration lawyer, and she wrote me:
"Thank you for contacting the Law Offices of xxxxxxx. Country
conditions (Sweden) is one factor in addressing "extreme hardship" to your
U.S. citizen spouse. You will not even need to address it.
You can always file an I-130. If you have a legitimate marriage (which it
sounds as if you do), the I-130 should be approved. Don't be discouraged by
consular officers who don't understand the law.
In typical non-D/S situations, when an alien overstays his/her I-94 date by
more than 1 year, when s/he leaves the U.S., he/she triggers the 10-year bar
for unlawful presence. Since you were D/S and no one pronounced you to be
unlawfully present, there is no unlawful presence bar. It would be just a
matter of briefing it to the Consular Officer. You don't need an I-601
waiver. I can also obtain a copy of your I-94 through the federal
government.
I don't think it's wise to talk about your case to the consular officers at
the American Embassy.
To obtain a copy of your I-94, brief regarding "no unlawful presence bar",
and obtain green card, my fee would be $xxxxx with $xxxx advance costs.
Filing fees to the government and medical examination fees will be extra and
be paid directly by you.
She said that my unlawful employment claimed us citizen is not a problem.
I'm confuse now to what to do.
please help me.
thank you
this is a link to my post:
http://boards.immigrationportal.com/showthread.php?p=1847412#post1847412