tuesdayschild
Registered Users (C)
Hi,
I was wondering if a family member could sponser another family member under an I-140 employment petition. What kind of business would the sponsering family member have to have? Is there a certain amount they'd have to be making say if they were a sole owner of a small business? Is the age limit 21+ ? Would a previously filed 245i be of help or hinderance in this case? Should the family member speak with a CIS worker or lawyer to get better information or is there an official online source?
On an entirely differrent topic, is it legally sound for employment sponsership to be filed in the name of an invalid individual. Say, a son who needs care for his bedridden mother who is incapable of speaking sponsers someone to care for her but proccesses the paperwork in proxy of his mother. Her name is on all the forms. How does that fudge out if the woman expires after the I-140 is approved and in wait for the offices to get in touch with the beneficiary, while the son is still alive and well? Is there anything the son can do or was this a dumb move from the word 'go'?
Thanks!
I was wondering if a family member could sponser another family member under an I-140 employment petition. What kind of business would the sponsering family member have to have? Is there a certain amount they'd have to be making say if they were a sole owner of a small business? Is the age limit 21+ ? Would a previously filed 245i be of help or hinderance in this case? Should the family member speak with a CIS worker or lawyer to get better information or is there an official online source?
On an entirely differrent topic, is it legally sound for employment sponsership to be filed in the name of an invalid individual. Say, a son who needs care for his bedridden mother who is incapable of speaking sponsers someone to care for her but proccesses the paperwork in proxy of his mother. Her name is on all the forms. How does that fudge out if the woman expires after the I-140 is approved and in wait for the offices to get in touch with the beneficiary, while the son is still alive and well? Is there anything the son can do or was this a dumb move from the word 'go'?
Thanks!