Hiddendragon38
Registered Users (C)
I agree with GungaDin. I planned to sue pro se and was pretty determined about it, although in my case, the Intent to Sue letter did the trick. I read from the sueing thread that based on statistics, Intent to Sue letter worked 30% of the time. (BTW, I would say I've ready 75% of the posts in the sueing thread.)
Just to update - I finally received my green card in the mail last Saturday, 10 days after my case was approved.
Good luck to everyone.
Hiddendragon38
Just to update - I finally received my green card in the mail last Saturday, 10 days after my case was approved.
Good luck to everyone.
Hiddendragon38
GungaDin said:If you want to file on your own, start on the very post of this thread and look at the links. Specifically
http://immigrationportal.com/showthread.php?t=194681
Publicus gives an excellent step by step plan of action and is an excellent place to start. You'll have to contact your federal district court for its Pro Se package (Google United States Federal Court District of Columbia)
If you're getting a lawyer, they will know what to do.
I personally felt comfortable filing the complaint in federal court on my own (if it came to that) - but your level of comfort may be different. My thought was that I'd file the complaint with the federal district court and see what happened. If the USCIS approved my case, then I wouldn't need a lawyer.
However if they wanted to fight this in court, I was going to hand it over to a lawyer. So even if you do this yourself, have a chat with a lawyer and see if you can hand the case off to them if it get to trial. Based on the experiences of almost everyone on these forums (I have not read _every_ thread so my information may not be complete) these complaints usually get resolved without going to trial.
Good Luck
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