Friend Question - USC with a past record

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Registered Users (C)
I am hoping someone here can help my friend.

She is married to a USC and she has sent all her paperwork (OCT 08). She has had her FP and also got an AP. She has an interview scheduled for end of June.

Her hubby (2 yrs)... had a record from a few yrs back - everything is clear now but she is worried this will come up in the interview. :rolleyes:

Question - can this affect whether she gets her GC or not?? She is also 1 mo pregnant so I really hope nothing goes wrong
 
Apparently he was arrested for having some unpaid tickets back in 2006.
He also has an aggravated assault which was dropped in 2007
Also there was a confusion in his record where he has been listed as being arrested for sale of cocaine :eek: -- this has been fixed in the state where he lived as he wasnt even in the state at the time (he thinks someone used his ID when they were arrested :confused: ) -- its no longer on the record they pulled two months ago.

I dunno - it seems like a serious rap sheet :mad:
 
USC husband's criminal record has no effect on spouse's immigration petition unless the husband is a naturalized US citizen and the crimes he committed were not disclosed at the time of his naturalization. (That would make his naturalization questionable)
 
USC husband's criminal record has no effect on spouse's immigration petition unless the husband is a naturalized US citizen and the crimes he committed were not disclosed at the time of his naturalization. (That would make his naturalization questionable)

unfortunately, untrue. my USC spouse has some criminal record on her account that took place 6 years before we married and 7 years before our initial interview, however interviewer was nice enough to told us that even midimeanor like that WILL hold our case on untill further investigetion into USC background.

and it make sense. should be obvious someone who broke the law before (USC) can do it again (get himself into sham marriage).
 
USC husband's criminal record has no effect on spouse's immigration petition unless the husband is a naturalized US citizen and the crimes he committed were not disclosed at the time of his naturalization. (That would make his naturalization questionable)

The Adam Walsh Act prevents US citizens convicted of certain crimes from sponsoring spouses and children.
 
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