I need your help pls concerning i-751

nanji

Registered Users (C)
Hello every1. I am so new here. I think my 1st post went to a diff forum. Ok in Nov I sent in my i-751 paper work but they sent it all back stating I sent it to early. So in Dec I sent again and so they sent me a year extension of my gc. A week after a letter to have my biometrics captured which I did 5 days letter we received a letter to go have a second interview with my husband and should ask 4 the District Adjustification Officer. Is this the normal process to be called twice, coz im really freaking out you how it is in there. Documents we sent where letters of affidavit of support, ipl bills, at&t bills, joint tax return, letters from I R S and the state in both our names, post cards 4rm family, junk mail, lots of pictures, lease as well as birth certificate. We couldnt open a joint acc 4 my husband owes bank of america around fifteen thousand so most banks wont allow to have an acc until the debt is cleared. My husband says im freaking out 4 nothing but I wasnt expecting this someone mentioned they randomly. What does a district adjustification officer do? So has any1 been my situation? We've been married 3yrs and we hope to grow old together and not get separated by immi.
 
well it looks like they have some serious findings or doubts regarding your marriage being legitimate. those findings were strong enough to call in for another interview -- stokes (which means you guys will be separated).

btw: your claim, regarding your relationship does not make sense to me. you claim to love your husband so much, but then assuming that immigration can separate you --- for your information this or most other countries in the world does not run comunist regime. further, immigration is not a para-militare organization as well. If your husband is not a drug dealer, doesnt rob banks and is not a pimp, there are no chances in the world ICE/USCIS will come after him because his order of deportation expired. no chance! their backlog to go after heavy criminals/illigal aliens is to large. Further, for your information: USA is not the only country in the world to live in! You are welcome to invite your husband to your country, apply for citizenship for him and simply live aboard US if your immigration file wont work here and you "hope to grow old together". Finally, you both can migrate close like to Canada for couple years (Canadian law is very immigrants-friendly) and then try to reapply back in US (the reason I state this this way is that you assume you dont want your husband to stay here illigally under deportation order you want him to leave the country - no matter where he goes as long as he is outside the US his ban kicks in and time runs down) -- you see there are so many choices! being denied for the first time by US Immigration is not the end of the world -- nobody is going to chain your husband and move him back to his country _separating_ from you, he got a free will! remember: immigration doesnt separate couples, they do it to themselves..
 
Nanji,

Don't worry much about it. The interview isn't something out of the ordinary but make sure you take as many originals as you can. Worst case scenario, if they deny your i-751 you can appear infront of an immigration judge and defend your case. And most of the time when the evidence is solid, you shouldn't worry about a denial.

Just let things happen one step at a time.


Jackdan,
her husband is a USC. I'm not sure what you were referring to by "his order of deportation".
 
thanks 4 ur responses. America being a land of opportunity and honestly had a dream when I came here and which to become a nurse. I was just incquiring to see if anyone has been in my situ. We'll go there this week and if its gonna be a stoks interview then let it be cause I believe 3yrs is long enuf to know each inside out. Them days r moving too slow wana get it over with :-) but im very confident that all will go well and thanks 4 ur help.
 
well, Its a land of oportunity, and I understand that. But what you saying now is that you are putting this "oportunity" above your relationship with your husband. what is more important is up to you.

as of stokes interview. you guys need and attorney -- you need a good one and he/she NEEDS to be there with you on the stokes interview. think this way: if USCIS wants to deny you, they will deny no matter what even if their assumptions or conclusions are out of this world. period. you need to be interviewed in the presence of your attorney this is so obvious to me -- officer can put anything in the file because you will be interviewed separately!

other than that -- make sure you know EVERYTHING about eachother. 3 years of marriage is nothing. I have seen couples pending 11 years and being denied. Read some Board of Immigration Appeal cases if you think your 3 years matter -- Matter of Ho -- this is a good case where green card based family was living 8 years in a country -- deistrict director found out some skelletons denied everyone 6 family members were deported. noone, including board cared how many years passed.

other than that I am thinking make sure you know all holidays you spent togethe,r all gifts you gave, all fights everything that happen between you guys -- its all important and any "dont remember" can bring the case down. I have read a case where couple were 2 years and interviewer asked them bunch of questions shortly after marriage, where did they go what did they do, day by day. mostly they replied "I dont remember". 2 weeks later case is denied with something like: "most of your questions you replied you dont remember, however you have never proove to USCIS that you have or ever had problems with your memory, no letters from family, friends, no prescriptions, no letters from doctor. Interviewing officer asked you multitude questions such as where you from, how old are you, asked you questions from your photo albums, you were able to answer right away, but yet you are unable to answer questions regarding your marriage integrity explaining you dont remember". case denied. -- you see what I am trying to say?? DONT BE TO SURE ABOUT YOUR MARRIAGE JUST CROSS-EXAMINE EACHOTHER TO BE SURE YOU ON THE SAME PAGE!


good luck!
 
if you are relating to board of immigration approve/denial ratio it is not even 5% of cases are approved (appeal sustained)

Um yeah so where did you get 5% from :D ? Give me a source, please, so that i can correct myself and correct others when they ask me.

Look up this forum and the 3 other main immigration forums. If you make some research you'll know what I'm talking about. But making up statistics doesn't sound very credible :). Trust me, people who post on forums are mostly ones who have problems or concerns, and obviously a denial is a huge concern. You'd be surprised to read about many who were approved despite the numerous red flags on their case.
 
You'd be surprised to read about many who were approved despite the numerous red flags on their case.

why you automatically assume that its all about approval? ANY approval can be revoked -- even citizenship. recently case of a War World 2 veteran that was living in this country for 31 years and at age of 82 he has been stripped from his citizenship he obtained through naturalization, and sent back to Germany.

approve is just a first step.
 
Um yeah so where did you get 5% from :D ? Give me a source, please, so that i can correct myself and correct others when they ask me.

Look up this forum and the 3 other main immigration forums. If you make some research you'll know what I'm talking about. But making up statistics doesn't sound very credible :). Trust me, people who post on forums are mostly ones who have problems or concerns, and obviously a denial is a huge concern. You'd be surprised to read about many who were approved despite the numerous red flags on their case.

I guess JackDan smacked right at you with his reference to your requested the statistical figures :)
 
I guess JackDan smacked right at you with his reference to your requested the statistical figures

Would be nice to include a page number as it's like giving me the bible to look up the word "God" :D

But in all honesty i really appreciate the link, JackDan. It was also interesting to know that such information is released. Pardon me, I'm more into medicine than law.

As far as most people is concerned, it's only their present case's approval, not about getting revoked in the future. Immigration is so backed up with pending cases... it may be important for them to investigate their former decisions, but I wonder if it's one of their top priorities..

recently case of a War World 2 veteran that was living in this country for 31 years and at age of 82 he has been stripped from his citizenship he obtained through naturalization, and sent back to Germany.

This guy's case was due to crimes against humanity. This is a whole different ball game and not quite that much people fall in such category. I heard of one person who was american-born but stripped of his citizenship due to some other serious stuff too.

Don't take things to that level :) I'm only referring to case approvals in day-to-day circumstances with your everyday immigrant. Nothing abnormal.
 
JackDan,

I kinda went over it and honestly found numbers only dealing with appearing in front of IJ or those who applied for asylum cases. Where can I find the figure you provided?
 
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