K1 Fiance Visa...i-864a or second i-864 from joint sponser

jillpalme

New Member
Dear experienced friends in the K1 fiance visa process for Indians,
Please inform me on the following 2 subjects...

Question #1:
My i-129f has been approved and I am now filling out forms to be sent to the American Embassy of New Delhi in prepartion for my fiance's interview.
My income is not enough to satisfy the i-864 requirement, thus, my mother will be a co- or joint- sponser.
On my mother's 2011 tax returns I was claimed as a dependent
On her coming 2012 tax returns I will not be claimed as a dependent
I have lived with her on and off over the years, yet for 2012 lived with her only 1 month.
Now my question...
For her sponsership, is she considered a household member and I have her fill out the i-864a
or
having lived so little together in this recent year
is she not considered my household member
and we instead have her fill out a second i-864 as a joint sponser? (I, as my fiance's petitioner am filling out the first i-864).

Question #2
Jan.17, this Thursday I and my son will fly to India to join my fiance (who is my son's father) to be with him for the rest of this visa process (we have been apart 5 months while I worked in the US). My son was born in the US. My fiance has never been in the US.
Question is: will consulate interviewers count it against him that we have not ever married, had a child out of wed-lock, are now wanting to marry four years after our child's birth, and to add to that he is a monk of the Shankaracharya Giri order (a local lawyer recommended he ceremoniously renounce celibacy vows to prove he is marriagable and have certificate of such from a presiding priest) Or will consules be objective, see that our paperwork passes the test, and award the fiance visa?
Is there any other proof or action we can take for the above if the above poses any barrier for our visa approval?

Many thanks,
mommy yogi
 
A1: Assuming she will not claim you as her dependent for tax year 2012, then use form I-864. If she will claim you as a dependent and you both did live at the same address, I-864A.

A2: The consulate does not care about whether your fiance' abided by his celibacy vow or not.

Many thanks,
mommy yogi
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Top