Folks, please give a hint about the "good moral character" of this case, if INS can screw it.
The guy had a B1/B2 visitor visa 10 years ago and came to the US for 2 weeks. During this 2 weeks he married a US citizen. They never lived together and no application was made based on that marriage. Also he divorced her the next year.
Then, 5 years later he immigrated to the US, employment based, got a green card by his employer, and now trying to apply for citizenship.
Since he must declare that marriage on the N400, the IO may think he lied to immigration when he entered the US for that marriage. What is the chance that the IO will come to this conclusion, considering that there was no immigration application based on that marriage?
You have seen lots of stories, please help me guess. Thanks a lot for your advice.
The guy had a B1/B2 visitor visa 10 years ago and came to the US for 2 weeks. During this 2 weeks he married a US citizen. They never lived together and no application was made based on that marriage. Also he divorced her the next year.
Then, 5 years later he immigrated to the US, employment based, got a green card by his employer, and now trying to apply for citizenship.
Since he must declare that marriage on the N400, the IO may think he lied to immigration when he entered the US for that marriage. What is the chance that the IO will come to this conclusion, considering that there was no immigration application based on that marriage?
You have seen lots of stories, please help me guess. Thanks a lot for your advice.