Remarried

gpv78

New Member
Hi Everyone. Wel just to give a background. my parents petitioned me back in 1995 which was approved. Our greencard was peding and my parents moved out of the country in 1999. In 2000 I got married. 2001 I had my first born and my wife petitioned me. in 2003 I got my greencard. 2004 had my 2nd daughter. 2006 had my twin boys and in 2007 I became a citizen. Early 2008 our marriage became sour. My wife filed for divorce in June of 2008. I moved out in October. November I met someone. We then met up again in December.Feb of 2009 my divorce was finalized and finally we met again in march. She flew in with me from singapore. End of march March of 2009 we got married. Now I want to petition her. Is there going to be any problems? what forms do I need to submit and where. I-130, I-485, G-325 and her medical. How many photos 2 or 4? where do I submit it? local office or lockbox? I love in San Jose, CA

Thanks in advance
 
The only problem you might have is her getting married to you so soon after entry. She could catch a misrepresentation at POE charge. It might be easier for her to go home and you do CP instead of AOS. Thats just my two cents
 
What type of visa did your new wife had when she came to the US? According to what you said you got married in less than one month since your girlfriend arrived? If she had a fiancee visa you wont have any problems, but if she had B1/B2 you shouldve waited for at least 3 months..
 
She flew in with me from singapore. End of march March of 2009 we got married. Now I want to petition her. Is there going to be any problems?
If you are not a US citizen, become one or there will be big problems with trying to sponsor her.

Second, if she entered with a B1/B2 visa, file I-130 for her with consular processing and have her return to her country to wait for the green card interview instead of pursuing AOS (I-485), or she could run into problems as a result of marrying so soon after entering with the visa (because the short time lag suggests a preconceived intention to immigrate, which is grounds for denial of the green card).
 
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