sponsoring nephews

sonano

Registered Users (C)
My brother and his wife both past away leaving behing two kids. I want to bring them both to the US. They are both living abroad with my parents. I am in the process of getting a GC through marriage. My sister is a USC. We are thinking of adopting the boys to bring them here. Neither of us can afford to pay the adoption/home inspection requirement. I was wondering which one of us has a more straight forward case. I will be going home at the end of the year and I can adopt them really easily. will I be required to do the home study for adoption as a GC?
 
Without you being a USC, your prospects for bringing them to the US via international adoption are next to nothing. Either your USC sister or USC spouse would have to adopt them.
 
Obviously I would have to adopt them with my spouse. But question is: is there a way to do this without doing the home study for adoption (thats very expensive. almost 10,000$)
 
Family adoptions are virtually impossible to count for immigration purposes.

1st of all, what country are they citizens of? What are the adoption laws like there?

In order to adopt a child and bring them to the U.S., the adoption has to meet one of three possibilities under U.S. immigration law.

Ordinary adopted children (non-orphans), (this was created for people who were immigrating and had adopted children) have to meet INA 101(b)(1)(E). This requires actually living with the child for 2 years BEFORE you can immigrate them. However, the petitioner may be either an LPR or USC. These use an I-130 or accompany a parent on an I-140 (or even can be petitioned via an I-360 or I-730). This one does not require a home study for USCIS purposes but that is something that could still be required for the adoption anyway.

Two varieties of orphans exist in immigration law but the petitioner must be a USC.

INA 101(b)(1)(F) defines non-Hague orphans immigrated via form I-600 and may be preceded by an I-600A.

INA 101(b)(1)(G) defines Hague orphans immigrated via form I-800 and may be preceded by an I-800A.

These last two require the home study etc..

Your late brother's children are orphans and your USC spouse could proceed that way.

See a lawyer. Affordable help might be found at: http://www.justice.gov/eoir/statspub/raroster.htm

Most EOIR pro bono lawyers tend to concentrate on asylum cases but you could try them also at: http://www.justice.gov/eoir/probono/states.htm
 
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