Green Card through wedding ceremony issue?
I am in New York and married to my American for the past three months and we are planning on filling the paperwork for me to take my greencard. My husband is a student and doesn't work right now, so I just wanted if it would be difficult beside his non-working status to help me obtain my green card? I have also be in this country for the past 10 years now, is that another issue?
Answers:
he can still file for you but would want a co-sponsor for the form I-864. as far being here 10 years the question is on how you entered the u.s., if illegitimately you will have to eventually return to your home country fro immigrant visa interview, due to unlawful presence of more than 180 days, be denied and then you will have to record for a waiver of inadmissibility and to have the waiver approved your husband will have to prove an EXTREME HARDSHIP to him if waiver not approved. if you came here and enjoy proof you went thru a point of inspection, or w/ visa.... if you didnt or dont have proof they will deport you and it will trigger a 10 year bar of one able to come back.... my husband is also going thru getting his papers.
If your husband can meet the income requirement, come what may, then you should be OK.
The requirements are listed in this document:
http://www.uscis.gov/files/form/I-864p.p...
If he can't unite the income requirement by himself, a relative or friend can be a co-sponsor to help meet the requirement.
As for your being surrounded by the States since 10 years, that's ok if your stay in the US was legal. If you're an unfair, you're in trouble if you want to apply for a green card now.
Having no income undeniably won't help on various levels. However, nearby are work-arounds that should allow you to solve this. The 10 year stay here complicates things. How much, will depend on whether you entered the US legally or not. If you came officially to begin with, but overstayed, then you can adjust status within the US. Plus your husband can file a work authorization request that should help the two of you meet the income requirement you're worried give or take a few.
If you came in illegally to inaugurate with, you'll have to leave the US and gain an immigrant visa outside of the US before you can get a green card. That would also involve applying for a waiver through USCIS of the 10 year ineligibility caused by your iffy stay. You'd have to get the waiver first, and then the immigrant visa to be competent return legally and get the green card.
yes, your husband need to database a Affidavit of Support and i didn't get that been in this country for times gone by 10 years.
btw it not going be an issue, if you came here on a visa and just overstayed!!
Resolved Questions:
When do you reflect Pelosi/ Obama are going to try and push an Amnesty Bill thru?
Never, voters do not want it ever again. Instead of allowing illegals to stay they need to focus on securing our borders. Especially our southern border. Mexico's filth is spilling into the U.S. more respectively day and the drug cartels are taking citizen's lifes and causing wound. We...
If i'm a resident surrounded by U.S.A do ia want a visa to enter morocco?
yes,because u r still not an american citizen.US citizens do not need a visa to travel to Morocco for upto 90days. you need to have a valid passport from doesn`t matter what country you are a citizen from, and must apply for a Moroccan visa. I believe...
Answers:
he can still file for you but would want a co-sponsor for the form I-864. as far being here 10 years the question is on how you entered the u.s., if illegitimately you will have to eventually return to your home country fro immigrant visa interview, due to unlawful presence of more than 180 days, be denied and then you will have to record for a waiver of inadmissibility and to have the waiver approved your husband will have to prove an EXTREME HARDSHIP to him if waiver not approved. if you came here and enjoy proof you went thru a point of inspection, or w/ visa.... if you didnt or dont have proof they will deport you and it will trigger a 10 year bar of one able to come back.... my husband is also going thru getting his papers.
If your husband can meet the income requirement, come what may, then you should be OK.
The requirements are listed in this document:
http://www.uscis.gov/files/form/I-864p.p...
If he can't unite the income requirement by himself, a relative or friend can be a co-sponsor to help meet the requirement.
As for your being surrounded by the States since 10 years, that's ok if your stay in the US was legal. If you're an unfair, you're in trouble if you want to apply for a green card now.
Having no income undeniably won't help on various levels. However, nearby are work-arounds that should allow you to solve this. The 10 year stay here complicates things. How much, will depend on whether you entered the US legally or not. If you came officially to begin with, but overstayed, then you can adjust status within the US. Plus your husband can file a work authorization request that should help the two of you meet the income requirement you're worried give or take a few.
If you came in illegally to inaugurate with, you'll have to leave the US and gain an immigrant visa outside of the US before you can get a green card. That would also involve applying for a waiver through USCIS of the 10 year ineligibility caused by your iffy stay. You'd have to get the waiver first, and then the immigrant visa to be competent return legally and get the green card.
yes, your husband need to database a Affidavit of Support and i didn't get that been in this country for times gone by 10 years.
btw it not going be an issue, if you came here on a visa and just overstayed!!
Resolved Questions:
When do you reflect Pelosi/ Obama are going to try and push an Amnesty Bill thru?
Never, voters do not want it ever again. Instead of allowing illegals to stay they need to focus on securing our borders. Especially our southern border. Mexico's filth is spilling into the U.S. more respectively day and the drug cartels are taking citizen's lifes and causing wound. We...
If i'm a resident surrounded by U.S.A do ia want a visa to enter morocco?
yes,because u r still not an american citizen.US citizens do not need a visa to travel to Morocco for upto 90days. you need to have a valid passport from doesn`t matter what country you are a citizen from, and must apply for a Moroccan visa. I believe...
