I am from honduras but be a legalized lifelong resident surrounded by usa,i be deported 8 years ago,can i come support surrounded by?
my parents are both american citizens,and they recieved a letter saying that my case have been accepted and that they have to do absolute things in order to have me renter the usa.very soon i was wondering is it possible that they are really letting me back in,or is it lately a mistake on their part.what can i do,i was deported on 3rd degree burglaries,but it be my first offense and i did time also,but was not there longer then 4 months,after was released on a program then was picked up and deported.very soon is there any posible way for me to return,since my parents just get this paper in the mail a week ago,please hand over me advice,that is what i need not judgeing,i own had enought of that,also i am 29 years old,i have be out of usa for 8 years.hope some one can help me in some posible way.appreciation.
Answers:
The approval of the petition your parents filed is not a mistake. It's only dependent on proving that they are legal unbreakable residents or citizens and that you are their son. It has nothing to do with any court ineligibilities you acquired. that's something to be determined at the visa interview.
As Yak Rider noted the last time you asked, at the very lowest possible you're currently ineligible for a visa. However, depending on whether or not your parents are citizens and what country you're from, that may not be a problem by the time your petition is valid for use. If they are green card holders, your petition would be an F2b, and that petition wouldn't be valid for 8 1/2 years from the time it was filed, longer if you're Mexican or Filipino. If they are citizens, and you aren't married, the petition would be an F1, and that petition wouldn't be valid for at least 6 years. If you are presently married, the petition would be an F3, and that would take 8 years or more.
Until your petition is valid for use, or current and you've been scheduled for an immigrant visa interview, you can't even apply for a waiver. So, it will be comparatively some time before this will be resolved. There's no guarantee that you'll be approved for the waiver simply by applying, but you do at least have a opening once you can apply. By the way, if your parents are green card holders, you would invalidate the petition if you got married. Legal permanent residents can solitary file for single adult children.
I'm sure this sounds pretty grim, but that's the way it is at the moment, and better you should know in a minute.
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Answers:
The approval of the petition your parents filed is not a mistake. It's only dependent on proving that they are legal unbreakable residents or citizens and that you are their son. It has nothing to do with any court ineligibilities you acquired. that's something to be determined at the visa interview.
As Yak Rider noted the last time you asked, at the very lowest possible you're currently ineligible for a visa. However, depending on whether or not your parents are citizens and what country you're from, that may not be a problem by the time your petition is valid for use. If they are green card holders, your petition would be an F2b, and that petition wouldn't be valid for 8 1/2 years from the time it was filed, longer if you're Mexican or Filipino. If they are citizens, and you aren't married, the petition would be an F1, and that petition wouldn't be valid for at least 6 years. If you are presently married, the petition would be an F3, and that would take 8 years or more.
Until your petition is valid for use, or current and you've been scheduled for an immigrant visa interview, you can't even apply for a waiver. So, it will be comparatively some time before this will be resolved. There's no guarantee that you'll be approved for the waiver simply by applying, but you do at least have a opening once you can apply. By the way, if your parents are green card holders, you would invalidate the petition if you got married. Legal permanent residents can solitary file for single adult children.
I'm sure this sounds pretty grim, but that's the way it is at the moment, and better you should know in a minute.
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