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i hqave conditional residence based on marriage n will apply 4 permanent this year. im wondering wat happens....do u only send papers or need to go interview again

2007-01-04 03:54:10 · 5 answers · asked by latin_goddess24 1 in Politics & Government Immigration

5 answers

You need to file Form I-751. If you and your spouse are still married and still live together, you should be able to do this on your own. If you have separated or divorced, you may still be able to file, but you may want to seek the advice of an immigration attorney as this will be a trickier case. Be sure that you file within the 90 day window before your conditional residence expires.

After you send your papers in, one of three things can happen. If you provide lots of documentation that your marriage is still solid, for example if you and your spouse now have a child together, if you've bought a house and the mortgage is in both of your names, or if you have lots of other government and financial documentation that shows that you continue to live together and have your finances co-mingled, chances are that your case will just be approved without your having to go in for an interview. (That being said, a certain number of cases are selected for a random audit, so there's always a small chance you will be called in for another interview, even if your documentation is perfect.) If you send in some documentation, but not a lot, or the documentation that you send in doesn't show clearly that you and your spouse are still together, you may be sent a "Request for Evidence" or "RFE" that will ask you to submit more documentation by mail. If you file your I-751 without much supporting documentation that you and your spouse are still together, or if there are clear red flags on you application, such as you and your spouse no longer live at the same address, you will most likely be called in for an interview to explain your situation.

The upshot is, the best way to avoid a second interview is to make sure you include lots and lots of documentation upfront. And make sure the evidence that you provide spans the entire past two years. Don't submit a bunch of documentation from right after you were married and then nothing recent. Make sure you submit photos and documents from right after you were married, then from about 6 months later, and 6 months after that and so on.

Good luck!

2007-01-04 04:14:38 · answer #1 · answered by puffinpower 2 · 2 0

My wife and I just sent in the I-751 form to remove the condition from her residency. Along with the form we provided documentation to show that the marriage is genuine (the forms give examples of what to include) along with a check.
My understanding is that most of the time there is not a second interview required. We received a letter in the mail letting us know that the application was received and is being processed and that it would take a minimum of 4 months.

2007-01-04 05:03:50 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

In most cases you will not have to appear in front of an USCIS officer. If you put together a "good" application with a cover letter, signed statements and evidence of a "bonafide" marriage, you should receive a notice in the mail with USCIS decision.
Here are some application pointers

Fee payment
Two photos attached
I-751
Cover Letter
Copy of front and back of I-551 (Permanent Resident) card
Other evidence
Supporting documentation

Good luck
Crystal
www.crystalibarra.com

2007-01-04 04:16:17 · answer #3 · answered by Crystal I 2 · 0 0

it depends on what they think of your application. If they think your application is complete and that your marriage is solid, and no need to pursue the issue anymore, they will no longer ask for any more evidence such as an interview, but if you do not provide them enough evidence with your application packet, they can request an interview at their discretion. But it will not be all cases that get an interview, only ones with what they deem as either insufficient evidence or fraud marriages or just random interviews maybe. good luck!

2007-01-04 04:01:04 · answer #4 · answered by crazydeb16 5 · 1 0

in the experience that your husband is a US citizen then all you may desire to do is document your son's delivery on your closest US consulate to be certain his citizenship. you will get a Consular document of delivery in a foreign country on your son and there will be no choose for him to get a green card/immigrant visa. definite, in case you get an IR-a million visa you will in reality flow by way of the same technique, yet not somewhat comparable to once you adjusted status in that there will be no submitting of I-485. the entire technique is performed in case you're on your place u . s . a . (scientific, interview and so on); you will get your new green card interior weeks of getting into the U. S. alongside with your IR1 visa. You confident your wellbeing motives won't qualify you to word as a returning resident somewhat of beginning from scratch? good success.

2016-12-12 03:36:09 · answer #5 · answered by declue 4 · 0 0

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