I married a woman and have been married for almost 3 years (longer than the 2 years for conditional residents) and as soon as she got her she decided that she was unhappy and it became evident that she had been in touch with an old flame and is going to go live with him and taking my son with her. She has been in the states for less than 60 days and in that time has got busted cheating 3 times and the whole story of this other guy who she has been dating since before she knew me comes out. Our marriage wasbased on fraud. She fooled me and now is trying to run out to be with him. Fine, but not after I have vouched for her to have US residency. If she wants it, tell him to do it.
2007-02-02
03:15:48
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12 answers
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asked by
Magnus01
3
in
Politics & Government
➔ Immigration
We have been married for 2.5 years so we have just passed the conditional resident threshold of 2 years. She has been in the states less than 2 months and these problems started after 3 weeks of being here so we hardly had time to fall "out" of love.
2007-02-02
05:45:33 ·
update #1
You need proof....then submit it to INS.
2007-02-02 03:59:58
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answer #1
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answered by mstrywmn 7
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Well, immigration does care about fraud, and at least as importantly, you have vouched for her economically, and you will want to get out of that. I understand her residence is conditional for a short period, but as to that, it isn't really your business any more. Getting out from under financial requirements is pretty important, though.
2007-02-02 03:30:10
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answer #2
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answered by DAR 7
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if you have the proof to back it up then yeah you can have her residency filed under fraud. but beware that this could backfire on you. If she get a good lawyer she could file domestic violence charges that could end up costing you more than you wish to. I've worked in a domestic violence division and trust me a lot of women have pulled that scam to get residency or just out of revenge on their husbands and needless to say half the time the judge ends up taking their sides and the man ends up loosing big time and even risking time in jail. so up to you,just careful what you choose. best of luck to you.
2007-02-02 04:15:26
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answer #3
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answered by Nexus K 4
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If she's been in the US less than 2 months I find it HIGHLY unlikely that she already has her Green card. If she doesn't, you can send a letter to USCIS withdrawing your sponsorship of all of her immigrant applications. If she does have her green card, then you are screwed; USCIS or ICE will almost definitely not try to prosecute her.
2007-02-03 06:45:00
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answer #4
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answered by Arsan Lupin 7
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I'm pro immigrant but yea this is a bad case of BAD illegal immigrants that make other's look bad, first I don't want you thinking all illegals are like that because humans are all different just like me and you and yes I think you should do something about it and you should call the immigration service on that.
2007-02-02 10:37:30
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answer #5
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answered by djdolcegabbana 1
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Just let her go and go on with your life.
there's no point in trying to get into more problems.
All this will one day back fire on her. remember we all pay for our mistakes.
2007-02-02 10:39:59
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answer #6
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answered by licy 1
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if she is not a conditional resident anymore than she doesn't need you
2007-02-02 04:46:30
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answer #7
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answered by Antis Suck 3
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yes. she married you for convenince. the law for this changed in 84 i think. unless she stays married to you for 7 yrs they can deport her. contact immg asap. www.uscis.gov
2007-02-02 03:44:53
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answer #8
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answered by CCC 6
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I believe you can, call INS and report fraud.
2007-02-02 03:24:13
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answer #9
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answered by SN 4
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Playa,,, its time to step up be a man SEND HER HOME!
2007-02-02 03:35:07
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answer #10
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answered by josh 2
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