U.S. IMMIGRATION
INFORMATION FOR RELATIVES
RELATIVES When people
think relatives, they usually think about
fiancée visas. However, there are
many other categories of relatives. Certain
people are not aware that they can sponsor
their parents. Other people are not aware
of multi-level methods available in order
to bring in relatives when direct sponsorship
is not available.
There are three types of relative cases
an immigration lawyer will deal with:
1. Fiancées
and Fiancés
2. Non-Preference
relatives
3. Preference
Relatives
FIANCEES AND FIANCES
An immigration lawyer will often receive
calls from people who have met over the
Internet. Ten years ago, this wasn’t
a reality yet today it is. Interestingly
enough, this visa has the highest failure
rate of any --- a whopping 42! Why? Many
people try to prepare their own case without
knowing the law. The biggest mistake you
can make is thinking that immigration law
is all about filling out forms. There is
a lot more you need to know. A critical
error in a case can not only delay it, but
also keep you out of the United States.
Delays are difficult in this area of law
because people want to be together. A fiancée
visa takes at least 6 months to win (don’t
believe rumors stating it takes 30 days….that's
only one of 4 parts to this case) . There
are many cases in this area that are blocked
because of a simple criminal past, membership
in a Communist Party (no, cancelling your
membership 3 months before filing won’t
save you), or communicable diseases. Preparing
and filing waivers in advance of a denial
can save you many months of stress and delays.
To learn more about waivers, go to our WAIVERS
section on the front page.
Be careful of something else that people
often try to do; this will get you in serious
trouble. People realize they do not want
to wait six months (all times stated are
average times) for the fiancée visa
and the man or woman enters, stating at
the border they are coming to visit friends
or take a vacation. A little later, that
person marries their fiancée or fiancé.
Well, that entry is based on a lie. This
deception is immigration fraud and that
can get you barred from the country for
an indefinite period of time. Immigration
fraud also carries federal criminal consequences.
Although the writer has never heard of this
happening, it is possible, in legal theory,
to charge you for counseling this person
as a co-conspirator to a federal offence.
This could carry a 5-year prison term as
well as a $250,000 fine. Not a good idea!
For those of you who don't know, you have
to be a U.S. citizen in order to apply for
a fiancée visa. The person can enter
for a period of 3 months, and then you either
marry, in which case you apply for a Green
Card (also called Resident Alien Card or
Permanent Residence). No, the Green Card
is not green any more!
NON-PREFERENCE RELATIVES
These are called Immediate Relatives. These
include children (the terms sons and daughters
mean something else in immigration law),
parents and spouses of U.S. citizens. You
can sponsor (the real word is petition)
for these people and they can enter much
more rapidly than Preference relatives.
However, a common problem immigration lawyers
hear is that people want to marry someone
and then bring them back to the U.S. That
is not possible.
If you fall in love and marry someone,
you will have two choices. You can apply
for a Green Card directly and wait approximately
a year, or apply for the K-3 visa in addition
to your case and bring them in sooner. The
K-3 is a catalyst, or speed-up visa. It
allows you to wait in the United States
for the Green Card to continue processing
(as contrasted to waiting in your home country
for its completion).
Another issue people do not realize, but
is very serious in immigration law, is having
their spouse enter from a foreign country
and then apply for a Green Card once that
person is here. Of course, just as in a
fiancée visa case, as mentioned above,
the person would have to deceive the officer
at the border to enter. This is a violation
of §214(b) and will keep you out of
the country. Potentially there are immigration
fraud issues. This may not sound like a
big deal to many people, but for lawyers
having to tackle the issue, be assured this
is not one of the easier cases to overcome.
It is a similar situation in immigration
law when someone has their parent visit,
making it look like a pleasure trip, when
the true intent is to have them enter so
that a Green Card can then be applied for.
Beware of these immigration law issues as
they can hurt you. Yes, it is possible to
file the case and obtain a work permit (called
an EAD or Employment Authorization Document),
but at the time of the interview is where
someone can leave with handcuffs. Don't
take chances with this dangerous area.
PREFERENCE RELATIVES
This is an area of great frustration for
many people because of the long waits. There
is a chart of waiting periods and our program
explains how to read and understand it.
Certain countries have bigger backlogs than
others.
This area includes the following categories:
1. Unmarried sons and daughters of U.S.
citizens
2. Spouses and unmarried children of Green
Card holders
Unmarried sons and daughters of Green Card
holders
3. Married sons and daughters of U.S. citizens
4. Brothers and Sisters of U.S. citizens
The fourth category is useless to you and
our program will explain why. If you are
planning to petition your brother or sister,
rather than waiting a decade or more, you
are better off figuring out another method
of entering the United States and we will
provide you with all the options.
These categories cause you two problems.
First, of course, is the long wait. Second,
in most cases, these people who are being
sponsored are not allowed to visit the U.S.
until they receive their Green Cards. The
problem is that they are ‘Intending
Immigrants under section 214(b). You need
to understand this code section and what
it means to you as it is the most popular
code section quoted to immigration lawyers
by people who are denied entry.
As you see, there are many issues that
must be addressed. You need to know immigration
law before you put your future in anybody's
hands because ultimately, you are responsible
for your future. If someone else makes a
mistake, it will be you who lose.
Our CEO (Chief Executive Officer) will
never forget a horrible case in which a
client found an inexpensive attorney who
promised to obtain a work-related Green
Card for an entire family for $5,000. Well,
4 years later, after all the extras, it
cost $27,000 and they lost the case? Why?
The lawyer simply chose the wrong category
for the client and the immigration department
held the client responsible for what the
lawyer did. Now, after all that money and
all that work, they have to leave the United
States. It's your future, take control of
it.
FIANCEE VISAS: WHERE SHOULD YOU
MARRY?
Lawyers enjoy this area of law, because
they have happy clients who are looking
forward to their new life together. But
this area of law also has some tricky areas
that you need to know about before beginning
the process to get a fiancée visa.
Since female fiancées represent over
95% of the cases presented, this article
will use the feminine form of fiancée,
but it is intended to include both male
and female fiancées. A fiancée
visa is also called a K1 and is available
only for U.S. citizens marrying non-U.S.
citizen. K1 visas are not available for
permanent residents, also known as Resident
Aliens or Green Card holders.
Basically, a fiancée visa:
a. Permits a U.S. citizen to bring someone
they met abroad into the United States.
b. The person brought into the United States
get a four month window in which they are
allowed to stay in the
United States for up to 3 months.
c. The U.S. citizen must either marry the
person they brought in or the foreign person
must return before the 3-month expiry of
the visa.
d. The K1 cannot be extended.
e. A new fiancée may not be substituted
on an existing K1 visa.
f. A change of status to another visa is
not allowed.
g. A change of status to a visitor visa
is not allowed.
h. A fiancée who entered on a K1
visa may not apply for a Green Card number
under another category.
In order to understand the value of this
visa, a little about immigration law must
be explained.
Essentially, if someone comes into the
United States desiring to stay (as is assumed
about an entering fiancée or spouse),
then they cannot come in as a nonimmigrant.
This is because a nonimmigrant is a person
that enters but just for a temporary period
of time, such as a visitor going to Disney
World or a business executive flying to
New York for a meeting. A common question
is whether it would be easier to marry abroad,
and then enter the U.S. as a married couple.
This is not permitted. If a U.S. citizen
marries someone abroad, the new spouse must
either wait for a Green Card to be approved,
which is a slow process, or they can apply
for a K3 visa which allows them to wait
inside the United States for the Green Card
to be approved. This process can take 6
months or longer, though at times it has
taken only 3 months. To find out the wait
time, it is best to speak with a lawyer.
Remember, that a U.S. citizen may not, under
any circumstances, marry someone abroad
and bring them back into the United States
with them.
However, there are options if a U.S. citizen
has met someone abroad (or met someone through
the internet, and then went abroad to meet
them personally) and realizes that they
do not want to ever be separated from that
person again. What are the options? Well,
the options include: 1. Go to the person’s
country, marry there, and then have them
wait to receive their Green Card (Resident
Alien Card) abroad (longest wait); 2. Go
to the person’s country, marry there,
apply for a K3 visa, and have the new spouse
come to the United States to wait for a
Green Card (about equal to or a little longer
wait than a K1 Fiancée Visa); or
3. Apply for a K1 Fiancée visa and
when the person comes to the United States
for their 3 month allowance, marry them,
and immediately submit a Green Card application.
If a U.S. citizen decides to go abroad
and marry the person, then they need to
contact a lawyer before they go, so that
they can get all of the requirements they
need when they go abroad, saving the trouble
and cost of having all of the requirements
shipped.
What is that referring to? There are 2
or 3 different sets of information required:
a. Forms for the government must be completed.
If a law firm assists in the process, they
will have
questionnaires in addition to the government
forms. These need to be completed for the
U.S. citizen, as well as, the fiancée
so that the law firm may prepare the government
forms in time and the U.S. citizen is able
to take them with them when visiting their
fiancée abroad. If the forms are
not taken with the U.S. citizen upon their
trip abroad, they will have to pay to internationally
ship the documents to their fiancée
so that original signatures may be obtained,
and then pay to have them shipped back to
the United States, delaying the visa process.
b. The government also requires what is
called documentary evidence, which includes
pictures, divorce
certificates, birth certificates, and so
on. A lot of money can be saved by gathering
these items when the U.S. citizen travels
abroad. When submitting the case, copies
are required, with originals of the documentary
evidence being required only at the interview
unless the government believes that the
forms submitted are fraudulent. If they
believe the forms are fraudulent, they may
request originals sooner.
c. In addition, law firms like to prepare
a Memorandum of Law, which is also called
a Memorandum of Points and Authorities,
in cases involving K1 visas. This is simply
a document that applies the facts of each
particular case to cases and code sections
of the law so that the law firm can make
a case for the visa, because forms cannot
always make a case. For example, assume
that “J Jones” was charged with
theft, and the only thing he submitted in
his defense was a form with his name, address,
and other basic information. Would that
make his case? Absolutely not. The same
is true in immigration law. The required
forms do not always make a case, and the
government may request more information
through a ‘RFE’ or Request for
Evidence, where they basically ask more
questions. To avoid the case being slowed
down by a RFE, it is better to provide the
government with everything from the start.
A common question is whether a fiancée
is able to visit the United States while
their K1 visa is pending. If, for instance,
an emergency situation came up and they
would return abroad shortly, they most likely
could visit. The snag is that a K1 is an
exception to the nonimmigrant rule, since
they intend to immigrate and remain in the
United States. So they are not suppose to
be given a visa to travel, but if they can
prove that they will return to their original
country and do not intent to stay in the
United States on this trip, then they can
technically make the trip. In reality though,
Embassy personnel rarely let someone to
visit while their K1 is pending.
The same is true for a K3, or Green Card
application. Technically, as long as the
person does not intend to stay in the United
States on this trip then they could be given
a visa, but Embassy personnel abroad rarely
do this.
One very important issue that needs to
be addressed deals with people who believe
they will trick immigration officers to
allow them to enter the country on a temporary
visit and then the person tries to remain
in the United States. Yes, there are those
that are able to not get caught doing this.
But, if the person entering is caught, they
risk being permanently barred from the United
States for committing immigration fraud.
If this fraudulent entry is used to file
for a K1 visa, both the U.S. citizen and
the foreign person are guilty of first-degree
immigration fraud, which has a penalty of
5 years in federal prison and a fine of
$250,000. It is unfortunate for someone
to wait a year or more for a Green Card
interview and then get arrested, or to have
an enemy send the Immigration Department
a letter, causing them to investigate the
foreign person’s immigration status.
Often people talk of situations where someone
came into the United States, married, and
filed for a case with a successful conclusion.
This can and does happen. The key is that
the foreign person has to enter the United
States without intent to stay. Preferably,
the foreign person has not met their fiancée
yet, but instead came to the United States
for vacation and happened to meet the love
of their life, deciding to get married while
they are here. In situations like this,
there is not a violation of section 214(b),
which deals with nonimmigrants not being
allowed to stay if they intended to immigrate.
This works only because the foreign person
cam into the United States without an intent
to stay; they only intend to visit. But
cupid intervened, brining the person of
their dreams into their life unexpectedly.
Then again, if the foreign person and a
United States citizen had been communicating
and the foreign person later comes to visit,
they end up marrying on that trip, and the
foreign person remains, the situation is
different. First, it is different because
the immigration officer would most likely
not have allowed them in if they had known
the truth. Second, at the Green Card interview
an immigration officer can argue that the
person came to the United States with the
intent to stay and deny the case.
Tomorrow is the result of today's choices—
where will YOU be one year from now?
|