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Debany Doombringer
Nate The Lawyer
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Comments by "Debany Doombringer" (@debanydoombringer1385) on "Trump Supporter’s Wife Deported By ICE | Begs For Pardon" video.
@clutchboi4038 No you don't. You remain in whichever country you apply in. You can enter the US on a visitor's visa and file. As long as you entered legally. You can't work obviously, though you can also file for a work visa after filing for a permanent residence as a spouse. Edit: Whatever Visa you entered under will be extended for as long as your application is a waiting a decision.
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For a spouse, it's a year or less for a green card. Provided there's no criminal background. It and the fiancee visas are the quickest and easiest. A fiancee visa, you just have to prove you got married in 90 days and it's permanent residency.
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@tahmaskenchers False. It's dependent on where you file. If you file outside the US you're barred entry. If you file in the US, you're allowed to stay with extended Visas. Edit: My husband immigrated to the US 20 years ago and that was the case then.
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Unless it was an asylum case. That does go before the court to determine if they meet the requirements. Then the question is why didn't she file as a spouse once she got married. During the last few years asylum seekers have been allowed to remain while waiting on their court date which is 10 years at the moment.
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@uncleeddie-xo9ln That's ridiculous. Immigrantion laws for spouses hasn't changed in decades. The last change was under Bush who sped up the process. Putting in time requirements of 3 months for each step. Meaning Immigration Services has to process your application within that time period or have a very good and clearly communicated reason why it's not. You're talking to people that have been through it multiple times bringing family over. 3 times personally for me. Including one being adopting my immigrant husband's crackhead niece's little boy. While you've never been through it, but pretend you're an expert. We did without a lawyer all 3 times, too. They're only needed if it's a complicated case. Like the person has a criminal past.
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@duneeaaasha I wish I could tell people you don't need one unless they've got a criminal history. I've heard so many stories about how slow it is when people use one. It's pretty easy. Everything is laid out clearly, they'll happily answer any questions, and you save a lot money.
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Ah! They added the Covid vaccine to the vaccine requirements. Ridiculous. My husband couldn't find his vaccination records so took them all at once when he was in the process of immigrating. That's the last step before the interview and getting your green card. The physical health requirement. X-rays, a doctor saying you're healthy, and your immigration records. I hope they removed the lung X-ray for tuberculosis, but I guess it would depend on the country if it's risk or not and they can't individualize the process like that.
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@iquesnell Bush revised it and put time limits on each section for family members. There are exceptions if the applicant has previous criminal charges or had been previously deported. I've been through it 3 times. My husband, my son, and when we took custody of my husband's nephew. If it took that long, it's because your wife did something in her past.
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@GeorgieB1965 That's because she's Chinese which requires more scrutiny due to it being an adversarial country.
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@harisjaved1379 Nope. Bush put in time limits for each immigration step for families. Each one can't take more than 3 months and it's 3 steps. So it should take less than a year. The only reason it takes longer is you aren't filing correctly, waiting for a background check from your home country, you're from an adversarial country, or you've committed crimes. Including being in the US illegally previously. Those are the only reasons allowed for Immigration Services to delay your application. I've done it 3 times without a lawyer. It's not hard. It's also not hard to maintain legal status as long as you aren't working. You simply leave the country for a couple days every 6 month to renew your visitors visa. Edit: I will say I has to contact my representative's office to get my son's citizenship sorted out. He was born in Canada and entered when it was an open border policy. As in you didn't need a passport. So we didn't have proof of legal entry. There's a special division for those cases and he got his passport (his proof of citizenship) in 4 months.
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@kevind2760 Good. Since illegal immigration was one of the biggest issues and he voted Trump, then he knew it was coming.
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Why did it take years? It's by law less than a year for family members. The only reason is she has a criminal record or it's a country we're suspicious of. Those are the only reasons Immigration Services can slow down the process themselves. Everything else is you collecting records and sending them, which, if you're slow about, obviously will make it take longer. If she's got a criminal record then it's not broken. People who commit crimes, no matter how silly it may seem, should face scrutiny. People from countries we're not on good terms with should also face scrutiny for the safety of the public.
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Most likely she has a criminal record and depending on what it is, would be rejected. If she entered illegally, which she did if she's getting deported, she'll be barred from entry for a a few years. Married or not, you enter the country legally.
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@Sniperboy5551 That's actually a tiny percentage currently. It's not difficult to remain legal under visitor status. It's for 6 months and you simply leave, spend the night,and re-enter on a new Visa. Unless you're from a country that we require you to apply before you're given a visitor visa which is very few countries. In which case you can file for an extension once you've entered. If you know you're going to be here longer, you should say that upon entry.
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