am on State parole. They said that I cant leave the US legally to visit my fiancee whom I met online in order to satisfy an in-person meeting within past two years requirement. And my fiancee tried to apply for a visitor visa application at the US consular. Her application was denied. She told the consular office the truth why she wanted to see me in order to complete the meeting requirement and will return home to wait for a fiancee visa And she told him why I cant come to see her.
I looked at i-129F form. There is a waiver if there is good reason.
My question to you....have you heard personally of any parolee's fiance visa petition with waiver request being denied by the USCIS? I have called 15 immigration lawyers. They have never tried it before but 13 out of them said USCIS will not approve a waiver. I dont believe them because they have not experienced it personally.
If a parolee successfully received a petition approval, I will go ahead and retain an immigration lawyer.
Secondly, if a waiver will not happen, it is good for her to apply for a J1 visa - trainee to work for a host company. So she can meet me then next day, I file a fiancee visa petition while she waits to finish her visa expiration (4 months) and return to her home country to wait for fiancee visa interview. Is that good idea? My friend owns an internet media company...he is willing to provide her a trainee opportunity. She is a senior student at the university. The J1 sponsoring organization reviewed her resume and seems that she looks qualified. I believe she will not be subject to 2 years home residency requirement because her country is not on the Country Skills list. I will pay her everything (living expense, airfare, etc).
Is that good idea?
I think the petition with waiver request may be gambling. If the USCIS denies it, and the immigration judge denies, it will waste money and 6 months or more. I think by using J1 visa for her, it will save us alot of money and time unless you are sure that the parolees did receive the petition approval.
If she comes on J1 (4 months) and meets me, can I file the fiance visa petition next day while she is here in the US?
I looked at i-129F form. There is a waiver if there is good reason.
My question to you....have you heard personally of any parolee's fiance visa petition with waiver request being denied by the USCIS? I have called 15 immigration lawyers. They have never tried it before but 13 out of them said USCIS will not approve a waiver. I dont believe them because they have not experienced it personally.
If a parolee successfully received a petition approval, I will go ahead and retain an immigration lawyer.
Secondly, if a waiver will not happen, it is good for her to apply for a J1 visa - trainee to work for a host company. So she can meet me then next day, I file a fiancee visa petition while she waits to finish her visa expiration (4 months) and return to her home country to wait for fiancee visa interview. Is that good idea? My friend owns an internet media company...he is willing to provide her a trainee opportunity. She is a senior student at the university. The J1 sponsoring organization reviewed her resume and seems that she looks qualified. I believe she will not be subject to 2 years home residency requirement because her country is not on the Country Skills list. I will pay her everything (living expense, airfare, etc).
Is that good idea?
I think the petition with waiver request may be gambling. If the USCIS denies it, and the immigration judge denies, it will waste money and 6 months or more. I think by using J1 visa for her, it will save us alot of money and time unless you are sure that the parolees did receive the petition approval.
If she comes on J1 (4 months) and meets me, can I file the fiance visa petition next day while she is here in the US?
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