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Illegal in The US and getting married
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<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">grandfathered by 245(i) , provided your </div></BLOCKQUOTE>
Please help. im 22 years old.my father entered a petition for me after april 31..245i petition has been aproved ..i entered the usa illegally in january of 2000 when i was 12 years old..i already graduated from college and i want to workk in my career..please is there any thing there could be done to adjust my status>???????
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Guest repliedThere is one and only way to adjust your status. If you have been grandfathered by 245(i) , provided your application was approvable then that's your last chance. But I doubt if there are alot of people eligible for that because most of them had already got their greencard.
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Guest repliedYou may be eligible to apply for adjustment to permanent resident status if you are already in the United States and if one or more of the following categories apply to you.
Family Member
You are the spouse, parent, unmarried child under age 21, the unmarried son or daughter over age 21, the married son or daughter, or the brother or sister of a United States citizen and have a visa petition approved in your behalf.
You are the spouse or unmarried son or daughter of any age of a lawful permanent resident and you have a family-based visa petition approved in your behalf.
Otherwise Eligible
If "otherwise eligible" to immigrate to the U.S., immediate relatives may adjust status to LPR (get a "green card") in the United States even if they may have done any of the following:
worked without permission,
remained in the U.S. past the period of lawful admission (e.g., past the expiration date on your I-94) and filed for adjustment of status while in an unlawful status because of that,
failed otherwise to maintain lawful status and with the proper immigration documentation, or
have been admitted as a visitor without a visa under sections 212(l) or 217 of the Act (which are the 15-day admission under the Guam visa waiver program and the 90-day admission under the Visa Waiver Program, respectively).
Please note: If a person came into the U.S. illegally, that person is barred from adjusting their status to LPR (cannot obtain a green card) even if he or she marries a U.S. citizen or otherwise becomes an immediate relative. An immediate relative must meet the eligibility requirement of being "inspected and admitted or paroled into the United States."
****************again this is the most important part for those that entered illegally!!
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Please note: If a person came into the U.S. illegally, that person is barred from adjusting their status to LPR (cannot obtain a green card) even if he or she marries a U.S. citizen or otherwise becomes an immediate relative. An immediate relative must meet the eligibility requirement of being "inspected and admitted or paroled into the United States."
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Guest repliedIf you marry an USC you're okay.
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Guest repliedWhat if you entered legally and werent able to keep your status and are in deportation proceedings right now.. What happens then?
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Guest repliedNo, not if you entered illegally.
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Guest repliedcan I adjust the status thought marrying my GF (USC) not i254?
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Guest replied245(i) was something that illegal could use to become legal. To my knowledge it's not in effect anymore.
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Guest repliedMary Thank you for your answer,what is 245i?
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Guest repliedIf you enter ILLEGALLY, then you can't adjust your status. That's why.
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Guest repliedI came with B-1 visa., does it ONLY because that the guest entered without visa if the gust cannot adjust as mine, ?can he adjust as mine?
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Guest repliedIf you enter with a visa, you can adjust if you get married. I think the only one that doesn't work is the J visa unless you get a waiver. How did you come in the US?
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Guest repliedif i enter with a visa but else thing is same as guest's whar else way can make me get PR besides though the i245?
thanks
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Guest repliedNot until they bring back the 245(i) which I haven't heard anything lately.
Anyone else?
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