It is possible there will be a court hearing before any deportation, that way your case would be seen/heard and possibly a change of status.
AnswerYesThe person will not automatically be eligible for deportation, such cases are determined on an individual basis.
An unlawfully present foreign national who is employed and supporting a family will be given a chance to plead his or her case at a deportation hearing.
Children born in the U.S. to illegal immigrant parent(s) are referred to as "anchor babies" because they are legal U.S. citizens, the government is very lenient when it pertains to an employed head of household parent when such conditions exist.
Answer: If you are being abuse and is an illegal immigrant, what you need to do is leave her, because she can report you to INS and you will get deported. Because you are illegal, there is really nothing much you can do with the legal system.
yes, my ex-husband is going through this with his wife, they have 2 small children and have been married for almost 7 years. She is being deported around the first of the year.
No.
The marriage may be valid, but once the person is deported, for any reason, he/she is guilty of "agrivated re-entry" if he/she ever returns to the U.S. The spouse is welcome to live with the illegal immigrant in his nation of birth as husband and wife.
what? I'm sorry are you an illegal immigrant?
Yes, he is an undocumented alien, therefore illegal. Once he is reported or apprehended in the commission of a crime (sometimes as simple as a traffic stop), he is likely to be deported.
You cant. Speak to your local Department of Homeland Security Immigration department, they can. They will explain the process.
The same as those of the wife of a legal immigrant, you get half of whatever he has. You may get more if he doesn't understand English
Yes. He should have had his wife start the procedures to sponsor his citizenship when they got married. If she knew he was illegal, she, too, could face criminal charges for housing an illegal alien. Since no illegal can enter into a legally binding contract, the marriage may not be legal either.
Yes, but why ask? Is your wife a pregnant illegal alien immigrant?
He wouldn't want to leave the country and have his papers checked, he might not be allowed back. And marriage does not change the status of an illegal immigrant.
This would actually be illegal; if found out, you'd be deported and your "wife" might go to prison.