* You need to take a certified copy of your Marriage Certificate with you whenever you need to show your Immigration papers. * The Marriage Certificate will show your old name and your new name.
* You don't get new immigration papers in your new name. * This also applies to School and College certificates and qualifications. They stay in your old name.
The US Immigration Service handles those matters. They will tell you who, what, and why procedures and papers (documents) will be needed.
The only way for someone in America that is illegal can get papers is if they are married to someone in America. The person would have to stay married in order to keep the papers.
No, you can legally change your name by filling out the papers at your courthouse. You may have to have a judge declare it legal, but you do not have to have an attorney to help you do this.
if you've waited so long to get immigration papers to get into the U.S why wouldn't you wanna go to the U.S at once ? ..
You need to consult an immigration lawyer but normally when the husband died in this case the process is terminated.
Not the kind of immigration papers talked about today. Some were indentured servents and carried papers to prove they had a job waiting for them. Early immigration was not the same kind of problem it is today. Today the government must keep track of the number of people immigrating to ensure our system of jobs, schools, hospitals and so on is not overwhelmed by total numbers.
Answer From what I understand of immigration laws they have changed, so that even if a guy were to marry you, he wouldn't be able to stay in the country because marriage doesn't mean as much as it once did to immigration. To find out what responsibilities you would have, if you married this person why not contact the immigration department in the country where you live and have them explain what is acceptable and what's not acceptable.
NONE. Marriage to a US citizen does not in any way automatically confer any change in immigration status. Your US Citizen spouse can now petition to have your immigration status changed, but you will almost certainly have to leave the country and return to your home country to pick up the new visa, and, depending on the case, you may NOT be allowed to return to the US for up to 10 years.
Contact a lawyer or an attourney. Immigration services cannot do anything about this, but the courts can. And to be engaged to a married man doesn't sound correct, either.
Contact the Immigration and Naturalization Services (the INS.)
That is a question you should ask your lawyer.
A valid passport, and a valid visa.