No, if you are legally married anywhere in the world then the marriage is considered legal under US law. Any subsequent marriage while still married anywhere would be legally invalid and you could be arrested for bigamy.
If the marriage is legal in Mexico, it should be legal in the US. One exception is for same-sex marriage. If you marry someone of the same-sex in Mexico City, that marriage will not be recognized in most of the United States.
If you are legally married in Mexico that must be disclosed when you apply for a marriage license in the United States. You will be expected to legally dissolve your marriage in order to remarry. If you lie on the application your marriage won't be valid and the Mexican marriage may surface at some future date and cause a lot of trouble.
No. Your US marriage must be dissolved through a divorce decree.
No. Your US marriage must be dissolved through a divorce decree.
No. Your US marriage must be dissolved through a divorce decree.
No. Your US marriage must be dissolved through a divorce decree.
Of course not. You can only be married to one person at a time.
Of course not! You are only legally allowed to be married to one person at a time, it does not matter where you live or where you got married.
No. Your US marriage must be dissolved through a divorce decree.
Yes, of course
If the marriage is legal in Mexico, it will be held legal in the US. However, it is not legal for anyone under the age of 16 to get married in Mexico.
Yes, she is legally married if the wedding was legal in Mexico. If she lied about her age in order to get the marriage license, then no. The US recognizes legal marriages performed in other countries.
No. No one is allowed to be married to more than one person at a time in the US or Mexico.
If you are married than he is now legal.
Yes, but only if you apply for a green card.
So long as your paperwork with the embassy is in order, and the legal portions of the marriage are covered, it really makes little difference where you have the wedding ceremony, whether it be in Mexico, the US, Antarctica, etc.
In US law a common law marriage does have some legal standing; but is not considered a legal marriage. In most cases a legal marriage anywhere in the world is considered legal in the United States. Therefore if Mexico considers you to be married then the US does too.
No, they are not legal residents of the US and cannot use US laws to change the status of their marriage.
The real question here is, did you register your divorce in Mexico with the US embassy or councilate? If you did then you may have just found yourself in a legal bind. If the marriage in Mexico was never registered in the US then you are probably in the clear. Check it out with a lawyer just to be on the safe side.
If you both have lived in Mexico, got married then you would immigrate to Canada as husband and wife and it is legal in Canada.
You need a copy of your marriage certificate from Mexico. That is your proof that you are married.
I'm not totally sure what exactly you're asking- it sounds like you're asking if the US recognizes a legal marriage from Mexico. If that's the case, then yes, the US does recognize legal marriages that happen in other countries- it actually happens all the time, people get married at resorts in Mexico, Jamaica, and elsewhere in the Caribbean, even occasionally on cruise ships! This of course requires that the marriage was properly registered with the relevant local authorities. So you cannot legally marry another person until the Mexican marriage's divorce proceedings have finished.