You can inquire as to whether the consulate in her home country where you are getting married will do Direct Consular Filing for you after you are married. If they agree n it is approved, then she will acquire LPR status right away and be able to come back to the US with you. If they won't do DCF for you, then you will have to come back alone and file for K-3 spousal visa for her.
No!
Stay away. We are sick and tired of supporting you outsiders.
No, A US Green Card holder can't marry a Filipino and bring them back to the US. The spouse will need to apply for a Visa to be admitted into the US.
They is back togerther as fiancee.
Yes you can.Yes you can.Yes you can.Yes you can.Yes you can.Yes you can.Yes you can.Yes you can.Yes you can.Yes you can.Yes you can.
You have to get a legitimate marriage license, go there and marry her in a legitimate ceremony (chronicle everything). As long as you have the financial means of support (you have to prove that via affidavit) and you are not a felon, then you come back and with or without (if you just read the different paperwork and use common sense you can do it by yourself) a lawyer's help file your spouse's paperwork as soon as each is ready so she can be here in no time.
There's nothing stopping you from marrying the person, although you will obviously have to leave Canada for the wedding since your betrothed cannot come to you. Also, you will not be allowed to bring your new spouse back into the country unless you win an appeal with the Immigration department to have him or her allowed back into the country.
If their Visa hasn't expired yet it is best for them to go back to their country. THEN you can apply for a K-1 fiancee visa and they can come back to get married within 3 months. Then you apply for a permanent resident and then citizenship. Trust me, it is A LOT EASIER is you don't break the law by letting the visa expire.
no
The UK reserves the right to bar any undesireable person from entering the country. This applies to criminals, racists, militants, and many others.
It depends on how long ago the person was deported and the reason that s/he was deported. Deportation in and of itself carries a five year bar and if the person was an overstay or illegal entry, s/he may also have the ten year bar to overcome. The fiancee would have to file for a waiver(s) of the bar(s). If the person was deported for commiting a crime, then it may be impossible to bring her/him back to the States.
I did it and my husband is not back yet, I believe you still have to do the exact same paper work as if you were only fiance the i-212 and the extreme hardship form, we also have a child together.