You have to begin his naturalization process so he can enter US soil again.
yes he can still get married
NO
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
No, in most countries it is illegal (a crime) to marry someone that is still legally married to another person.
The U.S. grants a married immigrant conditional permanent residence status for two years. At the time of the divorce if the two years has not past the spouse is deported after the divorce proceedings.
If you are already legally married and "got married" in another country you are committing bigamy, which is a crime. It can get you deported and even jailed. Also, your second "marriage" is invalid.
My being pregnant, as unlikely as that might be, has no bearing on your husband's citizenship. If you are a citizen and you married him he won't be deported until you kick him to the curb.
Yes. No matter which of the two countries you were married in, you are married until one of you dies or you get a judgment of divorce signed by a judge. You can still divorce your husband, even if he lives in a foreign country. You can still divorce your husband, even if you cannot find him. You cannot legally remarry until you obtain a divorce.
September 1919 on 31 December.
Yes, she married her husband Raymond Parks on December 18, 1932.
García was previously married, but has divorced. She married her second husband, Chris, on September 2009.