hello, i am looking to marry my boyfriend but his work visa has expires and we were talk about marriage but he has to leave soon. if we get married at this stage will it help him or cause issuses for him
Its important to be in legal status while in US. Individuals who obtain a Green Card through marriage to a U.S. Citizen are granted "Conditional" Green Card status, which is only valid for two years. Individuals who have been granted Conditional Green Card Status are required to apply to remove the Conditions on their Green Card within 90 days of the date that their Conditional Permanent Resident status expires.After conditions are removed the applicant is issued a green card valid for 10 years.
No. Getting married doesn't give a green card. If the marriage is not a marriage for other than getting the green card it is illegal and against federal laws.
If the marriage was purely for the purpose of obtaining a Green card and if the USCIS comes to know of it, then the Green card will be revoked. The person will get to lose the legal permanent resident status.
Yes, if the marriage was made in bad faith.
If you both have your green card, then no immigration steps need to be taken.
no you just need your green card to go up there and they give you a licences in jamaica.
If one is an immigrant to the United States of America and is in need of a green card so that they may work legally, they need a green card lawyer. Green Card lawyers are found in green card law agencies.
He or she will not qualify to receive a green card by means of marriage.
A marriage license is all you need. You have all you need to stay in the US.
The only time a green card holder is forgiven for working illegally or owing taxes is if they obtain the green card through marriage to a US citizen.
You will get your green card if: 1. You applied it through employement, family or marriage
For a Green Card - 2010 The Sanctity of Marriage Part 1 1-1 was released on: USA: 24 December 2010
For a Green Card - 2010 The Sanctity of Marriage Part 2 1-2 was released on: USA: 24 December 2010