Green cards through marriage may face one problem

Are you married or Engaged …? This offer is well outlined on this page for you to make use of what ever you have in other to secure a proper and brighter Feature on the go. What More Benefits? A marriage green card allows the spouse of a U.S. citizen or green card holder to live and work anywhere in the United States. A green card holder will have “permanent resident” status until they decide — if they wish — to apply for U.S. citizenship, for which they become eligible after three years.

Green cards through marriage may face one problem
Green cards through marriage may face one problem

The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has revised one of its procedures for immigrants who got their green cards through marriage with U.S. citizens.

Green cards issued for those immigrants are normally conditional and are only valid for two years. 

After that, those seeking permanent residence must prove their marriage was not intended to break the immigration laws and therefore is not fraudulent.

This process, known as a petition to Remove Conditions on Permanent Residence Based on Marriage, requires Form I-751 and most likely an interview with a USCIS official to demonstrate eligibility to remove such conditions.

The interviews often make couples nervous because they are questioned, frequently separately, about intimate details of their lives in order to test the legitimacy of their marriages.

But a new policy memorandum issued by USCIS provides some guidelines that agency officials can use to decide whether to waive that interview requirement.

USCIS announced this week that adjudicators are now able to waive this important requirement if they are satisfied that:

▪​There is sufficient evidence about the authenticity of the marriage that proves it clearly was not entered into in order to evade immigration laws;

▪​There is no indication of fraud or misrepresentation in the Form I-751 or the supporting documentation;

▪​USCIS has already interviewed the main petitioner of Form I-751 (this is relevant for cases received after Dec. 10, 2018);

▪​There are no complex facts or issues that require an interview to clarify.

“When determining whether to waive an interview, the considerations listed above apply regardless of whether the Form I-751 is filed as a joint petition or as a waiver of the joint filing requirement,” the new guideline notes. “Cases involving fraud or national security concerns must be referred to the Fraud Detection and National Security Directorate according to local procedures.”