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AnotherPerson
31st March 2008, 10:00 AM
Hi, I´m new to Immigration Portal, and I´m new to immigration in general. So, I have questions that are probably rather ignorant. Please forgive me for that--I want to learn. I am planning to find a good immigration lawyer when I return to the US in June, but I´d like to find out what I can in the mean time. Right now I´m doing service work outside the US. It would be nice to know more than nothing when I talk with a lawyer. I know that advice given on Immigration Portal is not legal advice, nor is it intended to be. It is appreciated when people who know more than I do are able to point me to resources that address my situation.

I am a US citizen because I was born here. I met my fiance, a Guatemalan immigrant, in the US. He is in the US now. He entered illegally about two years ago and has never had any kind of visa. My understanding from what I have read both here and elsewhere is he must leave and serve a ten-year-ban before he can apply to enter the US again. I´m not sure which documents he has and doesn't have, but his parents are working on getting him the Guatemalan equivalent of a birth certificate. The plan right now is for me to take it to him after I visit his parents in Guatemala this summer. He has enough documents with him in the US that he can cash his paychecks at the local bank, that much I know. I think that amounts to a Guatemalan driver's license.

Here are some of my questions. I know I will have others.

1. He walked across the Arizona border. I´m gathering it´s not legal for him to leave the same way he entered. Can he turn himself in to INS with a plane ticket in hand, and they´ll let him leave that way? Or does INS pick the method of departure? Would it make a difference if he turns himself in from the eastern-US state in which he lives, or if he travels to the border with Mexico and turns himself in there? Is he likely to be arrested and placed in jail when he turns himself in? If so, for how long, and would I be allowed to see him?
2. Will he have more problems if he waits until we have our wedding to leave than if he leaves ASAP? I´m not sure if he has enough forms of ID to get married legally in the US, but we can have a social wedding here so my family can participate, and then do the legal part in Guatemala... right?
3. Supposing he does turn out to have enough forms of ID to get married legally in the US, would INS require him to leave as soon as the marriage license is issued, or would we be allowed to have a wedding and honeymoon before leaving the US?
4. When does the ten year ban start? Does it start from the date he officially and legally leaves the US, or did it start when he entered? I´m guessing it´s the former since he can neither prove nor remember exactly which date he entered.
5. After the ten-year-ban, would he have additional requirements to gain legal entry to the US because he entered illegally before? Would that depend on the type of visa he applied for? Depending on what we learn and how much we do or don´t want to live in the US, we might decide we just want to visit my family in the US now and then after the ban finishes, and he´d be applying for short-term stays to the US.
6. Do any of you know of forums where people can ask questions, in English or Spanish, about immigration to Guatemala? I´d like to find out what my options there are as well.

TheRealCanadian
31st March 2008, 10:03 AM
He walked across the Arizona border. I´m gathering it´s not legal for him to leave the same way he entered.

While technically speaking it's probably not legal, it doesn't really matter from an immigration standpoint. I'd be very careful about turning myself in to ICE, and he should seek competent counsel before doing anything.

Will he have more problems if he waits until we have our wedding to leave than if he leaves ASAP?

No more problems, it just starts the 10-year clock that much later.

Does it start from the date he officially and legally leaves the US, or did it start when he entered? I´m guessing it´s the former since he can neither prove nor remember exactly which date he entered.

The date of departure.

After the ten-year-ban, would he have additional requirements to gain legal entry to the US because he entered illegally before?

It's unlikely he'd get a non-immigrant visa, both having stayed illegally and being married to you. There should be no difficulty getting an immigrant visa.

AnotherPerson
31st March 2008, 10:16 AM
While technically speaking it's probably not legal, it doesn't really matter from an immigration standpoint. I'd be very careful about turning myself in to ICE, and he should seek competent counsel before doing anything.

Absolutely, we're going to seek competent counsel as soon as I get back to the US. We wouldn't do anything just based on what someone told me on the internet. :p

Why do you say you would be very careful about turning yourself into ICE? I had this idea in my head that might be part of the process if he wants to be able to enter again legally at some point. I thought that might be how one proves when one left and started the ten year ban.

No more problems, it just starts the 10-year clock that much later.

Thank you.

The date of departure.

As I suspected. Thank you.

It's unlikely he'd get a non-immigrant visa, both having stayed illegally and being married to you. There should be no difficulty getting an immigrant visa.

Clarifying question: He wouldn't be likely to get a non-immigrant visa because they'd figure he'd overstay it since he stayed before when he wasn't allowed, and I'm likely to want to stay, and he'd stay with me?

For people in his/our shoes, roughly how many years and how many dollars does it take to get an immigrant visa to the US? I've heard it can take ten years (after the ten year ban) and tens of thousands of dollars, not to mention the frustrations and other emotional toll. I'm trying to get an approximate idea of what it takes so we can decide together if it is worth it. Not that we have to decide now... we have over ten years to figure that one out. But I know my family will want to know how long it might be before I can live with him in the US.

Thank you so much for your help!

cherr1980
31st March 2008, 12:45 PM
When you marry him, you will have to apply for a "extreme hardship" waiver or form I-601 and that has to be approved. He anyway will have to go back to Guatemala.

I have no recollection about "ten of thousands of dollars" because there is no form that cost that much. What it costs if you hired such expensive lawyers and very expensive ones. I would recommend a lawyer for the waiver issues, once that is approved (if it's approved) the rest of the paperwork is very self explanatory.

Good luck,

boatbod
31st March 2008, 02:38 PM
There are two ways to approach the ban problem:-
i. He leaves the US, serves out his reentry ban and during that time gets married to you. Once the ban is complete, you sponsor him for his GC via either K-3 visa or CP (consular processing).

ii. You get married immediately, and try to go the hardship waiver route. If successful, this might allow him to return to the US sooner.

I wouldn't think you'd need a lawyer for option (i), except maybe during the phase where he is getting ready to turn himself in / voluntarily depart the country. Not sure about option (ii) - my understanding is you need some pretty convincing evidence to be granted the waiver.

trialanderror83
31st March 2008, 04:41 PM
Hi, I´m new to Immigration Portal, and I´m new to immigration in general. So, I have questions that are probably rather ignorant. Please forgive me for that--I want to learn. I am planning to find a good immigration lawyer when I return to the US in June, but I´d like to find out what I can in the mean time. Right now I´m doing service work outside the US. It would be nice to know more than nothing when I talk with a lawyer. I know that advice given on Immigration Portal is not legal advice, nor is it intended to be. It is appreciated when people who know more than I do are able to point me to resources that address my situation.

Option 3, the best one....
I am a US citizen because I was born here. I met my fiance, a Guatemalan immigrant, in the US. He is in the US now. He entered illegally about two years ago and has never had any kind of visa. My understanding from what I have read both here and elsewhere is he must leave and serve a ten-year-ban before he can apply to enter the US again. I´m not sure which documents he has and doesn't have, but his parents are working on getting him the Guatemalan equivalent of a birth certificate. The plan right now is for me to take it to him after I visit his parents in Guatemala this summer. He has enough documents with him in the US that he can cash his paychecks at the local bank, that much I know. I think that amounts to a Guatemalan driver's license.

Here are some of my questions. I know I will have others.

1. He walked across the Arizona border. I´m gathering it´s not legal for him to leave the same way he entered. Can he turn himself in to INS with a plane ticket in hand, and they´ll let him leave that way? Or does INS pick the method of departure? Would it make a difference if he turns himself in from the eastern-US state in which he lives, or if he travels to the border with Mexico and turns himself in there? Is he likely to be arrested and placed in jail when he turns himself in? If so, for how long, and would I be allowed to see him?
2. Will he have more problems if he waits until we have our wedding to leave than if he leaves ASAP? I´m not sure if he has enough forms of ID to get married legally in the US, but we can have a social wedding here so my family can participate, and then do the legal part in Guatemala... right?
3. Supposing he does turn out to have enough forms of ID to get married legally in the US, would INS require him to leave as soon as the marriage license is issued, or would we be allowed to have a wedding and honeymoon before leaving the US?
4. When does the ten year ban start? Does it start from the date he officially and legally leaves the US, or did it start when he entered? I´m guessing it´s the former since he can neither prove nor remember exactly which date he entered.
5. After the ten-year-ban, would he have additional requirements to gain legal entry to the US because he entered illegally before? Would that depend on the type of visa he applied for? Depending on what we learn and how much we do or don´t want to live in the US, we might decide we just want to visit my family in the US now and then after the ban finishes, and he´d be applying for short-term stays to the US.
6. Do any of you know of forums where people can ask questions, in English or Spanish, about immigration to Guatemala? I´d like to find out what my options there are as well.

Option 3, the best one.......
He doesn't have to turn himself in to INS to go back home, buy a plane ticket and leave.Does he have a DL from the US? Has he ever worked here? If he entered illegally across the border then INS doesn't know he is here unless of DL, or work here with SS#. Send him back to his country, apply for a K visa, when he arrives then apply for his AOS. Keep your mouth shut about him ever being here, remember if INS doesn't know he was here then NO ten year ban! Get married in his country, or wait for the K visa to be approved then marry here. However you will have to explain how you two meet if it wasn't here in the US....... I guess you could say the Internet...

trialanderror83
31st March 2008, 05:47 PM
Why doesn't he just go home and come back legally? I don't know if he can do that, since I'm no expert, but one thing I do know is that the US doesn't care who leaves the country, they care who comes in and how.

Exactly.........As I mentioned above INS doesn't know he is here if he walked across the border, unless he got arrested while here of course. If he has a DL then they might know, and illegal immigrants don't get SS# so he should be fine there. Leave on a plane, apply for K visa, then come back and get married. This will solve all the problems. This is not legal advice, it's probley the best you will get though. And to those on here who post IRA status, please don't this lady is looking for a way around this issue..I AM NOT A LAWYER, WHAT SHE DOES IS UP TO HER!

TheRealCanadian
31st March 2008, 05:54 PM
And to those on here who post IRA status, please don't this lady is looking for a way around this issue..

I sympathize with her situation, and that's certainly an option. But you need to realize that you are advising someone to commit a felony.

MOM1211
31st March 2008, 05:56 PM
I don't know if it's legal what I said above.. so I removed it... even though a lot of people have done it, but generally in my experience the USA WANT'S you to leave. People leave all the time, and if he's here illegally, you wouldn't think they care as long as he leaves. Coming back and doing things legally is a whole other issue you'd need to figure out.

trialanderror83
31st March 2008, 06:45 PM
I sympathize with her situation, and that's certainly an option. But you need to realize that you are advising someone to commit a felony.

As I said in my post, THIS IS NOT LEGAL ADVICE. I am not asking her to commit a felony, what this women does is her choice. Hey boyfriend has already commited a felony by entering illegally and overstaying. We all know he entered illegally, so any advice would make us all responsible then.

trialanderror83
31st March 2008, 06:45 PM
I don't know if it's legal what I said above.. so I removed it... even though a lot of people have done it, but generally in my experience the USA WANT'S you to leave. People leave all the time, and if he's here illegally, you wouldn't think they care as long as he leaves. Coming back and doing things legally is a whole other issue you'd need to figure out.

You didn't do anthing wrong.

PraetorianXI
31st March 2008, 07:08 PM
Opening the thread to "trickery and felony" is not a good "comment" (since you do not want it to be called advice...).

He has been here... he is not exempt from the bar. It is what it is... if discovered, that he was actually here and is trying to conceal that fact, then he will be banned for life form the USA.

I am in no position to provide legal advice, but I can see a poor "comment" when I see it and mentioning someone the possibility to lie and deceive the "system" is a bad choice. It seems you like making those, often.

TheRealCanadian
31st March 2008, 07:22 PM
As I said in my post, THIS IS NOT LEGAL ADVICE.

Whether it's legal advice or not is irrelevant. (Although if you were claiming to offer legal advice and you are not a member of the bar, it's probably a misdemeanor.) Suggesting that someone deliberately seek an immigration benefit they know they are not entitled to is against the law, whether you describe it as legal advice or not.

Hey boyfriend has already commited a felony by entering illegally and overstaying.

If memory serves correctly, the entry is not a felony. The overstay certainly isn't.

We all know he entered illegally, so any advice would make us all responsible then.

There's a difference; I've not suggested that she do anything against the law. You have. You wonder why the country is so anti-immigrant? It's because of so many people skirting the law and aiding those that do.

GotPR?
31st March 2008, 08:09 PM
As I said in my post, THIS IS NOT LEGAL ADVICE. .
Legal advice means advice is based on the law which is more lilkely to be paid for and nothing on this board is legal advice unless you are an attorney.
Regardless of that, you are advising to do the illegal act.

This is the board run by an immigration attorney who respects the law and does everything within the boundary of law.
Stop the post which encourages the unlawful act.

AnotherPerson
31st March 2008, 09:54 PM
When you marry him, you will have to apply for a "extreme hardship" waiver or form I-601 and that has to be approved. He anyway will have to go back to Guatemala.

I have no recollection about "ten of thousands of dollars" because there is no form that cost that much. What it costs if you hired such expensive lawyers and very expensive ones. I would recommend a lawyer for the waiver issues, once that is approved (if it's approved) the rest of the paperwork is very self explanatory.

Good luck,

Hi Cherr, thank you for responding to this thread. I'm a little bit confused by your first paragraph--are you saying I will need to apply for an extreme hardship waiver before the ten-year-ban? Or is that the first form in the process after the ban?

I know there is no form that costs tens of thousands of dollars. I have heard that the total cost of everything might total that much, but that may be for very complicated situations or entire families.

There are two ways to approach the ban problem:-
i. He leaves the US, serves out his reentry ban and during that time gets married to you. Once the ban is complete, you sponsor him for his GC via either K-3 visa or CP (consular processing).

ii. You get married immediately, and try to go the hardship waiver route. If successful, this might allow him to return to the US sooner.

I wouldn't think you'd need a lawyer for option (i), except maybe during the phase where he is getting ready to turn himself in / voluntarily depart the country. Not sure about option (ii) - my understanding is you need some pretty convincing evidence to be granted the waiver.

Hi boatbod, thank you for your well-organized comments. :D What would constitute an extreme hardship? My career in the US is at a stage where it's very difficult to take it to another country. (I'm taking a break from my career for a few months, which is how I ended up doing service work outside the US.) Now, that's not to say there aren't plenty of opportunities for me in Guatemala... but it's not precisely what I've been doing.

With the extreme hardship waiver, is there a possibility of shortening the ten-year-ban?

Option 3, the best one.......
He doesn't have to turn himself in to INS to go back home, buy a plane ticket and leave.Does he have a DL from the US? Has he ever worked here? If he entered illegally across the border then INS doesn't know he is here unless of DL, or work here with SS#. Send him back to his country, apply for a K visa, when he arrives then apply for his AOS. Keep your mouth shut about him ever being here, remember if INS doesn't know he was here then NO ten year ban! Get married in his country, or wait for the K visa to be approved then marry here. However you will have to explain how you two meet if it wasn't here in the US....... I guess you could say the Internet...

Hi trialanderror. I'm drawing a blank on "DL." I'm pretty sure "down low" and "disabled list" don't apply in this situation.

I am not interested in lying to INS/ICE. If I wanted to live in secrecy, I could do that by getting married socially in the US and pretending to the US government I'm still single. And hoping he never gets deported or needs any number of the things I would certainly hope my husband would have access to. I disagree with many of INS/ICE’s policies and laws for a multitude of reasons, and I do not blame anyone who chooses not to obey them... but for me, the freedom to live my life out in the open is priceless. And there’s nothing so inherently wonderful to me about living in the US, as I discover every time I leave it. I don’t mind terribly learning that I will probably have to leave the US to live out in the open with the man I love.

Exactly.........As I mentioned above INS doesn't know he is here if he walked across the border, unless he got arrested while here of course. If he has a DL then they might know, and illegal immigrants don't get SS# so he should be fine there. Leave on a plane, apply for K visa, then come back and get married. This will solve all the problems. This is not legal advice, it's probley the best you will get though. And to those on here who post IRA status, please don't this lady is looking for a way around this issue..

I am not looking for a way around anything. I believe he might have a Taxpayer Identification Number with the IRS, and in any case he has used his real name in all his endeavors here in the US. It also would take one phone call to my parents to find out the truth. Even if I were on board with lying, they aren’t. It is soooo not worth it to me to try to lie our way out of this one.

I sympathize with her situation, and that's certainly an option. But you need to realize that you are advising someone to commit a felony.

No felonies for me. So far I only have a speeding ticket, and I’d like to keep it that way.

I don't know if it's legal what I said above.. so I removed it... even though a lot of people have done it, but generally in my experience the USA WANT'S you to leave. People leave all the time, and if he's here illegally, you wouldn't think they care as long as he leaves. Coming back and doing things legally is a whole other issue you'd need to figure out.

I wonder about this, too--if INS/ICE wants people who are here outside of the law to leave, wouldn’t they make it as easy and simple as possible to leave? Crack down on people when they’re coming in, not when they’re going out. However, my knowledge is limited, so perhaps someone with more experience could shed some light on this.

Opening the thread to "trickery and felony" is not a good "comment" (since you do not want it to be called advice...).

He has been here... he is not exempt from the bar. It is what it is... if discovered, that he was actually here and is trying to conceal that fact, then he will be banned for life form the USA.

I am in no position to provide legal advice, but I can see a poor "comment" when I see it and mentioning someone the possibility to lie and deceive the "system" is a bad choice. It seems you like making those, often.

I’m definitely don’t want him be banned for life from the US. Although right now it’s not a big deal to me to move indefinitely outside the US, I could change my mind someday. And, in the event US immigration laws change, it would be better not to have a “banned for life” under his name, since that part might not get changed.

Whether it's legal advice or not is irrelevant. (Although if you were claiming to offer legal advice and you are not a member of the bar, it's probably a misdemeanor.) Suggesting that someone deliberately seek an immigration benefit they know they are not entitled to is against the law, whether you describe it as legal advice or not.

Yeah, I’m not interested in going against the law here. Not on something that affects my entire life and isn’t, like, a requirement of my religion or something.

If memory serves correctly, the entry is not a felony. The overstay certainly isn't.

I’ve heard it’s a minor misdemeanor, both entry and staying.

There's a difference; I've not suggested that she do anything against the law. You have. You wonder why the country is so anti-immigrant? It's because of so many people skirting the law and aiding those that do.

I’m not touching that one. :p

austriacus
1st April 2008, 02:03 AM
I think it may just be ok if he leaves through a border post back to Guatemala. If he turns himself in he'll likely be put in removal proceedings, with the final outcome that USCIS wants to remove him anyway. (But look into "voluntary departure" which can be granted during removal proceedings and I remember reading somewhere it might not make someone subject to the 10-year ban ... but don't hold me to this.)

If he leaves, I guess he should think about what proof of departure he might be able to get. A passport stamp that he exited? (I don't think I ever got one of those.) Certainly, a passport stamp that he entered Guatemala or anywhere outside the US and he can probably prove that he's living there with records he accumulates when he lives there again. Perhaps an airline ticket could also be good proof of travel.

If he were to take a plane back to Guatemala, Customs and Border Protection (CBP) would know of his departure about 15 minutes before take-off of his airplane from the electronically transmitted Passenger Manifest.

trialanderror83
1st April 2008, 05:13 AM
Whether it's legal advice or not is irrelevant. (Although if you were claiming to offer legal advice and you are not a member of the bar, it's probably a misdemeanor.) Suggesting that someone deliberately seek an immigration benefit they know they are not entitled to is against the law, whether you describe it as legal advice or not.



If memory serves correctly, the entry is not a felony. The overstay certainly isn't.



There's a difference; I've not suggested that she do anything against the law. You have. You wonder why the country is so anti-immigrant? It's because of so many people skirting the law and aiding those that do.


Of course the "Famous Three" respond again, are you three related? You wanna talk about law, TheRealCanadian you know he is here in the US illegally, it is your obligation to turn him in just by knowing that.

She simply asked for a way around the situation, I gave it to her period! What she does is on her. You also mention this is a immigration attorney's board right? Do you think everyone he represents entered properly? I bet he deals with lots of overstays, and illegal entry. Sorry I don't just post IRA laws.

AnotherPerson
1st April 2008, 09:44 AM
I think it may just be ok if he leaves through a border post back to Guatemala. If he turns himself in he'll likely be put in removal proceedings, with the final outcome that USCIS wants to remove him anyway. (But look into "voluntary departure" which can be granted during removal proceedings and I remember reading somewhere it might not make someone subject to the 10-year ban ... but don't hold me to this.)

If he leaves, I guess he should think about what proof of departure he might be able to get. A passport stamp that he exited? (I don't think I ever got one of those.) Certainly, a passport stamp that he entered Guatemala or anywhere outside the US and he can probably prove that he's living there with records he accumulates when he lives there again. Perhaps an airline ticket could also be good proof of travel.

If he were to take a plane back to Guatemala, Customs and Border Protection (CBP) would know of his departure about 15 minutes before take-off of his airplane from the electronically transmitted Passenger Manifest.

Yes, I was wondering how he would prove when he left the US if going to INS/ICE to say, "Hey, I'm leaving, catch you in ten years," is not a good idea. It would be nice to have proof in addition to a stack of bills and paychecks from the past ten years in Guatemala, that's for sure.

I'm not entirely sure if he has a Guatemalan passport. Is it possible to get an entry/exit stamp on something else?

If he left via commercial airplane, and CBP noticed his name on the manifest fifteen minutes before departure, would they be inclined to take him off the plane to arrest him, etc?

Would a marriage license or its equivalent with a date within days of our arrival in Guatemala help toward proving when he left the US?

Of course the "Famous Three" respond again, are you three related? You wanna talk about law, TheRealCanadian you know he is here in the US illegally, it is your obligation to turn him in just by knowing that.

I'm curious how you think anyone on these boards has enough specific information about my fiance to be able to turn him in. Let's see... he's Guatemalan, lives somewhere in the eastern US, is engaged to a US citizen who's presently out of the country, and is employed. Yeah, INS/ICE is really going to be able to do a whole lot with that one.

I also was not aware anyone was a mandatory reporter for undocumented immigration, you know, like teachers and daycare workers in the US are mandatory reporters of suspected child abuse.

She simply asked for a way around the situation, I gave it to her period! What she does is on her.

It appears you did not read my previous post. I do not want a way around the situation. I want a legal way through the situation.

MOM1211
1st April 2008, 10:41 AM
They don't care who leaves the country is the thing here. He could simply leave. If you are worried about him proving when he left the US then why not turn himself in? Either way they'll find out because you're telling them.

No, he wont have proof he left. They don't stamp things when you come home. I had a friend actually who went back to el Salvador, who was illegal I found out after he left, and he just simply left. The us doesn't care who leaves. Nobody will pull him off the plane, especially if he's exiting the US because they WANT him to leave if he's illegal. I'd say your biggest issues are that he's worked illegally, (you said he deposited his paychecks) stayed illegally and if he goes through the ban, I wouldn't expect an easy time of him coming back to the US in 10 years. A lot can happen in 10 years you don't plan for. That's something I've learned through experience. So rather than worrying about 10 years from now, I'd say you need to simply talk to a lawyer at this point.

GotPR?
1st April 2008, 11:02 AM
In case he'd like to come back, try I-601. The chance to get I-601 approved is known to be very narrow, but that is only legal way which MAY work for reentry.
if I-601 gets approved, 10 year bar will be lifted and he can get visa.

http://www.uscis.gov/portal/site/uscis/menuitem.5af9bb95919f35e66f614176543f6d1a/?vgnextoid=bb515f56ff55d010VgnVCM10000048f3d6a1RCR D&vgnextchannel=db029c7755cb9010VgnVCM10000045f3d6a1 RCRD

boatbod
1st April 2008, 04:15 PM
Hi boatbod, thank you for your well-organized comments. :D What would constitute an extreme hardship? My career in the US is at a stage where it's very difficult to take it to another country. (I'm taking a break from my career for a few months, which is how I ended up doing service work outside the US.) Now, that's not to say there aren't plenty of opportunities for me in Guatemala... but it's not precisely what I've been doing.

I'm not an expert on the hardship waiver, but my understanding is you need to prove that your (future) husband's absence would be an extreme hardship to you.

It has to be something more substantial than the two of you being forced to live apart/outside the US, and since it sounds like you have a career, I anticipate that might be difficult to adequately prove. The typical sort of case is one in which the major breadwinner faces deportation or an entry ban, yet they have family/kids to support back in the US.

With the extreme hardship waiver, is there a possibility of shortening the ten-year-ban?

Yes, that is its purpose.

Al Southner
1st April 2008, 11:25 PM
Whether it's legal advice or not is irrelevant. (Although if you were claiming to offer legal advice and you are not a member of the bar, it's probably a misdemeanor.) Suggesting that someone deliberately seek an immigration benefit they know they are not entitled to is against the law, whether you describe it as legal advice or not.



If memory serves correctly, the entry is not a felony. The overstay certainly isn't.



There's a difference; I've not suggested that she do anything against the law. You have. You wonder why the country is so anti-immigrant? It's because of so many people skirting the law and aiding those that do.



RC,

Her fiance committed an illegal act which we all agree. Not a criminal act in the true sense of violent crime, but a civil offense against the people of the United States. He should attempt to walk out of the US and see if he succeed before Praet picks him up with the CBP...:D

Jackolantern
3rd April 2008, 02:10 AM
Simplest solution: Return to the US, get married, file I-130 and adjustment of status, he should not leave the US until his green card is approved.

PraetorianXI
3rd April 2008, 05:43 AM
Simplest solution: Return to the US, get married, file I-130 and adjustment of status, he should not leave the US until his green card is approved.

he is in the us, entered without a visa. read the whole thing.

cherr1980
3rd April 2008, 05:49 AM
There is no simple solution when you enter without inspection regardless if you marry a US citizen.

For more information about the waiver go to uscis.gov or go for a consultation with a lawyer that in their profile shows about that kind of cases.

Jackolantern
3rd April 2008, 10:06 AM
he is in the us, entered without a visa. read the whole thing.The OP is currently outside the US. I was referring to the OP returning to the US to get married to him.

PraetorianXI
3rd April 2008, 10:09 AM
I got the solution!

Get LargoLargo's (http://immigrationportal.com/showthread.php?t=276980) lawyer... he/she can make magic and miracles happen... :eek:

cherr1980
3rd April 2008, 10:12 AM
To the OP, when he entered to the US? Before 2000?

AnotherPerson
4th April 2008, 10:30 AM
They don't care who leaves the country is the thing here. He could simply leave. If you are worried about him proving when he left the US then why not turn himself in? Either way they'll find out because you're telling them.

How long do removal proceedings take? And is it something for which he and/or I would have to pay money? I imagine there could be lawyer fees if he is entitled to representation, and also court costs which at least in other courts are assessed to the guilty party. I don't like the idea of removal proceedings, but since I know my family would ask about that, it'd be nice to have some idea of the "How long?" and "How much?"

I thought it might be important to be able to prove when he left so he could have some basis in the future for saying he served a 10-year ban and would like to come back in.

I'd say your biggest issues are that he's worked illegally, (you said he deposited his paychecks) stayed illegally and if he goes through the ban, I wouldn't expect an easy time of him coming back to the US in 10 years. A lot can happen in 10 years you don't plan for. That's something I've learned through experience. So rather than worrying about 10 years from now, I'd say you need to simply talk to a lawyer at this point.

Yeah, coming to the US to work was kind of the point of him being here...

What did you mean by "if he goes through the ban"? Did you mean entering the US again before the 10-year ban is up? Or did you mean waiting out the ban outside the US and then trying to gain legal status?

In case he'd like to come back, try I-601. The chance to get I-601 approved is known to be very narrow, but that is only legal way which MAY work for reentry.
if I-601 gets approved, 10 year bar will be lifted and he can get visa.

http://www.uscis.gov/portal/site/uscis/menuitem.5af9bb95919f35e66f614176543f6d1a/?vgnextoid=bb515f56ff55d010VgnVCM10000048f3d6a1RCR D&vgnextchannel=db029c7755cb9010VgnVCM10000045f3d6a1 RCRD

Hmmm... and if that doesn't work, would he be subject to removal proceedings?

I'm not an expert on the hardship waiver, but my understanding is you need to prove that your (future) husband's absence would be an extreme hardship to you.

It has to be something more substantial than the two of you being forced to live apart/outside the US, and since it sounds like you have a career, I anticipate that might be difficult to adequately prove. The typical sort of case is one in which the major breadwinner faces deportation or an entry ban, yet they have family/kids to support back in the US.

Ahh, gotcha. He has no family or kids to support in the US (and if I find out he does, he'd be in pretty hot water!).

He should attempt to walk out of the US and see if he succeed before Praet picks him up with the CBP...:D

Who the what the? On second thought, maybe I don't want to know what that means.

Simplest solution: Return to the US, get married, file I-130 and adjustment of status, he should not leave the US until his green card is approved.

From what I'm hearing, he could only adjust status if he had a visa at some point, which he never did.

The OP is currently outside the US. I was referring to the OP returning to the US to get married to him.

Yeah... at this point I'm thinking it makes the most sense to have a social ceremony in the US and then do the legal end of things after arriving in Guatemala.

There is no simple solution when you enter without inspection regardless if you marry a US citizen.

For more information about the waiver go to uscis.gov or go for a consultation with a lawyer that in their profile shows about that kind of cases.

Thank you. I will check it out.

To the OP, when he entered to the US? Before 2000?

He entered in January 2006.

AnotherPerson
4th April 2008, 10:40 AM
Oh, for what little difference it makes, I found out yesterday that when I visit his family this summer, I will take the following documents back to the US for him:

* A current Guatemalan passport
* A Guatemalan birth certificate
* A current Guatemalan driver's license. He has one now with him in the US but it is about to expire.

Jackolantern
4th April 2008, 11:49 AM
From what I'm hearing, he could only adjust status if he had a visa at some point, which he never did.People have adjusted without having a visa before. There are ways to do it that may be available if he marries a US citizen (you). Consult a lawyer to find out.

MOM1211
4th April 2008, 02:36 PM
What I meant is, that they will already have him on record as doing these illegal things like working illegally, entering illegally, and then being banned because of it, so it won't be easy for him to come back in the future I'd think.

AnotherPerson
5th April 2008, 08:53 AM
New question: If he owes taxes to the IRS, does that have to come from garnishing wages in the US, or if he comes up with the money some other way, can he just send them a check? Would this cause problems at the border in the event we try to leave, even if he is paid up? I know when I owe more taxes than were taken out of my paycheck, I send the IRS a check and it's done. But, he tells me he doesn't have the money the IRS wants--apparently it's more than what was deducted from each paycheck as he's gone along--because he sent it to his family in Guatemala to pay for their needs.

I found out last night he's in trouble because he lacks the proper identification documents and because he didn't do certain paperwork.

He seems to be digging himself a hole in terms of ever being able to re-enter the US legally. I can't imagine that being in trouble with the IRS while here illegally will look good in the event he tries to come back in a legal way.

Yes, I'm so frustrated I could... I don't know... do something to vent my energies that hopefully causes no lasting damage.

Triple Citizen
5th April 2008, 08:56 AM
He should be able to send them a cheque. IRS will gladly accept it.

If he owes taxes to the IRS, does that have to come from garnishing wages in the US, or if he comes up with the money some other way, can he just send them a check?

AnotherPerson
5th April 2008, 09:21 AM
He should be able to send them a cheque. IRS will gladly accept it.

OK. I wasn't sure if the rules were different for the undocumented. It would have been so screwy if the IRS would require him to stay until he'd paid everything he owes through paycheck deductions, while INS/ICE wants him to leave ASAP since he's not here legally. If that had happened, it would be the true Catch-22.

Now it's a matter of figuring out how much he owes, how long it would take to pay off with paycheck deductions, and if it would be better to come up with the money some other way.

Would this put a black mark on his name when we try to leave? How about if he applies for legal immigration at some point in the future?

AnotherPerson
5th April 2008, 10:10 AM
He just told me something that might shed light on why he'd owe more taxes. Apparently the wrong number of dependents was on the tax forms that the company used throughout the year to determine how much to deduct from each paycheck. If the number of dependents claimed was higher than 1 (himself), then I could certainly see them not docking enough throughout the year and then later realizing he has to make it up.

I am not sure whether he, the company, or both would have been responsible for putting the wrong number of dependents on the forms. I suppose it might not matter.

Maybe it has less to do with how many forms of identification he has and more with the specific amount the IRS says he owes. That would be believable, as well.

AnotherPerson
11th April 2008, 10:02 PM
Hmm... another related question: I have heard many private lawyers offer a free half-hour initial consultation. Is this generally the case among immigration lawyers as well?

Triple Citizen
12th April 2008, 03:30 AM
Some immigration attorneys do indeed do pro-bono work.

Is this generally the case among immigration lawyers as well?