Quote:
Originally Posted by StandinStraight
So in its very first get tough on illegal immigrants action, Trump separates a mother from her family who has been living here peacefully for many years! She came to our country to escape persecution and to give her children a home and chance at life. Her crime that they deported her for was using a false social security number on a job application 10 years ago, to get a job at a store to feed her children! The big tough law and order administration deported her! I guess all of you conservative paranoid nutbags can sleep safely now. The closer America gets to being a all white society the happier you will all be, I hope you all are proud of yourselves!
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Well, she had 8 years and every opportunity to file for citizenship. Why didn't her husband do this?
A U.S. citizen who wishes to marry a non-U.S. citizen or
permanent resident can help their fiancé(e) obtain permanent
residence in different ways.
One way is to apply for a fiancé(e) visa if your fiancé(e) is
overseas and you want to marry in the United States. This visa
lets your fiancé(e) enter the United States for 90 days so that your
marriage ceremony can take place in the United States. Once you
marry, your spouse can apply for permanent residence and remain
in the United States while we process the application. If you choose
this method, file a Form I-129F, Petition for Alien Fiancé(e). Filing
instructions and forms are available on our Web site at
www.uscis.
gov. If we approve the I-129F, we will send it to the National Visa
Center, which will process and forward it to the U.S. Embassy or
consulate nearest your fiancé(e)’s foreign place of residence. The
embassy or consulate will then invite him or her to apply for the
actual fiancé(e) visa.
But no kept blowing it off and now time has run out.