Question:
What do you think about our adjustment of status interview?
honeebee86
2010-03-15 16:18:57 UTC
Immediently we were separated. I was "interviewed" first. The officer barely asked any real questions about our marriage. Instead he kept telling me stories of how I was going to end up alone if he approves us. How he sees it all the time and just kept pushing it. Then kept asking and telling me I could pull my application. He called my mom and asked her if she attended the wedding (she did) and then asked her opinion. My mom is in a bad relationship and her now husband is racist and controlling and has not supported my marriage at all. He takes his anger out on my mother if she doesnt agree with him. Also, just a little while ago she invited me to her wedding without telling me her husband was also inviting my ex. He did this because I asked to bring my husband and he wanted to create drama. So, my mom said she didnt support our marriage and thought I was being used. My mom has been around my husband a total of 3 times in the past year and has never had more than a 30 second conversation with him. After, he asked my husand a lot of terrorist type questions. He then brought me back, made my husband leave and told me more than likely he will deny us but we need to send in the medical examination again and our co-sponsors birth certificate. We had all this in the file. He said the medical examination was missing a piece in the sealed envelope he had even though we had it in ours. He also said he would sent someone to my moms house to get sworn statements. What do you think? We are worried sick. We had a lot of evidence but it seems as though he is basing it on one opinion of someone who I am not close to and have pretty much cut out of my life.
Four answers:
Immigration Guy
2010-03-15 18:06:41 UTC
Do you mind telling us what field office did your interview? Also, what country are you from?



Based on what you said he's looking for inconsistencies in your answers. Although he asked you two a series of different questions more than likely he threw in a lot of the same questions.



If he told you up front it's "probably a denial," then its probably a denial.



I wish you the best of luck and hope you will come back and update us on the status of your case.
Yak Rider
2010-03-15 16:32:25 UTC
The only thing that really matters is that you were both consistent in your answers. He was trying to shake you up mentally. If you had real reservations about the marriage you would have broken down and told him so. It's an interview technique.



On the other hand, he's right in this respect. The odds, not you and your husband personally, just the odds based on all couples is that you are being used. This is true whether your spouse is from the Philippines, Syria or Sri Lanka. He knows the statistics and that's why you got a hard time.



Visit this forum on a regular basis and count the number of men and women posting after 3 to 5 years of marriage who realized they were used and want to find a way to get the spouse deported. There's no shortage of them.



I wish you the best of luck. Hang tough and be consistent.
?
2017-01-17 09:38:19 UTC
right this is the worst ingredient that ought to happen: The Citizenship & Immigration service ought to deem your application to be deserted given which you probably did no longer look on the required interview. Failure to look can consequence in CIS putting you in removal complaints. If that occurs, your EAD is seen void. Your status would be "at-tremendous." you isn't waiting to resume your EAD as a results of fact there would be no foundation on which to assist your application. If the adjustment application is being denied, the applicant is entitled to a sparkling rationalization of the excuses why and to an probability to have the determination reviewed by applying the two an immigration choose (as a renewed application in removal complaints) or by applying the workplace of Administrative Appeals (by using certification of the determination if the alien isn't being placed in such complaints). Getting a lawyer could be clever. talking on your companion approximately her intentions would be even smarter. once you're fortunate, they might deliver your document to the shelf for 30 days and spot in case you talk with them.
she_said_911
2010-03-15 22:22:10 UTC
Unfortunately, this happens quite often.

It was also strange that your mother attended the interview also.



Regardless, rather than appeal, refiling the application may also work, since you have a chance of getting a different officer the next time around. (THIS TIME, DON'T BRING YOUR MOTHER)



Good luck!


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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