Posts Tagged ‘Marriage’
» posted on Monday, February 15th, 2010 at 10:13 am by admin
U.S.-Canadian marriage costly for couple
Newlyweds Matt and Heather Lopresto knew that every marriage has its ups and downs; they didn’t know that living together would be so difficult.
Matt, originally from Corning and now living in Rochester, is a U.S. citizen. Heather, who met her husband in 2005 when both were students at the Elim Bible Institute in Lima, is from Hamilton, Ontario, and a Canadian citizen. They thought that once they were married, it would be simple for Heather to get her “green card” and live and work legally here with Matt until they have enough money to finish their degrees and start the family they both want.
For more than a year, they had traveled back and forth to Canada without incident until June 26 (the day before the wedding at the Royal Botanical Gardens in Burlington) when Matt told the Canadian border guards that marriage was the reason for his visit.
“I was turned away at the border,” Matt says. “I had to prove I had a means of departing and that I would return.” He hurried back to Rochester, got a letter from his boss indicating that he has a job, made a copy of his apartment lease, and purchased a return airplane ticket (even though he planned to drive home). He stayed in Canada as a visitor for several weeks before coming home to Rochester, but that’s when the couple realized living together would not be as simple as they hoped.
The U.S. and Canadian governments want to be certain that a marriage between citizens of their countries is legitimate, that the citizen spouse can support the non-citizen, and that the newcomer will not need public assistance, says Rochester lawyer Margaret Catillaz, an expert in immigration law.
Since Heather and Matt were married, both their passports have been flagged and when they visit, they are always detained for questioning. Even though she’s done nothing wrong, Heather said during a recent visit, she always feels as if she’s in trouble.
Matt and Heather just want to be together.
And money is the only thing standing in their way. It costs up to $2,000 to apply for legal resident status and complete the required procedures. And right now, neither Matt and Heather, nor their families, have the money. Heather is unemployed and Matt washes windows and cleans gutters. Rent, car payments, food — that’s all they can afford.
Read the full story on Democrat and Chronicle
post a comment | filed under Green Card News | tags: Canada, Canada – United States border, Canadian nationality law, Elim Bible Institute, Immigration, Law, Marriage, United States nationality law
» posted on Sunday, January 24th, 2010 at 4:32 pm by admin
Green Card Through Marriage
You do not have to use a lawyer to apply for a green card through marriage. Easygration offers you a better option!
Congratulations on getting married!
As part of this exciting time-of-life, you are probably also looking for an affordable, simple and quick option for filing your green card application.
Did you know that you do not have to use a lawyer to file the application? Many couples choose to complete the application process by themselves and avoid the huge fees that lawyers charge (which range from $1,000 to $5,000).
Easygration offers you an even better option than paying these fees or spending lots of time learning all the legal jargon and studying the different forms. Since we are not lawyers, but experts on green card through marriage, we do not charge hefty legal fees, and since we review every case and only take green card cases that do not require a lawyer, you can feel rest assured that you are in good hands.
We prepare the forms for you and you do the rest:
✓All required forms to successfully apply for a Green Card through marriage.
✓Forms for work authorization, so the alien spouse can work in the USA while waiting for the green card to be processed.
✓Forms for travel authorization (advance parole), so the alien spouse can travel outside the USA while waiting for the green card to be processed.
✓Detailed instructions on how to file the green card application.
Contact Easygration for your green card through marriage application.
Note: Easygration is not a law firm.
For more information:
http://www.easygration.com
Visit our website: Green Card Through Marriage.
one Comment | filed under Green Card News | tags: Add new tag, Green Card, Immigration, Law, Law firm, Lawyer, Marriage, United States, Website
» posted on Tuesday, January 19th, 2010 at 9:45 am by admin
Immigrants take vows to stay here
Federal agents used old-fashioned detective work to prove that a professional couple from Ghana was trying to dodge immigration laws when they dissolved their marriage and wed U.S. citizens.
According to court documents, immigration agents placed the couple’s Blacklick house under surveillance, interviewed their next-door neighbors and sorted through trash bags taken from their curbside refuse container.
The agents collected enough evidence to establish that Kwadwo Asante and Lilian Asante were living as husband and wife but had entered sham marriages with others in hopes of gaining permanent residency in the United States.
Both pleaded guilty and were sentenced yesterday to two years on probation. An immigration judge is expected to deport them.
The tactics used by agents in the case aren’t typical, said a Columbus immigration lawyer, but they illustrate the extremes to which officials will go to investigate the validity of marriages between citizen and noncitizens.
“The truth is, if the government suspects that a marriage isn’t bona fide, they’ll investigate mightily,” said Kenneth J. Robinson.
Federal law is clear: Any individual who “knowingly enters into a marriage for the purpose of evading any immigration law” faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
The notion that marriage to a citizen is a simple path to a green card visa granting permanent residency is a common misconception, said Dennis Muchnicki, a Dublin-based immigration lawyer. “People think the process is easy, but it’s no walk in the park,” he said.
The couple must file forms with immigration officials asking the government to formally recognize the relationship and grant the noncitizen permanent residency.
The process can take five to seven months, requires exhaustive documentation and includes an interview with an immigration official who separates the couple and asks personal questions, such as where they put their dirty clothes and which side of the bed each sleeps on.
The filing fees for a green card visa cost $1,365. Couples who hire a lawyer to assist them with the process can expect to pay an additional $1,000 to $2,000, Robinson said.
The process isn’t open to all noncitizens. Those who scramble across the border without passing through inspection checkpoints aren’t eligible to gain residency through marriage.
Those who enter the U.S. through customs with fraudulent documents can seek residency through marriage, but the bureaucratic hurdles are significant.
“The majority of those who gain residency benefits through marriage entered the country lawfully,” Robinson said.
Most often, they came to the United States with temporary work or student visas. That was the path taken by the Asantes. Lilian Asante came to attend law school at Ohio State University. Kwadwo Asante was attending Case Western Reserve University’s MBA program.
“When people come here legally from the proverbial Third World countries with a student visa and realize everything this country has to offer, a lot of them don’t want to go back,” said Daniel A. Brown, an assistant U.S. attorney in Columbus.
And some are willing to pay to find a fraudulent spouse, he said.
In December, 11 central Ohio residents were indicted for their involvement in sham marriages arranged for about $17,000 each. Federal prosecutors determined that none of the couples lived together after they were married.
Brown said sham-marriage prosecutions are rare in central Ohio, but he suspects that many escape the scrutiny of investigators.
When couples approach Robinson about helping them with the green card visa process, he puts them through the same kind of questioning they’ll get from an immigration official.
“For every 10 I take, I probably turn away two,” he said.
But he assumes that most find another lawyer willing to help them. “I don’t envy the government’s job.”
Source: The Columbus Dispatch
post a comment | filed under Green Card News | tags: Add new tag, Case Western Reserve University, Ghana, Immigration, Law, Marriage, Ohio State University, Third World, United States
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