After your Fiancee has been admitted to the U.S. and you have
married her within the 90-day time frame, you are eligible to
adjust his/her status to permanent
resident with your local USCIS office.
New: Applications I-485, I-765 and
I-131 should be mailed directly to the Chicago Lockbox:
U. S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
P.O. Box 805887
Chicago, IL 60680-4120 or
Effective Dates for the Following States:
December 1, 2004
Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida,
Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine,
Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nevada, New Hampshire,
New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania,
Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont,
Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming, as well as the District
of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands of the United
States.
April 1, 2005
Alaska, California, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Maryland, Missouri, Montana,
Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, Texas, and Washington.
A
lawful permanent resident is a foreign national who has been granted
the privilege of permanently living and working in the United States.
If you want to become a lawful permanent resident based on the fact
that you have a relative who is a citizen of the United States or
a relative who is a lawful permanent resident, you must go through
a multi-step process.
You and your now-spouse must file the following MAIN items with
the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services:
- Application for Alien Relative (I-130)
- Application to Register Permanent Residence (Form I-485)
- Biographical information (Form G-325)
- Medical Exam Sheet is not required, if your Spouse has had a medical
exam based in K-1 visa
- Two color photos taken within 30 days
- Evidence of inspection, admission or parole into the United States
(Form I-94, Arrival Departure Record)
- Affidavit of Support (Form I-864 with supporting documents)
- Authorization for employment (Form I-765)
- Travel Parole (Form I-131)
Travel permission that will allow her to depart and
re-enter the U.S.
Note: The important thing to remember about the travel document
is that the recipient cannot depart the U.S. until she receives the
actual approved document. She cannot apply for it, depart the U.S.,
have someone send it to her while she is still outside of the U.S.
and then return to the U.S.
In this situation, she would be denied re-entry to the U.S. and
would have to remain outside of the U.S. while her American spouse
filed for a spousal visa (K-3).
The first "Green Card" received will be a temporary card
that makes the Spouse a Conditional Permanent Resident of the United
States. She must file an application to remove the "Conditional" status
during a 90-day period prior to the two-year anniversary of the issuance
of the Conditional Green Card
Once she received her permanent resident "Green Card" (which
is valid for ten years), she must still apply for naturalization
if she wants to become a U.S. citizen.
She can do this:
- If she is
still married to the U.S. citizen who originally sponsored her for
her Fiancée visa, 3 years after the issuance date of her permanent
residency (Green Card);
- If she is not married to the U.S. citizen, who sponsored her Fiancée
visa, she can apply for naturalization in 5 years after the issuance
date of her permanent residency (Green Card)