Hi there, I've been checking the site and others like this during our process of AOS and because I know how nerve-wracking this whole thing is I just thought I'd share our interview experience with ya'll.
We had our interview in Baltimore and even though our lawyer had warned us we might wait over an hour we didn't really wait for long (under 30 min). We were called in, told where to sit exactly (petitioner and beneficiary) and sworn in and then he informed us we'd be recorded by a webcam oddly positioned on one side of the officer's desk. I'm not sure if that thing was even on, I didn't really care for it.
The first set of questions where for my husband to answer (the US citizen). Here's what I remember:
- Wife's full name, place and date of birth.
- Have you met her parents + their names
- where do her parents live? (just the town name)
- What are their names? (he was basically going through the forms)
- What is your phone number? (I thought it odd that he'd ask for his own instead of mine and viceversa)
- Address where you live and since when have you lived there.
Questions for me (foreign national):
- husband's full name, place and date of birth.
- what are his parents names. have you met them? when?
- what is your phone number (again, he asked for mine not my husbands, which was odd)
- what are his brother's names?
- what is your husband's work assignment/program? (he's in the army and the form stated his MOS acronym - that's what he wanted)
Then he asked to know about our relationship and asked me where and when we met. I wasn't sure how much detail he wanted so I didn't elaborate on the whole embarrassing story of the night we met. He moved on to the next question, this one for my husband: where was the wedding and when. He told him the venue name and all he wanted to hear is that it was in Washington DC (because that's what he had on the forms). He also asked him about my trip back to Italy last summer, and he assumed he meant the reason why I went, but what the officer wanted was the exact dates. Not even I remembered that, but he was ok with him saying what month.
Then we gave him more paperwork about our joint bank account, some recent pay stubs, our new lease and joint insurance documents. We gave him the copies of everything and brought the originals with us too, but he didn't ask to see any. He seemed to be done with questions and my husband says he wouldn't have looked at the photo album if we hadn't offered (I had spent the weekend prior putting it together so I asked if he wanted to see it! haha). He hurriedly turned page after page until he saw one of the wedding with our friends, pointed to one person in the photo and asked me for her name. I told him, and he closed the album. That was it.
We were out of there in under 20 min. A week later we got a letter saying the case was approved.
So as you see it was very simplistic, clearly they didn't want any details. Our officer pretty much stuck to the forms. I had read horror stories about how they dig for intimate details or very specific things like bathroom wall colors or toothbrush colors. Nothing like that was asked of us. Just very general stuff. So if you're preparing for the interview, relax. My advice is just have all your paperwork ready and organized (I put post-in tabs on everything). Bring a set of copies to give the officer and the originals in case they want to look at them. That's all.
And good luck!
We had our interview in Baltimore and even though our lawyer had warned us we might wait over an hour we didn't really wait for long (under 30 min). We were called in, told where to sit exactly (petitioner and beneficiary) and sworn in and then he informed us we'd be recorded by a webcam oddly positioned on one side of the officer's desk. I'm not sure if that thing was even on, I didn't really care for it.
The first set of questions where for my husband to answer (the US citizen). Here's what I remember:
- Wife's full name, place and date of birth.
- Have you met her parents + their names
- where do her parents live? (just the town name)
- What are their names? (he was basically going through the forms)
- What is your phone number? (I thought it odd that he'd ask for his own instead of mine and viceversa)
- Address where you live and since when have you lived there.
Questions for me (foreign national):
- husband's full name, place and date of birth.
- what are his parents names. have you met them? when?
- what is your phone number (again, he asked for mine not my husbands, which was odd)
- what are his brother's names?
- what is your husband's work assignment/program? (he's in the army and the form stated his MOS acronym - that's what he wanted)
Then he asked to know about our relationship and asked me where and when we met. I wasn't sure how much detail he wanted so I didn't elaborate on the whole embarrassing story of the night we met. He moved on to the next question, this one for my husband: where was the wedding and when. He told him the venue name and all he wanted to hear is that it was in Washington DC (because that's what he had on the forms). He also asked him about my trip back to Italy last summer, and he assumed he meant the reason why I went, but what the officer wanted was the exact dates. Not even I remembered that, but he was ok with him saying what month.
Then we gave him more paperwork about our joint bank account, some recent pay stubs, our new lease and joint insurance documents. We gave him the copies of everything and brought the originals with us too, but he didn't ask to see any. He seemed to be done with questions and my husband says he wouldn't have looked at the photo album if we hadn't offered (I had spent the weekend prior putting it together so I asked if he wanted to see it! haha). He hurriedly turned page after page until he saw one of the wedding with our friends, pointed to one person in the photo and asked me for her name. I told him, and he closed the album. That was it.
We were out of there in under 20 min. A week later we got a letter saying the case was approved.
So as you see it was very simplistic, clearly they didn't want any details. Our officer pretty much stuck to the forms. I had read horror stories about how they dig for intimate details or very specific things like bathroom wall colors or toothbrush colors. Nothing like that was asked of us. Just very general stuff. So if you're preparing for the interview, relax. My advice is just have all your paperwork ready and organized (I put post-in tabs on everything). Bring a set of copies to give the officer and the originals in case they want to look at them. That's all.
And good luck!
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