I have a friend who arrived in the US as a parolee through her father back in 2003. She is getting married now and is wondering if her current status would jeopardize her ability to file for an I-485 after marriage. She has heard that the paroled status is a lot rarer nowadays.
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Originally posted by 485HelpMe View PostI have a friend who arrived in the US as a parolee through her father back in 2003. She is getting married now and is wondering if her current status would jeopardize her ability to file for an I-485 after marriage. She has heard that the paroled status is a lot rarer nowadays.
This is my personal opinion and is not to be construed as legal advice.
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Agreement?
Originally posted by newacct View PostIf she was paroled, she entered legally. If she is married to a US citizen now, she can do Adjustment of Status in the US.
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Originally posted by 485HelpMe View PostDoes everyone else agree and have nothing to add? She's only worried because she knows these visas are rarer today, and that the current administration is much stricter on Adjustment of Status.This is strictly an opinion and should not be misconstrued as legal advice. The use of this information is strictly at your own risk.
-Krypton9591
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Follow Up
Sorry to resurrect this thread. She says she visited a lawyer, who said that since her parole was in 2003 it is probably expired today (like I said earlier, some documents are kept from her by her parents), making her effectively illegal. The lawyer said that with his services (helping "clean up" her parole, coming with her to the meeting, etc, she'll have a 95% chance. Does the information the lawyer gave make sense? What other steps/precautions should she take because of this issue?
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Originally posted by 485HelpMe View PostSorry to resurrect this thread. She says she visited a lawyer, who said that since her parole was in 2003 it is probably expired today (like I said earlier, some documents are kept from her by her parents), making her effectively illegal. The lawyer said that with his services (helping "clean up" her parole, coming with her to the meeting, etc, she'll have a 95% chance. Does the information the lawyer gave make sense? What other steps/precautions should she take because of this issue?
So if she meets the two criteria above and can demonstrate that her marriage is bonafide, she will get her GC.Just an opinion; Not legal advice.
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Originally posted by 485HelpMe View PostSorry to resurrect this thread. She says she visited a lawyer, who said that since her parole was in 2003 it is probably expired today (like I said earlier, some documents are kept from her by her parents), making her effectively illegal. The lawyer said that with his services (helping "clean up" her parole, coming with her to the meeting, etc, she'll have a 95% chance. Does the information the lawyer gave make sense? What other steps/precautions should she take because of this issue?
This is my personal opinion and is not to be construed as legal advice.
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Originally posted by newacct View PostIt's not relevant. The parolee "status" on the I-94 probably expired a year after entry, but that doesn't matter. She is in the Immediate Relative category (spouse, parent, or unmarried under-21 child of US citizen) and being out of status doesn't matter for AOS in this category. All that matters is that she was admitted or paroled in her most recent entry. There is nothing to "clean up"; that sounds like a scam.This is strictly an opinion and should not be misconstrued as legal advice. The use of this information is strictly at your own risk.
-Krypton9591
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Did the terms, "clean up" actually was used. Was the lawyer's name Saul, have late night TV ads?
You friend should really just do a file request via FOIA in this case to understand what has happened herself directly. The request is free. The request would be to CBP and as long as the person knows when they entered the USA roughly (year/month) should be able to find the information.
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