I have an adjustment of status interview August 14, 2006. My wife works for the US-Navy for more than 2 years now. and is a US citizen. She is stationed all over the USA and right now is in San Diego, I live in Oregon (because she lives on base we can't live together, also the constant moving would be too hard on me). We have been married since 1997 and lived in my home country for 5 or so years, then decided to move to the USA. I have a military ID-card proving my relationship to her, along with all the usual paperwork.
The problem is, my wife is not able to appear at the interview, as she didn't get permission from her command. She is in some kind of training/school program which allows for little to no freedom, like bootcamp. Also she wouldn't be able to afford the trip. Neither of those reasons, according to the interview appointment I received, are valid reasons for rescheduling (valid ones are things like disease or death amongst close relatives and such). So I will appear as scheduled with all the documentation necessary, and then some. To me it seems it will be hard to mistake our marriage to be fraudulent, even though we live apart and she is unable to appear. I can imagine it may be to our advantage that she is in active military duty, that being the main reason for living apart and being unable to appear.
I do worry there may be a denial, is there reason for me to worry? Would it be wise to get an attorney to join me? I can't afford one, so how would that work out?
Thank you
The problem is, my wife is not able to appear at the interview, as she didn't get permission from her command. She is in some kind of training/school program which allows for little to no freedom, like bootcamp. Also she wouldn't be able to afford the trip. Neither of those reasons, according to the interview appointment I received, are valid reasons for rescheduling (valid ones are things like disease or death amongst close relatives and such). So I will appear as scheduled with all the documentation necessary, and then some. To me it seems it will be hard to mistake our marriage to be fraudulent, even though we live apart and she is unable to appear. I can imagine it may be to our advantage that she is in active military duty, that being the main reason for living apart and being unable to appear.
I do worry there may be a denial, is there reason for me to worry? Would it be wise to get an attorney to join me? I can't afford one, so how would that work out?
Thank you
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