Hello, and thank you for any help with the following issue:
At our interview at the Chicago USCIS office for change of status for my wife (I'm US citizen), everything seemed fine except the officer told us our Georgia Marriage Certificate was not a legal document, just a "souvenir" and we needed to submit the "real" one within 30 days. (We're in Chicago because of move after filing I-485). But the probate court that issued the certificate told me that what I have is the only document to prove a marriage that they issue. The officer refuses to accept that claim, even though the probate court official sent an email verifying what I said. the (very unhelpful) USCIS officer refuses to call the court official and said it is up to us to get the document.
The county probate court suggested I go there and get another certificate signed by the judge, not the clerk, and get an apostille from the State of Georgia, which will state the document is authentic.
A. Has this happened to anyone else and what did you do?
B. Is the apostille likely to do the trick? (We don't really trust this USCIS officer)
C. If she rejects the next document again, what do we do next?
Any help would be greatly welcomed. We are really worried about this.
At our interview at the Chicago USCIS office for change of status for my wife (I'm US citizen), everything seemed fine except the officer told us our Georgia Marriage Certificate was not a legal document, just a "souvenir" and we needed to submit the "real" one within 30 days. (We're in Chicago because of move after filing I-485). But the probate court that issued the certificate told me that what I have is the only document to prove a marriage that they issue. The officer refuses to accept that claim, even though the probate court official sent an email verifying what I said. the (very unhelpful) USCIS officer refuses to call the court official and said it is up to us to get the document.
The county probate court suggested I go there and get another certificate signed by the judge, not the clerk, and get an apostille from the State of Georgia, which will state the document is authentic.
A. Has this happened to anyone else and what did you do?
B. Is the apostille likely to do the trick? (We don't really trust this USCIS officer)
C. If she rejects the next document again, what do we do next?
Any help would be greatly welcomed. We are really worried about this.
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