Hello,
May I-134 forms be filled out to sponsor people who are not related?
I am in a situation where I am trying to invite a person from Croatia to stay, at least for a while, with me during a 51-day vacation in the US. The person also intends to visit a couple other people in other cities, and has letters from those persons as well. This is a true vacation, and nothing more. Yet, this person keeps getting rejected, the first time because the consulate "could not understand why she'd stay with someone she hadn't met" (we have known each other through the internet and phone for two years, but never met in real life). The other two people, she has met but did not provide any concrete proof of that other than their letters.
This person has had a full-time job for over 2.5 years and makes about $900, after taxes, a month. Not bad at all. However, she is single and owns no property and is not quite 30 years old. She lives, as most Croatians do, at her parents' apartment. She has a bank account with $10,000 or so in it (the balance sheet was provided), but she has been denied twice now, the second time because of insufficient ties to Croatia.
We have more than enough resources to fully sponsor her, but there is no relation among us. I have seen very conflicting references to the use of I-134, and would like to know if filling out one of these would help, despite not being related to the person we'd like to sponsor/invite.
Also, I read on this site that "getting a letter from a senator/congressman will likely not help," but does that refer to an American citizen sponsor getting a U.S. congressman to write a letter vouching for the intending visitor, or those attempting to invite/sponsor her?
Thank you.
May I-134 forms be filled out to sponsor people who are not related?
I am in a situation where I am trying to invite a person from Croatia to stay, at least for a while, with me during a 51-day vacation in the US. The person also intends to visit a couple other people in other cities, and has letters from those persons as well. This is a true vacation, and nothing more. Yet, this person keeps getting rejected, the first time because the consulate "could not understand why she'd stay with someone she hadn't met" (we have known each other through the internet and phone for two years, but never met in real life). The other two people, she has met but did not provide any concrete proof of that other than their letters.
This person has had a full-time job for over 2.5 years and makes about $900, after taxes, a month. Not bad at all. However, she is single and owns no property and is not quite 30 years old. She lives, as most Croatians do, at her parents' apartment. She has a bank account with $10,000 or so in it (the balance sheet was provided), but she has been denied twice now, the second time because of insufficient ties to Croatia.
We have more than enough resources to fully sponsor her, but there is no relation among us. I have seen very conflicting references to the use of I-134, and would like to know if filling out one of these would help, despite not being related to the person we'd like to sponsor/invite.
Also, I read on this site that "getting a letter from a senator/congressman will likely not help," but does that refer to an American citizen sponsor getting a U.S. congressman to write a letter vouching for the intending visitor, or those attempting to invite/sponsor her?
Thank you.
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