Legal Question in Immigration Law in Michigan
2nd International marriage -- new problems
I am a US citizen. I married a Japanese woman in Hawaii and applied for her greedcard(temp) in Nov03, which she received and she started working in Hawaii. In Aug01 we moved to Japan; she had not lived in the USA for the mandatory 1-year and her greencard expired
We split up in Dec02; she stayed in Japan and I moved to the USA. In Jan04 we officially divorced in both Japan and the USA.
Now I am in love with a Taiwanese woman, and we want to get married this year. She has been living (and working) in Michigan for the past 5 years. She applied for her greedcard a few years ago, but supposedly it will take another 5-10 years.
Her lawyer told us that I cannot get her a greencard when we get married, because there is a law that prevents a US citizen from ''giving'' a greedcard to another immigrant through marriage within 5 years of divorcing his former international wife.
Is there ANYTHING that I can do to make her a permanent resident? She is here only because of her work visa, and she said that if she switches companies, the greedcard process will completely restart. Would having a child help?
3 Answers from Attorneys
Re: 2nd International marriage -- new problems
Having a child will not help. If she has a greencard application pending through employment, you should check the processing times. It should not take 5 to 10 years, but around 3 years. She should also have an EAD to work and an AP to travel.
Re: 2nd International marriage -- new problems
It is a common myth that giving birth to a child on US soil will help with immigration benefits. Do not rely on this option.
I am happy to help you explore your options including checking the employment petition filed and exploring other options. You can email me.
Re: 2nd International marriage -- new problems
I am not aware of any provision in the law that would prevent you from marrying your Taiwanese fiancee' and petitioning for her green card.
Similarly, I am not aware of any provison that would prevent her from filing a family based petition while her employment based petition is pending.
She would have immediate relative status, which is sort of a first-class ticket to a green card.
I would check with the lawyer who advised you not to marry her and request a thourough explanation of the law he is relying upon. I also would be happy to assist you if you need any representation/consultation.
Regards,
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