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How To Get A Green Card Or Permission To Live In America

I have us green card, can i get permission to live in an india for a year?

This unlawful alien does no longer qualify for any green card or something yet deportation. He could return to his place of beginning and be conscious, wait out a 10 300 and sixty 5 days ban for his criminal movements and then and in basic terms then might he get to grow to be criminal. Marriage or infants do no longer end the guidelines from being enforced on unlawful extraterrestrial beings. yet helping or supporting and abetting an unlawful can placed somebody in detention center for 5 years and a great of $250,000.

How do I get a Green Card to live in America?

In order to get a Green Card, an immediate relative of yours (parent, spouse, child over 21), who needs to be a U.S. citizen, would need to sponsor you. If you are not the immediate relative of a U.S. citizen, do not have a doctorate degree, and are not a multi-millionaire investor, you have no way to get a Green Card and thus no way to live in America.

How do you get a green card when you marry an American?

If he came in legally you do the following.......


"1. Petition for Alien Relative (USCIS Form I-130)
2. Application to Register Permanent Residence (USCIS Form I-485)
3. Biographic Information (USCIS Form G-325A)
4. Affidavit of Support (USCIS Form I-864)
5. Permission for Work Authorization (Optional) (USCIS Form I-765)
6. Medical Examination Results (USCIS Form I-693)
7. Request for Travel Documents (Optional) (USCIS Form I-131)
8. The appropriate supporting documents
9. The USCIS filing fees ($1,010 to $1,365).

The USCIS will contact you first regarding the Biometrics / Fingerprinting Appointment.

The USCIS will then issue the work authorization and permission to travel approximately 90 days after filing.

The USCIS will contact you next to schedule an interview. This will be anywhere from 6 months to 9 months after filing the initial application.

Following a successful interview, the foreign national spouse will receive a stamp classifying him/her as a Conditional Permanent Resident.

USCIS will mail the Permanent Resident Card (Green Card) approx 4-8 weeks after the successful interview.

The Conditional Status may be dropped by applying for Removal of Conditional Status (USCIS Form I-751) within 90 days of the 2 year anniversary of the granting of Conditional Permanent Residency."
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If he came in illegally and has been here ever since he must return to Mexico to complete a waiver called the I-601 to excuse his unlawful presence and it is not easy to gain approval.You should head to immigrate2us.net in this case because you're going to need all the help you can get.

How life is in america without a Green Card?

My Mexican buddy was in the same shoes, he was stinking rich, bought expensive houses and cars. He just got out of college and works with an oil company here now. He started with a student visa and his father with some kind of investor visa or something. They gave him a social security number, which allowed him to get a drivers license and a US credit card. You are pretty much allowed to do whatever you want except voting, work (well you can but with permission) and apply for loans. Don't feel unwelcome by some of these people, by all means come, if you are as rich as you say, its in our best interest to have you here. Once you own property and such you too will be paying some sort of tax, calculating the assets purchased I say my buddy paid about 20K bucks a year, more than most of the nation. So I say again, come on over brother.

How to apply for green card to america from egypt?

this could help

http://www.immigrationdirect.com/index.html?r=bg-ppc-usi1-id&utm_source=bg&utm_medium=ppc&utm_content=usi1&utm_campaign=id

use the "where do i start tab. either way this is the rite website but i cant say it wont be confusing

How is it possible to live in the USA without green card?

Answering the question: “How is it possible to live in the USA without a green card?”Citizens live in the US, and do not have a green card. This is the vast majority of people in the US.It’s possible, though rare, for a non-citizen to become a US citizen without having a green card - for example, if both of a persons parents have green cards, and become citizens through naturalization, then the child can become a citizen without having a green card.It’s also possible through an act of congress - for example, The Jones–Shafroth Act passed by congress in 1917 gave citizenship in the US to all Puerto Rican residents.Some people enter illegally, and live in the US without being a citizen, and without a green card. These people are known as “Illegal Aliens”. They work “under the table” - that is, they are paid in cash and no taxes are taken out for them. This has several drawbacks — ie, usually the pay is low, and it adds additional illegal acts (failures to pay taxes).There is still a road to citizenship for non-citizens (even illegal aliens) -From Wikipedia:Some exemptions from permanent residency exist for certain qualifying naturalization applicants. For example, an undocumented immigrant who served in the US military during a designated period of hostility may naturalize without having first been a permanent resident.An immigrant who successfully completes the MAVNI program may naturalize in 10 weeks without first having been a permanent resident.Similarly, an immigrant who has made extraordinary contributions can be exempted from residency as well as the physical presence requirement and prohibitions for support of totalitarianism and or communism.A non-citizen U.S. national is also eligible for naturalization after becoming a resident of any state

I am a British citizen do I require a Green card to live in the USA?

Yes you do every Foreign dose.

you can move at age 18 PROVIDED you have completed and graduated from an approved university WITH a degree in an area that is in demand (specialization)


Why wouldn't you think you require a green card?

Also if you didn't know this answer already I don't think your ready to live here.

A Green Card is a Permanent Visa to USA. Green Card gives you the status of permanent resident and legal rights to work in United States. Once you have a green card you may apply for USA Citizenship. The Green Card does not affects your present citizenship.


Green card is not issued for life time. It is for a specific period, which is normally for 10 years. You need to revalidate it after that limit.

But really can you stop coming here

United Kingdom has sent over 50,000 Immigrants over the five years.

And we already have are own problems we don't need more people coming here.

In U.S. immigration, what is a green card?

"Green card" is the term for a U.S. Permanent Resident card. It’s a form of identification, issued by the U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services that serves as proof that the person is a lawful permanent resident. Some people use it to mean the same as permanent resident status, as in, “I’ve had my green card for three years now” to mean that they’ve been a permanent resident for three years.The term "green card" is a relic of a brief period following World War II when high levels of immigration cause the United States to begin issuing proof of legal immigration status for the first time.[1] This proof of status was initially printed on a green piece of paper that looked something like this:Since counterfeiting quickly became an issue, the card has gone through several changes over the years. Today, a green card looks like this:And since we’re talking green cards, here’s John Lennon’s:John Lennon’s fight to receive his green card is actually a big moment in the history of U.S. immigration.[2] During his trial, the government was forced to reveal that they had an internal procedure for selective enforcement of immigration laws, a practice known as “prosecutorial discretion.” This is the same practice that the Obama Administration used three decades later as the basis of the DACA program.Footnotes[1] On the Fourth of July, a Look at Why the Green Card Changed Color[2] John Lennon's Deportation Fight Paved Way For Obama's Deferred Action Policy

If some body tell lie to us government to get green card what will be happen?

Honey everybody lies to the government!!
What part of 'tax return" don't u understand?? Or retired senior citizens "shacking up" w/ their new partners after their spouse dies but don't marry so that their benefits won't get cut!! It's the American way. What about the "lies" our politicians tell to us everyday!! Join the club!!There's always room for one more.

But seriously honey...that affidavit u sign stating all the above statements/documents presented are true...we take your SWORN statement VERY seriously in USA. The government WILL NOT HESITATE to deport you . INS has the duty to protect law abiding citizens. Your breaking the laws is what they don't want! If u have children they do not care. They feel; let them follow you to your country of origin if u want to be w/them so much. . You will be penalized for 10 years/fined and the process would start all over again. The lies that INS is looking for is what you are planning on DOING whilst living in this country and making sure you abide by our laws.

What is a green card?

United States lawful permanent residency is the immigration status of a person authorized to live and work in the United States of Americapermanently.A United States Permanent Resident Card (USCIS Form I-551), formerly Alien Registration Card or Alien Registration Receipt Card (INS Form I-151), is an identification card attesting to the permanent resident status of an alien in the United States. It is known informally as a green cardbecause it was green from 1946 until 1964, and it reverted to that color on May 11, 2010.[1][2] Green card also refers to an immigration process of becoming a permanent resident. The green card serves as proof that its holder, a lawful permanent resident (LPR), has been officially granted immigration benefits, which include permission to reside and take employment in the United States. The holder must maintain permanent resident status, and can be removed from the United States if certain conditions of this status are not met.Green cards were formerly issued by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS). The Homeland Security Act of 2002 (Pub. L. No. 107–296, 116 Stat. 2135) dismantled INS and separated the former agency into three components within the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The first, the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services USCIS) handles applications for immigration benefits. Two other agencies were created to oversee the INS' former functions of immigration enforcement: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), respectively.[3]Permanent residents of the United States eighteen years of age or older must carry their actual green card at all times. Failing to do so is a violation of the Immigration and Nationality Act, carrying the possibility of a fine up to $100 and/or imprisonment for up to 30 days for each offense.[4] Only the federal government can impose these penalties.[5]

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