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USA Immigration 2019 – Trump,K1 Visa, CR1 Visa, Green Card gen98

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USA Immigration 2019 – Trump,K1 Visa, CR1 Visa, Green Card gen98

= Bring Your Foreign Love to USA with a Fiance Visa. Let VisaCoach guide you to success!
President Trump during the last two years of his administration has been very successful in throwing up many roadblocks to fiancé and spouse visa and green card applications. Here is a description of the top 11 executive actions that affect marriage based immigration making it more difficult to bring ones fiance or spouse to immigrate legally to the USA
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It was already difficult to get a Fiance or Spouse visa before, now
it is tougher, the bar has been raised even more
by President Trump. In general he has striven
to push US immigration to perform stricter reviews of all cases,
which has caused denial rates to skyrocket. Under the Obama
administration denial rates may have been one percent or under,
now we are seeing 20 to 30% denial At the USCIS’s
stateside reviews, and then further at the foreign consulate reviews.
These are dark days indeed for applicants. The reasons
why denials have increased, and processing times have stretched
can primarily be attributed to the executive orders passed down
from the President to US CIS and the US state department.

Our “Country is Full” was a recent tweet by President Trump.

Here is my report on the executive orders that have been made
or proposed during the Trump administrations first 30 months
that have been designed to limit legal immigration and keep
more aliens out.

1. Travel Bans
Travelers from Iran, Libya, Somalia, Syria, Yemen, Venezuela
and North Korea have been banned from being issued visas to USA.

So far over 37,000 applications have been rejected.

2. Vigorous Enforcement of Immigration Laws

President Trump has mandated that USCIS vigorously
enforce and administer immigration laws, take no short cuts.
The goal is to restrict Legal immigration while
stopping illegal immigration.

“We have to get much tougher, much smarter, and less
politically correct,” Trump said.

What this means is that they are very closely examining
and scrutinizing all cases looking for reasons to deny.

3. Extreme Vetting

Applicants could be asked to do the following:
Hand over their phones so that their contact list and photos
could be examined by embassy or consulate staff

Provide their social media handles and passwords so that both
private and public posts can be viewed.

Provide 15 years’ worth of travel history, employment
history and addresses

Pass an “ideological test” Potential questions might focus on
the traveler’s view of society, and culture

4. Application forms increasing in size and complexity

Fiance Visa I-129F application has increased from 3 to 13 pages.
The Spouse visa I-130 application has increased from 2 to 12
Adjustment of Status, Green Card I-485 application has
increased from 6 to 18

5. Heightened Scrutiny of any arrest, conviction, citation.

The Fiance Visa application now has two fairly problematic
new questions that must be answered, and when answered must
be backed up with court and police records..

Has the American Sponsor EVER been the subject of any
type of restraining or protection order?

Has the American Sponsor EVER been arrested, cited, charged,
indicted, convicted, fined or imprisoned, for any law,
any ordinance, ANYTIME. ?

No matter how frivolous a protection order was,(Divorce lawyers
frequently use this as a pressuring tactic) no matter how trivial
or long ago the crime, (a teenager in the wrong place at the
wrong time) these questions create extra hurdles to be jumped,
and extra reasons for delays and possible denials.

6. USCIS can deny without warning
In the past when applications for fiance visas,
spouse visas, adjustment of status ran into trouble, because
the applicant didn’t quite know what he was doing, the reviewer
at USCIS often, halted processing, then spent the time and effort
to issue a RFE (Request for Evidence) that listed what
was missing giving the opportunity to respond and correct
the error. Or if a case was in risk of being denied due to
missing materials, a NOID (Notice of Intent to Deny)
might be issued, also giving the application an opportunity
to correct mistakes.

Now USCIS can skip the RFE, skip the NOID and go directly
to denial, and in some cases if the applicant is present in the USA,
go directly to deportation procedures.

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