CASE: I-751
APPLICANT: Kenyan
LOCATION: Atlanta, Georgia
Our client contacted our office in early April of this year regarding her I-751 interview. She is from Kenya and married a U.S. citizen in June 2008. Through her marriage with a U.S. citizen spouse, she obtained a 2-year conditional green card in November of 2009.
Prior to the expiration of her conditional residency in November 2011, she and her husband jointly filed an I-751 application to remove the condition on her residency. Without the assistance of legal counsel, they filed an I-751 application to the USCIS in October 2011. They filed the application with some supporting documents, but the USCIS issued a Request for Evidence (RFE) sometime in 2012, and they submitted more supporting documentary evidence to the USCIS. She and her husband have maintained their marital relationship for the last 5 years without any issues. Nevertheless, the USCIS Atlanta Field Office issued an interview for our client’s I-751 application.
She was nervous and did not know what would happen at her I-751 interview. She contacted our office in early April of this year, and retained our office to prepare and accompany them for their I-751 interview in Atlanta, Georgia.
After our office was retained, we thoroughly prepared our clients through conference calls. We explained to them the nature of the interview, what to expect at the interview, and we also asked them to remember specific details of their marriage especially after November 2009.
On April 25, 2013, our client was interviewed at the Atlanta, GA USCIS Field Office. Attorney Sung Hee (Glen) Yu from our office accompanied them at this interview. The interview went well and our clients were fully prepared. On May 8, 2013, the USCIS approved our client’s I-751 application. Now, she has her ten-year green card.
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Good Morning
I Would like to get more information and also use your as my
attorney to present my case to the immigration actually I got
married to a us citizen two years ago while on visitor visa I
had not planned for the wedding but the function took place as
a request from the great grandmother and grandmother of my
wife who were not able to travel outside America to my country
in africa on medical condition. so we have all the photos of
the ceremony and also email messages that we have been
communicating for the last one years. Definitely I will
registered with your office to present my case to the
immigration and both my wife, great grandmother and grandmother
are ready to help you to draft the affidavit to support my
case to the immigration officer to show this is a genuine legitimate
marriage so please advise and let me know how I can come to
your office so that you can help me to remain in the usa legally
and avoid the risk of deportation because now I am leaving with
my wife in Atlanta and also u can advise if you have experienced
similar cases because. Now I feel traumatized and leave in fear
because of negative information I get from the internet in regards
to this situation .i don’t want to rely on information obtained
from the internet because I know I know you are experience
attorney and you help me to file my case and succeed my request
while still here in Atlanta
Thank you Benjamin. Feel free to call me as there are a lot of missing information. Do you plan to file for your initial green card? Or did you already have a 2 year green card and plant to remove conditions on your residency?
~ JP Sarmiento