Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Understanding The Requirments For US Fiance Visas

To enter the U.S. through marriage, one needs a Fiance Visa. As there are various Fiance Visa requirements, it is essential to know the basic laws pertaining to the Fiance Visa process and Fiance Visas in general.

The Fiance Visa processing takes about 120 days. Only after the marriage takes place, can the foreign citizen can apply for the Green Card visa. This visa gives them a permanent citizenship status as per U.S. visa requirements. The foreign citizen can thus migrate to the U.S. with the help of the Fiance Visa but it should comply with the laws of both the countries.

The Fiance Visas (also known as K1 Fiance Visas) are given to those who wish to marry U.S. citizens. The couple must marry within a 90 day time frame. After the marriage takes place, the foreign citizen can apply for a Green Card to become a permanent citizen. They can then enjoy the rights of the citizens except for the right to vote, which they get after 5 years.

To obtain a Fiance Visa, there are certain U.S. visa requirements that have to be met. The petitioner who applies for the Fiance Visa must be a permanent member of the U.S. Also, Green Card holders cannot apply for the K1 Fiance Visa. Both persons must be legally entitled to marry as per the rules of both the countries. If previously married, he/she must be divorced or widowed. Both the petitioner and the fiance must have the intention of getting married within 90 days after the arrival of the foreign fiance in the U.S. See visas-for-marriage.com for other requirements.

It is mandatory that they must also have met 2 years prior to the filing of the Fiance Visa. The petitioner must also have a minimum income requirement that is above the poverty level set by the Congress every year. The foreign fiancee must not have any criminal record. Finally, he/she must pass the medical exam at a clinic approved by the U.S. consulate.

Once the petition is made to the INS, it approves and forwards to the appropriate U.S. embassy. The embassy then conducts the final interview.

Once the Fiance Visa requirements are met, the Fiance Visa is not difficult to obtain. So you can now proceed with confidence!

O.J. Will Go Free

We want him put away for life.

Nancy Grace salivates on her TV show for The Juice to be slammered till death. She gets professional guests to back up her thesis.

However, once in awhile a professional will counter her thesis that O. J. will rot in jail. It's then that she gets the jitters. And for Nancy Grace to reveal jitters is something unlike her crisp, alluring persona.

Nevertheless, though most of the civil world agrees with the likes of Nancy Grace, what will happen is that O. J.'s lawyers will present such confusion to the jury that they will conclude they cannot jail O. J. Why? Due to reasonable doubt. On what points? No matter. One point would do it. One juror could bring down the tent.

There are so many complicated dimensions to this case that I think it impossible for a clear-cut guilty decision to come write the last sentence. Just impossible.

All those charges would have to be so utterly solidly in place so that a jury would have to be blown over with concrete evidence that O. J. slip through bars till he breathes his last.

That won't happen.

The law-abiding are wishing against cold reality. The law-abiding are commiserating among themselves that it's a slam dunk against O. J. But preaching to the choir won't put the double-killer away.

As time moves along and the hysteria against O. J. settles, more and more the twisting debacles facing a clear-cut guilty verdict will rise to the top.

I believe, though it slays my gut to type this, that O. J. will go free. He will smile his way out of court, his arms lifted in victory and his sociopathic egomania shooting off the charts.

No doubt he'll author still another bloody book. And no doubt a publishing house will put it right out there. Further, no doubt a sizeable gullible public will pay high price to purchase the rag.

This world does not make sense in too many instances. Sadly, this is one of those horrific instances. Time will reveal its depression to the law-abiding, civil culture.

--


Twitter Facebook Flickr RSS



Français Deutsch Italiano Português
Español 日本語 한국의 中国简体。





Sponsor Links