Permanent Resident card (10 year Green card):
A permanent resident is a not a citizen but has obtained legal permission to live and work anywhere in the United States. A Green card holder is also required to renew the card once every 10 years before it expires.The sponsor's responsibility lasts until the immigrant becomes a U.S. citizen, has earned 40 work quarters credited toward Social Security (a work quarter is about three months, so this means about ten years of work), dies, or permanently leaves the United States.
You Divorce after Your Two-Year Conditional Residency
For example, you will not be eligible to apply to become a citizen until 5 years have passed. Had you stayed married to a U.S. citizen, you could have become a naturalized citizen after 3 years, but that option disappears if you divorce.The physical green card must be renewed every 10 years (similar to a drivers license), but the individual's status is permanent. Having your green card revoked is actually quite difficult but not impossible. A green card may be revoked based on numerous grounds including: fraud, criminal activity and/or abandonment.
U.S. permanent residence is permanent in many ways. The green card immigration status allows you to live and work in the U.S. indefinitely. However, it is possible to be deported. Each year the U.S. deports thousands of lawful permanent residents, 10 percent of all people deported.
If you obtained your green card through marriage to a U.S. citizen or permanent resident, a divorce (or annulment) may pose a problem. The good news is that there is nothing in the law saying that, once you are divorced or your marriage is annulled, your efforts to get a green card are automatically over.
A green card gives its holder the legal right to live and work in the U.S. on a permanent basis. You can apply for many government jobs with a green card (though some are reserved for U.S. citizens). You may keep your present citizenship in your native country, and you may apply for U.S. citizenship at a later time.
A person who immigrates to the United States based on a marriage that is less than two years old at the time of his/her admission will receive conditional permanent residence. Meanwhile, if the marriage ends in divorce, then the immigrant spouse will lose his/her immigrant status and become deportable.
An immigrant who marries a U.S. citizen must apply for a green card (U.S. permanent residence). This is a long process involving many forms and documents. After successfully obtaining a green card, the immigrant spouse can, after three years as a permanent resident, apply for U.S. citizenship.
If at any point a divorce occurs before the approval of an application for a green card, the immigration process stops. The divorce dissolves the relationship that made the spouse eligible. This is true even if USCIS already approved the immigrant petition. However, before the interview, the couple divorces.
Divorce Makes Applicants Ineligible to Apply for Citizenship in Three Rather Than Five Years. You have to remain married up until you actually get your citizenship, and you have to be living with your spouse three years before filing your citizenship application to qualify for early citizenship.
You Divorce but are a Naturalized Citizen
If you have gone through the naturalization process and receive your certificate, then it doesn't matter that you are divorced. You are a citizen. Citizenship is revoked only in very rare circumstances, such as committing fraud to obtain citizenship.The answer to the main question is: No, a spouse CANNOT deport their wife or husband. Marriage-based immigration does require a spouse to initiate and carry through with the petition and financial support portions of the Green Card application, whether Adjustment of Status or Consular.
Permanent residents are legally required to carry their green card with them if age 18 or older. The Immigration and Nationality Act (§264(e)) states that all permanent residents must have “at all times” official evidence of permanent resident status. A photocopy is not acceptable.
It takes 7 to 33 months to process a Green Card application.
The Green Card processing time depends on the type of Green Card you are applying for, the location of the processing office and other factors. Family Preference Green Cards processing takes from 1 to 10 years depending on the wait time and yearly caps.The simple answer, of course, is that it is impossible to know whether USCIS knows if an applicant for a green card or for naturalization is lying to them. The safe assumption is that they DO know everything about you and that, if you lie in the interview, you will be caught. Do not ever lie to the immigration service.
The most common minimum annual income required to sponsor a spouse for a marriage-based green card is $21,550. This assumes that the sponsoring spouse — the U.S. citizen or current green card holder — is not in active military duty and that the couple has no children.
A Single Status Certificate, also sometimes known as a singleness certificate, is simply put, a certificate proving one's bachelorhood. Or in other words, a legal document that specifies one's marital status as per the judiciary laws of the country.
U.S. citizens can petition for green cards for more than one spouse, but expect close inspection. U.S. law doesn't put a limit on the number of times a citizen can marry foreign nationals and petition for green cards, but U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services will inspect the unions closely.
Legality. Most marriages between residents and non-residents are undertaken properly, for reasons other than or in addition to residency status. That said, the practice of obtaining residency through marriage is illegal in the United States if the marriage itself is fraudulent.
If a divorce between a U.S. citizen and a foreign spouse is granted prior to the two-year conditional residency period expiring, and the foreign spouse desires to continue their path toward obtaining U.S. citizenship, the foreign spouse has to apply for a termination waiver.
Answer. Yes. Your husband's bigamy (being legally married to two women at the same time) could cause your interviewing officer at United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) to decide that you are practicing polygamy.