GREEN CARDS THROUGH FAMILY TIES
Immediate versus non immediate relatives
Green cards are immediately available (subject to the required petition being approved) for certain 'immediate relatives' of US citizens. A spouse of a US citizen is considered an immediate relative.
'Non immediate relatives' of US citizens or Green card holders are subject to annual quotas and as such are subject to often lengthy delays before they obtain their green card. These delays typically last over 4 years and even much longer. A spouse of a green card holder is considered a 'non immediate relative.
Note: Grandparents, aunts, uncles, in-laws and cousins cannot sponsor a relative for immigration.
IMMEDIATE RELATIVE CATEGORIES
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An immigrant visa may only be processed for a child if he/she has no claim to U.S. citizenship |
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U.S. citizen must be 21 or over |
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Step-parent, step-child relationship must occur before the child’s 18th birthday |
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Petition must be filed within 2 years of the death of the U.S. citizen |
NON IMMEDIATE RELATIVE CATEGORIES
Persons seeking to immigrate in one of the family based preference categories will qualify for immigrant status only if they have the necessary relationship to a U.S. citizen or Lawful Permanent Resident as described below.
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U.S. citizen must be 21 or over |
Mr. Capp can assist in obtaining the following visa categories.
| Green cards through marriage and family ties | |
| Green cards through employment/labor certification process | |
| Work visas for professional employees (H1-B visas) | |
| Work visas for intra-company transferred employees (L1 visas) | |
| Treaty Trader and Investor visas (E1 and E2 visas) | |
| Fiancée/Spousal visas | |
| Student visas (F1 visas) | |
| Miscellaneous visas (O, P, V, K visas etc..) |