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kamome wrote:If you are in serious need of help and are willing to pay lawyer's fees, I recommend that you contact Marcus Kosins, Esq.:
Kosins Attorney at Foreign Law Office
6th F1, Urban Toranomon Bldg., 1-16-4 Toranomon, Minato-Ku
Tokyo 105
Japan
Tel: 81355100505
Fax: 81335802348
He's a very nice guy and can at least provide a consultation on your matter so that you know whether you would need to hire him or not.
Big Booger wrote:My wife got her visa in 2 years, then we moved to Japan, and she let it expire...
inthebubble wrote:Being here in Okinawa and seeing many Mixed marriages (these your dumb military guys just don't learn) this time seems about right.
inthebubble wrote:Things became much harder since 9/11. I have a british friend that is an American citizen that is trying to get his Japanese wife a visa, they told him possibly five years.
AssKissinger wrote:I'm so devastated by the news and they won't help me at all. They won't even talk to me or answer a simple question. I may have to give up everything I've been doing here in the States and just go back to Japan permanently.
AssKissinger wrote:Big Booger wrote:My wife got her visa in 2 years, then we moved to Japan, and she let it expire...
The process took two years total from when you first filed to when she finally got it?
L S wrote:AK - I am going throught the same thing. I am back in US now, but my fiance is in Japan. She has a travel bar to the US due to a previous visa overstay violation. We are getting married in Vancouver BC this month and will file for a spouse visa to start with.
L S wrote:AK - I am going throught the same thing. I am back in US now, but my fiance is in Japan. She has a travel bar to the US due to a previous visa overstay violation. We are getting married in Vancouver BC this month and will file for a spouse visa to start with. ....
cstaylor wrote:AssKissinger wrote:I'm so devastated by the news and they won't help me at all. They won't even talk to me or answer a simple question. I may have to give up everything I've been doing here in the States and just go back to Japan permanently.
You should move back to Japan long enough to get the paperwork settled, then return.
AssKissinger wrote:Man, I've got a good job here now, plus a car and furniture and I'm in school. I'm not sure if I could ever recover financially.
Yall, my wife is still in Japan.
Can I apply through Japan on her behalf? Is there any easier process for her to come here with another type of visa? They're talking this 1000 days thing just to get the interview in Tokyo!
cstaylor wrote:AssKissinger wrote:Man, I've got a good job here now, plus a car and furniture and I'm in school. I'm not sure if I could ever recover financially.
Yall, my wife is still in Japan.
Can I apply through Japan on her behalf? Is there any easier process for her to come here with another type of visa? They're talking this 1000 days thing just to get the interview in Tokyo!
Sounds like you should do the right thing and sign some divorce papers if you can't handle 3-4 months back in Japan (that's what immigration told me when we filled out the lengthy first phase of the green card application process) so your wife can continue on with her life.
None of us can speed up that wonderful American bureaucracy for you. As far as I've been told when applying through the American Tokyo consulate, filing in Japan takes 1/10th the time it would take if you tried handling it in the U.S., and it would be a lot easier if you were there for the interview phase so things look on the up-and-up.
Mulboyne wrote:I'm sorry I can't help you AK but I do recall kamome's comment in this thread:kamome wrote:If you are in serious need of help and are willing to pay lawyer's fees, I recommend that you contact Marcus Kosins, Esq.:
Kosins Attorney at Foreign Law Office
6th F1, Urban Toranomon Bldg., 1-16-4 Toranomon, Minato-Ku
Tokyo 105
Japan
Tel: 81355100505
Fax: 81335802348
He's a very nice guy and can at least provide a consultation on your matter so that you know whether you would need to hire him or not.
sludge wrote:I just got a US immigrant Visa (Green Card) for my J-Wife.
Start to finish it took less than 4 months.
kenchan wrote:I had to go to Japan on short notice. This can be avoided IF you plan well and get the appointment well in advance with the embassy.
GJAll applicants must submit the following documents with their petition:
I-130: This form is required in all cases. (Download form I-130 ) At the bottom of the first page of the I-130 please write an email address where we would be able to reach you.
Photograph: A 5cm x 5cm photo with a white background, taken within the last six months. The head (measured from the top of the hair to the bottom of the chin) should measure between 25 to 35mm with the head centered in the frame facing straight ahead. Please submit one photo of the petitioner and one for each beneficiary.
Proof of U.S. Citizenship: An original birth certificate, original U.S. passport or original naturalization certificate are the only acceptable documents. If you are not a U.S. citizen, please submit your Alien Registration (Green) Card.
Affidavit of Support: Form I-864 is a contractual affidavit of support. Most family-based visa applicants must submit an I-864 completed, signed and notarized by the petitioning relative (sponsor). Mistakes in completing the I-864 are the most common reason for refusing an immigrant visa application. Please read all instructions carefully before filling out the I-864.
Photo ID: Please submit a copy of a U.S. passport, a U.S. military ID card or other photo identification for petitioner.
Birth Certificate: Please provide an original birth certificate for the beneficiary.
Copy of Beneficiary's Passport: Please provide copies of the picture ID page and any pages that have U.S. visas, foreign visas or SOFA stamps.
Biographic Information Form: The petitioner and the beneficiary should both complete separately form G-325. (download form G-325.)
Immigrant Visa Application Form: The beneficiary should complete Part 1 and Part 2 of form DS-230. Please do not sign the bottom of the last page of Part 2. You will need to sign that form in the presence of a consular officer after taking an oath.(Download form DS-230 Part 1 or DS-230 Part 2)
Application Fee: Please include a postal money order for $190 payable to "U.S. Embassy, Tokyo". If you are required to provide a foreign address for your postal order, use U.S. Embassy, Unit 45004, Box 205-IV, APO AP 96337-5004.
If the petition is for a spouse or step-child, you must also include:
Marriage Certificate: Please provide an original marriage certificate from the juristiction where the marriage took place. If the marriage occurred in Japan, please submit a copy of the family registry.
Divorce Decree or Death Certificate: Original divorce decrees or death certificates, or certified court copies of the certificates, showing termination of all prior marriages of petitioner and/or beneficiary is acceptable. An official translation of the document must be provided if it is not in English.
Proof of Relationship: If you have been married less than 6 months, please provide a statement of how you met and evidence of your relationship such as courtship and wedding photos, phone records, letters, e-mails, evidence of travel and long stays in the same country.
If you are filing a family-based petition, you must also include:
Birth Certificate for Beneficiary's Children: Please provide an original birth certificate or consular report of birth for beneficiary's children.
When ALL of the necessary documents have been collected and put together in order, mail them to:
U.S. Embassy
Box 205-IV
1-10-5 Akasaka
Minato-ku, Tokyo 107-8420
U.S. military address:
U.S. Embassy
Box 205-IV
Unit 45004
APO AP
96337-5004
After your petition is approved, we will contact you to begin the second part of the immigrant visa process. This will include scheduling the interview.
AssKissinger wrote: I'm American. My wife's JPN. She's trying to get a visa to the USA.
maraboutslim wrote:Just come to the states however you'd like - tourist visa should be fine. It was for my wife. Then go to immigration and get the massive stack of paperwork and instructions for the green card process and go for it.
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