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are you asking this question for yourself?vmulberry wrote:I've been reading the other posts and have a question.
If someone is in the UK as an overstayer they have to then go home to apply for settlement status?
Is it not possible to apply from within the UK? Is that just a more lengthy process or is it not possible at all for some reason?
I'm not in a position to comment on your immigration case, however you should be aware that even if your application is successful you will probably not get a permanent visa immediately, but rather a 2 year spouse visa that can be upgraded to permanent residence after that time. This is because although you were living with your husband for 4 years (the requirement for immediate permanent residence), it was not outside the United Kingdom.vmulberry wrote:Thank you for your reply. Here are the answers to your questions.
-My visitor visa expired in June of 2002 so I have been here 4 years and a bit.
-We were married on 8 October of 2002 and therefore will have been married 4 years in October of this year.
-In total we have known each other for nearly 7 years and dated close to 6 of those.
-Fortunately myself, my husband, and our two children aged 3 and just turned 1, are all in good health. I somehow know you're going to tell me that doesn't actually help us out, but I wouldn't have it any other way of course.
The reason I ask if it is possible to file from within the UK is that my situation outside of the UK is not a cut and dry one. I was born in Mexico, but raised in the US and have never had any ties with Mexico otherwise. My parents and siblings are US Citizens and I was not made one because we were hoping I could get done when my parents did. They didn't get made citizens until after I was 18 and at the time I was at college so we postponed my paperwork until I was done with school and back home.
I met my husband while at university and we were living in the UK and married right after I left school. Because of this I now have lost Permanent Residency in the states as I have been away for too long.
JAJ wrote:I'm not in a position to comment on your immigration case, however you should be aware that even if your application is successful you will probably not get a permanent visa immediately, but rather a 2 year spouse visa that can be upgraded to permanent residence after that time. This is because although you were living with your husband for 4 years (the requirement for immediate permanent residence), it was not outside the United Kingdom.vmulberry wrote:Thank you for your reply. Here are the answers to your questions.
-My visitor visa expired in June of 2002 so I have been here 4 years and a bit.
-We were married on 8 October of 2002 and therefore will have been married 4 years in October of this year.
-In total we have known each other for nearly 7 years and dated close to 6 of those.
-Fortunately myself, my husband, and our two children aged 3 and just turned 1, are all in good health. I somehow know you're going to tell me that doesn't actually help us out, but I wouldn't have it any other way of course.
The reason I ask if it is possible to file from within the UK is that my situation outside of the UK is not a cut and dry one. I was born in Mexico, but raised in the US and have never had any ties with Mexico otherwise. My parents and siblings are US Citizens and I was not made one because we were hoping I could get done when my parents did. They didn't get made citizens until after I was 18 and at the time I was at college so we postponed my paperwork until I was done with school and back home.
I met my husband while at university and we were living in the UK and married right after I left school. Because of this I now have lost Permanent Residency in the states as I have been away for too long.
Your time illegally in the UK will not count for British citizenship, so the 3 year clock for naturalisation will start when you return legally to the United Kingdom.
Had you come to the United Kingdom with a spouse visa at the outset (rather than overstaying as a tourist) you would likely be a British citizen by now. In retrospect, it was probably not a good idea to leave the United States before obtaining your U.S. citizenship (your children would be U.S. citizens had you done so). Being sponsored by your family for a green card is probably not going to work under current U.S. immigration law because of the enormous excess of demand from Mexico-born people for third preference family immigration:
http://travel.state.gov/visa/frvi/bulle ... _2978.html
Probably the best thing you can do once your situation is regularised is to remain in the United Kingdom until you can become a British citizen.
You can try once you are clearly settled in the United Kingdom with an appropriate visa. Ties to the UK, such as your spouse/children, a job, study and other factors will help. It will also help once you upgrade from spouse visa to ILR.vmulberry wrote: Do you think it will be possible to get a visitor's visa into the USA during my 3 years of waiting to become a British Citizen? I am fine with the terms I was just wondering if in that time I would be able to visit at all or if my family would have to visit us in the UK for those three years.
This page from the U.S. State Department may help:Kayalami wrote:vmulberry,
I'm sure JAJ will weigh in with his opinion on this but there may be a case for you to try and obtain an S1B visa - returning lawful permanent resident from the US consulate in London. Based on the info you provide its likely to be a lost cause but perhaps the help of a good attorney well versed in US law will be of great benefit (it won't be cheap..IMHO you are looking towards the 10K mark). The success of such depends on the ties you retained with the US especially on the matter of filing taxes and whether an arguement say could be made that you had chidren in the UK which made it somewhat difficult to immediatley travel back to the US. It may be that you decide the funds are better off used for your UK settlement visa application.