• Rhaedas
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      1913 days ago

      For now. What if they change the rules and retro the law to apply to anyone? “Can’t happen.” We’ll see I guess.

      • @[email protected]
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        313 days ago

        I would like to say that SCOTUS is about to have bigger fish to fry than one Colombian getting married to stay in the country.

    • @[email protected]
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      13 days ago

      Getting a green card, even after marriage, typically takes 6 months at a minimum. If they started the process now, she could still be deported within Trump’s 100 days

    • @dance_ninja
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      613 days ago

      Still need to apply for a green card from the Federal government. Marriage certificates from State/local governments are not sufficient on their own. You’re basically trying to prove that the marriage is legit.

    • tiredofsametab
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      212 days ago

      That’s not how this works. I am legally married in Japan and wanted to get it official in the US as well and… we gave up. I would have to go through all the hoops to get her an SSN or TIN or whatever just to get it done, at least in the county I used to live in. That proved to be a second problem to me because I couldn’t prove current residence there (though that hurdle could be cleared by this person assuming only he needs to prove residence).

      This ignores the fact that dude has been harboring an illegal alien, among potential other crimes, and the illegal alien is there in violation of stay which makes all future visa/residency stuff harder. If I get married THEN apply for some residency status for my wife, that’s possible and not the most painful thing from what I hear (green card and citizenship are whole other things), but that goes out the window when things are illegal already.