Rick is correct in most of what he says except that if you are a non English speaking person that you need an attorney. The paperwork can be in Spanish at the Consulate and they will give the interview in Spanish also. Rick, it may have changed since you went through the process, but there have been several people on my board who have gotten visas without attorneys and their spouses or fiancees' didn't speak English at all. There is NO shortcut. Period. We have had cases where someone got an open cita when the beneficiary was pregnant but quite frankly, this case already is fishy. You can't come on a public forum and say you are going to try to get a work visa if you can't get a fiancee' or spousal visa. The US government is not stupid and does investigate these cases. I remember his other post and I think he has little chance unless he goes through the normal process. Even then, it will be a good 6 months before the petition even gets to the Consulate. Like someone said here, it would be easier and faster if he waits until the baby is born and then gets the DNA test. There is a good chance the Consulate will require it, and he might just possibly find out something he didn't want to know anyway.
-Tim
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Last edited by AnnaC; 12-05-2006 at 02:34 PM..
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