He is married to US citizen and has a 16-year-old child with her.
I think deportation was uncalled for, when he voluntarily went to the CIS building to get his papers in order. As a spouse of a US citizen, he qualifies for permanent resident status.
He should have had his papers in order prior to his first entry into the U.S.
They applied to him a law retroactive.
He is married to US citizen and has a 16-year-old child with her.
I think deportation was uncalled for, when he voluntarily went to the CIS building to get his papers in order. As a spouse of a US citizen, he qualifies for permanent resident status.""
How can they be applying anything to him retroactively?
He has NEVER been here legally. IF he is really "married" to any US citizan, what paperwork did he show to get a marriage license? Wouldn't he have to state his birthplace (I did), and if he correctly stated he was born out of USA, then wouldn't he have to show a legal green card visa, etc, ?? If he produced forged papers to satisfy the marriage license clerk, then he committed fraud and shouldn't be legally "married" to a US citizen.
If he lied about his status to get "married", and claimed to be born somewhere in the USA, then he committed fraud in that set of actions, also.
IMO, he doesn't belong in the USA, and has proven he will not follow our laws when he kept coming back into the country when he was caught.
If he has produced a child, and is not legally married to the mother, that child has a problem, also.
My foreign-born wife (with my children) and I endured months of separation at severe financial expense so we could get her papers in order before she came to America. I have no sympathy for someone who doesn't bother to do it legally.
They're blaming the separation on the government when they should be blaming him. Or blame his wife for not forcing him to get legal before they married and had a child who would suffer the consequences of his dad's decisions.