Consular Processing at USA Embassy in Thailand
CTR & Associates offers Consular Processing Services to U.S. Law Firms and to individuals. CTR & Associates is managed and owned by a licensed American attorney who is also a member of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, which is a member only organization for American Lawyers and Representatives specializing in the practice of U.S. Immigration Law.
CTR & Associates Consular Processing Services can provide U.S. Law Firms with “on the ground” representation and investigation about the status of the visa application at the USA Embassy in Bangkok. Our American attorneys and Thai staff are there to meet and interview cases in at the client’s location. This on the ground service means less delays in your green card processing time and green card approval.
An Immigration Law Firm Offering Competitive and Quality Services
With CTR & Associates Consular Processing Service you can provide your clients more options and a higher quality of service knowing that they will be represented by an American Immigration lawyer and will be guided through the final stages of their green card process by a qualified American attorney and staff.
Our firm can provide certified Thai-English translations where needed and inquire with the US Embassy post in matters involving 221g denials, administrative processing, or appointment scheduling. For firms with clients facing foreseeable 221g denial issues, our attorneys can assist in preparing the applicants for managing these issues to avoid green card denials. We provide applicants with the knowledge they need to be prepared to deal with the US Embassy in an honest and concise manner so they are prepared to present their case with the best foot forward.
Be aware that No One can guarantee an outcome of a visa application as the ultimate adjudication are evaluated and based on the evidence provided and the unique set of facts of each case. If anyone promises a 100% guaranteed or money back policy then it’s best to inquire into the integrity of that statement. The Immigrant Visa Section of the U.S. Embassy in Bangkok review each case based on the quality and quantity of evidence presented at the interview and prior.
CTR & Associates provides clients with the knowledge and peace of mind of knowing that the applicant is being advised by an licensed American attorney who is trained in assisting the applicant to prepare for the most important interview in the final stages of their Visa Application.
On The Ground US Attorney to Provide Assurance That Your Client Will Receive a Higher Quality of Service
In the final stages of your client’s green card process, you will have the peace of mind that a licensed American Immigration Lawyer will assist the applicant in preparing for the interview,and locating and submitting required documents to the US Embassy. Our American Attorneys will be on hand to correspond with clients and applicants and will facilitate a smoother transition thereby avoiding any delays in the process.
CTR & Associates can add an international aspect to your law practice with our office and staff in Bangkok, Thailand. Email us at Info@CtrLegal.com now for more details. While CTR & Associates is owned and managed by an American attorney, we do not have any special relationship or influence at the US Embassy in Bangkok and we strive to provide our clients with the utmost professionalism in our interaction with the US Consular staff. We strive to conform to all US guidelines regarding attorney client representation and communication when assisting clients at the US Embassy.
Arizona's New Immigration Law
You need a passport to go to Arizona!
Los Angeles officials on Wednesday approved a ban on future business with Arizona in protest against its crackdown on illegal immigrants, becoming the largest U.S. city to impose such an economic boycott. http://tinyurl.com/22rdg8c
A tough new anti-immigration law in the US state of Arizona is facing its first legal challenges.
Critics say the new legislation, which requires police to question anyone they suspect may be in the country illegally, targets Hispanic minorities.
A Latino Christian group and an Arizona police officer have filed lawsuits.
Civil rights groups and the federal government say they may follow as President Barack Obama and Colombian popstar Shakira join the protests.
Even though most Arizonans support the measure, it has sparked protest and controversy nationwide.
Arizona police will be required to stop and question anyone they reasonably suspect to be an illegal immigrant. If the person cannot prove their status, they can be arrested.
In a state of fewer than seven million people, nearly half a million are thought to be illegal.
Most come from Mexico looking for work, but Arizona’s border is a busy route for drug smugglers.
Supporters of the new law say it will protect lawful residents. Opponents say anyone could be stopped simply because they look Hispanic. Find it here.
Passport Required to Travel in the US
You need a passport to go to Arizona!
Los Angeles officials on Wednesday approved a ban on future business with Arizona in protest against its crackdown on illegal immigrants, becoming the largest U.S. city to impose such an economic boycott. http://tinyurl.com/22rdg8c
A tough new anti-immigration law in the US state of Arizona is facing its first legal challenges. Critics say the new legislation, which requires police to question anyone they suspect may be in the country illegally, targets Hispanic minorities.
A Latino Christian group and an Arizona police officer have filed lawsuits.
Civil rights groups and the federal government say they may follow as President Barack Obama and Colombian popstar Shakira join the protests. Even though most Arizonans support the measure, it has sparked protest and controversy nationwide.
Arizona police will be required to stop and question anyone they reasonably suspect to be an illegal immigrant. If the person cannot prove their status, they can be arrested. In a state of fewer than seven million people, nearly half a million are thought to be illegal. Most come from Mexico looking for work, but Arizona’s border is a busy route for drug smugglers.
Supporters of the new law say it will protect lawful residents. Opponents say anyone could be stopped simply because they look Hispanic. Find it here.
Our Services For Regular & Regional Center Programs
We are ready to provide you with comprehensive EB-5 Green Card services that apply to both the Regular and Regional Center programs, including:
- Confirm the source and availability of funds available for your EB-5 Green Card business investment, which generally requires the submission of 5 years of tax filings
- Advise on due diligence for your preferred business investment
- Prepare and file your I-526 petition as an alien entrepreneur with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (CIS)
- Once you are approved, we help you file for an Adjustment of Status or Immigrant Visa
- When you are granted conditional resident status, we monitor your case during the 21-24 month wait period required to verify that the full investment has been made and 10 jobs created (if applicable)
- We help you file the Form I-829 application to remove conditional resident status at the specified time to obtain permanent residence.
EB-5 Green Card Regional Center Application Services
The Regional Center program is ideal for the retiree or inactive investor due in large part to the “indirect employment creation” requirement and usual limited partner feature of this program. If you choose to invest $500,000 plus acquisition costs through one of more than 70+ Regional Centers, we can assist you by discussing the Regional Center program options that may be best suited to you.
There are several steps in the Regional Center program category which vary based on your individual circumstances.
EB-5 Green Card Regular Program Application Services
If you choose to invest $500,000 to $1 million through the EB-5 Green Card Regular Program, we can help you:
- Advise on reorganizing an existing business to become a qualifying new commercial enterprise
- Identify a “troubled business” that may allow you to create fewer than 10 new jobs
Start The EB-5 Green Card Process Now
Getting started is easy. Schedule a consultation to speak to EB-5 Green Card attorney Cathy Tran Reck in more detail about your case, or contact us at one of our international offices in Bangkok and Ho Chi Minh City.
CTR and Associates K1 Fiance Visa Services
“I had consulted with numerous other immigration lawyers (locally and abroad) prior to meeting Cathy and after the initial consultation with Cathy I knew this was the lawyer that I had been searching for! Cathy answered all my initial questions in thorough detail and comprehensible manner. I chose Cathy and her associates as my sole immigration attorney for all my legal issues which may arise while going through the Fiancee Visa process and with any possible future issues after the process was completed. In my opinion Cathy’s firm went above and beyond my expectations from what I was expecting from an immigration lawyer. ”
K1 Fiance Visa Overview
If your fiance is not a citizen of the United States and you plan to get married in the U.S., then you must file a K1 Visa petition with USCIS on behalf of your fiancé. After the petition is approved, your fiance must obtain a visa issued at a U.S. Embassy or U.S. Consulate abroad. The marriage must take place within 90 days after the 1st admission to the U.S.
If the green card marriage does NOT take place within 90 days or your loved one marries someone other than you (the U.S. citizen filing USCIS Form I-129F – Petition for Alien Fiancé), then he/she will be required to leave the United States. Until the marriage takes place, that person is considered a non-immigrant. A non-immigrant is a foreign national seeking to temporarily enter the United States for a specific purpose and may not obtain an extension of the 90-day original non-immigrant admission.
If your loved one intends to live and work permanently in the United States, you should apply for an adjustment of status for the green card after your marriage. Conditional permanent residency or conditional green cards, or otherwise referred to as the “two year green card” is granted when the marriage is less than two years old at the time of adjustment of status or time of the green card processing.
K1 Visa Step by Step Presentation
Below is a presentation that takes you through the K1 Fiance Visa application process step by step.
For more detailed information please contact us for a consultation.
Who is Eligible?
U.S. citizens who will be getting married to loved one in the United States may petition for a fiance(e) K-1 Visa. Both of you must be free to marry. This means that you are legally able to marry and any previous marriages have ended through divorce, annulment or death. You must have met each other in person within the last two years before filing for the I-129F Form for a Fiancé(e) Visa. This requirement can be waived only if meeting in person would violate long-established customs, or meeting would create extreme hardship for you. You a must marry within 90 days after the initial entry into the U.S.
You may also apply to bring any dependents that your fiance(e) may have who are unmarried and under 21years of age.
After arriving in the United States, you will be eligible to apply for a work permit or employment authorization document for your loved ones. The applicant may be able to work while the green card is pending and in any profession without requiring a work permit.
K1 Fiance Visa and the In Person Meeting Requirement
The INA requires K1 fiance visa applicants to have physically met their US citizen petitioner in person before the USCIS will grant the I-129F. This is simply one factor used to prove the bona fide or sincerity of the relationship between the fiancee visa applicant and the US citizen petitioner.
This in person meeting mandate flies in the face of modern time and technology where couples meet on dating websites, online chats, and social network sites. With the advent of online dating, couples utilize video chat and instant chat, and Skype calls wherein it’s genuinely plausible that couples fall in love and have a bona fide relationship. Saying that though, virtual meetings do not meet the US law that mandates that the couple are in physical presence of each other at least 1 time.
US law does allow for extenuating circumstances where an in person meeting may be waived. This waiver is permitted when it is established that a meeting would be an extreme hardship for the US citizen petitioner, or it is not permitted due to cultural or religious traditions. As long as the religious belief is recognized, or the cultural tradition is sincere, then USCIS will waive the meeting requirement.
For the extreme hardship method, this is a waiver that the US petitioner submit indicating that visa denial based on meeting the fiancee in person mandate would place extreme hardship to the US citizen petitioner. Extreme hardship to the petitioner exists where the petitioner may have an extenuating medical disability or circumstances that warrants a waiver of the meeting in person requirement.
Oftentimes, couples have met and can fulfill the 1 in person meeting requirement, but whether it is sufficient to create a genuine and caring relationship with the visa applicant will depend on the couple’s unique sets of facts. For instance, the consular officers may scrutinize extensively whether a couple who spent 1 day together would be able to establish a bona fide relationship as oppose to 1 month. The 1 day visit may also contradict the traditional notion of a relationship where there’s sincerity and genuine care and affection if the couple commenced their relationship 1-2 months prior to filing the Fiance Visa Application. Nonetheless, a 1 month long visit may also be scrutinized if there are other red flag issues such as a wide age gap or multiple filings for the same applicant.
The US consular officers can glean from the meeting(s) and the evidence submitted whether it rise to the level of of creating a sincere and bona fide relationship.
K1 Visa Consulate Interview
Questions asked by the officer is generally geared at determining whether the couple has a sincere or bona fide relationship. In generally practice,
the interviewing officer will review the documents that the American petitioner submitted to USCIS in the I-129F form, and any additional evidence submitted by the visa applicant. The officer conducts a due diligence in that he/she reviews the information in the file and ask the visa applicant questions to ascertain the sincerity of the relationship. Interviewees may feel intimidated in this situation as one would be if sitting across a complete stranger who asks you personal questions regarding your relationship with your loved one. Nonetheless, the officers are trained to scrutinize the applicant for any legal inadmissibility issue and whether the couple’s relationship is bona fide.
Any temptation to lie to the consular officers is pointless as they are trained to detect those deceptive techniques used to obtain a visa. The penalty for lying to a consular officer could result in an outright denial of the visa application and possibly a bar on entry to the US for years to come. Thus, honesty is the best policy when it comes to answering sensitive questions at the interview.
How Can I Appeal a Denied K1 Visa
Generally, you may appeal within 33 days of receiving the denial by mail. The appeal must be filed with the office that made the original decision. After your appeal form and a required fee are processed, the appeal will be referred to the Administrative Appeals Unit (AAU) in Washington, DC.
K1 Fiance Visa
For many American who have met their girlfriends during their holiday tour of Thailand or who have met online through various dating websites, the most confounding problem is what to do if you want to pursue your relationship in the US. The most common questions I get from prospective client are: How can I bring my Thai fiancee to the US to get married? Do I have to marry her in Thailand or can we marry in the US? What are the financial and procedural issues I’d have to substantiate to the US Embassy?
An American citizen who plans to marry in the US must first determine their local USCIS office to file the I-129F for their fiancee. This initial processing means you have to submit sufficient proof that you have a bona fide relationship with you fiancee and you must also have met with your fiancée in person within the last two years before filing for the visa. This requirement can be waived only if meeting your fiancée in person would violate long-established customs, or if meeting your fiancée would create extreme hardship for you. There are narrow exceptions to this rule so if you have fall in this category, you need to get professional legal help. Additionally, you and your fiancée must be free to marry. This means that both of you are unmarried, or that any previous marriages have ended through divorce, annulment or death. You may also apply to bring your fiancée’s unmarried children, who are under age 21, to the US. As a practical matter, the National Visa Center does an administrative review of the file to ensure everything is in order before moving it along to the US Consulate abroad.
Once your petition is approved in the US, the file is then sent to your fiancee’s country of residence, and in this case it would be Bangkok, Thailand. The US Consulate will do an administrative review of the file to see that everything is in order and then send your fiancee a packet of information to complete prior to making an interview appointment. This ranges from residency documents to medical exams, and any supplemental evidence she may want to take to the interview to verify the veracity of the relationship. While the US Consulate does see a fair amount of fraudulent cases, most Consular Officers are fair and knowledgeable in immigration law and they will normally approve credible, legitimate cases.To their credit, they are trained to determine if a case lacks merits or if it’s purely based on circumventing USA immigration laws, for which they will ultimately deny.
The most crucial part of this process is the interview. This is the only time where the Consular Officer will meet with your fiancee and to determine whether there are any discrepancies or dishonesty in the case. This is an essential and pivotal point in the process and where more applicants tend to fail. As mentioned earlier, the Consular Officers are adept at fraud detection and signs of misrepresentation, wherein it is within their discretion to outright deny the case and send it back to USCIS for revocation, or they issue a 221(g) and forward it to Administrative Processing. Either way, the strength of the case is dependent on the applicant’s response to questions posed and the quantity and quality of the evidence. It’s true, some legitimate cases are wrongfully denied, and some weak ones do get approved.
If your fiancee is successful, the U.S. Embassy will issue a visa for her, and her dependents if applicable, to go abroad and get married. However, the marriage has to take place within 90 days of your fiancee entering the USA. If the marriage does not take place, your fiancee cannot marry someone else and she must return to Thailand. Until the marriage takes place, your fiancée is considered a nonimmigrant, which is simply a foreign national seeking to temporarily enter the United States for a specific purpose so it’s nearly impossible to change the status of that visa to that of Tourist or Student Visa when your fiancee enters on the Fiancee K1 Visa.
If your fiancee intends to live and work permanently in the US, she should apply to become a permanent resident after your marriage. If she does not, she will have to leave the country before the 90 days nonimmigrant admission date. Once the permanent residence is issued after your marriage, your fiancee will initially receive conditional permanent residence status for two years, and it simply means that the marriage was created less than two years at the time of the application for permanent residence. This would also apply to any dependents that benefited from the K-2, such as her unmarried children.
Alternatively, if you are one of those unfortunate souls that were denied a Fiancee Visa, you may appeal within 33 days of receiving the denial by mail. Chances of getting an appeal approved is slim, especially if the denial is based on facts in the case. If you believe it was erroneously denied due to legal grounds, I suggest hiring professional legal help to appeal to the appropriate department in the Embassy. More often than not, clients do not even realize that their denial was without applicable legal basis versus factual findings to gauge whether to appeal. Many will simply abandon the Fiancee Visa and seek other immigration options or they seek the advice of a legal professional. This is purely a personal and strategic decision depending on your ultimate goal.
Working with the US Embassy does not have to be a traumatic or expensive journey. It takes some time to research the administrative procedures and a patient. The end result of bringing your fiancee to the USA should be your ultimate goal and never underestimate the power of bureaucracy.

