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Gabriel Cheong, Esq.

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Infinity Law Group LLC

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Boston Divorce Lawyer Blog

Where Family Law Intersects Immigration Law: Divorcing while a Conditional Resident

February 19th, 2009

Keith A. Pabian, Esq. is an immigration attorney with Pabian & Russell, LLC, a law firm in Boston with practice areas including corporate law and estate planning.

GUEST BLOGGER – Keith A. Pabian

If you are a person that immigrated to the United States through a marriage that was less than 2 years old when you received your green card, then you received your green card on a conditional basis.  In other words, you are known as a conditional permanent resident.  This conditional status lasts for 2 years after your green card was granted.  But what happens if you and your spouse get divorced before the end of those 2 years while you are still in the United States as a conditional permanent resident? Do you lose your green card?

 

Usually, the United States Citizenship & Immigration Service (USCIS) requires that a spouse granted conditional permanent residence file to remove the conditional residence jointly with his or her spouse.  However, there is an exception for a person that has been divorced before filing to remove his or her conditional residence.

 

If you are a conditional permanent resident and you are divorced, then you may file an I-751 petition without the help of your ex-spouse to remove your conditional residence if you can show that you entered into your marriage in good faith and that the marriage has legally been terminated.  Therefore, if you can show that you and your former spouse had a real marriage and that you have obtained a legal divorce, then you can file an I-751 petition by yourself.  Similarly, children of divorced parents can also file an I-751 petition by themselves if they can show that their parents entered into a good faith marriage and that they were legally divorced.

 

To show that you entered into a good faith marriage, you should submit as many documents as possible with the I-751 petition to show that you had a real marriage.  Documents such as joint bank account statements, a lease or mortgage with both your name and your ex-spouse’s name on it, and birth certificates of any children than you had together are helpful in showing a valid marriage.

 

Keith A. Pabian, Esq. is an Immigration Attorney at Pabian & Russell, LLC. Mr. Pabian can be reached at (617) 951-3100 or by email at kpabian@pabianrussell.com if you would like to schedule a consultation or are in need of immigration assistance or advice.

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