Episode 13

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Published on:

12th Jun 2020

Impact Of Divorce Before You Remove Conditions On Permanent Residence

You were married less than two years before your break-up took place. Yet, you still have to file to remove the conditions placed on your permanent residence status.

And the process requires you and your U.S. spouse to file a joint petition to remove the conditions. Should you give up?

Not at all. Do not simply give up, even if the divorce paperwork has been filed.

As this podcast shares, there are three grounds that will enable you to continue, alone, without the help of your former husband or wife.

Recommended Links For More Information:

Three Ways To Remove Conditions On Green Cards Without A Joint Petition

How Divorce Affects Your Green Card Marriage Case

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About the Podcast

The Immigration Mastermind
The Immigration Mastermind is a podcast for immigrants and their families that shares tips, insights, and tidbits to help guide the quest for permanent residence and citizenship in the United States. The podcast strives to build knowledge, while dispelling myths in short bite-sized, easy-to-understand snippets of pull-no-punches information.

Designed for both immigrant families who have already started the immigration process and those just starting to think about their journey, the Immigration Mastermind provides a mix of expert tips about legal rules, insights about breaking news, and tidbits to help immigrants and their families to keep their chin up, even when the road to success seems to be a never-ending road.

About your host

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Carlos Batara

Carlos Batara is an immigration lawyer, author, educator, public speaker, and online talk show host. A graduate of Harvard Law School, he has cared for, protected, and guided immigrants from over 100 countries on their journeys to the United States. His goal is to help at least one family from every nation in the world before he calls it quits.

With family roots from Mexico, Spain, and the Philippines, as well as Native American, Greek, and Turkish ancestry, he brings a broad multicultural background to the practice of immigration law.

Combined with knowledge gained from advanced studies in international relations and constitutional politics, Carlos is always willing to speak his mind openly on immigration issues.