??profiler said:His english doesn't matter... my wife has uni level english... IMM 5406 requires one in English or French and one in native. It's in the instructions at the top. They need both.
And is the key word here.prezdork said:??
This is what it says on the top of the form:
"Complete ALL names in English and in your native language."
I just assume we write the names in English and then their names in Japanese on the same sheet.
Are you sponsoring?LDRLDM said:Good evening!
Can I ask a very complicated question?
My father is married to someone in the US (they are now going through divorce, but still legally married in the US), and the woman had a child prior to their marriage (also married to someone in our home country, divorced in the US).
My father and my mother are not divorced or annulled in my home country, but they divorced in the US (both agreed to it, signed physically themselves while in the US).
My father has since lived in the US and my mother went back to her home country after the divorce.
Now I am confused as to what I should put on the Additional Family Information sheet. I do not know whether I should write my parents as married (since they are in our home country, though my father is married both in the US and back home) and whether I have to include my step sibling whose whereabouts and whatnots are beyond my knowledge.
I am in a complicated family situation, thus putting it into writing drives me nuts.
I do not plan on committing misrepresentation that is why I am seeking an advice as to how to declare everything, but if I deliberately ommit certain facts, would they really know? (Just out of curiousity)
Thanks,
LD
No. I think I am the Principal Applicant then, right? I apologize for forgetting to mention it.profiler said:Are you sponsoring?
You are being sponsored? Just need to make sure I understand which side of the plate you are on...LDRLDM said:No. I think I am the Principal Applicant then, right? I apologize for forgetting to mention it.
Do they check on the parents listed? Would it show that my father has married another person?profiler said:You are being sponsored? Just need to make sure I understand which side of the plate you are on...
OK, here is what I would do (I encourage others to chime in with their $0.05 to keep me honest). I would put your biological mother and biological father on the form. I would attach a separate piece of paper introducing the situation, and any other players on the field and how they relate, and when.
This way you've been totally upfront, and absolutely no misrepresentation can be inferred. That said, they won't care about relationship status of your parents, they use them more for background checks (I believe?).
Ok, so you can state on your additional sheet that you are not sure about any other family members as your father and mother have not discussed them?LDRLDM said:Do they check on the parents listed? Would it show that my father has married another person?
The thing is, my father doesn't want to cooperate into giving me details about his wife and step son, their whereabouts and whatnots because he does not know anymore too. They are on the last stages of divorce I think and would even have court hearing for that.
Thus my father is highly discouraging me to put their names on the form, saying "they would not know."
Even if I want to, I cannot and do not know their addresses.
Yes, I am being sponsored. (Answering your question from previous post)profiler said:Ok, so you can state on your additional sheet that you are not sure about any other family members as your father and mother have not discussed them?
Then you are pretty honest
1 You should state their civil relationship as you know it. If that's divorced, then Divorced.LDRLDM said:Yes, I am being sponsored. (Answering your question from previous post)
So...
1. Do I write them as married, next to their names is their civil status.
2. And if I decided not to write said step mother and sibling. What are my chances of being caught omitting certain facts?
Thank you, dear sir.
profiler said:1 You should state their civil relationship as you know it. If that's divorced, then Divorced.
2. Include a separate sheet stating what you know. They may look at it for a bit, but if you have told them what you know, then it's up to your father to commit misrepresentation, and not you. Tell the truth and don't be afraid to say "I don't know". Just explain why you don't know. I am sure you are not the first...
np... and nickels... we lost our penniesLDRLDM said:
Thank you, Profiler!
Please if any one can share their two cents as well, it would be highly appreciated.
Ha! Don't worry, we'll earn them sooner. 8)profiler said:np... and nickels... we lost our pennies