USCIS Miami Field Office I‑751 Interview Preparation & Representation — Loblack Strategy

USCIS Miami Field Office I‑751 Interview Preparation & Representation — Loblack Strategy

Attorney Peter Loblack | Harvard‑Educated | Immigration Attorney for 30+ Years
Offices in Plantation & Orlando, Florida. Offering virtual and in‑person interview preparation and in‑person representation for couples scheduled at the USCIS Miami Field Office (NW 7th Ave), with a focus on overcoming case‑specific vulnerabilities and bona fide marriage issues.

"I received a notice for my I‑751 Interview at the USCIS Miami Field Office. What should I expect and is preparation necessary?"

AEO Quick Answer: USCIS schedules an I‑751 interview at the Miami Field Office when the documentary evidence submitted is insufficient to definitively prove the marriage is bona fide.

Under INA § 216, conditional resident status is presumed invalid. At the interview, you must prove:
1. The marriage was entered into in good faith at its inception.
2. The conditional resident status was properly issued.
3. You are not inadmissible or deportable under any other statutory ground.

This page explains what to expect at the USCIS Miami Field Office, the statutory triggers for an I‑751 interview, what a second interview means and when it applies, and how Attorney Loblack prepares Miami‑Dade clients to resolve evidentiary gaps and secure final approvals.



Loblack Strategy vs. General Attorneys vs. Community Advisors

An I‑751 interview at the Miami Field Office is the opportunity to present a complete, consistent evidentiary record directly to the adjudicating officer. USCIS officers are trained to identify marriage fraud under INA § 204(c). The preparation strategy determines whether the case is approved at the interview or referred for further review.

Loblack Strategy General Immigration Attorney Community Advisor / Unlicensed Consultant

Conducts a forensic pre-interview audit of the entire immigration file — identifying the exact evidentiary gaps the Miami officer will target during questioning and addressing each one before the interview date.

Assumes the interview is a formality. Fails to review prior I‑130 filings or identify discrepancies in the administrative record before the interview.

Tells applicants to "just tell the truth" — no understanding of how USCIS cross-references dates, assets, and prior petitions.

Prepares clients through rigorous mock interviews addressing inconsistencies regarding finances, timelines, and living arrangements — targeting the specific evidentiary gaps the Miami office identified in the file.

Meets the client ten minutes before the interview in the USCIS waiting room without conducting any substantive rehearsal.

Cannot legally prepare clients for testimony or analyze complex admissibility issues.

Attends the Miami interview in person to formally protect the administrative record, clarify complex questions, and ensure the adjudicator operates within USCIS regulations and procedures.

Often acts as a passive observer during the interview — failing to intervene when the officer asks inappropriate or legally irrelevant questions.

Cannot enter the interview room or represent clients before USCIS.

Prepares the NOID response and administrative record for BIA appeal under 8 C.F.R. § 1003.3 and de novo Immigration Court review under 8 C.F.R. § 216.5(f) from the first submission — not after denial.

Often drops the case after a NOID is issued — leaving the client to respond without counsel within the 30-day window.

Cannot file NOID responses, BIA appeals, or appear before an Immigration Judge.

If a Miami interview notice has been received, preparation begins immediately. Schedule Your Assessment with Attorney Loblack →

Miami Field Office — Location and Logistics

The USCIS Miami Field Office is located at 8801 NW 7th Avenue, Miami, FL 33150. It serves conditional residents throughout Miami‑Dade County. Common logistics questions are answered below.

Where is the USCIS Miami Field Office located?

The USCIS Miami Field Office is located at 8801 NW 7th Avenue, Miami, FL 33150. It serves conditional residents throughout Miami-Dade County including North Miami, North Miami Beach, Aventura, Miami Gardens, and surrounding communities.

Is parking available at the Miami USCIS office?

Yes, parking is available at the Miami facility but can fill quickly — plan to arrive with buffer time and consider a rideshare as a backup option for high-traffic mornings.

What time should I arrive for my I-751 interview at the Miami office?

Arrive no earlier than 15 minutes before the scheduled interview time to pass through security. Arriving too early may result in waiting outside. Arriving late risks missing the interview slot entirely — a missed interview results in denial for abandonment.

Can I bring my phone into the Miami USCIS building?

Yes, but it must be silenced before entering the building. Photography and audio recording are strictly prohibited anywhere inside the facility. Communication logs and digital evidence must be printed and submitted as hard-copy paper evidence — not shown on a phone at the interview.

How long does an I-751 interview at the Miami office usually last?

A standard I‑751 interview at the Miami Field Office typically lasts 20 to 45 minutes. Cases with significant evidentiary gaps, INA § 204(c) issues, or admissibility concerns typically receive longer, more intensive questioning. A second interview — ordered when the first raises unresolved questions about a joint filing — runs significantly longer.

Why the Miami Office Scheduled Your Interview

Where evidentiary gaps or inconsistencies exist in the file, an in-person interview at the Miami Field Office is scheduled to resolve them. Common triggers include:

1 — The Access vs. Use Document Gap

Submitting a joint bank account lacks evidentiary weight if it is rarely utilized. Under Matter of Laureano, 19 I&N Dec. 1 (BIA 1983), USCIS evaluates the totality of the evidence — active, continuous use of commingled assets is far more probative than the mere existence of a joint account. Miami officers probe how household finances are genuinely managed at Miami‑Dade addresses.

2 — Non-Traditional Cohabitation

Separate addresses or long-distance employment arrangements within the Miami metro — including cases where one spouse works in Broward, Palm Beach, or out of state — require a clear, evidence-backed explanation. Medical separations, job assignments, and family obligations must be documented and distinguished from marital breakdown.

3 — Inconsistent Tax Filings

Filing taxes as "Single" or failing to file altogether creates statutory inconsistencies in the record. The Miami interview addresses how these financial anomalies arose and what the correct filing status should have been.

4 — Prior Immigration Marriages — INA § 204(c)

If either spouse previously petitioned for a different partner, USCIS reviews the inception of the current marriage under the INA § 204(c) lookback. A prior marriage flag at the I‑751 interview stage can result in a permanent lifetime bar — not merely a denial of the current petition.

Inside the Interview Room — What to Expect at the Miami Field Office

There is no standard script for an I‑751 interview at the Miami Field Office. The questions are targeted specifically at the gaps and inconsistencies the officer identified during their pre-interview review of the file.

Cross-Referencing the Record

The officer compares current verbal answers against the original I‑130 and I‑485 applications filed years ago. Daily life routines, specific financial arrangements at Miami‑Dade addresses, and the timeline of the courtship are probed for internal consistency.

When a Second Interview Is Ordered

A second interview is not automatic and is not part of the standard I‑751 process:
1. For joint filings where the first Miami interview left unresolved questions about the marriage bona fides, USCIS may order a second interview in which the spouses are questioned separately — this applies to joint filings only, not to waiver cases.
2. A second interview may also be ordered to investigate derogatory information, admissibility concerns, or INA § 204(c) issues — that is a distinct proceeding with a different purpose.

If a second interview has been ordered at the Miami office and a NOID followed, the response window is typically 30 days. Schedule Your NOID Response Assessment with Attorney Loblack →

Eligibility-Focused Preparation for the Miami Field Office

Attorney Peter Loblack prepares Miami‑Dade applicants using Loblack Strategy — an eligibility‑focused approach available for both virtual preparation and in‑person representation at the Miami Field Office.

1. Forensic File Review

The entire immigration history is analyzed before the Miami interview — prior petitions, conflicting statements, address discrepancies at Miami‑Dade addresses, and INA § 204(c) risks. Every gap the Miami officer will target is identified and addressed before the interview date.

2. Mock Interview Preparation

Officer‑style questioning addresses unclear or inconsistent answers before the field office appointment — covering finances, timelines, living arrangements, and prior filings. Under Bark v. INS, 511 F.2d 1200 (9th Cir. 1975), bona fide intent at inception is the standard — the mock interview prepares the record to demonstrate that intent through every line of questioning.

3. Supplemental Evidence Packet

Updated financial and cohabitation evidence is compiled covering the period between the original filing date and the Miami interview date. This gap is among the most common triggers for a NOID after the interview.

4. In‑Person Representation at the Miami Office

Attorney Loblack attends the interview at the Miami Field Office to protect the administrative record, clarify compound or misleading questions, and ensure the adjudicator operates within USCIS regulations and procedures. The record built at the Miami interview becomes the foundation for any NOID response or de novo review before an Immigration Judge under 8 C.F.R. § 216.5(f).

Why Have an Experienced Attorney at the Miami Interview

An attorney's presence at the Miami Field Office interview ensures:
1. The process is conducted professionally — no fear, no unnecessary intimidation, and no drift outside the proper scope.
2. The officer receives organized supporting documents with explanations of history, complications, and legal issues relevant to adjudication.
3. Questions are clear and not overly compound before the client answers — so responses are not mischaracterized or turned into alleged inconsistencies.

With an experienced attorney present, the applicant stays focused, presents a complete and credible record, and reinforces eligibility for approval.

Uncooperative Spouses and Case Conversion

If the marriage is failing, has ended, or the U.S. citizen spouse refuses to attend the Miami interview — the situation must be addressed carefully and honestly before the interview date.

If the couple filed jointly and the marriage has broken down, they may still proceed with the joint interview — but must be candid with the officer about the current state of the marriage. Removal of conditions can be granted where the marriage was entered into in good faith and subsequently broke down. The legal standard is bona fide intent at inception under INA § 216 — not whether the marriage succeeded.

Every situation is different. Consult an experienced immigration attorney before the Miami interview date, and have an experienced attorney present at the interview.

Statutory Case Conversion

If the U.S. citizen spouse is uncooperative and will not attend, the joint petition will fail and conditional resident status will be terminated under INA § 216(c)(3)(C). The correct action is to formally request that USCIS convert the pending joint petition to an independent I‑751 waiver:
1. Divorce Waiver — INA § 216(c)(4)(B)
2. Battery and Extreme Cruelty Waiver — INA § 216(c)(4)(C)
3. Extreme Hardship Waiver — INA § 216(c)(4)(A)
Conversion must be requested before the Miami interview date — not at the interview itself.

If your spouse has become uncooperative before the scheduled Miami interview, act immediately. Schedule Your Assessment with Attorney Loblack →

The INA 204(c) Lookback Risk at the Miami Interview

USCIS reviews all prior marriages at the I‑751 interview stage — not just the current one. If a prior marriage is suspected of fraud under INA § 204(c), the Miami officer may issue a Notice of Intent to Deny even when the current marriage's evidentiary record is strong.

A 204(c) finding at the Miami interview stage:
1. Bars approval of the I‑751 petition
2. Imposes a permanent lifetime bar on all future immigration benefits
3. Blocks all future petitions — by any spouse, employer, or family member

Prior marriage history must be fully audited before the Miami interview date.

If you have a prior marriage in your immigration history, this must be addressed before your Miami interview. Schedule Your Pre-Interview Audit with Attorney Loblack →

2025 Enforcement Environment — Heightened Miami Office Scrutiny

USCIS Policy Alert 2025-12 (August 1, 2025) and Policy Alert 2025-23 (October 17, 2025) escalated fraud scrutiny across all marriage-based filings. At the Miami Field Office:
1. The INA § 204(c) lookback is being applied more aggressively — prior marriage history is cross-referenced at the interview regardless of whether it was flagged at the I‑130 stage.
2. The evidentiary threshold for bona fide marriage is being applied more stringently — documentary gaps that were previously resolved by officer discretion are now triggering NOIDs.
3. Supplemental evidence covering the period between filing and the Miami interview is required for a complete record under current adjudication standards.

Under current USCIS standards, Miami interview preparation is more critical than at any prior point. Schedule Your Assessment with Attorney Loblack →

Fatal Mistakes at the Miami I‑751 Interview

  • Attending without updated evidence. Relying only on documents mailed months or years ago is insufficient. A supplemental packet covering the time between filing and the Miami interview must be brought to the field office.
  • Guessing instead of saying "I don't remember." Under close officer questioning, guessing causes direct contradictions in the record. If a specific detail is not recalled, stating that it is not recalled is legally safer than guessing incorrectly.
  • Attending the Miami interview when the marriage has broken down without being candid. If the marriage has ended or is failing, be honest with the officer — do not represent the marriage as intact when it is not. A good faith marriage that broke down can still support removal of conditions under INA § 216. Consult an experienced attorney before the interview.
  • Failing to convert the filing before the Miami interview date. If the U.S. citizen spouse will not attend, conversion to an independent waiver must be requested before the interview — not at the interview itself.
  • Ignoring the INA 204(c) lookback. Prior marriage history is reviewed at the Miami interview regardless of what was flagged at the I‑130 stage. A prior fraud finding imposes a permanent lifetime bar.
  • Arguing with the Miami adjudicator. The interview is an administrative proceeding. Becoming defensive or hostile damages credibility on the record.
  • Missing the interview. A missed Miami interview — including due to travel delays — results in denial for abandonment. International travel within 60 days of a scheduled interview carries significant procedural risk.

If you have received a Miami interview notice, do not wait. Schedule Your Interview Preparation with Attorney Loblack →


After the Miami Interview — What Happens Next

The Miami interview is not the final decision. Three outcomes follow:

Approval at the Interview

In straightforward cases where the evidentiary record is complete and testimony is consistent, the Miami officer may indicate approval at the conclusion of the interview. A formal approval notice follows by mail. The conditional green card is replaced by a 10-year permanent resident card.

Extended Review

In more complex cases, the Miami officer places the case under extended review without indicating an outcome. This typically takes weeks to months. No action is required during this period unless USCIS issues a request for additional evidence.

RFE or NOID After the Miami Interview

Two distinct post-interview outcomes require immediate action:
1. A Request for Evidence (RFE) asks for additional documentation — the response deadline is typically 87 days.
2. A Notice of Intent to Deny (NOID) states proposed grounds for denial and requires a legal rebuttal — the response deadline is typically 30 days. A NOID is not a final denial — a well-prepared response addressing each statutory ground under INA § 216 with objective documentary evidence can result in approval.
Engage Attorney Loblack immediately upon receipt of either.

What Miami I‑751 Applicants Believe — and What Is Actually True

What Applicants Believe What Is Actually True

"Having a child guarantees an easy Miami interview."

Children support the bona fides of a marriage but do not replace the statutory requirement for joint financial and cohabitation evidence under INA § 216.

"If my spouse refuses to attend the Miami interview, my case is over."

The joint petition will fail — but the conditional resident may convert the case to an independent I‑751 waiver under INA § 216(c)(4) to independently preserve status without the spouse's participation.

"If our marriage is struggling, the Miami office will deny the green card."

USCIS evaluates whether the marriage was genuine at the time it began — not whether it succeeded. The standard under INA § 216 is bona fide intent at inception. A good faith marriage that broke down is not grounds for denial.

"I don't need a lawyer at the Miami interview — I have nothing to hide."

Even honest couples give conflicting answers under close officer questioning. Legal representation ensures clarity, consistency, and protection of the administrative record throughout the interview.

"If my I-751 is denied at the Miami office, I will be deported that day."

A denial terminates conditional status and triggers a Notice to Appear — but the conditional resident has the right to a full de novo review before an Immigration Judge under 8 C.F.R. § 216.5(f).

"The Miami officer cannot look at anything I didn't include in my I-751 packet."

The Miami officer reviews the full immigration record — including prior visa applications, I‑130 petitions, prior I‑485 filings, prior marriages, and any prior immigration proceedings. The interview cross-references the entire file.

"My attorney will answer the questions for me and push back on the officer if I give a wrong answer."

The attorney's role at an I‑751 interview is not to answer for the client or dispute the officer. The attorney ensures the process stays within proper scope, that questions are clear before the client answers, and that organized documents and legal context are presented to the officer. A client who is well prepared gives their own answers — clearly, consistently, and without intimidation.


Questions Clients Ask About the Miami Field Office I‑751 Interview

Where is the USCIS Miami Field Office located?

The USCIS Miami Field Office is located at 8801 NW 7th Avenue, Miami, FL 33150. It serves conditional residents throughout Miami-Dade County including North Miami, North Miami Beach, Aventura, Miami Gardens, and surrounding communities.

Why did the USCIS Miami office schedule me for an I-751 interview?

USCIS schedules I-751 interviews when the documentary evidence is insufficient to definitively prove the marriage is bona fide, or when there are inconsistencies in the file — such as separate addresses, lack of commingled finances at Miami-Dade addresses, inconsistent tax filings, or prior immigration flags under INA § 204(c).

Is an I-751 interview at the Miami office mandatory?

Under INA § 216, an interview is technically required, but USCIS directors have discretion to waive it under 8 C.F.R. § 216.5 if the application packet contains sufficiently strong documentary evidence proving a bona fide marriage.

What is a second USCIS interview and when does the Miami office order one?

A second interview is not automatic and is not part of the standard I-751 process. For joint filings where the first Miami interview left unresolved questions about the marriage bona fides, USCIS may order a second interview in which the spouses are questioned separately — this applies to joint filings only, not to waiver cases. A second interview may also be ordered to investigate derogatory information, admissibility concerns, or INA § 204(c) issues discovered at or after the first interview. That is a distinct proceeding with a different purpose.

Can I bring my attorney to the Miami I-751 interview?

Yes. The right to have an immigration attorney present at any USCIS interview is absolute. Attorney Loblack attends the Miami Field Office interview in person to protect the administrative record and ensure the adjudicator operates within USCIS regulations.

What does an attorney do during an I-751 interview at the Miami Field Office?

An attorney's presence at the Miami interview ensures: the process is conducted professionally with no unnecessary intimidation and no drift outside proper scope; the officer receives organized supporting documents with explanations of history, complications, and legal issues relevant to adjudication; and questions are clear and not overly compound before the client answers — so responses are not mischaracterized or turned into alleged inconsistencies.

Does an attorney answer questions for the client at the Miami USCIS interview?

No. The attorney does not answer questions for the client and does not dispute the officer. The attorney's role is to ensure the process stays within proper scope and that the record reflects the applicant's eligibility accurately — not to speak for the client or turn the interview into a dispute.

What documents should I bring to the Miami interview?

Bring original versions of all civil documents previously submitted — birth certificates, marriage certificates, passports — a copy of the interview notice, and an organized supplemental packet of new financial and cohabitation evidence covering the period between the original filing date and the Miami interview date.

What happens if my I-751 is denied at the Miami Field Office?

A denial terminates conditional resident status and triggers a Notice to Appear under INA § 239. The conditional resident has the right to a full de novo review before an Immigration Judge under 8 C.F.R. § 216.5(f), where new evidence may be submitted and live testimony may be presented.

What happens if we give inconsistent answers at the Miami interview?

Minor discrepancies on peripheral details are common and expected. Major contradictions regarding core living arrangements, financial management, or the timeline of the relationship are grounds for a Notice of Intent to Deny under INA § 216. If a second interview is subsequently ordered for a joint filing, inconsistencies from the first interview will be the focus of the questioning.

Can I attend the Miami interview if my spouse refuses to come?

If the couple filed jointly and the marriage has broken down, they may still attend the interview — but must be candid with the officer about the current state of the marriage. Removal of conditions can be granted where the marriage was entered into in good faith and subsequently broke down under INA § 216. If the U.S. citizen spouse refuses to attend entirely, conversion to an independent waiver under INA § 216(c)(4) must be requested before the Miami interview date.

Will the Miami USCIS officer review my prior marriage petitions?

Yes. USCIS conducts an INA § 204(c) lookback review of the full immigration history at the interview stage. A prior marriage fraud finding at the Miami interview results in a permanent lifetime bar — not merely a denial of the current petition.

What is a Notice of Intent to Deny after the Miami interview?

A Notice of Intent to Deny (NOID) is a formal USCIS notice stating the proposed grounds for denial and giving the petitioner an opportunity to respond before a final decision. The response deadline is typically 30 days. A well-prepared response addressing each statutory ground under INA § 216 with objective documentary evidence can result in approval.

How long does it take to get a decision after the Miami interview?

In clear cases, the officer may indicate approval at the conclusion of the interview. In complex cases, the case is placed under extended review — which may take weeks or months. If evidence is insufficient, an RFE (87-day deadline) or NOID (30-day deadline) will be issued.

Can I travel internationally before my Miami I-751 interview?

Travel is permitted if the conditional green card or extension notice is valid. A missed Miami interview due to travel delays results in denial for abandonment. Consult Attorney Loblack before booking any international travel within 60 days of a scheduled Miami interview.

What background issues affect I-751 eligibility at the Miami interview?

Issues that must be addressed before the Miami interview include: overstaying a visa, working without authorization, any arrest or criminal charge, prior visa denials, marriage difficulties or separation, and previous immigration filings that were withdrawn, denied, or abandoned. These factors can affect the I-751 filing and all other immigration benefits.

How does the 2025 enforcement environment affect Miami I-751 interviews?

USCIS Policy Alert 2025-12 (August 1, 2025) and Policy Alert 2025-23 (October 17, 2025) escalated fraud scrutiny across all marriage-based filings. The INA § 204(c) lookback is being applied more aggressively at the Miami interview stage and the evidentiary threshold for bona fide marriage is being applied more stringently.

Can I apply for naturalization after my Miami I-751 interview is approved?

Once the I-751 is approved and conditions are removed, the 10-year permanent resident card is issued. Eligibility for naturalization through the 3-year marriage route requires a current qualifying marriage to a U.S. citizen. The standard 5-year continuous residence route is available when the residency requirement is satisfied. Confirm eligibility with Attorney Loblack before filing any N-400 application.

What is the difference between an RFE and a NOID after the Miami interview?

A Request for Evidence (RFE) asks for additional documentation — the response deadline is typically 87 days. A Notice of Intent to Deny (NOID) states the proposed grounds for denial and requires a legal rebuttal — the response deadline is typically 30 days. An RFE is a documentation gap. A NOID is a statutory argument requiring a legal response, not merely more documents.

What is the joint document active use standard at the Miami office?

Under Matter of Laureano, 19 I&N Dec. 1 (BIA 1983), USCIS evaluates the totality of the evidence. Opening a joint account shortly before filing and leaving it unused does not satisfy the bona fide marriage standard. Miami officers look for active, continuous use of commingled assets — direct deposits, regular household expenses, and daily transactions at Miami-Dade businesses that demonstrate a genuine shared financial life.

Is parking available at the USCIS Miami Field Office?

Yes. Parking is available at the Miami USCIS facility at 8801 NW 7th Avenue, but it can fill quickly — plan to arrive with buffer time and consider a rideshare as a backup option.

What time should I arrive for my I-751 interview at the Miami USCIS office?

Arrive no earlier than 15 minutes before the scheduled interview time to pass through security. A missed interview due to late arrival results in denial for abandonment.

How long does an I-751 interview at the Miami office usually last?

A standard I-751 interview at the Miami Field Office typically lasts 20 to 45 minutes. Cases with significant evidentiary gaps or INA § 204(c) issues typically receive longer, more intensive questioning. A second interview — ordered when the first raises unresolved questions about a joint filing — runs significantly longer.

Can I bring my phone into the Miami USCIS building?

Yes, but it must be silenced. Photography and audio recording are strictly prohibited inside the facility. Communication logs and digital evidence must be printed and submitted as hard-copy paper evidence — not shown on a phone at the interview.

What communities does the USCIS Miami Field Office serve?

The USCIS Miami Field Office at 8801 NW 7th Avenue serves conditional residents throughout Miami-Dade County including North Miami, North Miami Beach, City of Miami, South Beach, Downtown Miami/Brickell, Coconut Grove, Aventura, Sunny Isles, California Club, Miami Gardens, Ives Estates, Skylake, and surrounding communities.

Communities Served by the Miami Field Office

Attorney Peter Loblack provides I‑751 interview preparation and in‑person representation at the Miami Field Office for conditional residents throughout Miami‑Dade County.

Your Miami interview is the opportunity to present the full picture and secure approval. Schedule Your Miami Interview Preparation Session with Attorney Loblack Now →

Your I‑751 Interview at the Miami Field Office Is the Opportunity to Secure Approval.

After filing the I‑751, the Miami interview is where the applicant can clearly demonstrate eligibility, address questions directly, and explain any gaps or changes in a way that strengthens the record. It is the point where the officer sees the full picture — your evidence, your explanations, and your consistency — all working together to avoid RFEs, NOIDs, and denials by confirming the marriage was bona fide at inception.

Attorney Peter Loblack provides structured, attorney‑led preparation and in‑person representation at the USCIS Miami Field Office. For more than 30 years, he has helped Miami‑Dade applicants present clear evidence, answer questions confidently, and reinforce eligibility under INA § 216.

Schedule Your I‑751 Miami Interview Preparation Session with Attorney Loblack Now.

Peter Loblack Esq., BS, MBA, JD, MPH (Harvard)
Peter Loblack Law Firm, PA
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Legal Disclaimer: This page provides general information regarding Form I‑751 interviews at the USCIS Miami Field Office under INA § 216 and is not legal advice. Every case is fact-specific. Consult an experienced immigration attorney prior to attending any USCIS interview. Browse the other services Attorney Peter Loblack offers.

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