• Domestic violence, sexual assault, child abuse and
neglect, dating violence, elder abuse, and stalking.1
• Homicide, murder, manslaughter, rape, abusive sexual contact, sexual
exploitation, incest, torture, trafficking, peonage, holding hostage,
involuntary servitude, slave trade, kidnapping, abduction, unlawful criminal
restraint, false imprisonment, or an attempt to commit any of these crimes.
• Crimes relating to a controlled substance or alcohol where the petitioner
has been convicted on at least three occasions and where such crimes did not
arise from a single act.
If the petitioner indicates that he or she has been convicted by a court or
by a military tribunal for one of the specified crimes by checking one or
more of the boxes in Part C., question 2 of Form I-129F, or USCIS ascertains
through relevant background checks that the petitioner has been convicted,
the petitioner will be required to submit certified copies of all court and
police records showing the charges and dispositions for every such
conviction.
This is required even if the petitioner’s records were
sealed or otherwise cleared. Such information shall become part of the
petitioner’s Form I-129F. If the petition is approved, the petitioner’s Form
I-129F (including all criminal background information submitted by the
petitioner and any related criminal conviction information that USCIS
discovers during the course of conducting its routine background check) must
be provided to the Department of State.
The Department of State will disclose this information to
the beneficiary during the consular interview. B. Filing Limitations IMBRA
imposes limitations on the number of petitions a petitioner for a K
nonimmigrant visa for an alien fiancé(e) (K-1) may file or have approved
without seeking a waiver of the application of those limitations.
If the petitioner has filed two or more K-1 visa
petitions at any time in the past, or previously had a K-1 visa petition
approved within two years prior to the filing of the current petition, the
petitioner must request a waiver. These limitations do not apply to
petitioners for a K nonimmigrant visa for an alien spouse (K-3).
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