... in response to Almost 6 weeks, posted by Hiker on May 7, 20031. Back in 2000 my fiancee waited patiently for a letter telling her when she could go to Bogota for her interview. After about 6 weeks I called the Embassy myself from here in the states. The lady told me that my fiancee had an 'open date' to come to Bogota as soon as she had all her paperwork in order. My fiancee didn't understand the term 'open date' even though the paperwork was in Spanish. Personally I don't think she really read it all. Good thing I called.
Once she got there she started her interview and everything was in order until he askes about her police report. The paperwork she had received in December 1999 said applicants for a K-1 visa from Colombia and Venezuela did not require them. The embassy officer informed her that the law changed on January 1, 2000 and there was nothing he could do about it.
Nobody bothered to tell her. There were 8 other girls in the same situation that day. There were a lot of tear and phone calls to fiances in the states.
They all had to go to the Bogota police department and get their reports that afternoon. By the time they all got back the immigration office wouldn't take any more interviews. The next day was Friday and they didn't do any interviews on Friday. Monday was a holiday so she had to fly back to Cali and return on Tuesday. That also cost me since her ticket to Miami and my flight to meet her had to all be changed to the following week. Just an idea of the many little hassles and hurdles they put in front of you.
Using your congressman really won't help. The people in the Embassy deal with visas everyday. It's the same old routine to them. They've heard it all and seen it all so unless they are guilty of some serious negligence nothing much will happen until they are ready for it to happen. Trust me, I considered it, too but knew it was futile.
2. As for getting a visa for someone who is already married to a Gringo. I know a guy who I hooked up with the same agency I went through. He first went to Cali in September 2000. Met a girl on the first trip. Returned in October and got married and she was in the US by the end of November. The key was he paid some lawyer who was connected with the agencey $1000 to push the paperwork through. Money does talk in Colombia.
There are 1000 stories. The two main keys when dealing with this whole process is:
A. Make sure all of the paperwork (both yours and her's) is accurate and complete.
B. PATIENCE, PATIENCE, PATIENCE.
Good luck.