rahul412 Posted December 16, 2014 Report Share Posted December 16, 2014 I am sure that my CPT was legit. I went to an accredited school and attended all classes with a 3.9 GPA. So did everyone in that class took CPT?? Did you completed your degree or not?? Let me guess, your CPT job and H1 are one and same. Link to comment
JoeF Posted December 16, 2014 Report Share Posted December 16, 2014 I am sure that my CPT was legit. I went to an accredited school and attended all classes with a 3.9 GPA.. That has nothing to do with CPT being legit. CPT is ONLY for work as integral part of the curriculum. If it wasn't, it wasn't legit. Once you have grown up, you will realize that my posts are helpful. And you still haven't answered my questions: So, why did you do it, then??? Are you always doing unethical things, and then acting surprised if it comes back to bite you??? Did you think the authorities in the US are so st*pid they wouldn't know or care? Cheap excuses or trying to avoid the hard questions doesn't help you. Or are you also going to say the same thing you said to me to the officer at the consulate??? What is better, reading and answering the hard questions here, or in front of the officer??? Anybody who has grown up knows the answer. You obviously don't, ergo, you are an immature child. Link to comment
cali_worker Posted December 17, 2014 Report Share Posted December 17, 2014 Hi jairichi, I hope so too. The school has even given me a letter saying that there is no provision to provide the document that the USCIS has cited in the denial notice. I also have a letter directly addressed to the VO saying that I had submitted all required docs before starting working for them and my status was legal throughout. Furthermore, it states that I would have not gotten a revised I-20 had I not submitted the required docs. So, I have everything to back up the fact that my status was totally legal. I am just worried that the VO might not be in a mood to listen to my defense. @rahul412: Not at all. There were many people who had come in from other countries to get their degrees only and were not working. They did start working later on but, that is because CPT is a part of their curriculum and they had the option to do so. At that point, some of them took a semester break and those who had local internships, registered for the permissible number of credits. Link to comment
rahul412 Posted December 17, 2014 Report Share Posted December 17, 2014 Hi jairichi, I hope so too. The school has even given me a letter saying that there is no provision to provide the document that the USCIS has cited in the denial notice. I also have a letter directly addressed to the VO saying that I had submitted all required docs before starting working for them and my status was legal throughout. Furthermore, it states that I would have not gotten a revised I-20 had I not submitted the required docs. So, I have everything to back up the fact that my status was totally legal. I am just worried that the VO might not be in a mood to listen to my defense. @rahul412: Not at all. There were many people who had come in from other countries to get their degrees only and were not working. They did start working later on but, that is because CPT is a part of their curriculum and they had the option to do so. At that point, some of them took a semester break and those who had local internships, registered for the permissible number of credits. AFAIK, CPT is part of F1 program that means a course needs practical training so everyone should take that training. If only few ppl took CPT for a particular course then something should be wrong or I am wrong. Your status is legal, what USCIS wants to know is whether your CPT work is legal or not. You still didn't answer the question, your CPT and H1 job are one and same? Link to comment
JoeF Posted December 17, 2014 Report Share Posted December 17, 2014 @rahul412: Not at all. There were many people who had come in from other countries to get their degrees only and were not working. They did start working later on but, that is because CPT is a part of their curriculum and they had the option to do so. At that point, some of them took a semester break and those who had local internships, registered for the permissible number of credits. So, you are confirming that the CPT was fraudulent. If CPT is part of the curriculum, people would not have an "option" to do it or not. CPT has to be an integral part of the curriculum, not something optional. It really isn't rocket science... Link to comment
jairichi Posted December 17, 2014 Report Share Posted December 17, 2014 Hi jairichi, I hope so too. The school has even given me a letter saying that there is no provision to provide the document that the USCIS has cited in the denial notice. I also have a letter directly addressed to the VO saying that I had submitted all required docs before starting working for them and my status was legal throughout. Furthermore, it states that I would have not gotten a revised I-20 had I not submitted the required docs. So, I have everything to back up the fact that my status was totally legal. I am just worried that the VO might not be in a mood to listen to my defense. @rahul412: Not at all. There were many people who had come in from other countries to get their degrees only and were not working. They did start working later on but, that is because CPT is a part of their curriculum and they had the option to do so. At that point, some of them took a semester break and those who had local internships, registered for the permissible number of credits. All I can say is good luck. Link to comment
cali_worker Posted January 15, 2015 Report Share Posted January 15, 2015 H1-B approved. Interview was less than 60 secs Link to comment
rahul412 Posted January 15, 2015 Report Share Posted January 15, 2015 H1-B approved. Interview was less than 60 secs Good, next time don't try to abuse immigration rules. Link to comment
MICH_WORK Posted August 6, 2015 Report Share Posted August 6, 2015 H1-B approved. Interview was less than 60 secs Hi Cali_Worker, Can you share the questions, what was asked to you in your interview? Did you leave immediately when your COS was denied, or do you get any time limit. Link to comment
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