This also all depends on whether the United States Government is aware of your presence here in the country illegally. If you have money, and buy property in Brazil, and go home without having ever been caught out for being here illegally, then there is nothing in your record to show, and you can get a non-immigrant visa at any time without a waiver because you won’t be banned.
Legally – yes. Practically – it depends.
As Andrew Lazarus pointed out, you seem to be still all right and would be eligible for a tourist visa. However, given your personal history and family ties, a consulate would consider you a high “no-return” risk. Normally, high risk individuals can demonstrate ties with their native country, but in your case it would be years until your ties to Brazil will outweigh your ties to US.
The above paragraph is specific to a non-immigrant visa, like visitor’s or student’s. For an immigrant visa (like EB-5), you don’t need to show ties, and there is nothing that I see that can disqualify you.
To get a nonimmigrant visa to the US you need to prove that you’ll be leaving the country before it expires. That is fairly hard if you were ever in the country illegally.
Having property (especially real-estate) in your home country helps a lot. Family ties help a lot. A steady job helps a lot.
Ultimately it’s going to be very hard to get a tourist visa, but it’s not impossible unless you have a ban.
Unlawful presence does not accrue for children under 18:
An alien whose unlawful status begins before his or her 18th birthday does not begin to accrue unlawful presence for purposes of section 212(a)(9)(B) of the Act until the day after his or her 18th birthday pursuant to section 212(a)(9)(B)(iii)(I) of the Act.
If you leave before 180 days of unlawful presence, there is no automatic ban. Between 180 days and one year, a three-year ban. Over one year, a ten-year ban. So pack a suitcase now.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
5 Mar, 2024
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