ForumTitleContentMemberSexCountryDate/Time
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresI-129F Denied
Really, this is all just idle speculation.

You've got a guy here who didn't even care enough about what he was supposed to do to keep a copy of the request. And we have his story of what he thought the request was. Then, he shows us his answer to what he thought they wanted (it was sort of a condescending response too - I think - not really written in a way to get what you want). Then he's PO'd that he didn't get the approval he wanted.

It's like he said/she said (only worse) because we are only getting one side of the story!!
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2012-10-16 13:28:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresI-129F Denied

No no. See here's the thing. one of the requirements of the visa is being "free to marry". In the Philippines you need to provide a CENOMAR which shows that they're single. Even if they divorced in another country, they wouldn't be divorced in the Philippines. Which means they're NOT "free to marry" by Philippine law. Which makes them ineligible for a visa.

The same can be said of EVERY country, they have their own laws. You can think it's unfair but you're asking for permission to bring her here, that includes permission from her government.

There is another country (Vietnam I think) that WILL NOT permit it's citizens to marry USC's who are older than a certain age, and who don't earn over a certain amount (a HIGH amount too). Other countries require their permission to leave the country, even just for visits.

In regards to your particular RFE, by Philippine law she is NOT free to marry you (same as if she wasn't actually divorced in her country). That means she CANNOT leave the country to marry you without her first fulfilling the requirements for someone of her age for her country.

You might not think it's fair, but it is the law of her country.


No No my eye.

CENOMAR etcetera has never been a requirement until interview.

I think the OP didn't understand his RFE.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2012-10-15 20:51:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresMy passport is placed on hold
http://travel.state....family_863.html
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2012-11-09 21:05:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresK1 NOID's at California Service Center
Glad to see you still around.

Thanks.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-03-03 21:09:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresRFE to show we met in person. HELP!

Does that really happen? Where some papers are lost? That is probably not likely since I MEGA-stapled everything together.


Yes it happens. But they want to know how you first encountered each other. Not just how you met face to face.

I agree except I would have worded it "They want to know how you met to establish a relationship AND proof of meeting within the past two years". The only thing I submitted as to how we met to establish a relationship was one sentence in my overall statement of meeting.


But......it happens often enough that the AO wants to know more.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2012-10-15 20:55:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresK1 Visa: Marrying outside U.S. once approved?
Well, you've got me on the USCIS bit, that's for sure! :thumbs:
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-08-30 21:05:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresK1 Visa: Marrying outside U.S. once approved?

The K1 is issued as approval to "enter the USA for 90 days" for the purpose of marrying the petitioner in the USA during the 90 days and also provides the basis for adjusting status to permanent resident provided the terms of the visa are complied with. Visas are used to "enter" countries.

It is definitely not "approval to marry" and no such approval is needed from USCIS or the US Dept. of State. (The US Government agencies associated with obtaining a K1 visa)

Approval (license) to marry is obtained a local government authority in the USA AFTER and only AFTER the K1 visa holder enters the USA. Approval to marry in any other country is obtained through a government agency in that country. Visas are used to "enter" countries. Visas are not required for marriage in the USA, as long as you are already here. It happens all the time.


I know you really want to be right. It's important to your revenue stream.

For whatever it's worth, IMO, the statement "approval to marry you" isn't wrong in the context of issuance of a K1 visa. Such a visa wouldn't be issued if a marriage wasn't planned. We all know a K1 entrant can only adjust status to permanent resident based upon marriage to their K1 petitioner. They can't marry someone else and become a legal resident.

There are times when it's important to nit-pick about terminology in this process. This isn't one of them. From a wholesale standpoint, when a K1 visa is issued, USCIS has essentially given it's permission for a specific alien to marry a specific US citizen.

And that's all I have to say about it.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-08-28 05:43:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresK1 Visa: Marrying outside U.S. once approved?

As Gary and Alla said, the visa is issued only for the purpose of entering the US legally.

A couple can marry without a visa. Most couples do marry without a visa. They can marry abroad, or they can even marry inside the US. True, for some couples, getting INTO the US without a visa could present a problem, and in some cases might or might not involve breaking a law or two that might or might not cause serious immigration difficulties, but it wouldn't cause difficulties in getting married.


True on all that.

But the alien wouldn't be entering the US if there wasn't an intended marriage.

People here illegally, who entered on the Visa Waiver Program or on visitor visas are all equally eligible for marriage but are NOT provided with a legal path to apply for and receive "legal permanent resident" status as the K1 visa holder is.


They aren't?

You don't need permission to marry anyone (within reason, such as age etc) and this visa doesn't give you that permission, it DOES however give your fiance the chance to enter your country TO marry you with the INTENT to stay here and obtain a greencard.


What is the difference?


It's all swings and roundabouts.

Edited by JohnnyQuest, 22 March 2010 - 06:00 AM.

Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-03-22 05:59:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresK1 Visa: Marrying outside U.S. once approved?

A K-1 is not "APPROVAL TO MARRY YOU" He does not need approval to marry you from the governemnt. He needs approval to enter the USA, marry you and apply for a green card. You can marry him today, or maybe tomorrow, depends how long it takes you to travel there.

That said, you are young and inexperienced. Read the guides.

YES, you absolutely can marry him outside the USA after he gets his K-1 visa. Then throw away the K-1 and start over by filing for a spousal visa. A K-1 is a finace(e) visa for fiance(e)s, it is not for boyfriends or husbands. K-1s have cerain advantages and isadvantages when compared to other types of visas (CR-1 for example) Do not make a choice until you understand all about each one and decide what is best in your situation, it is not the same for everyone.


It isn't? :bonk:

Pray tell me then what other reason the visa is issued for?
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-03-21 08:55:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & Proceduresred flag advice
If the Service had a problem with his first entry in 2006, he wouldn't be a citizen now.

File away.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2013-01-11 07:03:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresG 325A question gaps in employment history
My husband had huge gaps in his employment history. Huge.

It's not an issue.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2012-02-11 12:46:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresFiance on disability, Affidavit of Support

Holy rampant bad information, Batman.

 

1.  125 percent of the US poverty guideline is required for Form I864.  Not for form I134.  The instructions for the I134 actually just say "sufficient income".  Department of State recommends generally to the consulates that 100 percent is adequate income for a sponsor signing the I134.  It's easy to Google and find this out.

 

2.  Some consulates require 100 percent.  Some require 125 percent.  Learn what is the correct answer for YOUR consulate.

 

3.  Social Security disability, Social Security, private pensions, child support, savings accounts, etcetera and wages from a plain old J-O-B job can be used to qualify.  All must be verifable.  When savings are used, it is THREE times the amount of any shortage, NOT five times. 

 

4.  Household size is best determined by the household size declared by the sponsor on their last Federal Income Tax return, PLUS the number of immigrants sponsored.

 

5.  A sponsor must stand alone on their income.  Two sponsors cannot combine income (in other words, two I-134's or two I-864's). 

 

6.  When filing I864 (later on), the spouse of a sponsor can add their income to the household by filing I864A along with the I864. 


Edited by Rebecca Jo, 04 June 2013 - 03:54 PM.

Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2013-06-04 15:53:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresWedding venue booked - need visa within 10 weeks of NOA2. Help!

I agree with this completely.  You do NOT need to rush into the USA to get married if having a big wedding is important.  What you need to do is set the date AFTER the visa is in hand for up to 9 months from either the date of the interview or the medical (depending on what determines your 6 months of entry eligibility.)  



OP you may or may not be able to get the medical done without an interview letter.  In some countries, that is a requirement. (Most countries I think.)



 

But what are the standard procedures for Australia?

 

I don't know them.  It sounds like you are unsure also.

 

OP needs to research the norms for the Australian consulate. 

 

Any other information, except NVC protocol, is useless to the OP.


Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2013-05-22 20:20:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresMoral turpitude and esta problems

http://www.scottimmi...ontent/i601memo


Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2013-08-30 21:27:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresMoral turpitude and esta problems

 

Yes, he did. He didn't spend any time in jail though.


 

No, I was going to look for a good immigration lawyer on Tuesday and get some advice about what to do.


 

So....no you have not prepared the waiver by yourselves?

 

Or you did prepare it by yourself?


Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2013-08-30 21:16:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresMoral turpitude and esta problems

 

Yes, we have the waiver ready, however we're worried that at the interview they'll realize that he has these convictions on his record (in the UK though, they were considered "stepped down", so they don't count against him there, they took place over 20 years ago), and that he had ticked "no" on his esta waiver. That technically is visa fraud and could get him banned from immigrating.

 

It's just taken us so long to get to the point where we could file for the K-1, it's been such a hard road getting where we are now. It's been such a strain be apart so long, and now it's all in jeopardy as we didn't understand what they were looking for. We're both besides ourselves with grief. We really thought that we were being completely on the up and up.

 

Have you prepared this waiver by yourselves?


Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2013-08-30 21:10:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresMoral turpitude and esta problems

Expect problems.

 

The previous failure to disclose them may be considered material misrepresentation, which can carry a lifetime bar from the US for which you would need to seek a waiver in order to overcome.

 

*sigh*

 

It's not the misrep that will cause the denial at interivew.  It's the CMIT.  The misrep will be another hurdle that will have to be addressed when the waiver is filed.  But it won't be the main cause for denial.


Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2013-08-30 21:05:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresMoral turpitude and esta problems

Are you prepared to file a waiver when he has his interview?

 


Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2013-08-30 20:54:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresSame sex couple K1 or lesbian wedding?

i dont think there is a country in the world that allows immigration based on same sex relationships right now


Great Britain?
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-08-27 14:28:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & Proceduresk-1 for proxy wedding not consummated

Provide stronger references to the places where the rules forbid applying for a CR1 or K3 if the marriage is unconsummated. This is a tough sell and you need to show you know what you are referring to. Include those rules in the package if you can


Well, pushbrk has stated in the forums that a proxy marriage won't fly for a spousal visa.

But he doesn't give sources for his information.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2010-08-21 13:32:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresEx-husband as co-sponsor?

I remember this having been done at least one time before by a VJ member. 

 

 


Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2014-04-10 19:34:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresChange of nationality

Hey all,

I recently naturalised as a british citizen and my fiance is sending off my paperwork to uscis to update them on my change of nationality. We're kinda confused..when he called them, the ever so (not) useful customer service adviser just said,send as much as we can. We don't know if the copies need certification or not and also, we don't know if a new g325 needs to be sent out. The adviser didn't mention it so I am presuming they don't need one but we're not entirely sure. If anyone has been in this situation and knows what to send out, please let me know. Thanks :thumbs:


IMO, there's nothing you need to be sending to anyone right now.

Many people get approved for US visas who hold dual nationality.

When you receive Packet 3 from the London consulate, you will need to disclose that dual nationality. At that time, you may also want to disclose that the grant of UK citizenship occurred since the visa petition was filed.

The US government will require the visa be placed in the passport of your nationality of birth.

You still require a police certificate for every country you have lived in for more than six months from the age of 16.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-02-23 21:44:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresArrest Problem for K-1 Interview
How do you know his Italian police record is clean? Have you ordered the Italian police report?
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-02-14 00:29:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresVisisting US after application denied

R.J. HAS A BETTER UNDERSTANDING THAN MOST, ALSO HAS BETTER ANSWERS... :thumbs:


Awwwwwwwwww thank you John.

And congratulations on the baby!
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-02-24 20:35:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresVisisting US after application denied

So, technically, you are petitioning for the right to request a visa? If that makes sense.


The US citizen is petitioning for the foreign consulate to send a visa application to their beneficiary.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-02-23 21:13:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresVisisting US after application denied

It's okay, you have not run out of options. You could get married in your home country and apply for a CR-1. I don't know the specifics of how to do that, but I know that you CAN apply for a CR-1, even if your K-1 was denied. I would do a search on VJ and seek out other members whose K-1s were denied, but their CR-1s were approved.

Best of luck!


The beneficiary and her petitioner need to find out what the denial was about first.

I agree it sounds like a case of not knowing how to properly file the petition. For one thing, there is no need for the beneficiary to produce her birth certificate at the petition stage. My guess is the initial RFE was not satisfied properly. Beneficiary and her petitioner can probably re-file a K1 AFTER they've learned more about the process.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-02-23 21:08:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresVisisting US after application denied

How do you not consider that a denial of a visa? You are applying for a visa, not applying for a petition. The 'petition approval/denial' stage is one step in the overall visa application. If you get denied at one step during that process, then the visa is denied.

1-129 = A fiance visa application
ergo
1-129 application denied = Fiance visa denied.

The visa application was for the beneficiary, if approved, she would receive it. So even though the petitioner filled for her, since the visa was to benefit the beneficiary, the denial is on her.


There has not been a visa application yet. A visa application occurs when the beneficiary is invited by the consulate to apply for a visa. This only happens once a petition has been filed by a US citizen, approved by USCIS, and then arrived at the consulate via NVC.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-02-23 21:05:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresContacting Congressman to speed up visa process

Yep, and I'm sure it'll be a nasty shock for them! :lol:


Meh. I don't worry about it. Well, I only worry about it when I see someone really really spiraling about their wait.

IMO, this process is just hard. Carrying grudges about who got what when, well it serves no purpose. If a person tries an expedite or a congressional call and it's really unwarranted, it will be denied. I guess it keeps them busy.........

About a year after my husband came to the US, there was one particular female petitioner (in the UK forum) who came up with the idea of calling DOS every morning. She wanted to know if there was an interview date yet for her husband. Her idea caught on, and soon everyone was doing it. It's now standard practice (at least in the UK forums) to start bothering DOS so you can get a one-up on the interview date. And I suppose the only reason I bring this up is because the female in question said she did it because it gave her something to do.

I would idly note that when she got her interview date, it wasn't to her liking. She pulled a few strings (literally she told later on that she knew someone who knew someone) and got his date moved up. Up ahead, I might add, of other forum "friends" who had weddings scheduled BEFORE hers.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-03-03 00:03:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresContacting Congressman to speed up visa process

Precisely - you don't need to tell me that! :thumbs:


Some people on here just seem to think that they're somehow "special" and deserve to have a better journey than others, for whatever reason.
We all know how frustrating the whole immigration thing is, and how horrible it is to be apart from the one you love. People being critical of advice given by others who have been through the whole thing, just because those people are now together, is ridiculous IMO. They will one day be in the same position. All of us have been apart, some longer than others. The animosity is silly because generally people here are trying to help. I didn't resent those who were already together while we were doing the visa thing, because I knew they'd been in our situation before. Some people need to look at the bigger picture and realize the world doesn't revolve around them! :)


:lol:

USCIS has a way, though, of bringing folks back to the reality that their case is NOT special.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-03-02 23:51:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresContacting Congressman to speed up visa process

I'm not beating up the OP! I replied to the comment from thesantamarias (with a quote from them - sorry I thought that was quite clear) who did start a whiny thread and are now complaining about people who are married having an opinion!

OP - my comment was in no way directed at you. Good luck with your process!


Well, beating up the "already marrieds" isn't necessary either, IMO. That's also been happening on Vj since - well the dawn of Vj time! :lol: Have you never read any of the threads in the spousal forum where they loudly bang the gong that their cases should take precedence over fiance cases, since they are the ones already in "legitimate relationships". :P I made that tongue-sticky-outey smiley but, seriously, those threads exist.

I've been married to my ulsterman for over five years. At some point, all this nasty immigration ####### fades away from your relationship. It really does. It's so so so fruitless for Vj members to get all stiff-legged about who waited longer or less, who is married or not, etcetera ad nauseum. It doesn't help get the cases processed, you know?
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-03-02 23:41:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresContacting Congressman to speed up visa process

Just because some of us are already through with the visa process and married doesn't mean that we didn't go through the stress and anxiety - everyone did! Sorry if you don't like what you hear, but when you post whiney threads complaining that you're so badly done to it doesn't go down well!


I wonder if you realize the post you responded to is not the OP. Because the person you just spoke to didn't start the "whiny thread".

I thought the OP was brief in her question and not particularly whiny. Her question gets asked here all the time and often in a more "violent" manner than the way she phrased it. She got a couple of brief responses early in the thread that succinctly told her she would be wasting her time.

I see no need to beat up the OP. Really.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-03-02 23:33:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresContacting Congressman to speed up visa process

Don't you think we waited for our visa to be approved? In total it took almost 10 months for my husband to get his visa (in a case which had no complications), so I certainly understand the waiting game, everyone on this site does. So why should your case or anyone else's take precedence just because you feel like you are too good to wait like everyone else?


Everyone's visa should take 10 months.

Or longer.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-03-02 23:19:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresContacting Congressman to speed up visa process

So sick of people trying to push their way ahead, there are very few cases that are more urgent than any others (sickness, military, etc). Unless you fall under these categories wait in line like everyone else.


That's not really necessary, is it?
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-03-02 23:04:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresWhere to contact?

No, you should contact or email where you had your interview.


No.

AP is only given to people who have already received a visa, are already in the US, have married, and have filed to adjust their status to permanent resident.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-03-02 23:06:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & Procedurescriminal record
Do you mean your police report? You only need a police report for the interview, unless you have a criminal background. If that is the case, only then do you need a copy of your criminal record.

As to how long a police certificate is "good", that is consulate specific. And yes it must be translated to English.

You can start working in the US after you have married and filed to adjust your status. About sixty days after filing, you will receive a document called an EAD which allows you to work legally in the US.

Edited by Rebecca Jo, 02 March 2011 - 11:09 PM.

Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-03-02 23:09:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresImportance of Staying with current job during k1 processing
That's more relevant to how the financials are viewed by your consulate than anything else.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-03-02 23:35:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresCase undergoing "additional processes"(?) at NVC

Sounds like a complaint to me. To each their own.


Perhaps.

And perhaps the OP is a bit impatient.

What's the point though in rubbing the hasty approval of his petition in his face?

I mean - did he do that himself? Is he directly responsible for his good fortune?

You can tell the guy to simmer down without making a federal case out of his good luck, you know.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-03-06 23:54:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresCase undergoing "additional processes"(?) at NVC

What's ridiculous about it? In this country, we have something the USCIS seems to never have heard of. It's called The Bill of Rights. One of those rights is to be free from unreasonable search and seizure. So why should the Gestapo wannabees at USCIS be exempt from The Bill of Rights and seize your life for 50 days just because they feel like it? What happened to probable cause before you can be searched and seized? Oh yeah, that's right, I forgot! USCIS is above the law. They are a petty little empire unto themselves. How silly of me to think that The Bill of Rights actually applies to them!

Back in 2004, as much as I hated President Bush, there was one thing about him I never appreciated until now: He had the whole immigration process running like a well oiled machine. You got your NOA2 in 30 days (you read that right: 30 DAYS). You got your embassy interview 30 days after NVC sent it to the embassy. And you got your K-1 four days later. There was none of the abject incompetence you see now, none of the boldfaced lies, and none of the SS tactics like "additional administrative processing".

What President Bush accomplished with immigration should be the law: Issue the NOA2 in 30 days, or it gets issued by default. If they have a case for immigration fraud, make that case within 90 days or issue the damn visa and stop spouting all this ridiculous horse hockey about how they are protecting America from terrorists while thousands of illegal aliens invade our Southern border every day and they do nothing to repel the invasion.


:lol:

What a load of utter hogwash!!

You were here in 2004, right? Were you paying attention at all? This website was formed in 2004 because of inordinate delays at the Texas Service Center!!

Maybe you were one of the ones who went through Vermont. That Service Center was indeed issuing approvals in less than 30 days. But that certainly was the exception rather than the rule. Nebraska and Texas had people in hideous delays of far more than five months! George Bush my ar$e. :lol: You make me laugh!

I guess your recollection of history pertains only to the parts of it that affect yourself.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-03-06 23:51:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresCase undergoing "additional processes"(?) at NVC

Not sure why you felt the need to make this a public issue if you want to delete your account.

I also am not sure how you're surprised by the reaction in this thread. Your NOA2, I believe, was approved in less than a month? And you're complaining about waiting a few weeks at NVC. Meanwhile, this forum is full of people waiting 5-6-7 months for their NOA2. Common sense says a thread like this wouldn't go well.


They guy asked a question. He wasn't complaining.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-03-06 11:37:00
K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & ProceduresCase undergoing "additional processes"(?) at NVC

That is utterly obscene. It is no better than randomly selecting people off the street and throwing them in jail for 50 days. That is something you might expect from Mommar Gadhafi.


Well why is it obscene? It's a random check.

Would you prefer they only check people from certain countries?

I like to research what people post before I respond to them. I noticed in one of your earlier posts that you say USCIS has held up your life for five months. It's been five months since you filed. Now I also read that you had a previous filing in 2004. This means you are already acquainted with the system. This means you know that you don't drive up to a USCIS window, pay your money, and a visa spits out of a machine before you drive off.

The system is not what it should be, but you knew what you were facing going in. I think your rants border on unreasonable and serve no purpose other than to stir up the forums - and to rise your own blood pressure. I also think that if you didn't want your life to be held up, you should have stuck with domestic females.

Honestly, it never ceases to amaze me how someone makes a choice, and then bellyaches about it.
Rebecca JoFemaleUnited Kingdom2011-03-06 11:32:00