I was denied a visitor visa once by US EMBASSY. Do i say 'YES'? I was given a student visa earlier than that, but when i completed my study and came back i applied for visit visa on which i was denied.
Now should it be same as 'refused admission'? My understanding is that 'refused admission' refers to do not let someone in to a country when he or she arrives without a visa and seek refuge or some other status.
I was denied a visitor visa once by US EMBASSY. Do i say 'YES'? I was given a student visa earlier than that, but when i completed my study and came back i applied for visit visa on which i was denied. Refused visa.
Now should it be same as 'refused admission'? No.My understanding is that 'refused admission' refers to do not let someone in to a country when he or she arrives without a visa and seek refuge or some other status.You can arrive with visa and still be refused entry if the officer is not satisfied.
I think the answer is NO. Refused admission is not the same as overstaying. Your spouse was admitted into the US legally with a valid visa. He/she is not deported, and has not received any documents from the government asking him to leave the US. So the answer is NO. But, on the form where it asks "the status in that country," you should put "out of status."
you can say no in this case, but are you showing her as your spouse? if yes then tell them the truth in section 11 her "personal history" activity column, other wise it will affect her sponsership in future. Misrepresenation is a big issue in IRPA Canada.