LILY MJUN
Feb 11, 2026
ENOUGH EVIDENCE FOR VAWA HELP
for those that had been approved
my mom filed Vawa in October 31 2022
I was the derivative ( I was 20)
I wanted to know if these evidence are strong enough to be approved .
-3 Police report
-3 witnesses
- screenshot of chats
- call transcript
-photos of damaged walls or damages items
-medical record of the abuser (cirrhosis ) he was alcoholic
- I was underage back then
-my mom affidavit and mine
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Leo BFeb 11, 2026
I think good moral character and good faith marriage
ines inesFeb 11, 2026
@LILY MJUN Do you have FBI clearance, good moral character, bona fide marriage evidence, evidence that the abuse happened during the marriage while living together, abusers citizenship etc..
Affidavits from witnesses don't really mean anything anymore π
Just what you wrote is not even close to enough but I hope you're just talking about the abuse evidence and if yes then this sounds okayish.
Good luck ππ»
LILY MJUNFeb 11, 2026
yeah ines I do have all that as well
amber BergamotFeb 11, 2026
with updated memo(December 25) also need strong shared residence evidences and proof of bonifide marriage
ines inesFeb 11, 2026
@LILY MJUN Than you'll be good! I know it's hard but all we can do is wait πππ
Q UFeb 11, 2026
I think all of that is good evidence.
Does your mom have evidence of Bona fide marriage?
maybe therapists?
If you donβt have itβs ok.
I submitted mine in April 2022 and I was approved April 2025
hopefully your mom will receive the approval soon.
π
@LILY MJUN
Manifest LawFeb 12, 2026
First, Iβm really sorry you and your mom had to go through that. Based on what you listed, that is a solid amount of evidence for a VAWA case. Multiple police reports, witness statements, photos of damage, chat screenshots, call transcripts, and detailed affidavits all help show a pattern of abuse. Being under 21 at the time and filing while you were still eligible as a derivative also matters. The medical record showing alcoholism doesnβt prove abuse by itself, but it supports the overall story. What USCIS usually looks for is credibility and consistency, and your evidence seems to cover both. If affidavits clearly explain what happened and tie everything together, this is the kind of documentation that does get approved.
- Attorney Ana Gabriela Urizar
(All information shared here is for general educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice or create an attorney - client relationship. Your situation may require fact-specific guidance. For personalized legal advice, please consult an immigration attorney directly.)

