Solution: A guided navigator for marriage-based cases in trouble: (1) Status-and-stage mapper — identifies where the case is (I-130 pending, conditional GC via I-751, 10-year GC) and what marriage breakdown means at that exact stage; (2) Conditional-resident path — explains the I-751 waiver options (divorce waiver, good-faith-marriage waiver, abuse waiver) and what evidence each requires; (3) Petitioner obligations decoder — clarifies the citizen's duties: when to withdraw a petition, the fraud risk of supporting a dead-marriage petition, and that the I-864 affidavit-of-support financial obligation survives divorce; (4) Anti-weaponization guidance — how to document a genuine good-faith marriage, and how to protect yourself if a spouse threatens false abuse claims; (5) Evidence organizer for good-faith-marriage proof; (6) Attorney routing for contested divorces and abuse-waiver cases. ICP: Two sides of a failing marriage-based immigration case. (1) The conditional resident whose marriage is ending and who needs an I-751 waiver to keep their green card without the spouse's cooperation. (2) The US citizen/LPR petitioner who learns their I-864 affidavit-of-support obligation survives divorce, and who risks committing fraud by continuing to support a dead marriage. Both may face a spouse weaponizing the process.
Owning the intersection of divorce and immigration — for both the conditional resident AND the petitioner — is the differentiator. The petitioner-obligation decoder (especially the surprise that I-864 support obligations survive divorce, and the fraud risk of supporting a dead marriage) addresses a widely misunderstood, high-stakes issue nothing else explains. The anti-weaponization guidance serves a real, frightening, underserved need.
“Similar to how specialized 'divorce financial navigator' tools emerged to handle the financial-untangling consequences of divorce that neither generic divorce forms nor financial advisors addressed well. This is the immigration-untangling navigator for a failing cross-border marriage.”