Anonymous wrote:Last Tuesday, my au pair of 16 months (we had successfully completed the first year and we were 4 months into her 2nd year) up and left without notice. It all started a few days prior when she came home late on a Sunday night and woke up everyone in the house. I was awake and when she woke up my husband (and our 3 years old and 2 years old boys), I had sent her a text letting her know that she was late and that it should not happen again. She proceeded the next morning by confronting my husband about this as he was trying to leave to go to work. I came home that Monday and asked her to speak with me about what happened. She sent me a long text about how she no longer could work weekends because it was inconvenient for her. She wanted to spend more time with her boyfriend even though she had previously told us (on multiple occassions) that she didn't like him and that he was not her type, and she was "trying to change him." Basically, this guy is being tricked by her. She is marrying him for a green card. She is being pressured by her mother to marry him for a green card too. And she is only 20 years old (turned 20 in January). And he is oblivious--this is most likely (99% sure) his first girlfriend. He is buying her all kinds of expensive gifts like diamond necklaces, earrings, purses, concert tickets, etc.
We had, what I thought was a good discussion on Monday. We spoke about how we could improve our relationship. But, she didn't join us for dinner that day. And on Tuesday morning, she told me that she no longer wanted to be an au pair and that she wanted to leave. Then, on Tuesday evening, she left. All of her things were apparently all packed (she must have packed them during the day while she was supposed to be watching my two kids). She is now trying to stay in this country illegally--she is trying to marry this guy who she does not even like so that she could have a green card.
Good for her! You’re not her mother and none of your business. She left for a reason.
Just needed to vent.
Anonymous wrote:Last Tuesday, my au pair of 16 months (we had successfully completed the first year and we were 4 months into her 2nd year) up and left without notice. It all started a few days prior when she came home late on a Sunday night and woke up everyone in the house. I was awake and when she woke up my husband (and our 3 years old and 2 years old boys), I had sent her a text letting her know that she was late and that it should not happen again. She proceeded the next morning by confronting my husband about this as he was trying to leave to go to work. I came home that Monday and asked her to speak with me about what happened. She sent me a long text about how she no longer could work weekends because it was inconvenient for her. She wanted to spend more time with her boyfriend even though she had previously told us (on multiple occassions) that she didn't like him and that he was not her type, and she was "trying to change him." Basically, this guy is being tricked by her. She is marrying him for a green card. She is being pressured by her mother to marry him for a green card too. And she is only 20 years old (turned 20 in January). And he is oblivious--this is most likely (99% sure) his first girlfriend. He is buying her all kinds of expensive gifts like diamond necklaces, earrings, purses, concert tickets, etc.
We had, what I thought was a good discussion on Monday. We spoke about how we could improve our relationship. But, she didn't join us for dinner that day. And on Tuesday morning, she told me that she no longer wanted to be an au pair and that she wanted to leave. Then, on Tuesday evening, she left. All of her things were apparently all packed (she must have packed them during the day while she was supposed to be watching my two kids). She is now trying to stay in this country illegally--she is trying to marry this guy who she does not even like so that she could have a green card.
Just needed to vent.
Anonymous wrote:I’m in a similar spot. An Au pair left her host family to try to sneak in and love with my husband (we are divorcing). She’s hiding out in his house, pretending not to in hopes no one will find them. What’s the likelihood of the agency enforcing her return home? (They contacted me for their address, and know she’s there).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. We are done with au pairs. She will be deported and banned. She was an average au pair, but a very socially awkward individual. She found another geek who has never talked to a girl who is blind and ignorant and too socially stupid to see that she is trying to scam him for a green card. What he doesn't realize is that the punishment for marriage fraud is $250,000 fine and/or 5 years in prison. Given that he does some government work, that is not going to go over well for his career. I hope she gets deported, and sent back to Brazil and never given access to enter the USA again. She will be deported.
She sure be! Have you really reported here and with whom? You say 3 times she will be deported, will she really? How does that go? Do you have her passport? Have you talked to anyone but the agency? Police? Do they know where she is, are they looking for her? I'm going through a similar situation right now, I'd love to know how I can report this little b*** and walk her a** out of this country!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am an immigration lawyer and OP she's not getting deported. And she won't be found to have committed marriage fraud most likely. But the visa will be cancelled if you contact your agency. But you sound pretty nasty to be honest- I was with you until you said you hoped she'd be deported. yikes.
oh shut up
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An AP live in situation is different than a live in nanny.
I'm looking at Cultural Care now, and there are 50 girls in rematch. A large amount of them won't find a new family and will be sent home. The last 3 rematch girls in my town couldn't find a new family and went home. They were stunned- they think it's easy. But there's simply way more AP candidates than host families
Really? I just logged in to my CCAP account and zero APs in rematch. Granted, my AP is from CCAP and we are not rematch...maybe they changed who can see currently available APs.
Anonymous wrote:An AP live in situation is different than a live in nanny.
I'm looking at Cultural Care now, and there are 50 girls in rematch. A large amount of them won't find a new family and will be sent home. The last 3 rematch girls in my town couldn't find a new family and went home. They were stunned- they think it's easy. But there's simply way more AP candidates than host families
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last Tuesday, my au pair of 16 months (we had successfully completed the first year and we were 4 months into her 2nd year) up and left without notice. It all started a few days prior when she came home late on a Sunday night and woke up everyone in the house. I was awake and when she woke up my husband (and our 3 years old and 2 years old boys), I had sent her a text letting her know that she was late and that it should not happen again. She proceeded the next morning by confronting my husband about this as he was trying to leave to go to work. I came home that Monday and asked her to speak with me about what happened. She sent me a long text about how she no longer could work weekends because it was inconvenient for her. She wanted to spend more time with her boyfriend even though she had previously told us (on multiple occassions) that she didn't like him and that he was not her type, and she was "trying to change him." Basically, this guy is being tricked by her. She is marrying him for a green card. She is being pressured by her mother to marry him for a green card too. And she is only 20 years old (turned 20 in January). And he is oblivious--this is most likely (99% sure) his first girlfriend. He is buying her all kinds of expensive gifts like diamond necklaces, earrings, purses, concert tickets, etc.
We had, what I thought was a good discussion on Monday. We spoke about how we could improve our relationship. But, she didn't join us for dinner that day. And on Tuesday morning, she told me that she no longer wanted to be an au pair and that she wanted to leave. Then, on Tuesday evening, she left. All of her things were apparently all packed (she must have packed them during the day while she was supposed to be watching my two kids). She is now trying to stay in this country illegally--she is trying to marry this guy who she does not even like so that she could have a green card.
Just needed to vent.
Very odd that you would dictate what time she comes home on her non working days. You also need to get a better house setup if someone coming in will wake everyone up. We have a nanny suite with a separate entrance and our nanny can come and go whenever she wants as long as her work hours aren't affected. YOU ARE WAY OVER the top. I suggest you stop micro managing aspects that are none of your business.
Yeah, OP you should probably consider moving to a new home with a basement suite or hire a contractor to build you an addition on your current home if you want to have an AP. (note: major sarcasm).
Why is that sarcasm. Living in an uncomfortable situation isn't good for anyone. If you want to have a live in nanny or au-pair, you better damn well be setup for one. I didn't realize people would live in such a terrible arrangement. I guess I should advertise that in our home situation? When we built our house we made a nanny suite (20 x 20) with it's own full bath and a separate entrance.