Well, if this information from the lawyer is correct, then you would, in theory be OK and solve your moral dilemma. But in practical terms, you won't unless you can pull off the feat of gathering all your documents from overseas, getting them apostilled in your home country, couriering them in, receiving them, getting them translated, uploading them all, and having Migraciones then process them to the point they can issue the precaria. And all that may well consume most of the time between now and the next six months, meaning the moral dilemma only gets solved close to its natural expiry. It all depends on what residency category you are applying under and how far down the path you are of getting the documents that category requires, information you haven't disclosed to us.The advice I was given about this (from an Argentine immigration lawyer) is that you actually "regularise" yourself when you make an application for another visa. Migraciones may eventually reject your application and then tell you to leave, but you apparently have a regular migration status while they are considering your application.