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Filed: AOS (pnd) Country: Romania
Timeline

I apologize if this question has been asked before.

I had my citizenship interview on 10/13/09 and I passed, ia have my oath ceremony on 10/23/09 and I'm from Romania. I would like to have a dual citizenship but I don't know exactly how or what do I need to do.

Please help me if you have any ideas.

THANK YOU.

6/26/2005 arrived to us with J1

9/09/2005 got married

05/03/2006 send I-485,I-765 and I-130 to Chicago

05/12/2006 received Rejection Notice on I-130

05/15/2006 received Rejection Notice on I-485 and I-765

05/20/2006 send papers again

05/22/2006 USCIS received the forms(1)

06/01/2006 NOA1 for all 3 of them(11)

06/05/2006 TOUCHED(15)

06/15/2006 letter with biometrics appointment(25)

06/17/2006 I-130 and I-765 TOUCHED(27)

06/20/2006 biometrics taken(30)

06/21/2006 I-485 and I-765 TOUCHED(31)

07/27/2006 received letter with interview date set for september 29(68)

08/03/2006 I-765 TOUCHED(75)

08/09/2006 I-765 aproved(81)

08/11/2006 got work permit in the mail(83)

08/17/2006 I-765 TOUCHED(89)

09/02/2006 I-130 & I-485 TOUCHED(105)

09/29/2006 interview in Philadelphia APROVED(132)

10/05/2006 letter with I-130 approved(138)

10/05/2006 welcome letter(138)

10/09/2006 Green card in my mailbox(142)

PACE

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I apologize if this question has been asked before.

I had my citizenship interview on 10/13/09 and I passed, ia have my oath ceremony on 10/23/09 and I'm from Romania. I would like to have a dual citizenship but I don't know exactly how or what do I need to do.

Please help me if you have any ideas.

THANK YOU.

Call your local Romanian consulate .

K1 denied, K3/K4, CR-1/CR-2, AOS, ROC, Adoption, US citizenship and dual citizenship

!! ALL PAU!

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Filed: Other Country: United Kingdom
Timeline

If Romania allows you to have dual citizenship then you don't need to do anything. Once you have your oath ceremony here you will be a US citizen AND a Romanian citizen - i.e. you will have dual citizenship. However, if Romania does not allow you to have both then once you have the oath ceremony here you will no longer be a Romanian citizen.

I-130 For Both Parents

10/10/09 - Mailed both I-130 applications

10/13/09 - Received at Chicago Lockbox

10/20/09 - NOA1 Issued

10/21/09 - Checks Cashed

10/26/09 - NOA1 Received

02/19/10 - Approved - email notice

NVC

02/22/10 - Received at NVC

02/23/10 - Assigned Case Numbers for both applications

02/23/10 - Registered email addresses with case numbers

02/24/10 - Received emails for AOS Bill $70 & DS 3032 Choice of Agent form

02/25/10 - Paid AOS Bill

02/26/10 - Sent DS-3032 priority mail

02/28/10 - Emailed DS-3032

03/01/10 - Sent I-864 priority mail

03/03/10 - DS-3032 accepted by NVC - email notification

03/03/10 - Paid IV Bill for both parents

03/11/10 - IV Bill finally shows as PAID

03/11/10 - Mailed DS-230

03/17/10 - RFE notification mailed out per AVR - It was a false one - for the DS-230

03/19/10 - AVR changed from RFE to Checklist Response received (they received the DS-230)

03/29/10 - RFE - Q.30 on DS-230 for Step dad

03/30/10 - Log in failed for mum's case

04/01/10 - Mailed RFE

04/09/10 - AVR changed from RFE to Checklist response received

04/16/10 - Log in failed for step dad's case

04/16/10 - AVR case complete

04/29/10 - Interview Assigned for 15th June for both parents

06/01/10 - Medical Appointment

06/15/10 - Interview

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Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Russia
Timeline
If Romania allows you to have dual citizenship then you don't need to do anything. Once you have your oath ceremony here you will be a US citizen AND a Romanian citizen - i.e. you will have dual citizenship. However, if Romania does not allow you to have both then once you have the oath ceremony here you will no longer be a Romanian citizen.

Do you have to pay tax in both countries?

K-1,VSC, Moscow Consulate

I-129F sent:2009-06-04

NOA1: 2009-06-09

NOA2: 2009-09-16

NVC Received: 2009-09-17

NVC Left: 2009-09-22

Consulate Received: 2009-09-25

Medical: IOM, Moscow, 2009-12-07

Interview: 2009-12-08

Visa Received: 2009-12-14

Arrival to USA: 2010-01-15

Marriage: 2010-03-27

AOS, EAD, AP

CIS Office: Charleston, SC

Filed AOS Package: 2010-05-26

NOA: 2010-06-04

Bio Appt: 2010-07-09

AOS Transfer to CSC: 2010-06-30

EAD Card Production Order: 2010-08-04

AP Received: 2010-08-09

ROC

I-751 sent: 2012-7-11

NOA-1: 2012-8-1

Bio-Appointment: 2012-9-19

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I apologize if this question has been asked before.

I had my citizenship interview on 10/13/09 and I passed, ia have my oath ceremony on 10/23/09 and I'm from Romania. I would like to have a dual citizenship but I don't know exactly how or what do I need to do.

Please help me if you have any ideas.

THANK YOU.

I didn't think the US allowed people over 18 to have dual citizenship. I have a friend who had dual (Australian and US) while she was a child but once she turned 18 she had to choose. Maybe it's different now - that was 20 years ago.

VISA JOURNEY

USCIS Journey

02/23/09 ............I-130 sent

03/27/09.............NOA2

TOTAL 32 DAYS

NVC Journey

04/15/09.............Case # Assigned

07/10/09.............Interview assigned

TOTAL 105 DAYS

Embassy Journey

07/14/09.............Forward the case to Embassy in Dakar, Senegal

09/28/09.............Visa in Hand

TOTAL 80 DAYS

VISA GRAND TOTAL 217 DAYS

US CITIZENSHIP JOURNEY

Conditional Resident Journey

09/29/09.............POE New York PIECE OF CAKE!!!

10/27/09.............2 year Green card received

TOTAL 29 DAYS

Removal of Conditions Journey

07/18/11.............I-751 packet sent

03/23/12............10yr GC Received

TOTAL 249 DAYS

Naturalization Journey

07/03/12.............N-400 packet sent

07/23/12.............Resent N-400 packet (husband FORGOT check!)

08/23/12.............Biometrics done

09/12/12.............Interview letter received

10/16/12.............Interview scheduled

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Filed: Other Country: United Kingdom
Timeline

You only have to pay taxes if you earn money in that country, so if you are living and working in the US only, then you shouldn't have to pay taxes anywhere else - as far as I know. I don't pay taxes to the UK - only in the states.

The US doesn't recognise any other citizenship and in the oath you 'give up' your citizenship to your original country, BUT if you come from a country that allows you to have dual then you can still be both. For example the UK lets you have both but Sweden does not.

There is a list somewhere that tells you the countries that allow it. Can't remember where it is though. Maybe try to google it - I'm sure there will be some info on there.

Clara

I-130 For Both Parents

10/10/09 - Mailed both I-130 applications

10/13/09 - Received at Chicago Lockbox

10/20/09 - NOA1 Issued

10/21/09 - Checks Cashed

10/26/09 - NOA1 Received

02/19/10 - Approved - email notice

NVC

02/22/10 - Received at NVC

02/23/10 - Assigned Case Numbers for both applications

02/23/10 - Registered email addresses with case numbers

02/24/10 - Received emails for AOS Bill $70 & DS 3032 Choice of Agent form

02/25/10 - Paid AOS Bill

02/26/10 - Sent DS-3032 priority mail

02/28/10 - Emailed DS-3032

03/01/10 - Sent I-864 priority mail

03/03/10 - DS-3032 accepted by NVC - email notification

03/03/10 - Paid IV Bill for both parents

03/11/10 - IV Bill finally shows as PAID

03/11/10 - Mailed DS-230

03/17/10 - RFE notification mailed out per AVR - It was a false one - for the DS-230

03/19/10 - AVR changed from RFE to Checklist Response received (they received the DS-230)

03/29/10 - RFE - Q.30 on DS-230 for Step dad

03/30/10 - Log in failed for mum's case

04/01/10 - Mailed RFE

04/09/10 - AVR changed from RFE to Checklist response received

04/16/10 - Log in failed for step dad's case

04/16/10 - AVR case complete

04/29/10 - Interview Assigned for 15th June for both parents

06/01/10 - Medical Appointment

06/15/10 - Interview

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I apologize if this question has been asked before.

I had my citizenship interview on 10/13/09 and I passed, ia have my oath ceremony on 10/23/09 and I'm from Romania. I would like to have a dual citizenship but I don't know exactly how or what do I need to do.

Please help me if you have any ideas.

THANK YOU.

I didn't think the US allowed people over 18 to have dual citizenship. I have a friend who had dual (Australian and US) while she was a child but once she turned 18 she had to choose. Maybe it's different now - that was 20 years ago.

US law only determines whether or not a person is a US citizen. The other country's law determines whether or not the person is also a citizen of the other country. US law doesn't care whether another country still considers you to be a citizen after the US considers you to be a citizen. But once you're a US citizen, US law doesn't give you extra privileges in the US for being a foreign citizen, too.

The US doesn't make you choose when you turn 18. But another country might force you to choose; either you renounce your US citizenship or they would revoke your citizenship in their country.

The dual citizenship FAQ goes over this and other points. It should probably be required reading for anyone in this forum.

http://www.richw.org/dualcit/

04 Apr, 2004: Got married

05 Apr, 2004: I-130 Sent to CSC

13 Apr, 2004: I-130 NOA 1

19 Apr, 2004: I-129F Sent to MSC

29 Apr, 2004: I-129F NOA 1

13 Aug, 2004: I-130 Approved by CSC

28 Dec, 2004: I-130 Case Complete at NVC

18 Jan, 2005: Got the visa approved in Caracas

22 Jan, 2005: Flew home together! CCS->MIA->SFO

25 May, 2005: I-129F finally approved! We won't pursue it.

8 June, 2006: Our baby girl is born!

24 Oct, 2006: Window for filing I-751 opens

25 Oct, 2006: I-751 mailed to CSC

18 Nov, 2006: I-751 NOA1 received from CSC

30 Nov, 2006: I-751 Biometrics taken

05 Apr, 2007: I-751 approved, card production ordered

23 Jan, 2008: N-400 sent to CSC via certified mail

19 Feb, 2008: N-400 Biometrics taken

27 Mar, 2008: Naturalization interview notice received (NOA2 for N-400)

30 May, 2008: Naturalization interview, passed the test!

17 June, 2008: Naturalization oath notice mailed

15 July, 2008: Naturalization oath ceremony!

16 July, 2008: Registered to vote and applied for US passport

26 July, 2008: US Passport arrived.

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Filed: Other Timeline
If Romania allows you to have dual citizenship then you don't need to do anything. Once you have your oath ceremony here you will be a US citizen AND a Romanian citizen - i.e. you will have dual citizenship. However, if Romania does not allow you to have both then once you have the oath ceremony here you will no longer be a Romanian citizen.

Dangerous advise, my friend, as every country handles this differently. If a German citizen were to follow your advise, for example, he would lose his citizenship for good despite the fact that Germany now allows dual citizenship. The require all of their citizens to submit an application of dual citizenship BEFORE becoming citizen of another country or bust.

Also . . . since the US requires applicants to take the oath of allegiance (hereby showing the erected middle finger to their former countries), the whole thing from the US perspective is more like the gays-in-the-military thing: don't tell, don't wanna know!

The issue hasn't been challenged yet, but one signature on an up-and-coming bill can change that in a heartbeat.

Edited by Just Bob

There is no room in this country for hyphenated Americanism. When I refer to hyphenated Americans, I do not refer to naturalized Americans. Some of the very best Americans I have ever known were naturalized Americans, Americans born abroad. But a hyphenated American is not an American at all . . . . The one absolutely certain way of bringing this nation to ruin, of preventing all possibility of its continuing to be a nation at all, would be to permit it to become a tangle of squabbling nationalities, an intricate knot of German-Americans, Irish-Americans, English-Americans, French-Americans, Scandinavian-Americans or Italian-Americans, each preserving its separate nationality, each at heart feeling more sympathy with Europeans of that nationality, than with the other citizens of the American Republic . . . . There is no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American. The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else.

President Teddy Roosevelt on Columbus Day 1915

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Sweden
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For example the UK lets you have both but Sweden does not.

Since 2001 Sweden also accepts dual citizenship.

K1: 2006

GC: 2007

ROC: 2009

Citizenship application next...

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Morocco
Timeline
Dangerous advise, my friend, as every country handles this differently. If a German citizen were to follow your advise, for example, he would lose his citizenship for good despite the fact that Germany now allows dual citizenship. The require all of their citizens to submit an application of dual citizenship BEFORE becoming citizen of another country or bust.

The issue hasn't been challenged yet, but one signature on an up-and-coming bill can change that in a heartbeat.

Just Bob,

This might sound stupid, but .... how do we find out what any particular country requires to keep citizenship when naturalizing here? I tried googling, and got this link: http://www.800citizen.com/dualCitizenship.htm which says a German citizen would lose citizenship there when naturalizing here - no mention of anything that can be done to retain it. I thought maybe you'd have better information. I just want to double check to see if my husband will need to do anything next year.

Also, what bill (theoretical one, or actual one being considered, I mean), and what change would be made? Just curious. I know - I should be more aware of what is going on in the world... :blush:

venusfire

Edited by venusfire503

met online May 2006

visited him in Morocco July 2006

K-1 petition sent late September 2006 after second visit

December 2006 - third trip - went for his visa interview (stood outside all day)

visa approved! arrived here together right before Christmas 2006

married January 2007

AOS paperwork sent February 2007

RFE (yipee)

another RFE (yikes)

AOS approval July 2007

sent Removal of Conditions paperwork 01 May 2009

received I-751 NOA 14 May 2009

received ASC appt. notice 28 May 2009

biometrics appt. 12 June 2009

I-751 approval date 25 Sept 2009 (no updates on the system - still says 'received'/"initial review")

19 Oct 2009 - got text message "card production ordered"

24 Oct 2009 - actual card in the mail box!

sent his N-400 - 14 May 2010

check cashed 27 May 2010

NOA received 29 May 2010 (dated 24 May)

Biometrics Appointment Letter received 17 June 2010

Biometrics scheduled for 08 July 2010; walk-in successfully done in Philadelphia 07 July 2010

02 Oct 2010 - FINALLY got email saying the case was being transferred to the local office. Hoping to get his interview letter soon...

05 Oct 2010 - received interview letter!!!!

08 November 2010 - scheduled for N-400 interview

- went together for interview; file isn't there - need to wait to be rescheduled

Jan 2011 - went for Infopass

25 Feb 2011 - interview

19 April 2011 - Infopass

8 July 2011 - HE'S FINALLY A CITIZEN - WOO HOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

30 July 2011 - citizenship party

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I apologize if this question has been asked before.

I had my citizenship interview on 10/13/09 and I passed, ia have my oath ceremony on 10/23/09 and I'm from Romania. I would like to have a dual citizenship but I don't know exactly how or what do I need to do.

Please help me if you have any ideas.

THANK YOU.

I didn't think the US allowed people over 18 to have dual citizenship. I have a friend who had dual (Australian and US) while she was a child but once she turned 18 she had to choose. Maybe it's different now - that was 20 years ago.

US law only determines whether or not a person is a US citizen. The other country's law determines whether or not the person is also a citizen of the other country. US law doesn't care whether another country still considers you to be a citizen after the US considers you to be a citizen. But once you're a US citizen, US law doesn't give you extra privileges in the US for being a foreign citizen, too.

The US doesn't make you choose when you turn 18. But another country might force you to choose; either you renounce your US citizenship or they would revoke your citizenship in their country.

The dual citizenship FAQ goes over this and other points. It should probably be required reading for anyone in this forum.

http://www.richw.org/dualcit/

Ah good to know. My friends parents are American and she was born in Austraila. She did have to choose one or the other when she turned 18 - not sure if it was the US or Austrailan government who made her do it. But the same thing happen for her brothers and sisters when they turned 18.

VISA JOURNEY

USCIS Journey

02/23/09 ............I-130 sent

03/27/09.............NOA2

TOTAL 32 DAYS

NVC Journey

04/15/09.............Case # Assigned

07/10/09.............Interview assigned

TOTAL 105 DAYS

Embassy Journey

07/14/09.............Forward the case to Embassy in Dakar, Senegal

09/28/09.............Visa in Hand

TOTAL 80 DAYS

VISA GRAND TOTAL 217 DAYS

US CITIZENSHIP JOURNEY

Conditional Resident Journey

09/29/09.............POE New York PIECE OF CAKE!!!

10/27/09.............2 year Green card received

TOTAL 29 DAYS

Removal of Conditions Journey

07/18/11.............I-751 packet sent

03/23/12............10yr GC Received

TOTAL 249 DAYS

Naturalization Journey

07/03/12.............N-400 packet sent

07/23/12.............Resent N-400 packet (husband FORGOT check!)

08/23/12.............Biometrics done

09/12/12.............Interview letter received

10/16/12.............Interview scheduled

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Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: Italy
Timeline

I have a friend who's dual US/Romanian citizen, so you should be ok.

Dual citizenship is a great asset/benefit. Do NOT give up your other citizenship unless you're forced to.

I think countries which don't allow dual citizenship today are a minority.

AOS:

RD: 6/21/06

Biometrics: 7/25/06

ID: 10/24/06 - Approved

Conditional GC Received: 11/3/06

I-751

RD: 7/31/08

NOA 1: 8/6/08

Biometrics: 8/26/08

Transferred to CSC: 2/25/09

Approved: 4/23/09 (email received)

Card mailed: 4/28/09 (email received)

Card Received: 5/1/09

N-400

RD & PD: 7/28/09

NOA 1: 8/1/09

Biometric appt: 8/12/09

Interview Letter received: 10/02/09 (notice dated 09/29)

Interview Date: 11/10/09 at Federal Plaza in Manhattan

Oath Letter: 11/10/09

Oath Date: 11/13/09 - Special ceremony at USS Intrepid - Done - USC

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Colombia
Timeline

I really do not believe a legal term of "dual citizenship" even exists. Is certainly not even inferred when you take the oath for US citizenship, quite the contrary, you reject all allegiance to your former country.

Just feel the issue is, will your parent former country issue you a passport, if they do, don't even talk about dual citizenship, just have two or more passports.

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Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Philippines
Timeline

When someone becomes a USC, it is not always automatic that you retain your original citizenship. Filipinos who becomes a USC would have to re-acquire their filipino citizenship by going to the embassy/consulate, pay a fee, fill out a form and get another OATH. Re-acquiring ones citizenship actually makes sense to me because when somebody takes the oath of citizenship of the United States... that person is renouncing allegiance to his/her country . So i think it is only right to take another Oath for your home country.

To the OP, call your embassy/consulate to verify. Having two passports doesnt necessarily mean you have dual citizenship.

12/29/2007 Got married in the Philippines
03/28/2008 Got 10yr B1/B2 visa
04/12/2008 Arrived in US under B1/B2 visa
08/06/2008 Filed I-539 visa extension
10/23/2008 I-539 approved
02/23/2009 USC wife filed I-130 Chicago Lockbox
02/26/2009 I-130 delivered to Chicago Lockbox
02/27/2009 Medical exam I-693
03/01/2009 Negative result on TB skin test
03/04/2009 I-130 received by California Service Center
03/05/2009 Check cashed by USCIS
03/06/2009 Medical Exam form I-693 released by civil surgeon
03/07/2009 NOA Receipt Notice for I-130
03/14/2009 Mailed I-485, I-864, I-693, I-765 & I-131 thru USPS
03/16/2009 "The Package" delivered to Chicago Lockbox
03/16/2009 I-94 expired after 11 months since arrival
03/25/2009 Check cashed by USCIS
03/26/2009 Received NOA for I-485, I-765, I-131
03/28/2009 Received notice for Biometrics Appointment (April 9)
04/02/2009 Approval Notice for I-130 received
04/09/2009 Biometrics done
05/07/2009 Received Advance Parole Document
05/08/2009 Received Interview Letter
05/09/2009 Received EAD card
05/11/2009 Applied for SSN
05/16/2009 Received SSN
06/23/2009 AOS interview approved
06/27/2009 Welcome Letter received
07/05/2009 Green Card received
06/01/2011 Mailed I-751 Form
06/07/2011 Received NOA for I-751
07/11/2011 Biometrics Done

03/19/2015 Mailed N-400

03/30/2015 NOA Received

04/15/2015 Biometrics Appointment

06/23/2015 Interview

07/22/2015 Oath Ceremony

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Filed: Lift. Cond. (apr) Country: China
Timeline

I just wanted to ask a question. Take China... a country that doesn't allow you to have dual citizenship... If you become an American the u.s. government isn't go to call the chinese embassy and inform them nor would you use an american passport to enter China..... nor would you even have the same name as that on your american passport (if your a girl). So if my wife leaves amerca on her american passport and uses her Chinese passport to enter China how would they know she is an american unless we say something? The chinese border police don't care about exit stamps and even if they do America doesn't have them so again how would they know? Now if I (the american) were to try and become chinese they would take my passport away (but couldn't I just say I lost it and need a new one at the american embassy... assuming that the chinese government doesn't say anything to them?). Now I know most countries in the world deal with each other a lot as far as people go, some share databases and others even hold coop war games together with the u.s. but china isn't one of them. There is no way the government in america could know if I did anything illegal in china because even the chinese government in beijing can't know if I did something illegal in say far west or south china (I know this for a fact after talking to chiefs of police and former miltary). So maybe in some rare situation you could get around dual citizenship.

Edited by freetv
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