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jeangab75

What happens to your passport

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Filed: Other Country: United Kingdom
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I was just curious: What happens to your old passport when you take the oath?

Do they give it back at the end?

Thanks

They do not hold your passport, Your passport belongs to the country that issued it so the USA has no right to take it from you. They may ask to see it at the citizenship interview but they give it straight back. If you home country allows for Dual nationality then you just have two passports.

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Kenya
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I was just curious: What happens to your old passport when you take the oath?

Do they give it back at the end?

Thanks

They do not hold your passport, Your passport belongs to the country that issued it so the USA has no right to take it from you. They may ask to see it at the citizenship interview but they give it straight back. If you home country allows for Dual nationality then you just have two passports.

Sounds good.

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Filed: Country: Philippines
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The Oath letter does not require you to bring your passport to the ceremony. They just want your green card back.

08/28/2004 Engaged

09/22/2004 I-129F submitted

10/01/2004 I-129F Approved

12/15/2004 K1 Issued

12/30/2004 Arrival in US

02/19/2005 Married

01/30/2006 Conditional Green Card Approved

01/15/2008 Conditions Removed and 10 Year Card Issued

03/28/2009 N-400 mailed to Lockbox

07/17/2009 Interview Denver USCIS office RECOMMENDED FOR APPROVAL

08/28/2009 Naturalization Ceremony - US District Court - Denver, Colorado[/b][/u]

09/04/2009 Applied for passport

09/22/2009 Passport approved and mailed

09/24/2009 Passport received

08/26/2009 Naturalization Certificate and Name Change Petition arrive back from State Department

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Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: France
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The Oath letter does not require you to bring your passport to the ceremony. They just want your green card back.

Oh really? I did not know that.

The Oath letter does not require you to bring your passport to the ceremony. They just want your green card back.

Oh really? I did not know that. I 'll read it carefully.

As TayRivers said. If your country does not recognise dual citizenship then you return the passport to the embassy.

Beautiful baby!

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Colombia
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The Oath letter does not require you to bring your passport to the ceremony. They just want your green card back.

Oh really? I did not know that.

The Oath letter does not require you to bring your passport to the ceremony. They just want your green card back.

Oh really? I did not know that. I 'll read it carefully.

As TayRivers said. If your country does not recognise dual citizenship then you return the passport to the embassy.

Beautiful baby!

Yeah, you only bring your passport/s to the interview, so they can verify the length of time you are out of the country. They also want to see your green card, but you leave with both of those and all of your original documents they want to see to verify you didn't fool around with the copies you sent in. They do take just your green card at the oath ceremony, so even with a valid foreign passport, you cannot travel, at least not come back until you get a US passport. You might be able to sneak back in if you have a current US visa, but can get into trouble if they catch you. I don't know what kind of trouble you would get into, wife got a US passport ASAP.

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Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: Italy
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They do take just your green card at the oath ceremony, so even with a valid foreign passport, you cannot travel, at least not come back until you get a US passport. You might be able to sneak back in if you have a current US visa, but can get into trouble if they catch you. I don't know what kind of trouble you would get into, wife got a US passport ASAP.

In theory, yes, you are right.

However, a colleague of mine who lives and works in London got her US citizenship while living in London (husband, who lives in London as well, was in US Army, but 4 years ago, that might have helped).

She flew back for interview, then she flew back to London same night.

Same thing with the oath, she flew back to Ohio, took the oath, got the certificate and then flew back to London using her brazilian passport.

She then flew back to the US and got in using her brazilian passport + certificate of naturalization.

The CBP agent let her in and she just told her to get a US passport asap.

In theory, they cannot deny entry to a US citizen.

Still, get a US passport asap! :)

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
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They do take just your green card at the oath ceremony, so even with a valid foreign passport, you cannot travel, at least not come back until you get a US passport. You might be able to sneak back in if you have a current US visa, but can get into trouble if they catch you. I don't know what kind of trouble you would get into, wife got a US passport ASAP.

In theory, yes, you are right.

However, a colleague of mine who lives and works in London got her US citizenship while living in London (husband, who lives in London as well, was in US Army, but 4 years ago, that might have helped).

She flew back for interview, then she flew back to London same night.

Same thing with the oath, she flew back to Ohio, took the oath, got the certificate and then flew back to London using her brazilian passport.

She then flew back to the US and got in using her brazilian passport + certificate of naturalization.

The CBP agent let her in and she just told her to get a US passport asap.

In theory, they cannot deny entry to a US citizen.

Still, get a US passport asap! :)

It's nice to meet a friendly IO at the POE when coming back, big smile, Welcome back to the USA. But doesn't happen all the time, really can meet some b@stards for lack of a more descriptive word.

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Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: Italy
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They do take just your green card at the oath ceremony, so even with a valid foreign passport, you cannot travel, at least not come back until you get a US passport. You might be able to sneak back in if you have a current US visa, but can get into trouble if they catch you. I don't know what kind of trouble you would get into, wife got a US passport ASAP.

In theory, yes, you are right.

However, a colleague of mine who lives and works in London got her US citizenship while living in London (husband, who lives in London as well, was in US Army, but 4 years ago, that might have helped).

She flew back for interview, then she flew back to London same night.

Same thing with the oath, she flew back to Ohio, took the oath, got the certificate and then flew back to London using her brazilian passport.

She then flew back to the US and got in using her brazilian passport + certificate of naturalization.

The CBP agent let her in and she just told her to get a US passport asap.

In theory, they cannot deny entry to a US citizen.

Still, get a US passport asap! :)

It's nice to meet a friendly IO at the POE when coming back, big smile, Welcome back to the USA. But doesn't happen all the time, really can meet some b@stards for lack of a more descriptive word.

Agreed, but they can't deny entry to a US citizen anyways.

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
They do take just your green card at the oath ceremony, so even with a valid foreign passport, you cannot travel, at least not come back until you get a US passport. You might be able to sneak back in if you have a current US visa, but can get into trouble if they catch you. I don't know what kind of trouble you would get into, wife got a US passport ASAP.

In theory, yes, you are right.

However, a colleague of mine who lives and works in London got her US citizenship while living in London (husband, who lives in London as well, was in US Army, but 4 years ago, that might have helped).

She flew back for interview, then she flew back to London same night.

Same thing with the oath, she flew back to Ohio, took the oath, got the certificate and then flew back to London using her brazilian passport.

She then flew back to the US and got in using her brazilian passport + certificate of naturalization.

The CBP agent let her in and she just told her to get a US passport asap.

In theory, they cannot deny entry to a US citizen.

Still, get a US passport asap! :)

It's nice to meet a friendly IO at the POE when coming back, big smile, Welcome back to the USA. But doesn't happen all the time, really can meet some b@stards for lack of a more descriptive word.

Agreed, but they can't deny entry to a US citizen anyways.

But don't you need proof of your USC, like a birth certificate or the USC certificate?

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Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: Italy
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They do take just your green card at the oath ceremony, so even with a valid foreign passport, you cannot travel, at least not come back until you get a US passport. You might be able to sneak back in if you have a current US visa, but can get into trouble if they catch you. I don't know what kind of trouble you would get into, wife got a US passport ASAP.

In theory, yes, you are right.

However, a colleague of mine who lives and works in London got her US citizenship while living in London (husband, who lives in London as well, was in US Army, but 4 years ago, that might have helped).

She flew back for interview, then she flew back to London same night.

Same thing with the oath, she flew back to Ohio, took the oath, got the certificate and then flew back to London using her brazilian passport.

She then flew back to the US and got in using her brazilian passport + certificate of naturalization.

The CBP agent let her in and she just told her to get a US passport asap.

In theory, they cannot deny entry to a US citizen.

Still, get a US passport asap! :)

It's nice to meet a friendly IO at the POE when coming back, big smile, Welcome back to the USA. But doesn't happen all the time, really can meet some b@stards for lack of a more descriptive word.

Agreed, but they can't deny entry to a US citizen anyways.

But don't you need proof of your USC, like a birth certificate or the USC certificate?

Yes, but certificate of naturalization is the mother of all proof of US citizenship! :)

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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They do take just your green card at the oath ceremony, so even with a valid foreign passport, you cannot travel, at least not come back until you get a US passport. You might be able to sneak back in if you have a current US visa, but can get into trouble if they catch you. I don't know what kind of trouble you would get into, wife got a US passport ASAP.

In theory, yes, you are right.

However, a colleague of mine who lives and works in London got her US citizenship while living in London (husband, who lives in London as well, was in US Army, but 4 years ago, that might have helped).

She flew back for interview, then she flew back to London same night.

Same thing with the oath, she flew back to Ohio, took the oath, got the certificate and then flew back to London using her brazilian passport.

She then flew back to the US and got in using her brazilian passport + certificate of naturalization.

The CBP agent let her in and she just told her to get a US passport asap.

In theory, they cannot deny entry to a US citizen.

Still, get a US passport asap! :)

It's nice to meet a friendly IO at the POE when coming back, big smile, Welcome back to the USA. But doesn't happen all the time, really can meet some b@stards for lack of a more descriptive word.

Agreed, but they can't deny entry to a US citizen anyways.

They can't deny entry, but they can detain, arrest, fine, or imprison a US Citizen, if the citizen has violated US laws. For example, if they catch a US Citizen smuggling drugs into the US, they won't deny entry, but that US Citizen will nevertheless be in a big heap of trouble.

If a US Citizen enters or leaves, or attempts to enter or leave, the US without holding a US passport, it's not as serious as drug smuggling, but he/she is in violation of INA 215(b).

INA 215 (b) Except as otherwise provided by the President and subject to such limitations and exceptions as the President may authorize and prescribe, it shall be unlawful for any citizen of the United States to depart from or enter, or attempt to depart from or enter, the United States unless he bears a valid United States passport.

Of course, they've got to go through the normal constitutionally mandated due process, and they can't just arbitrarily assign whatever penalty they desire on the spot. I'm not sure what, if any, penalty is assigned to INA 215(b). It's probably not a huge deal. Still, get that US passport.

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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