Jump to content
caley

UNUSUAL PROBLEM - HELP

 Share

53 posts in this topic

Recommended Posts

Caley, don't lose sleep over it. Write to the American Citizens' Services of the Embassy where your fiancee is and tell them that you're not claiming US Citizenship for your child because of the reason(s) you've stated. The American Citizen Services will give you a letter acknowledging your abandonment of your child's claim to US Citizenship. Use this letter when you get an RFE from the CO either during the interview or before the interview.

I am in the same situation and that's what USCIS Manila told me to do when I wrote them a letter.

:blink:

How is this relevant to OP's situation? :unsure:

I read this post and for some odd rzn... Jackson 5 Dancing Machine came to mind... :whistle:

I have totally lost count. This has got to be more than 20 though.

Edited by Crashed~N2~Me
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Time to sort things out before it gets tangled and causes delays and / or stress.

:thumbs:

OP, In the VJ community...there are many helpful members. Most of the time, advice given is correct but sometimes it is not. Let's call the incorrect advice "bad advice". Sometimes the bad advice is due to inexperience. Occasionally the bad advice is given deliberately by a bad person. I remember a certain VJ member tried to get a K-1 with her bayaw. (Her sister died so she took her place) USEM denied the K-1. So...she and her bayaw got married and fled CR-1. It was approved. (but) It seems that certain VJ member became very angry about the denial. She regularly / proactively gave bad advice to fellow VJ's. I suppose she hoped others would be denied or greatly delayed as a result of her advice. Weird but true. :wacko:

Anh map gave you correct advice.

Your petition could fly under radar but, if it does not... You run the risk of being sent to the USEM fraud unit and being denied. Additionally, if you are denied for fraud, you face a lifetime ban.

Better clean this up before it hits Manila. (but, if NVC does their job correctly, it probably won't reach Manila)

Edited by Crashed~N2~Me
Link to comment
Share on other sites

reporting it to CRBA and getting him a US passport. any advice.thank you

1). You shouldn't have had your fiance sign the Birth Certificate. You gotta get it corrected, NOW.

2). You can't file for a CRBA because your son is a Filipino citizen not a US citizen. (A US citizen child does not need a K-2 visa. He/she need the CRBA along with the proof of evidence of his/her citizenship.)

A Non-US citizen child is not eligible for CRBA (Consular Report of Birth Abroad) nor is he/she qualified to obtain a US passport.

Claiming your Filipino son is a US citizen when he is not (to go along with your visa petition) is a huge mistake.

Your case has a lot of holes in it. You need to get this whole mess sorted out before it gets farther and before it's too late.

Edited by ~happyndinlove~

Immigration Timeline Summary

10.21.2008 – CR-1 Visa Application Filed (By Hubby's Sec)
09.04.2009 – Visa Interview | Passed
09.10.2009 – Visa Packet Received
09.17.2009 – US Entry | Home
07.05.2011 – ROC Petition Filed
05.01.2012 – ROC Approved (No Interview)
05.18.2012 – 10-year GC Received
06.19.2012 – Eligible to apply for Naturalization
(procrastinated)
06.24.2013 – N-400 Application Filed
09.30.2013 – Civics Test / Interview | Passed
10.03.2013 – Oath Taking Ceremony | Became a USCitizen!
04.14.2014 – Applied for "Expedite Service" Passport (as PI travel date was fast approaching)
04.16.2014 – Passport Issued & Shipped
04.17.2014 – US Passport Received

Our timeline vanished into thin air.

I've contacted the admin several times but I got zero response.

https://meiscookery.wordpress.com

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Timeline

Caley,

you may need to consult an immigration lawyer in the US and present the case for possible remedies or have a lawyer in the Philippines to fix it (probably some affidavits or something)

it's gonna be hard if you're going directly to the NSO because they might see it as fraud (if you read the thing about entering falsified information as your case is not a "mistake" or "error" but rather "false claims"). so check with a lawyer

Edited by Kang
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Timeline

really.maybe i should try your suggestion first, yes i was planning to ask the CO about my son's case when ill have my interview. so we wer on the same exact situation. did they approved it and and your son/daughter got a visa. can you tell me more about the details because im really wanna know how. thank you very much

You still run the risk on being banned. You should see a lawyer first before a CO. Not all CO are understanding. Some are more strict, some are very strict.

Edited by Kang
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Caley,

can you give us more details of the child, age, place of birth.

You cannot just go to NSO have it correct like editing and reprinting. cuz first you need to go to the local registry

office for this submit tons of requirements and will undergo interview to why this and that questions. this is legal

matter and CO cannot help you with that unless you want to get banned from entering US.

So go see a LAWYER.

(this is just a hopeful question) try to ask like what if your fiance will be the one to come over

here in the Philippines and get married in the Philippines, will there be a possibility that

the child will be on process of adoption even your fiance's name is already on the child's BC as

his/her father.

and when you go see a lawyer bring a copy of your child's BC. and maybe a photo copy of your fiance

passport or any identification card which will show his citizenship.

Edited by VirtualLee

Our Time Line
---------------------------
CR-1/CR-2
---------------------------


USCIS Stage: (13 DAYS)
Apr 15, 2012 - Filed I-130 ($420 x2)
Apr 19, 2012 - NOA-1
May 2, 2012 - NOA-2


NVC STAGE: (56 DAYS)
05/21/12 - Case finally entered into NVC system
05/25/12 - Received case #, IIN, and BIN, gave e-mail addresses, sent optin e-mail
05/25/12 - Received info package and AOS bill e-mails from NVC
05/25/12 - AOS bill invoiced & paid ($88)
05/29/12 - AOS bill appears as PAID
06/01/12 - IV Bill Invoiced & PAID ($230 x2)
06/04/12 - IV Bill Shows PAID
06/15/12 - AOS & IV Packages sent
07/02/12 - RFE email received
07/06/12 - Sent NSO copy of MC and BC
07/16/12 - Case Complete (2nd Wedding Anniversary)
08/01/12 - Interview Date Assigned -->>>>(Sept.5, 2012@ 6:15am)



Medical/CFO / Consulate / POE:
08/29/2012-------- Medical Exam: PASSED
08/30/2012 ---------Advance CFO @SMEF-COW
09/05/2012-------- Interview: VISA APPROVED!!!!

09/11/2012 ------- VISA RECEIVED!
10/02/2012 -------- POE = Honolulu, Hawaii
Welcome to Hawaii

10/18/2012 - received 10yr. GC & SSN#

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: IR-5 Country: Philippines
Timeline

I wanna clarify something. :)

I did not tell her to go to DIRECTLY GO to NSO and talk to someone from there. I just shared the LINK to NSO site. That seeking a Lawyer's service is their FIRST recommendation in cases like hers. Whatever you guys want to call it... it still going to be Petition for Change Name/or Correction of Entry in the Civil Registrar.

We all agree that she needs a LAWYER. That's all :thumbs:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: IR-5 Country: Philippines
Timeline

I copied & posted the information below from the NSO site. This is the same link that I posted in my previous post to the OP.

http://nso.citizenservices.com.ph/nso-certificate-correction

NSO Certificate Correction Of Entry

TEN steps to be undertaken in the correction o an entry in a civil registry document

  1. Contact a lawyer who will prepare the Petition for Correction of Entry.
  2. Lawyers shall file the Petition in the Regional Trial Court. The fee for filing the Petition in the Regional Trial Court is Php 160.00.
  3. The Petition will be raffled and assigned to a branch of the Regional Trial Court.
  4. The assigned Regional Trial Court shall issue an Order for the publication of its Order in a newspaper of general circulation for three consecutive weeks. Fee for publication varies.
  5. The Order contains the date of the first hearing.
  6. During the first hearing, the lawyer will present compliance of the jurisdictional requirements like publication of the Order in a newspaper of general circulation.
  7. After establishing compliance with jurisdictional requirements, the petitioner will be presented in Court to testify. The Court may assign the Clerk of Court to receive evidence.
  8. During the hearing, i is possible that an oppositor may appear contesting the Petition. If no oppositor appears, the Clerk of Court will receive the petitioner's evidence.
  9. After presentation of evidence, the Court will rule on the Petition.
  10. If the decision is favorable, the Court will order the Office of Civil Registrar to correct the entry in the civil registry document (birth/marriage/death certificate of the petitioner).

Source: http://www.census.gov.ph/data/civilreg/ten_steps.html

View the pages below for other NSO Certificate problems.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
Didn't find the answer you were looking for? Ask our VJ Immigration Lawyers.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
- Back to Top -

Important Disclaimer: Please read carefully the Visajourney.com Terms of Service. If you do not agree to the Terms of Service you should not access or view any page (including this page) on VisaJourney.com. Answers and comments provided on Visajourney.com Forums are general information, and are not intended to substitute for informed professional medical, psychiatric, psychological, tax, legal, investment, accounting, or other professional advice. Visajourney.com does not endorse, and expressly disclaims liability for any product, manufacturer, distributor, service or service provider mentioned or any opinion expressed in answers or comments. VisaJourney.com does not condone immigration fraud in any way, shape or manner. VisaJourney.com recommends that if any member or user knows directly of someone involved in fraudulent or illegal activity, that they report such activity directly to the Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement. You can contact ICE via email at Immigration.Reply@dhs.gov or you can telephone ICE at 1-866-347-2423. All reported threads/posts containing reference to immigration fraud or illegal activities will be removed from this board. If you feel that you have found inappropriate content, please let us know by contacting us here with a url link to that content. Thank you.
×
×
  • Create New...