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Ingrid V Herrera

How can I get a private interview with a Consular officer at The US Embassy in COLOMBIA?

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I took my daughter Daniella to the US Embassy in Bogota COLOMBIA.  I’m a US Citizen and The last time I went to get the 
Resident visa for Daniella age of 5 now 6 years old, you guys sent me to get her citizenship to another place.  They asked me to prove that I lived in the US at least for a year and because my University, I was traveling back and for, worked in the US for 10 months and I’ve done it for more than 5 years.  I don’t know if my daughter qualify to be a US City or to get a green card.  How can I make an appointment to speak to an officer so he can guide me and help me out?. 

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****  Personal info removed for your own security and to prevent phishing scams.  Topic moved to CRBA forum *****

 

They are unlikely to answer such questions over the phone, because that is what the interview is for. 

Bye: Penguin

Me: Irish/ Swiss citizen, and now naturalised US citizen. Husband: USC; twin babies born Feb 08 in Ireland and a daughter in Feb 2010 in Arkansas who are all joint Irish/ USC. Did DCF (IR1) in 6 weeks via the Dublin, Ireland embassy and now living in Arkansas.

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On 10/5/2018 at 3:45 AM, Ingrid V Herrera said:

I took my daughter Daniella to the US Embassy in Bogota COLOMBIA.  I’m a US Citizen and The last time I went to get the 
Resident visa for Daniella age of 5 now 6 years old, you guys sent me to get her citizenship to another place.  They asked me to prove that I lived in the US at least for a year and because my University, I was traveling back and for, worked in the US for 10 months and I’ve done it for more than 5 years.  I don’t know if my daughter qualify to be a US City or to get a green card.  How can I make an appointment to speak to an officer so he can guide me and help me out?. 

The officer's role is not to guide you or help you out.  It is to evaluate what you have submitted, request additional information if needed, and make a decision whether your application met the requirements of the law.  It sounds like you need 12 months of continuous presence in the US to transmit citizenship to her.  If the longest period you ever spent at one time (without leaving the US) is 10 months, she would not qualify for citizenship. 

 

Did you apply for a CRBA that was denied or did you just not complete the application?    Once the CRBA is denied, if you plan to move to the US, you will need to file for an immigrant vIsa for her.

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