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dodger48

Time outside the US

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Filed: Other Country: Philippines
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I have a stupid question. I see people all asking about time spent outside the United States as it applies for US citizenship and i'm just curious. How does immigration know the time you are out of the US. When you leave no one documents your passport that you left on a certain date. Im just curious how they verify all dates of travel

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: China
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I have a stupid question. I see people all asking about time spent outside the United States as it applies for US citizenship and i'm just curious. How does immigration know the time you are out of the US. When you leave no one documents your passport that you left on a certain date. Im just curious how they verify all dates of travel

I am not positive, but I know when I enter another country they stamp my entry, and exit dates in my passport.

I think they could compute my time in USA by subtracting the time I was in a foreign country.

However, when you read these statements it is usually for the non-US citizen, and their passport would be stamped on entry and exit from USA. So, theirs would be even easier to count the time.

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Filed: Other Country: Philippines
Timeline
I have a stupid question. I see people all asking about time spent outside the United States as it applies for US citizenship and i'm just curious. How does immigration know the time you are out of the US. When you leave no one documents your passport that you left on a certain date. Im just curious how they verify all dates of travel

I am not positive, but I know when I enter another country they stamp my entry, and exit dates in my passport.

I think they could compute my time in USA by subtracting the time I was in a foreign country.

However, when you read these statements it is usually for the non-US citizen, and their passport would be stamped on entry and exit from USA. So, theirs would be even easier to count the time.

When you leave the USA on a flight you do not pass through immigration and your passport doesn't get stamped with the an exit date.

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I have a stupid question. I see people all asking about time spent outside the United States as it applies for US citizenship and i'm just curious. How does immigration know the time you are out of the US. When you leave no one documents your passport that you left on a certain date. Im just curious how they verify all dates of travel

They probably don't absolutely verify every single date. Sometimes they can use passport stamps, airline records, and similar things to track where you were, but sometimes it's possible to leave without a record. I've walked across the border to Mexico, and there was no one there who asked to check my papers.

However, if you lie or misrepresent a material fact during the naturalization process, and if they don't catch it before giving you citizenship, your naturalization may still be revoked at a later time. It's to your advantage to fill it out correctly. Let them worry about how or if they're going to check it, and rest secure in the knowledge that if they do verify it, they'll uncover data that's consistent with what you wrote.

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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i agree, even if they dont checked every case, this information about crossing border out and in - is just too easy to investigate and to find out truth,

so I'd never ever lie about that or anything else in N400, there are known cases of people who got Naturalized years and years ago, but then immigration finds out they lied, and deported them - like the case with former Nazi members.

My PAST Timelines:

10/2004 - Conditional GC

08/2006 - 10/2007 - Lifting Conditions timeline

10/2007 - 6/26/2009 Citizenship, Los Angeles DO timeline

auBam7.png

CSC i-130 for my Mom

06/30/09 - delivered

07/06/09 - NOA date (rec'd - 07/10) #WAC 09xxx3, touched.

07/08/09 - check cashed, #WAC 09xxx2 (not online)

08/29/09 - APPROVED!!!

NVC

09/14/09 - NVC case # assigned, emails registered

09/17/09 - email AOS bill received and paid online, ds3032 received and returned

09/21/09 - AOS bill status "PAID", FedExed out AOS, 09/24/09 delivered to NVC

09/28/09 - AVR:AOS acknowledged

10/02/09 - 3032 was acknol. by NVC, paid IV Bill online

10/05/09 - emails: 1 pm -RFE for 3032, 3 pm - IV bill, 5 pm - status PAID

10/09/09 - ds230 delivered to NVC at 9am

10/14/09 - AVR: Checklist response was received

10/20/09 - login failed! - between 5 pm and 9 pm PST, at 5 pm it was still working

10/21/09 - case complete! (AVR updated after 10 pm) = total NVC 37 days

10/28/09 - interview date email came at 6.30 pm, no AVR changes yet

10/30/09 - AVR: "Case sent to embassy on Oct 29" = total 4 months from delivery of i130 to USCIS

11/02/09 - Medical

11/20/09 - Interview - PASSED!!!

11/28 - POE: LAX

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