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Mike E

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Everything posted by Mike E

  1. So you navigated to your country of residence and concluded from the section on police records that a police record for you and one for your child would not be of use? Time to hire a U.S. immigration attorney.
  2. yes SB-1? Yes both a waste of time and dangerous. Some applicants have had their green cars taken from them and SB-1 denied. Total lack of due process. You are married to an American citizen. What would a CBP officer or immigration judge think will happen if your LPR status revoked? Answer: they know your lawyer will file an I-485 package so that you get a new gc. Giving you an NTA is a waste of time. I am not saying it is impossible. But it is illogical. I became interested in this topic after I started reading here in 2017, and out of dozens of stories of successful returns, since then (some of which were because I and others urged the LPR to just get on a pkabe) I know of just one where an NTA was issued: If you get an NTA, you have an option to avoid embarrassment: leave, and file for a consular IR-1 visa and have your lawyer dismiss the NTA.
  3. . How would a school or hospital know you live together? AFAiCT you have not revealed to us where you live, so your questions are going to increasingly to get lower quality answers. Perhaps a police certificate each for parent and child. In some countries, police certificates are issued by local police stations. Go to https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/us-visas/Visa-Reciprocity-and-Civil-Documents-by-Country.html .
  4. Government, medical, or school records addressed to each (or better yet, both) of parent and child that show same physical address of residence.
  5. Depends on the POE. Some are reputed to have a policy of no I-407s. The problem is the travelers who report this, refuse to name the POE. The fact OP mailed I-131 before leaving the U.S. gives weight to a finding that OP did not intend to abandon status. OP should bring evidence I-131 was mailed from inside the U.S. before OP left the U.S.
  6. During your F-1 interview, did you disclose that you had a fiancé in the U.S.?
  7. 10/02/2023. And bot 90 days early. That is ny advice.
  8. So you answer no to ib a form you are unlikely to be asked for.
  9. Risky compared to what? The risk multiplies each day you wait to come back to the U.S. Then book a flight back to usa now and come back. Then file properly file re-entry permit, I have seen cases of people gone for over 5 years who cone back, with no questions asked, and are admitted as returning residents.
  10. Of a CBPO asks you if you bought anything while outside the U.S., what do you say?
  11. You have to declare everything to acquired from outside the U.S.
  12. Declare it or leave it behind. I over value trinkets when I do not have the receipts. Usually my duty exemption is $800. The only time I paid duty was on a $3000 purchase. I paid under $100 duty.
  13. N-600K requires the applicant to leave the U.S. after becoming a U.S. citizen.
  14. You might or might not enter this electronically at kiosk when you arrive. This depends on the airport and the whims of the CBP station manager. You might be asked to make verbal declaration. Hence the advice to write this down. If you have it on your phone, and take it out to show the officer, IME the officer will scream at you. And IME, fewer countries are doing this than before. Mexico did in 2022, and did not in 2023 for us. Thailand did in 2018, and did not in 2022 for us. The U.S. used to always do it. I have not used a U.S. customs form in over 3 years.
  15. What I do not understand is that there were fascinating sub civilizations which Hollywood has largely ignored. I get it. Hollywood is mostly controlled by white people and they are not interested. But there are powerful people in Hollywood like the Smiths, Elba, Freeman, the Washingtons, etc. Why the fixation with color washing ancient Egypt versus depicting more of these: Pretty sure most of the monarchs of most of the above were black.
  16. Estimate their value, ideally from memory of what you paid.
  17. Correct procedure would have been to apply for a U.S. passport at the U.S. embassy. IMO the embassy would have given the applicant the run around. I am not surprised the N-600 route was tried. Once N-600 is denied, one cannot apply for it again so I would do everything humanly possible to make that appointment. * Definitely try an emergency passport appoint with embassy. * Canada, Mexico, and U.S. require visas for citizens of Antigua and Barbuda. I would apply for tourist visas at all 3. If U.S. does not approve a tourist visa in time, maybe Canada or Mexico will. If so, show up at land border with all the USCIS N-600 notices in hand, and after long secondary be admitted to the U.S. * While waiting for a visa or passport appointment, since no visa needed for Bahamas, and I believe Turks and Caicos, Aruba, and Bermuda, and so each of those has U.S. CBP pre-clearance ports of entry, I would fly to one or more of each, and try to board a flight to U.S., again showing all USCIS notices to CBP at those countries. The challenge is getting the airline to issue a boarding pass. * The closest living relatives in the U.S. needs to get their U.S. senators to help. If you cannot make the N-600 appointment reschedule.
  18. Declare everything bought. Bribg receipts Paper customs forms are rarely used now. List purchases on a scrap piece of paper.
  19. GCs are for living in the U.S. Legally if he took up residence in another country, he is subject to a finding of abandonment of LPR status.
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