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Everything posted by Mike E
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Nvc letter spell my last name wrong
Mike E replied to Afif899's topic in K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & Procedures
At the interview show the CO your: * passport * birth certificate * NVC letter and explain your name is incorrect in the NVC letter and that you need your visa to match your name in your passport. -
Nvc letter spell my last name wrong
Mike E replied to Afif899's topic in K-1 Fiance(e) Visa Process & Procedures
Correct it at the interview. -
I can read it all. What can you not read?
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Joint sponsor possible tax issue
Mike E replied to jaywave's topic in IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & Procedures
Not ideal. Why aren’t these in a U.S. bank? You need a different joint sponsor. -
I-751 approved in the middle of move
Mike E replied to OldUser's topic in Removing Conditions on Residency General Discussion
On a Saturday? -
Not possible. You go to SSA with it. You leave SSA with it. sometimes If the court knows what is doing.
- 5 replies
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- name change
- n-400
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(and 2 more)
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Sounds like you should get your passports after your SS cards and DLs are updated. Are you up to speed on the separate change of name document that the court has to issue?
- 5 replies
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- name change
- n-400
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(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
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I do not believe I suggested you could. Unfortunately this is not always true. A minority of derived citizens who do not have certificates of citizenship encounter problems like: * getting a U.S. security clearance * becoming an officer in the U.S. armed forces * being assigned certain roles in the U.S. armed forces * getting a drivers license or state ID * registering to vote * getting a new or replacement social security card * getting social security benefits * petitioning a relative for an immigration benefit * replacing a damaged or lost U.S. passport * obtaining a U.S. passport for their own children who were not born in the U.S. * registering to vote * being ineligible to renew a passport due to criminal record, child support lapses, losing passports too often, no fly list, etc. Lest others chime in and say they had no problem with the above, I say congrats and welcome to the majority. Tragically derived citizens tend run into these issues long after their parents have passed and/or lost naturalization certificates and other critical evidence. Some end up living in the shadows of American Society: no job, no home, and in fear. CCA 2000 has done evil things to at least tens of thousands of Americans, and USCIS is to blame for not educating naturalized citizens on these issues. Fortunately, on visa journey we are educated.
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Daily update on Biden tanking america
Mike E replied to Nature Boy 2.0's topic in Current Events and Hot Social Topics
And that is going to leave a mark. -
Citizenship of children of naturalized parents To get your child a U.S. passport you need to have evidence that the child: is your child lives with you is in your legal custody has LPR status you are a U.S. citizen the above all happened before the child reached age 18 IMO there these are facts: the longer a parent waits to secure a U.S. citizenship document for the child, the harder it becomes to prove the child is. U.S. citizen. It actually becomes exponentially harder because evidence, like radioactivity of isotopes has a half life. It’s actually the law of physics: order tends to disorder aka the Law of Entropy you get exactly one chance to file N-600. Often when parents decide to try N-600 first, they get RFE for evidence. The parent doesn’t know how to respond to RFE, and the case is denied. Forever. Whereas if the passport acceptance agent is half way competent the agent won’t accept the application with incomplete evidence. whereas you can try as many times as you want to get a passport passports get lost and replacing a passport without a certificate of citizenship is hard. Replacing a passport when you have a passport card is easy.
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Every U.S. passport holder has to gill out DS-11 at least once. Application for certificate of citizenship Not always. It does. That is the law. When you apply for their passports provide proof: * their GCs * your certificate of naturalization * legal and physical custody evidence * their birth certificates
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They might or might not become citizens when you take oath. This will be determined by an adjudicator at: 1. the U.S. passport agency who will look at the evidence in their DS-11s and rule whether the children became citizens. If affirmative, passports will be issued. The GCs might be retained by the passport agency or returned. 2. USCIS who will look at the evidence in their N-600s and rule whether the children became citizens. If affirmative, certificates of citizenship will be issued. The GCs will be retained by USCIS. If you decide to do step 1 before step 2, the longer you wait between steps 1 and 2, the more likely the passport agency and USCIS will make different rulings. This is because, evidence, like radioactive isotopes, decays at an exponential rate. Step 1 can be attempted multiple times. Step 2 can be attempted just once. For this reason, step 2 should not be attempted until step 1 succeeds.
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I-751 approved in the middle of move
Mike E replied to OldUser's topic in Removing Conditions on Residency General Discussion
The day the card is delivered will be tense, like an episode of 24. I hope we get updates every hour. -
Joint sponsor possible tax issue
Mike E replied to jaywave's topic in IR-1 / CR-1 Spouse Visa Process & Procedures
Are these assets at U.S. financial institutions and denominated in U.S. dollars? 1. She is still married. So enter 1 for her spouse 2. I would get a new one, especially because of 3 3. 2022 tax transcript is needed. You need a new I-864 from her. -
Busting the myth that the N400 knocks the 751 lose
Mike E replied to Rocio0010's topic in US Citizenship General Discussion
OP in fact got an n-400 interview.