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| Life After The Green Card How soon can you leave your employer. All other issues after the green card. |
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#1
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How would the Immigration Officer know the duration of your absence??
Hi everyone, I have a question.
I have a green card and have been away from the US for almost 2 years for educational reasons. I am a national of a country that has the visa waiver program. Whenever I enter the waiver country, I don't have any entry stamp because they don't stamp the passport. I also have no exit stamps from the US because the US doesn't have exit stamps. The only stamp i have are entry stamps INTO the US. So i'm wondering: if i return to the US, how will they know that i've been away for almost 2 years? There is no evidence on the passport whatsoever that shows when I left or when I entered another country, or any record of my departure from the US. So if i say i've been away for 1 month, how could they possibly know that I actually didn't? Obviously this is illegal and it's lying and I'm not saying i'm going to do that and in fact will probably give the green card up, but I'm just curious if that's doable without getting caught. |
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#2
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__________________
PD: Jan 2003 (EB3 rest of world) I-485 filed: June 2005 Approved: July 2007 I am a layman, not a lawyer. What I write here is not official or professional legal advice. In addition, my answers on this forum are specific to the scenarios discussed in each thread and should not be generalized to other situations. |
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#3
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Flight manifests.
__________________
Regards, S K Ghori skg@vex.net http://www.vex.net/~skg/ **NOTE** I underwent the immigration process in both Canada and the US. I hold Pakistani, Canadian and US citizenship. **DISCLAIMER** I am neither a lawyer nor an immigration consultant. My comments should NEVER be considered as legal or professional advice as they are not meant to be such. |
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#4
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canada
Flight manifest does not seem to be a fool proof way as anyone can exit the US by land border and fly out from Canada. Canada does not stamp the passport when you enter by land border. Though I am not sure if they stamp your passport when you board a flight from Canada.
Last edited by PHSESAaug; 5th April 2009 at 09:27 PM. |
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#5
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Quote:
__________________
EB2, rest of the world. LC(RIR) PD : 4/29/02 LC(RIR) Approved : 11/17/04 I485/I140/EAD/AP RD : 12/15/04 FP : 1/9/05 AP Approved : 2/17/05 EAD Approved : 3/26/05 I485/I140 Approved : 5/24/05 I-551 stamp : 6/3/05 Plastic Card RD : 6/28/05 |
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#6
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For what? to determine how long a US PR has stayed outside the US. I would think they have far more important concerns like catching a suspected terrorist. Furthermore, I don't think Canadians whose flights don't enter the US would appreciate their flight manifests being shared with the US authorities.
Last edited by PHSESAaug; 6th April 2009 at 12:51 AM. |
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#7
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I know from personal experience that US authorities know which international flight a GC holder boarded out of Pearson airport.
__________________
Regards, S K Ghori skg@vex.net http://www.vex.net/~skg/ **NOTE** I underwent the immigration process in both Canada and the US. I hold Pakistani, Canadian and US citizenship. **DISCLAIMER** I am neither a lawyer nor an immigration consultant. My comments should NEVER be considered as legal or professional advice as they are not meant to be such. |
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#8
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Quote:
Ghori, Based on this experience do you think Canadian flight manifests are readily available for a US border inspector or is it something that is requested on a case by case basis. My point is this is not something that is handed over to them every day for every flight but will certainly be made available by Canadian authorities on request. There is a big difference between the two. |
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#9
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It was a Toronto-Frankfurt flight.
I believe they are shared routinely and without fail. Remember, both countries have the same problem. Green and Maple Card holders who think they are smarter than the authorities ![]()
__________________
Regards, S K Ghori skg@vex.net http://www.vex.net/~skg/ **NOTE** I underwent the immigration process in both Canada and the US. I hold Pakistani, Canadian and US citizenship. **DISCLAIMER** I am neither a lawyer nor an immigration consultant. My comments should NEVER be considered as legal or professional advice as they are not meant to be such. Last edited by Triple Citizen; 6th April 2009 at 11:35 AM. |
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#10
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The information is shared regularly for every flight. But it is not necessarily sorted and correlated to every individual. However, if they suspect something, they can send you to the secondary inspection room where they can spend hours to query the data from all sorts of angles and interrogate you and find out if a certain Joe Public listed on a given flight is really you. Or when you apply for citizenship, they have even more time to study the data from different sources.
__________________
PD: Jan 2003 (EB3 rest of world) I-485 filed: June 2005 Approved: July 2007 I am a layman, not a lawyer. What I write here is not official or professional legal advice. In addition, my answers on this forum are specific to the scenarios discussed in each thread and should not be generalized to other situations. Last edited by Jackolantern; 6th April 2009 at 12:25 PM. |
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#11
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Quote:
Other data is probably shared as well.
__________________
------------------------------------ IMPORTANT NOTE: I am a Volunteer Moderator - one of you. I am not a lawyer. So act accordingly. PD: 9/12/2000 (EB3/VA/RIR/Canada) I-140 RD: 12/22/2000 I-140 AD: 7/16/2001 RD: 8/28/2001 ND: 10/26/2001 FP1: 1/31/2002 RFE: 8/2/2002 RFE RD: 8/28/2002 TD: 10/22/2002 FP2: 6/19/2004 ID: 07/15/2004 AD: 07/15/2004 CO: 08/18/2004 CR: 08/23/2004 N-400 RD: 05/21/2009 FP: 06/13/2009 CFR: 08/05/2009 IL: 08/21/09 ID: 10/7/09 USC: 10/8/09 |
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#12
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If you cross on foot to Mexico, no data will be shared since even Mexicans don't check your passport.
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