Just make my mind about RTD or Passport!

masylee

Registered Users (C)
Hi, everybody
Yesterday by advice of a friend who is a immigration lawyer here in miami, I went again to infopass to try get clear about using a valid passport or RTD to travel outside USA. I had my appointment at 1:00pm at the miami customer service center with the officer Haydee B. Echeverry. She was very friendly but direct and clear after my question about RTD or passport:
"Don't bother calling 1800-, they are contract service not IO to answer this kind of question. It is totally up to the officer at the Port of Entry to let you in or not using your national passport or if he/she will gives you a hard time at the time that you come back because this. The advice from this immigration unit to people looking for travel outside USA is to be safe and get RTD, even if they have a valid national passport. But if they want they still can take their own risk and travel without RTD and see what happens at the port of entry when they return from their trip"
One thing is just so clear for them (IO), "YOU ARE NOT SUPPPOST TO RETURN TO YOUR COP EVEN WITH GC ON HAND, THIS MIGHT BRING REVIEWS ABOUT FRAUD ON YOUR APPLICATION AND EVEN DEPORTATION

And this is not a fake history, or that some body told me. I even keep a copy of the infopass appointment confirmation.:D
Anyway i just want to share this information with you guys, is up to you how take it.:cool:
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Hi, everybody
Yesterday by advice of a friend who is a immigration lawyer here in miami, I went again to infopass to try get clear about using a valid passport or RTD to travel outside USA. I had my appointment at 1:00pm at the miami customer service center with the officer Haydee B. Echeverry. She was very friendly but direct and clear after my question about RTD or passport:

Hey guys
I think The IO was right what she said about calling 1-800, but I see IO have different thought about using RTD or NP to travel abroad. I was last year 2 times at Immigration Service Center in Atlanta (Infopass) asking the same question and the IO said me both times if i have a valid NP i could use it. She said me " If you have a valid NP of your Country, then you don't need a RTD to travel abroad since you are LPR, because you are no longer an asylee"
I traveled in november to Dominican Republic using my GC and NP and I did'nt get any problem at POE when I came back. I'm going to travel again next may to the same Country and I'm thinking about using my GC & NP again.

Regards

Travelco
 
Hi, everybody
Yesterday by advice of a friend who is a immigration lawyer here in miami, I went again to infopass to try get clear about using a valid passport or RTD to travel outside USA. I had my appointment at 1:00pm at the miami customer service center with the officer Haydee B. Echeverry. She was very friendly but direct and clear after my question about RTD or passport:
"Don't bother calling 1800-, they are contract service not IO to answer this kind of question. It is totally up to the officer at the Port of Entry to let you in or not using your national passport or if he/she will gives you a hard time at the time that you come back because this. The advice from this immigration unit to people looking for travel outside USA is to be safe and get RTD, even if they have a valid national passport. But if they want they still can take their own risk and travel without RTD and see what happens at the port of entry when they return from their trip"
One thing is just so clear for them (IO), "YOU ARE NOT SUPPPOST TO RETURN TO YOUR COP EVEN WITH GC ON HAND, THIS MIGHT BRING REVIEWS ABOUT FRAUD ON YOUR APPLICATION AND EVEN DEPORTATION

And this is not a fake history, or that some body told me. I even keep a copy of the infopass appointment confirmation.:D
Anyway i just want to share this information with you guys, is up to you how take it.:cool:


We've heard another stories when IOs at the POE insisted that asylees need to use NP in place of RTD. Some of them even took RTD away from people.USCIS is inconsistent as usual.
 
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