Thank you.
(sorry for my bad English, but I need to detail it here to help whoever will do future interviews).
I was pretty confident. But I had some problems:
1) I sent a CD and a copy in a pen-drive, of videos of threats that I received, videos of reports that I appeared in the TV, among other video evidence. However, they do not accept anything that is not printed, and they simply discarded my videos (okay, I had other proofs printed but not with the same content as the videos).
2) Since my English is not fluent, I took a translator. The interviewer made a call to another USCIS person who also speaks mu language to monitor if my translator was translating exactly what he was talking about. Well, if they already had a translator, so I take mine. The fact is that you need to explain your facts in a very brief and objective way, to summarize a story like mine (and many others here) in an objective way without losing information is very bad. And in my case the interviewing officer asked the question, my translator translated, the USCIS translator on the phone spoke if the translation was ok, I would answer, my translator translated into English, the USCIS translator would say if it was ok ... And everything you say, it has to be short, in a nutshell, because the interviewer is typing everything, so you speak 5 words, it spreads about 30 seconds of translation, another 10 seconds of typing ... In summary, I spent 1 minute pausing every 5 words. My process has around 350 pages.
3) I thought the official interviewer would follow page by page my process, this would make it easier to make sure nothing was forgotten. But it was not so. Only parts of my case were used in the interview.
4) My interview was scheduled for 9:30 am in a place far from everything. I arrived on time, and my interview only happened at 1:30 pm. My interview lasted two and a half hours.
5) My official interviewer was very stressed, but in the end she apologized, because she had a very tiring day (my case was her last day.) Yes I was one of the first to arrive, but my case was the last, since each Interviewer has a specific area, in my case it is political asylum, and only they did this type and interview).
Many important details I did not mention in my interview, because I did not lead the interview, so I could only answer what the interviewer asked.
Some good points:
1) When I entered the interviewer's room, my case was on her desk, full of notes made by her. She also asked me questions that only those who read my lawsuit would know. This shows that even though she did not ask me all the questions, she knew what was in my process.
2) I believe her stress is just a way to make you uncomfortable so you do not focus on telling lies.
I entered with 100% confidence in the interview, and it comes out with 60% ... Anyway, I believe in the USA process.
I have to go back on the first of October to get the result.
My advice is: Before the interview, have a way to summarize everything from your process. The interviewer needs to fill in some fields of USCIS software and the fields are very limited, and these fields are where your answers are placed. An officer will then take the information from this software and judge, granting or not asylum.