you need to check if any of the following circumstances apply to you to find out if you can get citizenship through your father --> http://bit.ly/c4Z3jK .
as far as proving lawful presence, you will have the burden to show that you were inspected at entry.
you shouldn't be afraid of...
husotx, if you've attached all the documents you could think of that applies to you from the M-476 Guide checklist, an RFE (besides the biometrics) would ask you to bring the evidence to the interview instead of sending them in.
My fingerprinting appointment letter says that if you miss your appointment, you can go on any following Wednesday(no appointment necessary) until a certain date which was a specified date 3 months down the line from my original FP date. Failure to do so within that date would mean they will...
stonewall, assuming the 5th year anniversary would be 05/09/10, and you filed 02/08/10, that would be 91 days or 1 day too early as you earlier reported. [edit:see later post]
Most applicants, if not all, will get an N-659 (aka white letter) with the interview letter which is the general checklist. The yellow letter is usually sent out earlier so that the applicant can prepare the documents listed that might require some time to procure (citation records, selective...
Sri,
Since you turned citizen, have you upgraded your wife's petition to the non-quota immediate relative status?
[Edit: corrected in post below] Sounds like you might have to go the green card route for your child, but an IR petition will be processed much, much quicker since there are no...
if the warning ticket doesn't require a court appearance, then you do not have to disclose it as it technically isn't a citation. as others have mentioned, just have it handy with you during the interview just in case it comes up but you do not need to disclose/offer it.
good to know chekodi. i just learned that another option is to go to your local IRS office and get a print out but not sure if all offices can accomodate that. i guess too late for that :) good luck.
grossmont,
I don't see a reason preventing your wife from currently filing for naturalization, but I could be wrong. I haven't seen a post similar to your situation and perhaps someone who has seen it will chime in. It is possible that an immigration officer can interpret the regulations (either...
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