Tried it, it can't do the check on her because we've got a security freeze / fraud alert on some of our credit accounts. Tried my number (I'm a natural born USC) and got the same error.
Any, as I was saying: Even if she checked the wrong box, so long as she hadn't used documents showing her as...
Well her concern is that she might have ticked the wrong box under "citizenship" on the form. She's fairly certain she didn't, and even if she did, I'm thinking the clerk would have caught it and questioned when my wife presented her supporting documents (Greencard, birth certificate). Hell...
We called the local office: When we go to update along with her certificate, they want to see a copy of her old greencard, her passport, state ID, birth cert, and marriage cert. As for her status, they can't give that info over the phone.
So if it was screwed up (her being listed as a...
Well that's one thing we've been real down careful about: The wife has never once claimed citizenship anywhere. We've been real careful about that.
I don't even see how the SSA stuff could be (hypothetically) screwed up: She would have had to lie about her place of birth, then shown a...
That's what I keep going over and over in my head: did she tick the wrong box on the SS-5. But even then, it would have been caught unless (and we know she didn't) she lied about where she was born and lied (and had documents to prove the lie) about her immigrant status. Somewhere between when...
Nope, no joke. Just over thinking things: a lot. It's my nature: one thing goes wonky (the issue with the AO thinking she had lied about a DUI conviction), I start going back over every, damn little, detail, of anything remotely related to said core issue.
I know, that there is nearly a 0%...
That's the game play, pretty much.
* Likely hood of it being buggered? I'd say <1 out of 10. After all she'd would have had to lied about place of birth and shown false documents that would look like she was a USC; cause the only other way it could be botched is down to some database error...
We're thinking about doing that this week. If it is screwed up, can she get in trouble with the USCIS over it? Or would they have caught it during the naturalization process.
Thing is, the only way I could see it being (hypothetially) screwed up is if she had lied about her place of birth and...
That's what I keep thinking:I know you can't get a card with just a state ID card--you can't even replace one with just that or just a marriage license (ours has her country of birth listed on it). You have to show some for of proof of legal residence or citizenship. even if you tick the wrong...
Even if she had buggered up on the form, there's no "case" (to use a word) against her unless she had submitted fake evidence documents to the SSA--which we know for 100% she didn't do. If her status was buggers on her SSA account, it should have been caught by the USCIS; they would have found...
If it was buggered, shouldn't the USCIS have seen it when they did their background checks? If it is buggered, is it a problem seeing as we wouldn't have known about it? Even if she had ticked the wrong box on a form, all her supporting documents would have made it clear she isn't/wasn't a USC...
Spouse's swearing should be in the next month of so. Going over the post swearing in To Do List, we were talking about her social security info needing updating:
Speaking in purely hypothetical terms: how likely is it that they would have the wrong status on her file? She got her number 10...
That's what we thought: Unions, political or community groups, professional groups, religious group. We didn't think "marching band" fell into that category.
Going over the wife's paperwork for her upcoming interview. Under affiliations, we listed "None". But we had forgot that before she came to the US from Canada that she had been in volunteer community marching band from Middle school to just after highschool (the marching band has since...
Wife has her naturalization interview at the end of the month at the Memphis TN field office.
Aside from the civics and english test and verifying you are you claim you are, if you have zero legal and/or civil court issues, clean record/background-check, what sort of stuff do they typically go...
So they're looking for criminal, tax, or failure to support issues? Which means the chance of it even being mentioned is near zero since it shouldn't pop up on the background checks?
We went over that form half-dozen times before we mailed it. And we're still thinking we missed something or...
Yeah I asked over there too. Frankly, we're nervous as hell over all this stuff. We know that we should be in the clear, but at the same time we're constantly second guessing ourselves.
My concern is the whole "moral character" thing. But I don't see how it'll come up in the interview when we're not behind on taxes, don't have any criminal issues with our Chapt. 7, and we don't owe any support payments. So I wonder if it'll even be mentioned.
Wonder if it'll even come up in the N-400 interview? If it did, could it count against moral character, or is bankruptcy so common these days that it's more common for them to see?
Got the NOA for my wife's case, only info shows they've mailed out the appointment letter for biometrics. Was going over some papers and got to thinking about something:
We filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in 2012--discharged in 2012. No abuse of process or criminals issues claimed, no contest...
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