Can I lose my green card if i become a PR of another counrty?

A US LPR is expected to file US taxes.

I do.

Working in a foreign country not as an intra-company transfer can be used to demonstrate that you have forfeited GC -reentry permit or not.

Could you please provide a source of this information?
 
You don't think that the US and UK share immigration data?

Additionally, if you spent a long time in the UK without being a citizen they will ask you how you were able to stay there for so long.
Even though US and UK share a lot of data, don;t think US border control has access to UK permanent resident database. For one thing i'm not sure that even UK border control has access to this database or that this kind of database even exists at all in digital/usable format. The whole immigration system is very messed up here.
 
how will they find out that I am a PR of a different country?
For instance, if you present to US officials a passport of that country in a year or two. That would raise a strong suspicion you have lied before in order to have kept LPR status illegally.
 
It is never the simple act of taking another country's PR status -- or even its citizenship -- that will get your US GC revoked.
However, it may certainly be the requisite ties established in that country in order to qualify for PR status that may make you ineligible for GC, especially the time spent abroad.
 
Yes, I meant if I applied the US PR with country A passport and got the green card, I traveled to UK, and came back to the US with a country B passport, would be a problem or not.

I believe the poster is referring to a situation where one leaves the US having citizenship A, then becomes a citizen of B before returning to the US.
 
Yes, I meant if I applied the US PR with country A passport and got the green card, I traveled to UK, and came back to the US with a country B passport, would be a problem or not.
I guess, A, B and UK are all three different distinct countries?
 
RP was granted to Mr. X from county A. now Mr. X is from country B. Will it a problem or not?

Hardly. Remember that Mr. X was born in Country Y, and that doesn't change. That is where he is "from". Other or current citizenships matter little to CIS.
 
RP was granted to Mr. X from county A. now Mr. X is from country B. Will it a problem or not?
If A, B and Uk are three distink separated countries, taht would not be a problem. If A or B is UK, that could be a problem.
 
an idea

Get a fresh passport by losing your old one before you go to the US and they won't have a clue that you've been in the UK so long.
 
Get a fresh passport by losing your old one before you go to the US and they won't have a clue that you've been in the UK so long.
Except that your A# still identifies you as the person who left to travel to the UK a long time ago, if they swiped your green card when you checked in for the flight to the UK.
 
Get a fresh passport by losing your old one before you go to the US and they won't have a clue that you've been in the UK so long.

Every one post in this forum knows very well he/she can hide some facts, lie, .......etc. The advice they need is: How to make things completely legal with no harm now or in the future whatsover. You will be handed a form to fill your vists, how long each vist was, your criminal history, your family .......etc. It is easy for one with criminal history to say no, I do not have any record, it is easy for one to change passport and lie in the form or in the interview and so on. The question is: What wil happen down the road? It is obvious that investigation is conducted on random basis every day and cases will be discoverd. GC, USC and any benifit will be revoked, fine will be triggered and jails are full and new ones are ready to be constructed. Giving the fact that many people escape punishment despite the crimes they did has no meaning. Obviously many will escape and few innocents will get punished, this is part of the game.
 
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