Al Southner
Registered Users (C)
Hi all...
I'm confused as to what "detained" means in Question 16 (Q16) of Part 10 of the N-400 form. It is:
Have you ever been arrested, cited or detained by any law enforcement officer (including USCIS or former INS and military officers) for any reason?
If I get pulled over for a minor traffic violation and let go with a verbal warning, or simply let go, does that count as detained?
If I get stopped for questioning as a suspect in a crime, then let go without any charges, does that count as detained?
I was suspected of shoplifting one time (which I did not do), and an officer stopped me for questioning. They reviewed the security camera footage and realized I was not the suspect, so they let me go. Do I have to report this? They checked my ID, but I'm not sure if they wrote anything down.
Thanks!
You have never being detailed in the legal sense of the word. If you are cuffed with nice bracelets by a police officer, taken to a county jail for overnight. That qualifies as a detention. It is important to remember this rule of thumb: Never volunteer information to any authority, unless you want to be screwed. For example, at your interview, the officer ask you whether you had breakfast that morning. Your answer should YES. Don't tell him how you had eggs with salmon, rice bread and cereal, plus chocolate milk. He doesn't care about what got into your stomach.
99% of people get in trouble with USCIS because they volunteer information which they shouldn't be offering. Last example, do you intend to practice poligamy in the US? You answer should be NO. If you dad was a polygamist, then spare the officer all the details, he might have ideas that you might want to practice is at some point..