Britsimon
Super Moderator
Yes you did, but I also mentioned the Asian birth registration had an apostille-certified affidavit by my father, that the newborn's name was changed soon after birth to its final name as shown on the second birth certificate and all subsequent identity docs. So all in all, they both affirm to the same dates, places, final names, life and identity. In my judgement, because of those things it is rather self-evident that its not a different person on each document, so it shouldn't really warrant much of a game-changing process. I feel comfortable I did the right thing according to my conscience and estimation, even knowing KCC would have its own perception and rules over this, that would potentially deprive me of the DV as finally happened. So I let things be, because I wanted to be clear from my side.
Yep I understand your position. I did not say in my above that I would have advised you not to have told them - but I would have recognized the risk and predicted the outcome. If the same things had come up in June, then maybe they would have had time for rechecking. But as it is, the background check was undermined and there was NO time for rechecking, so KCC could not send the case to the embassy having their checks "certified".
By the way I responded to Susie that this is not because of the new procedure. The reason I say that is because background checks are performed BEFORE the documents are processed, and the processing time for documents we are seeing is almost non existent (meaning you send documents by the end of the month and will be in the batch of cases for scheduling for the next month).
So - this was about undermining the background checks, NOT the document procedure.
Anyway - best of luck. With your positive attitude and honesty, you'll be fine.