Dear @Britsimon , I just read your recent blog post, regarding the winner who was refused because he listed his first name under "middle name". It was very unfortunate.
This story made me worry about my case, here's what happened:
While filling out the initial eDV form, under "middle name" I listed my father's name, which is used almost interchangeably with the middle name (there's no actual middle name in my country), for example, it is listed on my high school degree, will also be on my university degree (when I graduate in a couple of months), and other official documents. The main reason I put is because I got two previous B visas to the US, and one of them had my father's name as a middle name and the other didn't, so I thought I'd better put extra (and not inaccurate) stuff than omit some.
So my question is: will this be a problem? I'm also worried that correcting on DS-260 would raise some unnecessary red flags.
Any advice from any expert would be appreciated.
Also my CN is AS10***, submitted DS-260 on August 15.
Thanks!
This story made me worry about my case, here's what happened:
While filling out the initial eDV form, under "middle name" I listed my father's name, which is used almost interchangeably with the middle name (there's no actual middle name in my country), for example, it is listed on my high school degree, will also be on my university degree (when I graduate in a couple of months), and other official documents. The main reason I put is because I got two previous B visas to the US, and one of them had my father's name as a middle name and the other didn't, so I thought I'd better put extra (and not inaccurate) stuff than omit some.
So my question is: will this be a problem? I'm also worried that correcting on DS-260 would raise some unnecessary red flags.
Any advice from any expert would be appreciated.
Also my CN is AS10***, submitted DS-260 on August 15.
Thanks!
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