1. Yes, based on your above explanation. However selecting your birth country would have been a lot simpler and easier.
2. USCIS deals with roughly 5% of DV selectees annually, they have limited number of IOs experienced or with enough knowledge of DV requirements/qualifications. Your IO may or may not notice the cross chargeability issue in your case.
3. Probably parents’ b/c and evidence of their temporary stay in the UK at the time of your birth.
CAVEAT: While proactively trying to justify your decision to cross charge sounds like a good idea, it could end up bringing attention to a situation that could have possibly been overlooked and consequently lead to opening an unnecessary can of worms (based on my response 2 above).
4. The same form of evidence that would be required for a CP interview. You’ll need to figure this out on your own. See Caveat to this question above.
5. Yes. See Caveat to this question above.
6. See response to question 2 above. Also. see Caveat to this question above.
In general, one major advantage of AOS vs. CP is the fact that most of the IOs are not fully versed in the nuances of DV lottery and the requirements - very few IOs adjudicate DV based AOS applications and they are constantly being changed. The IOs more often than not do not deeply scrutinize DV cases like a CO would have with CP. There have been a couple of AOS cases that got through where they would have been denied if they went through CP, eg not listing a qualifying derivative on the entry form, selecting wrong chargeability country, etc. As a matter of fact, I think I have a wrong chargeability country case situation listed in the DV Unique Cases tracker spreadsheet which you might want to take a look at. It has a link to that case’s interview experience and a couple of other posts/responses related to the case on the 2022 AOS thread.
Hello Mom, I'd like to re-connect on this question about the best strategy for cross chargeability (born in UK, left after 26 days, lived in KZ since then, listed KZ on DV entry form). There are 2 general approaches in my mind:
A.
Minimalist Strategy - provide only basic info below without drawing attention to the cross chargeability issue and hoping IO doesn't notice it:
a. KZ passport
b. KZ-issued birth certificate (to emphasize KZ connection)
c. UK-issued birth certificate (to provide BC from jurisdiction of birth)
B.
Proactive Strategy - front-load package with more KZ-connections and evidence of temp stay in UK. All of the above docs, plus:
d. Mother's UK border-crossing records obtained from UK border authority (which shows she had temp visit visa and stayed in UK 4 months)
e. Mother's KZ passport, KZ birth certificate, KZ bank records, KZ employment records, etc.
f. Mother provides affidavit letter confirming her temp visit to UK and circumstances of my birth (e.g., we left UK after 26 days, etc.)
g. My KZ border crossing records indicating my entry to KZ shortly after my birth (obtained from KZ border authority; no UK records)
1. With your previous response in mind, I believe you may indicate option A has some appeal. However, with the above additonal context and list of available documents, would it be a good idea to add some more evidence from option B?
2. If so, which evidence would be useful?