Hi there!
I very much hate digging up a 2-year old thread, but it looks like it is the closest one to the situation I might be getting into now. I was particularly wondered if there were any known examples lately of how cases like the one in this post (and like mine) are resolved.
My story is the following - I have a very borderline physical presence situation due to my regular travel pattern (more than 20 trips abroad over last years, most of them very work-related).
At the time I was filing my N-400, I used a USCIS Guide to Naturalization, specifically page 24 "
Generally, partial days spent in the US count as whole days spent in the US" in calculating my physical presence - in other words, I excluded both days of arrival and days of departure from time outside of the US. As a result of that calculation, I got a little less than 40 days MORE in the US than outside, considered myself eligible and applied.
I recently had an interview that generally went well (I passed all tests etc.), but the IO told me that he couldn't have made a decision right away and that he must have verified my travel dates independently "
through his databases". And here is when I start getting a little nervous...
It looks like if he counts ONE out of TWO days (e.g. only departure date) as a day in the US, I will still be eligible, but I'll have only 1 day (!) more in the US than outside.
Logically, if he excludes BOTH days, I will be deemed ineligible.
So,
any updates on the recent practice? I found a
USCIS "Policy Alert" PA-12-001 paper dated Jan 7, 2013 that highlights updates in Policy Manual, and in Part D it explicitly says:
"Establishes that days of travel to and from the US will count as days of physical presence in the US."
Any recent similar cases you might have heard of? I don't want to magnet bad news, but I just want to have a clear idea for myself if I was in the right here doing calculation as I did, or if I just wasted $700 and almost 6 months of my time?
Thanks!