Interview Experience: Federal Plaza, NYC (05/13/2009)
..Will keep the forum updated. ...
Just returned from the interview. We reached around 40-minutes before; the security person asked us to come after 15 minutes (so that it's 30-minutes before the interview time, which was 9:35am). Spent some time in McDonald opposite federal plaza. Entered at 9:00am, went through the airport-like security check and reached the 7th floor. Gave interview letters one-by-one (I and my wife) to a person at the counter. She asked if both of us (wife and I) were together; we said "yes" and she placed our letters together, gave us some printouts that mentioned about "we are running late due to some delay..." Before I could finish reading it, I was called for the interview, 20 minutes before the scheduled time.
The officer was a very young lady and I thought "OK, junior officer; so no decision today." She made me take some oath ("will tell the truth, etc..."). Hardly had she started, and another officer barged in to the office, apologized for the interruption, and they started discussing about a case-file of an armed-forces person routed to wrong department by mistake. Didn't make me feel very comfortable listening to all that.
Anyway, the regular interview started after some time. She gave me civics test (six questions: name senator of NY, who is vice president, how many amendments to the constitution, which group of people were brought in as slaves, who lived in the US before Europeans arrived, and why did colonies fight the British), then went over the application item-by-item, made me sign few papers and two pictures I had attached with N-400 (everything is routine thus far). Asked for greencard and passport, verified my international travel stamps in the passport. Did not ask for any other documents.
She has another file on her desk with all my history - around 10-inches thick (yes; I went through many steps with the INS: J-1 visa-->Waiver from 2-year HRR-->H-1B-->EB-1/NIW based I-140-->I-485 was taking too long, so switched to Consular Processing, etc.). She went through all pages of that file, too but did not ask me any thing related to that file. She asked briefly about what I do at job (it sounded casual but I believe this was to check if my employment is consistent with EB-1 and NIW petitions I had in past).
Then she mentioned she would also interview my wife and whether we wanted oath on the same day. I said "yes." She told she would give me "recommended for approval" paper right now, and if my wife's file and interview are in order, she would approve both the cases and give us oath letters today itself. I thanked her. I went out (total 40 minutes interview) and she called my wife.
My wife's interview also lasted for 40-minutes. Her international travels were significantly less than mine, so the officer joked why I don't take her with me abroad whenever I fly. We have kids and my wife works and studies - so she explained it. My wife had two passports with her - both expired. The officer looked only on the most recent passport with greencard stamp. This passport had expired in August 2008. No questions were raised on this. No documents were asked. My wife saw officer stamp her and my files with a big, red "Approved" stamp; though the officer gave my wife a letter saying "recommended for approval." The officer told someone will review our files, we need to wait in the main room and that we would get oath letters today itself. Before the officer let her go, she asked my wife if she had income tax returns with her (what a surprise! - I expected that question for me). Anyway, my wife had, so she gave copies of last five years tax transcripts.
So we waited for around 2 hours, and first I got the oath letter (my name was announced asking me to go to a specific counter). We waited another half an hour, and my wife's name was announced. She was also given the oath letter. Our oath dates/time are the same (see signature below). We live in Westchester, NY - so we expected oath at White Plains court house; but our oath ceremony paper mentions about some "Special Naturalization Oath Ceremony" at New York Historical Society, New York location. Somehow, I did not feel any exhilaration; may be a tiny bit of relief.
Overall experience was good, staff was polite and courteous. No complaints.
Good luck to all who are eagerly awaiting for their turns. Thanks a lot to all who were very helpful here on this forum; and to those who selflessly shared their own experiences so that others can benefit.