Jump to content
malekkk

N400 5 years based. It's a special case! I need help!

 Share

20 posts in this topic

Recommended Posts

1 hour ago, Calicolom said:

I would say a lot of posters are wrong, saying what happened in other countries does not mater on the N-400. My wife just went for N-400, the interviewer was very friendly but very firm. We work in Jails and prisons as part of our contracting business. I told her there is no need to disclose our working in Jails and prisons. At the interview she was asked, why she did not disclose that she had been to the local jail. They knew of these visits, every time we work there, they scan her drivers license, and this information is entered into FBI database. Every police arrest goes into the FbI database. She had to explain that I had told her, it was for work, and was not necessary to disclose on the N-400. If people think it is not necessary, to tell what happens to you in other countries, and later they find out, you citizenship will be taken away. We have so called paper exchange with most western countries. They probably already know what happened in GB since there was an arrest. N-400 is not the end of everything, and everything is forgiven. Please do not think, becoming citizen means what happen anywhere else, is irrelevant and forgiven. Just disclose everything and let the chips fall where they may. This is the cases we get to hear in the news, the poor person lieved her for 30 years and now he gets deported. Don't be that poor person.  

You were wrong to tell her working in jails and prisons does not matter, it is a specific question on the n400 asking if you have EVER worked in one. It is not restricted to the US, you gave her totally the wrong advice. It’s nothing to do about country and everything to do with you told her to give a false answer!!

 

by contrast the questions about immigration pertain to the US only. The question about detained is a “have you EVER” one, which OP already indicated he would answer yes to. The circumstances of that detention are not serious for US naturalization purposes.

Edited by SusieQQQ
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Calicolom said:

I would say a lot of posters are wrong, saying what happened in other countries does not mater on the N-400. My wife just went for N-400, the interviewer was very friendly but very firm. We work in Jails and prisons as part of our contracting business. I told her there is no need to disclose our working in Jails and prisons. At the interview she was asked, why she did not disclose that she had been to the local jail. They knew of these visits, every time we work there, they scan her drivers license, and this information is entered into FBI database. Every police arrest goes into the FbI database. She had to explain that I had told her, it was for work, and was not necessary to disclose on the N-400. If people think it is not necessary, to tell what happens to you in other countries, and later they find out, you citizenship will be taken away. We have so called paper exchange with most western countries. They probably already know what happened in GB since there was an arrest. N-400 is not the end of everything, and everything is forgiven. Please do not think, becoming citizen means what happen anywhere else, is irrelevant and forgiven. Just disclose everything and let the chips fall where they may. This is the cases we get to hear in the news, the poor person lieved her for 30 years and now he gets deported. Don't be that poor person.  

The issue in her case was that she did not disclose her full employment history, which is explicitly asked on the N-400. That's much different than the OP's case.

Edited by geowrian

Timelines:

ROC:

Spoiler

7/27/20: Sent forms to Dallas lockbox, 7/30/20: Received by USCIS, 8/10 NOA1 electronic notification received, 8/1/ NOA1 hard copy received

AOS:

Spoiler

AOS (I-485 + I-131 + I-765):

9/25/17: sent forms to Chicago, 9/27/17: received by USCIS, 10/4/17: NOA1 electronic notification received, 10/10/17: NOA1 hard copy received. Social Security card being issued in married name (3rd attempt!)

10/14/17: Biometrics appointment notice received, 10/25/17: Biometrics

1/2/18: EAD + AP approved (no website update), 1/5/18: EAD + AP mailed, 1/8/18: EAD + AP approval notice hardcopies received, 1/10/18: EAD + AP received

9/5/18: Interview scheduled notice, 10/17/18: Interview

10/24/18: Green card produced notice, 10/25/18: Formal approval, 10/31/18: Green card received

K-1:

Spoiler

I-129F

12/1/16: sent, 12/14/16: NOA1 hard copy received, 3/10/17: RFE (IMB verification), 3/22/17: RFE response received

3/24/17: Approved! , 3/30/17: NOA2 hard copy received

 

NVC

4/6/2017: Received, 4/12/2017: Sent to Riyadh embassy, 4/16/2017: Case received at Riyadh embassy, 4/21/2017: Request case transfer to Manila, approved 4/24/2017

 

K-1

5/1/2017: Case received by Manila (1 week embassy transfer??? Lucky~)

7/13/2017: Interview: APPROVED!!!

7/19/2017: Visa in hand

8/15/2017: POE

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, geowrian said:

The issue in her case was that she did not disclose her full employment history, which is explicitly asked on the N-400. That's much different than the OP's case.

It’s not just employment history, It’s a very direct question-.Page 13, question 16 specifically asks ..

 

Were you EVER a worker, volunteer, or soldier, or did you otherwise EVER serve in any of the following:
A. Prison or jail? ....”

 

https://www.uscis.gov/system/files_force/files/form/n-400.pdf?download=1

 

(with the question worded that way, i don’t see how Calicolom thought the answer should be “no”.)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, SusieQQQ said:

It’s not just employment history, It’s a very direct question-.Page 13, question 16 specifically asks ..

 

Were you EVER a worker, volunteer, or soldier, or did you otherwise EVER serve in any of the following:
A. Prison or jail? ....”

 

https://www.uscis.gov/system/files_force/files/form/n-400.pdf?download=1

 

(with the question worded that way, i don’t see how Calicolom thought the answer should be “no”.)

Good point...double strike.

Timelines:

ROC:

Spoiler

7/27/20: Sent forms to Dallas lockbox, 7/30/20: Received by USCIS, 8/10 NOA1 electronic notification received, 8/1/ NOA1 hard copy received

AOS:

Spoiler

AOS (I-485 + I-131 + I-765):

9/25/17: sent forms to Chicago, 9/27/17: received by USCIS, 10/4/17: NOA1 electronic notification received, 10/10/17: NOA1 hard copy received. Social Security card being issued in married name (3rd attempt!)

10/14/17: Biometrics appointment notice received, 10/25/17: Biometrics

1/2/18: EAD + AP approved (no website update), 1/5/18: EAD + AP mailed, 1/8/18: EAD + AP approval notice hardcopies received, 1/10/18: EAD + AP received

9/5/18: Interview scheduled notice, 10/17/18: Interview

10/24/18: Green card produced notice, 10/25/18: Formal approval, 10/31/18: Green card received

K-1:

Spoiler

I-129F

12/1/16: sent, 12/14/16: NOA1 hard copy received, 3/10/17: RFE (IMB verification), 3/22/17: RFE response received

3/24/17: Approved! , 3/30/17: NOA2 hard copy received

 

NVC

4/6/2017: Received, 4/12/2017: Sent to Riyadh embassy, 4/16/2017: Case received at Riyadh embassy, 4/21/2017: Request case transfer to Manila, approved 4/24/2017

 

K-1

5/1/2017: Case received by Manila (1 week embassy transfer??? Lucky~)

7/13/2017: Interview: APPROVED!!!

7/19/2017: Visa in hand

8/15/2017: POE

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Hungary
Timeline
5 hours ago, Calicolom said:

I would say a lot of posters are wrong, saying what happened in other countries does not mater on the N-400. My wife just went for N-400, the interviewer was very friendly but very firm. We work in Jails and prisons as part of our contracting business. I told her there is no need to disclose our working in Jails and prisons. At the interview she was asked, why she did not disclose that she had been to the local jail. They knew of these visits, every time we work there, they scan her drivers license, and this information is entered into FBI database. Every police arrest goes into the FbI database. She had to explain that I had told her, it was for work, and was not necessary to disclose on the N-400. If people think it is not necessary, to tell what happens to you in other countries, and later they find out, you citizenship will be taken away. We have so called paper exchange with most western countries. They probably already know what happened in GB since there was an arrest. N-400 is not the end of everything, and everything is forgiven. Please do not think, becoming citizen means what happen anywhere else, is irrelevant and forgiven. Just disclose everything and let the chips fall where they may. This is the cases we get to hear in the news, the poor person lieved her for 30 years and now he gets deported. Don't be that poor person.  

Completely wrong. Indeed immigration violations in other countries or denied entries to other countries do NOT concern USCIS. If they did, they'd ask questions about them on the forms, like they do about being a terrorist, Communist, Nazi, prostitute or "habitual drunkard" or, of course, in the case of any criminal history one may have. USCIS is interested in those issues, not in being denied entry to another country.

 

Or, like in the quoted case, they specifically ask if one ever worked in a prison or similar. If one did, lying about it on the form is obviously the wrong course of action. Same with having served in the military or having received weapons training. One won't get refused for having done so. (Same with having worked in a prison, by itself, it's NOT a reason for denial.)  Lying about it CAN cause problems.

Edited by EM_Vandaveer

Entry on VWP to visit then-boyfriend 06/13/2011

Married 06/24/2011

Our first son was born 10/31/2012, our daughter was born 06/30/2014, our second son was born 06/20/2017

AOS Timeline

AOS package mailed 09/06/2011 (Chicago Lockbox)

AOS package signed for by R Mercado 09/07/2011

Priority date for I-485&I-130 09/08/2011

Biometrics done 10/03/2011

Interview letter received 11/18/2011

INTERVIEW DATE!!!! 12/20/2011

Approval e-mail 12/21/2011

Card production e-mail 12/27/2011

GREEN CARD ARRIVED 12/31/2011

Resident since 12/21/2011

ROC Timeline

ROC package mailed to VSC 11/22/2013

NOA1 date 11/26/2013

Biometrics date 12/26/2013

Transfer notice to CSC 03/14/2014

Change of address 03/27/2014

Card production ordered 04/30/2014

10-YEAR GREEN CARD ARRIVED 05/06/2014

N-400 Timeline

N-400 package mailed 09/30/2014

N-400 package delivered 10/01/2014

NOA1 date 10/20/2014

Biometrics date 11/14/2014

Early walk-in biometrics 11/12/2014

In-line for interview 11/23/2014

Interview letter 03/18/2015

Interview date 04/17/2015 ("Decision cannot yet be made.")

In-line for oath scheduling 05/04/2015

Oath ceremony letter dated 05/11/2015

Oath ceremony 06/02/2015

I am a United States citizen!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
Didn't find the answer you were looking for? Ask our VJ Immigration Lawyers.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
- Back to Top -

Important Disclaimer: Please read carefully the Visajourney.com Terms of Service. If you do not agree to the Terms of Service you should not access or view any page (including this page) on VisaJourney.com. Answers and comments provided on Visajourney.com Forums are general information, and are not intended to substitute for informed professional medical, psychiatric, psychological, tax, legal, investment, accounting, or other professional advice. Visajourney.com does not endorse, and expressly disclaims liability for any product, manufacturer, distributor, service or service provider mentioned or any opinion expressed in answers or comments. VisaJourney.com does not condone immigration fraud in any way, shape or manner. VisaJourney.com recommends that if any member or user knows directly of someone involved in fraudulent or illegal activity, that they report such activity directly to the Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement. You can contact ICE via email at Immigration.Reply@dhs.gov or you can telephone ICE at 1-866-347-2423. All reported threads/posts containing reference to immigration fraud or illegal activities will be removed from this board. If you feel that you have found inappropriate content, please let us know by contacting us here with a url link to that content. Thank you.
×
×
  • Create New...