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Davide66

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Posts posted by Davide66

  1. 11 minutes ago, Mollie09 said:

    It's not me you have to convince, it's not up to me whether your circumstances are enough, but don't be surprised if you have to start over when you get back.

    To be honest I would be very surprised if I have to start everything all over again. After reading the rules, it doesn't seem to me that I'm breaking any of them. Maybe the continuous residency requirement, but I believe that I qualify for the exceptions, as I mentioned above.

    It would be very useful if somebody who had a similar experience with an extended stay abroad, whether because of pregnancy or any other reason, while the naturalization application was pending would share his or her experience, whatever the outcome turned out to be, either positive or negative.

  2. 46 minutes ago, Mollie09 said:

    Then you probably have to delay your naturalization as you will definitely not meet the continuous residency and likely break the physical presence requirement. You should delay and reapply after you return and meet those criteria.

     

    Whether or not that break will be enough to consider your green card abandoned, I'm not sure. Up to USCIS. But you definitely won't qualify for naturalization.

    Also this is what I found regarding the physical presence requirement:

     

    Physical Presence

    Applicants are required to show that they were:

    • Physically present in the U.S. for thirty months within the five year period before applying, or (see legal basis)
    • Physically present in the U.S. for eighteen months within the three year period before applying in the case of qualified spouses of U.S. citizens (see legal basis)

    In addition, applicants are required to show they have resided for at least three months immediately preceding the filing of Form N-400 in the USCIS district or state where the applicant claims to have residency (See 8 CFR §316.2(a)(5) & §319.1(a)(5)).

     

    I am married to a US citizen and I have resided for 33 months in the US prior to filing for naturalization (three-year rule).

    I don't see how I'm breaking the physical presence requirement here.

  3. 19 minutes ago, Mollie09 said:

    Then you probably have to delay your naturalization as you will definitely not meet the continuous residency and likely break the physical presence requirement. You should delay and reapply after you return and meet those criteria.

     

    Whether or not that break will be enough to consider your green card abandoned, I'm not sure. Up to USCIS. But you definitely won't qualify for naturalization.

    This is what I found in the USCIS website:

     

    1. Absence of More than Six Months (but Less than One Year)

    An absence of more than six months [more than 181 days but less than one year (less than 365 days)] during the period for which continuous residence is required is presumed to break the continuity of such residence. This includes any absence that takes place prior to filing the naturalization application or between filing and the applicant’s admission to citizenship. [11] 

    An applicant’s intent is not relevant in determining the location of his or her residence. The period of absence from the United States is the defining factor in determining whether the applicant is presumed to have disrupted his or her residence. 

    An applicant may overcome the presumption of loss of his or her continuity of residence by providing evidence to establish that the applicant did not disrupt his or her residence. The evidence may include, but is not limited to, documentation that during the absence: [12] 

    • The applicant did not terminate his or her employment in the United States or obtain employment while abroad.

    • The applicant’s immediate family remained in the United States.

    • The applicant retained full access to his or her United States abode.

     

    1) I am a student at a US university and I'm not obtaining any employment while overseas

    2) My only immediate family in the US is my husband who's currently overseas with me nursing my pregnancy

    3) We fully own a condo in the US which I left uninhabited and immediately available to me upon return to the US

     

    Is this sufficient to "overcome the presumption of loss of continuity of residence"?

     

     

  4. 44 minutes ago, gnakr said:

    One year (365 days) is just the maximum allowed time that you can stay abroad and still be able to enter the U.S. with a green card, assuming you don't have a re-entry permit. Green card holders who stay out of the US one year or more can get denied entry, and will have to apply for a special visa (which is at their discretion to grant) to be allowed back into the U.S. Staying out of the US for 6 months can still allow you into the US but will likely be scrutinized by CPB because they may see it as a potential abandonment of your green card. With a pending naturalization, staying out for 1 year may potential disrupt the continuous residency requirements required for naturalization.

     

    In all, if you can, it's a much better idea come back and naturalize. After that, you can stay out as long as necessary.

    If I follow doctors' advice, and come back in April, I would stay out of the US for 9 months. If I explain my circumstances, backed up by medical documentation from local doctors and hospitals, that I'm not able to make it back to the US for September 17, nor for any time before April of next year, I don't understand why USCIS would consider it abandoning my green card.

    As I said before, because of how I'm feeling right now, there is no way that I can fly back from overseas before September 17.

  5. 39 minutes ago, milimelo said:

    You can try but at that time you’ll be past 6 months out of country and potentially not fulfil residency requirements = naturalisation denial. 

    Sounds like you’re newly pregnant- what’s preventing you from flying back to the US? 

    The pregnancy is affecting me both physically and emotionally. There is no way I can tackle an intercontinental flight in my conditions.

    I thought that the residency requirement allowed for a 1 year stay abroad, not 6 months.

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