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kavanna

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Posts posted by kavanna

  1. 2 hours ago, Rocio0010 said:

    I typed the form, printed it, then filled out all N/A in black ink. No RFEs. I am now a citizen.

    thank you! Did you put N/A on all fields or just the first field of a section that didn't apply to you, e.g. the interpreter section? What about the signature fields for interpreter and preparer? I saw that someone had theirs rejected because they wrote N/A. 

     

    Sorry for all the questions, I am so beyond nervous to send this out for some reason!

  2. Hi all!

     

    I'm reading very conflicting information about leaving any fields blank in the I-751 form. We used a lawyer for all previous forms and this is the first one we are doing by ourselves so I am definitely overthinking this... I left any fields empty (did not write N/A since Adobe doesn't let you do that) that had if applicable in parentheses. We don't have children, didn't use a preparer or interpreter this time, our marriage has not ended, etc. Can I leave those fields blank or should I use a black ink pen to write N/A in those fields? If using N/A, can I just write N/A in the very first field (e.g. the part about children, would I put N/A in the Last Name field?)?

     

    I looked at the example filled out file here on VisaJourney and that one has fields left blank instead of filling them with N/A. I also find it weird that the instructions from USCIS say to write in N/A, but then their very own PDF file doesn't allow you to write N/A in most of the fields in the PDF file... oh the joys! I'm sure I'm overthinking this, but we are finally ready to send this out today and I just want to make sure it doesn't come back to us as rejected or something because of something this silly.

  3. 14 minutes ago, payxibka said:

    Not sure how you understood that requirement because apostille is not referenced in any instruction 

    I don't know either. I was supposed to have my interview well over a year ago just when covid hit - I'm sure I had a better safe than sorry mentality. So the documents don't need an apostille stamp nor do they need to be notarised/legalised? Thank god, that will save me some time and money.

  4. 1 minute ago, payxibka said:

    For immigration purposes, nothing requires apostille.

    Oh, really? I have gotten all my documents apostilled, lol.

     

    Just now, powerpuff said:

    As long as you don’t go back to the UK, it has an unlimited validity date. 

    Even though it doesn't cover my entire residency since it's dated 2 weeks earlier than when I actually left the UK?

  5. Hi!

     

    I was wondering if anyone could help me. I studied in the UK and moved back to my home country last August after graduating. Before I left, I renewed my police certificate (because I naively thought that I would be able to get an interview for my K-1 visa last year... hah.) and it is dated about two weeks before I left the country. The certificate itself is less than 1 year old - will it still be okay to use even though it's dated two weeks before I left the UK?

     

    If not, and I have to renew the document again, does anyone know if I can ask the ACRO folks in the UK to send my police certificate directly to be apostilled before they send it back to me in Finland? Just to spare myself an additional loop...

     

    Thanks!

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