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I live and I work in stable form in mexico

2006-07-16 15:45:16 · 3 answers · asked by corrmexome 1 in Politics & Government Embassies & Consulates

3 answers

You might be confused.

There is no "Cancelled With Predjudice" stamp any more. There is only "Cancelled Without Predjudice" which we use to cancel a visa when we're replacing it with a new one, and simply "Cancelled" which is what we use on visas we wish we hadn't issued in the first place.

If you were only applying for a visa but were refused, the officer stamped "Application Received" and the date on the last page of your passport. This is a sign to embassies of other countries that the US refused you.

2006-07-17 05:37:26 · answer #1 · answered by dognhorsemom 7 · 1 0

Who did what?

An authorized US authority may cancel a US visa in a foreign passport if there are valid grounds to do so. If you hope to get another US visa in the future, then it is better to have a visa canceled without prejudice than to have a visa canceled with prejudice (and no, in this case, prejudice has nothing to do with racism).

2006-07-16 23:16:04 · answer #2 · answered by Curious1usa 7 · 0 0

Just be careful with this ****...I had the experience when visiting a neighbour country and some years later I had some issues raised...And believe they were pretty much complicated...I advise you ask someone expert whether your papers are officially ok...

2006-07-17 14:34:34 · answer #3 · answered by Yannis K 3 · 0 0

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