English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I was 16 years old when I came to United States. I was juvinile arrested for something I did not do. 10 days later the case was dismissed. that is when I was 16 years old. now I m 21 years old. I am trying to apply for US citizenship. In the application forums they ask you if you were ever arrested. I dont know what to answer, cause I am told that the case has been sealed etc etc. does anyone know what should I do or write??

2006-11-29 13:21:10 · 8 answers · asked by Sheeno 2 in Politics & Government Immigration

8 answers

Just tell the truth , i hope things go ok for you.

2006-11-29 13:23:41 · answer #1 · answered by MW 2 · 1 0

A case may be "dismissed"'; but the record is still there. You can take your chances, answer that you have never been arrested, and believe those who tell you the records have been sealed

If you are serious about applying for U.S. citizenship, consult an attorney who is knowledgeable about the law as it pertains to U.S. citizenship. Yes, this may cost you some money; but isn't citizenship your ultimate goal?

2006-11-29 14:05:14 · answer #2 · answered by Baby Poots 6 · 1 0

I can't believe no one thought of this yet - you were not only a juvenile, but recieved an ACD (all charges dropped). No, you do not have to answer yes. My sister, when applying for her green card, was asked the same, but was arrested for shoplifting when she was 20. She also had all charges dropped, and answered "no" to being arrested on the form, and everything went fine for her and she was granted her green card with no problem. If there is a problem, the government will present it to you and you can then explain the situation, should that happen. Other than that, your records are not only sealed because you were a juvenile, but there was NO record because you were never convicted. An arrest is officially reversed when you are found not guilty for the charge that led to the arrest.
Good luck!

2006-11-29 14:20:50 · answer #3 · answered by Euralalya 5 · 0 1

A friend of mine from New Zealand was recently deported for a something that happened in her teen years and now she's 40. She says she was in the wrong place at the wrong time. But, even though she had been married to an American citizen for 10 years, she was still deported.

2006-11-29 13:30:45 · answer #4 · answered by swissmiss620 4 · 0 0

i'm no lawyer, "fulfillment not likely", until eventually your spouse and children is properly worth > 4 Mio USD. There appears to be like confusion in some solutions in this web page: regularly, the GERMANS do no longer enable you to to have twin citizenship. (Grund: Gleichheit vor dem Gesetz, da koennten ja a million Mio deutsche Tuerken kommen und das auch haben wollen.) besides, that is why that is referred to as "Beibehaltungsgenehmigung". devoid of that, the instantaneous you change right into a US citizen, you've forfeited your German passport. (the US does no longer care. And been like that for no less than 15 years.) at the same time as very last I visited the German Consultate on the concern of "Beibehaltungsgenehmigung" they confirmed me a stack of applications (80 or so). i change into instructed 70 + of those might want to be grew to change into down. the US belongings tax had provisions which made the overseas "Ehepartner" a US belongings 'tax evasion' suspect. no longer a lot of a tax in Germany, yet > 30% in the US. So, why no longer flee to Germany which include you money, because no extradition for death tax from there. IRS determined, the surving GERMAN Ehepartner might want to pay the tax on the entire belongings (i.e. for both spouses), and due immediately at the same time as significant different passes away. That change into why in the most suitable few years Germany wanting to allow twin citizenship, so that you does no longer fall in that belongings tax seize. lately inspite of the actuality that the IRS exemption change into raised to 2Mio$ in protecting with significant different (and will boost added each and every new 12 months). With that a majority of applicants for twin citizenship can now no longer declare undue worry. that is why the above 70+ applications for Beibehaltung will fall through the way-area. actual situation for all, in 2011 (or so) the belongings tax exemption as such will be reviewed. no one is conscious what occurs at such time. I.e. who will administration the IRS, Republicans or Democrats? precis, bypass and spot a German consulate! they're very knowledgeable, and through no ability the above "Sessel-Furtzer". -- playstation . you received't loose your German Social safe practices reward, once you replace (vom rechten Glauben) and change right into a US citizen. yet another treaty "auf Gegenseitigkeit" prevents that.

2016-10-07 23:48:32 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

If the case was dismissed as you say, there is no conviction. It does not look like a big deal.Tell them the truth if you like.

2006-11-29 13:44:10 · answer #6 · answered by CC Moody Trojans 2 · 0 1

you should be honest. Usually, there is room for explanation of anything in your application.
Congratulations on taking this step. Thank you for being honest and trying to do the right thing :)

2006-11-29 13:46:21 · answer #7 · answered by Together 4 · 0 0

you don't want to be here we are horrible people. Go back to where you came from its great

2006-11-29 15:58:39 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers