Laila H said:Hi
My bf is in US ILLEGAL almost 10 years. It could be problem for him If he will go to get his FBI report?
Since , report will show he has been in US almost 10 years with out status .
Laila
Laila H said:Hi , thanks for reply. Do you mean the time when he apply he has to be legal in US? We want they process his application on US
rhcohen2014 said:your husband can't be processed as a US citizen/resident because
a) he is ILLEGAL in the US, therefore can't claim he has current, LEGAL residence there for 1+ years
b) he does not hold a US passport.
as many members have told you multiple times, CIC will CHOOSE where the application is processed, and it will most likely be his home country. You have absolutely NO say in the matter, so there's no point in keep asking the same question expecting a diffferent answer. it will be the same everytime... YOU do not have a say as to where the application processes. That choice is for CIC to decide. just fill out the application, submit it and deal with where cic decides to process the application. there's nothing else you can do!
RajaJi said:I disagree. CIC does not require that an applicant should have Legal Status at the time of application or during the processing of application. It is rather that applicant must have had a legal stay of at least one year in USA for an application to be considered for processing in USA. It is not required that applicant must have a US Passport for application to be processed in USA.
I agree with you, though, that it will be decided by CIC as regards to which office will process the application.
rhcohen2014 said:as stated above, the OPs husband does not have CURRENT, LEGAL status. I never said only people with US passports can only apply as a US applicant. a and b are EITHER/OR situations, not AND. EITHER the person needs to have CURRENT, LEGAL status for 1+ years in a country that is not their home country to be processed as a resident of that country OR they need to have a valid passport for the country they wish to be processed through.
in this particular case, he has been ILLEGAL for YEARS! CIC Will not take into consideration a past legal status in another country. an applicant can't say, "hey I had legal status in the US in 2008, and i've been living there illegally since, so I would like to be processed as if I have current, legal status in the US." the status must be CURRENT! HE can't be processed as a us resident just because he had 1 year of legal status 7 years ago. that is ridiculous. He does NOT have CURRENT, LEGAL status in the US, nor does he have a US passport... there fore he CURRENTLY can not be processed as a US resident.
Please show EXACTLY where it says that a person can be processed in a country where they hold illegal status, even though they once upon a time had legal status in that country.
this poster has asked this question multiple times already and has already been given the correct answer. please do not confuse the situation. the bottom line is for THIS particular applicant, they CAN NOT AND WILL NOT BE PROCESSED AS A US APPLICANT!
RajaJi said:I disagree again. This is the language from CIC website:
"...you must select the visa office that serves your country of nationality or the country where you have been legally admitted for at least one year."
One of the Link where this information is posted is noted below:
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/information/offices/apply-where.asp
I have no confusion. It seems this information has skipped your attention.
rhcohen2014 said:as stated above, the OPs husband does not have CURRENT, LEGAL status. I never said only people with US passports can only apply as a US applicant. a and b are EITHER/OR situations, not AND. EITHER the person needs to have LEGAL status for 1+ years in a country that is not their home country to be processed as a resident of that country OR they need to have a valid passport for the country they wish to be processed through.
in this particular case, he has been ILLEGAL for YEARS! I don't believe an applicant can say, "hey I had legal status in the US in 2008, and i've been living there illegally since, so I would like to be processed as if I have current, legal status in the US." if that is what you are saying, that is ridiculous. He does NOT have LEGAL status in the US, nor does he have a US passport. IF you are saying that CIC will choose to process him as a US resident because he once entered legally, yet has fallen out of status YEARS ago, then either you are very misinformed or there is something seriously wrong with the system.
I have never heard of such of thing, nor have I heard of situations of when a person is out of status in a country they will be processed as if they old currently, legal status in that country. To me, that is canada simply slapping the face of any country that a person is living illegally in, as if they don't respect the rules of that country. I don't think CIC or canada would risk their relationships with other countries by processing the application as if that person has the right to be processed from that country. while CIC may not care about the illegal status, it is hardly believed they will go along with it and let that person enjoy the benefits of having legal residence when they DO NOT!
the bottom line remains the same. the op has NO choice as to where the application will process, ONLY CIC has that choice!
rhcohen2014 said:no it didn't. i guess we will wait and see what happens with this particular case. how do you know for a FACT what will happen with this application? you don't, i don't. i just know what's been reported, and i have yet to see a case reported on here where an applicant is processed in a country they have illegal status in. perhaps you are the expert because you have the same situation?
to reward people for not following the rules that everyone else has to follow would be ridiculous and a HUGE public relations nightmare for canada. but since YOU say it's possible, then i guess this poster will just assume it is. i can't see that going well at all.
CURRENT LEGAL Status is not a requirement for an application to be processed in a country other than your home country.
RajaJi said:I disagree again. This is the language from CIC website:
"...you must select the visa office that serves your country of nationality or the country where you have been legally admitted for at least one year."
One of the Link where this information is posted is noted below:
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/information/offices/apply-where.asp
I have no confusion. It seems this information has skipped your attention.