minna said:
Robsluv - of course.
I don't think anyone asked a question that indicated that they didn't understand the process. I certainly didn't.
I used the same short-hand that everyone else here uses. Not because they are confused somehow about how the FBI processed their fingerprints, but because, for the most part, we know there is no criminal record to be found. That's my impression, anyways. We aren't too concerned about the 'content' of the report but whether or not we have to re-submit another set of fingerprints, delaying the processing of our applications.
The FBI *does* send a letter saying that your prints were rejected. From what I understand and from what I have read, it doesn't look too different from the report that they send you if your prints are processed. Both are pretty unremarkable.
The question I asked was about the timing of the processing of the fingerprints.
Hi Minna
First of all, I wasn't responding directly to your reply or I would have quoted it - so don't take my comments as correction or criticism. What I wrote was not, in any way, a response to whatever you had written earlier. Not about you.
Part of the reason for a thread like this is to provide correct information to others who are searching the forums - so I was simply clarifying a point for others who are reading through this thread - as I was - for information on how the whole FBI request process works, timelines, and what to expect. I thought that several of the replies made it
sound a little like the FBI was sending some type of "approval" or "rejection" as far as eligibility for Canadian immigration - even if that wasn't what people were meaning to say. I was simply trying to point out that the "accept" or "reject" was due to some people having experienced a rejection of the quality of their actual prints. I was only trying to clarify that an "acceptance" of prints doesn't mean the FBI somehow recommends approval for PR - it simply means that an FBI report can be issued . . . but that report could still result in refusal of a PR ap if an arrest is revealed. Likewise, a rejection of the prints because of quality issues does not mean the FBI is issuing a "rejection" as far as PR eligibility . . . it would simply mean a report could not be issued until new prints were received.
Hope this clears things up - it was a bit hard to explain what I was getting at, but I did my best at the time just to try to be of help. (I suppose that's why I now have a -6 in my rating when I could swear it was only a -5 a day or so ago. Sometimes it's not worth the trouble.)