Minneapolis/St. Paul Nesties
Dear Community,

Our tech team has launched updates to The Nest today. As a result of these updates, members of the Nest Community will need to change their password in order to continue participating in the community. In addition, The Nest community member's avatars will be replaced with generic default avatars. If you wish to revert to your original avatar, you will need to re-upload it via The Nest.

If you have questions about this, please email help@theknot.com.

Thank you.

Note: This only affects The Nest's community members and will not affect members on The Bump or The Knot.

Prooving Citizenship/Eligibilty to work in the US - Any advice?

So DH was born in Germany to a German mother and an American father.  He was born off a military base and his Dad's name wasn't listed on the birth certificate because they weren't married and he was deployed from Germany to Vietnam when DH was born.  Once he came back, his Dad and Mom married and DH was "adopted" by his Dad in the German court system. 

DH had to go through a hearing after he had been in the US for a while to show that he was a US citizen.  He's gone to school, been on unemployment previously when his job laid him off 10 years ago, went back to college, worked again and been on unemployment recently after being laid off again. 

Today he went to a temp agency to apply and when they ran his social security number they told him he was listed as ineligible to work in the US again.  Is this something that we should be getting an attorney to help us with to settle?  The temp agency told him that they had to inform unemployment who would likely stop his benefits and demand repayment.

image

Re: Prooving Citizenship/Eligibilty to work in the US - Any advice?

  • Yikes!  I would retain the services of an immigration attorney pronto.
  • I'm not an expert or anything ... but ...

    Does he have a passport? Because you have to prove citizenship to get a passport, so if he has one, he should be able to show that, right?

    What kind of documentation did he get after that hearing where he was deemed to be a US Citizen? Did he get a certificate of citizenship? Or one of those reports of U.S. citizen birth abroad (I think it's called a consular report of birth abroad or something like that). It seems like he would have been provided with some kind of document stating the results of that hearing.


    image
    Mr. Sammy Dog
  • For peace of mind, I would see an attorney. There are so many forms and loopholes in the immigration process - you could do it by yourself, but it is so much easier to hire an attorney to make sure everything gets done correctly . At the very least you could go for a consulation and see what he/she advises.

      We used David Wilson (www.wilsonlg.com) for all of my husband's immigration stuff. David was great and made the process so easy. Our friends have used him too and loved him.

    Good luck!

  • I sent you a pm. 

    (And David - or anyone in his firm - is a fantastic lawyer.  He's very well respected by other immigration attorneys, too.)

    image
    Tired after a long morning of hiking and swimming.
  • He never got a US passport.  When he came over here he had a German one and his military ID from his father.  The German passport expired.  He says that what he got when he went through court was his social security card.  But now that I think about it, that's not necessarily citizenship.  I'm hoping that his sister can find the file from the last court hearing in his Dad's paperwork.  HIs parents are both deceased so they can't notarize a new statment. 
    image
  • imagejennyk213:

    I sent you a pm. 

    (And David - or anyone in his firm - is a fantastic lawyer.  He's very well respected by other immigration attorneys, too.)

    Thanks!  I replied.

    image
  • I replied back.
    image
    Tired after a long morning of hiking and swimming.
  • imageMichellePete:
    Replied again. 

    Ditto.  Hope you are getting things figured out.

    image
    Tired after a long morning of hiking and swimming.
  • Thanks for all the help!  He found some paperwork in his Dad's files and some he had.  He spent the morning in the INS office and has to head to the Social Security office this afternoon.

    The agent told him that there was some new legislation signed about a month ago that involves a computer matching of citizenship and social security numbers.  The information doesn't match the SSN is deemed invalid and a note attached to it that the holder has to proove citizenship again.  In my DH's case, his was flagged because the new computer system didn't like a number on his citizenship paperwork. 

    It's all straightened out (hopefully) and the agent told him to get a US passport immediately and it should solidify his citizenship and this shouldn't happen again.

    Interestingly his sister is having the same issue with her SSN.  However, she was born on the military base in Germany.  Her first 2 sets of numbers don't match with the area/group for the base and the time that she was born.

    What a mess.  Thankfully it was simple though.

    image
  • Yay, I'm so glad to hear that he got it figured out! 

    I haven't heard about the legislation.  I need to ask around and see if others have.

    image
    Tired after a long morning of hiking and swimming.
Sign In or Register to comment.
Choose Another Board
Search Boards