Yes. Citizenship is not a pre-qualification to testify in court.
NO. If they are in the U.S. illegally, they should be arrested and detained when entering court building, and compensating them for services is a federal felony under Title 8 USC.
A lawful immigrant who has become a naturalized American Citizen can become a police officer, but not an immigrant/alien who has not become a US citizen.
Nothing these days, there's no such thing as an immigrant or illigal.
yes.
An American citizen can marry an immigrant who already has a green card in the United States. The immigrant is placed in preference category 2A, and is placed on a waiting list.
The Alien Acts increased the time that was required for an immigrant to become an American citizen from five to fourteen years
The Alien Acts increased the time that was required for an immigrant to become an American citizen from five to fourteen years
Not unless they themselves are registered in court as an American citizen.
anyone can marry anyone from anywhere, however it does not make the immigrant legal, and alot of the time, has no effect on the courts decision if the immigrant can stay
Yes, if born in the US, the child is automatically an American citizen.
Yes, a person can marry an illegal immigrant, but that doesnt mean that it will lead to the immigrant getting legal status.
Yes they retain citizenship.
yes. but not unless you are entitled to an Irish passportLinguistically, you are an emigrant from the US, and an immigrant into Ireland.