You can, but when you are caught, you will do hard time.
If you're a United States citizens you're legally entitled to be within your homeland.
If someone was deported from the United States it probably means that they committed a felony. Anyone convicted of a felony in the U.S. who is a foreign national and subsequently comes BACK in to the United States is guilty of another felony called, Agrivated Re-entry and as such can be locked up for 1 to 10 years. The message should be to all foreign nationals, come to the country legally, keep your nose clean and apply for the appropriate paperwork.
NO, unless the illegal fights his re-opens the criminal conviction and has the charges dropped, OR if the illegal is able to get a presidental'governor pardon (but tihs doesnt apply for serious felonies).
Nope there is no way!!MAybe in 10 years
Don't come back
You would need a waiver and depending on the crime, you might never be allowed into the country.
no you cant
No. If you come back after being deported, but the green card isn't expired yet, you will, again, be deported (which will not look good on your part being deported twice).
If they do and are picked up even the slightest infringment, they will be tried and found guilty of "agrivated re-entry", that means they came back into the U.S. after they were deported for a felony and given specific instructions to not EVER come back. Once convicted for that crime they will be locked up for 1 to 10 years in Federal prison then deported again. In fact, they don't even need to be found guilty of another crime, they can just get the attention of INS/ICE and they're arrested.
No, you cannot come back. Your record is on file permanently.
It depends on why he was deported. If he was deported as a result of a criminal conviction, then he may not be eligable to re-enter the U.S. If he has no criminal record, he may have to wait 5 years before he can legally enter the U.S. as a nonimmigrant (student, vistior). If he makes an application for a immigrant visa (green card) and he has no criminal history, he might be able to enter the U.S. by filing for a waiver of the previous deportation.
If you are deported from the United States, you do not lose your 401(k) account. You can generally leave the funds in your 401(k) account and manage it remotely or roll it over to an account in your home country, depending on the rules of your specific situation and plan.
Can an illegal alien who was deported and barred for ten years come back sooner by marrying an us citizen?