Possible. Was she merely turned around? or was she charged with a crime? If she make affirmative statements that she was indeed a U.S. citizen, that is a PERMANENT bar and would never be able to enter the U.S.
yes i think there is a law and that if the child was born in American then he has the right to file for who so ever he needs and the government sould be careful about the laws
Landed Immigrant then Permenant Resident
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.
I don't think it matters, I read about it all the time in various places. All you need is a marriage certificate and your an American.
Yes, they probably wouldn't know that your illegal.
Yes. If the illegal immigrant marries a citizen, they can become a citizen from that.
Nothing these days, there's no such thing as an immigrant or illigal.
No.
No. A birth certificate is issued after you are born, usually in the city and state where the birth took place. Barack Obama's birth was recorded in Honolulu, Hawaii, for example. A certificate of naturalization is provided when a person who is an immigrant decides to become a citizen, passes the tests and takes the oath. My maternal grandfather was born and raised in Lithuania, for example; but when he emigrated and moved to America, he decided he wanted to be a U.S. citizen, and he was issued a certificate of naturalization. A naturalized citizen of the United States is one who has become a citizen, after being born in another country. A "natural born citizen," on the other hand, is one who was born in the United States and did not come here from another country.
No, she is not. She will be allowed to remain in the US with her spouse and children, but she will have to apply for citizenship separate from her marriage. The US citizen REMAINS a US citizen. The immigrant remains an immigrant and must follow the legal path to resident immigrant status, and from there to citizenship. Marriage is not a free pass to residency or citizenship.
No
No.