If you want to go back to Canada after being deported, you may haveÊto have an ARC, or an Authorization to Return to Canada. Whether you need one or not depends on the type of removal order you received.
To the best of my knowledge, I would have to say "that depends." Typically, if you were deported, it means that the ejecting country did not want you there, or you no longer had any legal basis to be there. In order to return lawfully to the U.S., you would have to go through the country's appropriate procedures to obtain permission for reentering...and in the U.S., that means they will check to see if there were any other Immigration violations by you in the past (as would most countries). Depending on the reason you were deported - if you overstayed your previous visa, committed a crime while here, or entered illegally, for example - the U.S. may deny you lawful entry.
Hope this helps...good luck.
Not unless there are certain extenuating circumstances. It would pretty much take an act of Congress to allow it.
No. The deportation order is forever. You could have a lawyer in the US petition the court to change your status. Don't bet on it.
Deportation.
I've heard that USCIS will issue a deportation order for him, but Cuba only accepts back a few deportees. So, they'll just wait for the day in the future that Cuba allows US to send back all these pending deportees.
It is possible for a non-US citizen to go to court in a custody case for a child. If one party is an illegal immigrant, they may be subject to deportation.
Deportation
There is some evidence that Mr. Frank had applied for visas to go to the US, but they did not pass and had to go into hiding when Margot was called up for deportation.
idk but u should ask the president he should know. because he is really smart at this stuff! hope it helps
Contact the INS as soon as possible. There is a great possibility of deportation.
Deportation is the only answer. Illegal aliens will be deported back to their own country from which they entered the US illegally. Further more, they will lose all chance of applying for any other visa or undergo any US Immigration process.
No it can not. my husband and I have 2 children born in the US and I am a US citizen and they still deported him.
Quite simple. Deportation. If you enter any country illegally, you get deported out (forcibly removed if you don't do it voluntarily).
The Immigration and Customs Enforcement or (ICE) Formerly known as the 'US Immigration & Naturalization' or (INC)