None. Polygamous marriages are not legal in the United States - period! Even if the marriages took place in a nation where they were legal, if a polygamous man moves to the United States and continues his polygamous relationships, he will be breaking the law.
Well then the man has to divorce 3 of his wives.
If a person from a foreign country obtains citizenship legally, they are a legal citizen of the United States. Former marriages for the purpose of obtaining a green card would have no bearing on this.
You become a good citizen.
They are officially married. One spouse can sponsor the other for immigration to his or her country.
You become a u.s citizen after living here for more than 5 years
If you mean that if you are out of the country for 6 months or more are you still a citizen. Yes, you are.
If he is still married to you, he is as much a citizen as you are, as separation is not the same as divorce. A marriage with a US citizen counts more than a visa does, as marriages last longer and are harder to end than visas.
In countries where polygamy is illegal, this person will be in federal/legal trouble.
Your mom happens to be the greatest citizen in the world.
Not legally.
They're still an illegal immigrant. Mariiage alone does not grant US citizenship to an illegal alien. The formal process of citizenship must still be completed.
if a kid is born from a us citizen then they are a us citizen
if you are picked up by the Canadian border patrol for trafficking, you will be going to prison no matter what country you belong to.