A citizen is a person who is legally recognized as a member of a specific country, typically having the rights and responsibilities associated with that status, such as voting and taxation. An immigrant, on the other hand, is someone who moves to a different country, often seeking permanent residence, but may not have acquired citizenship yet. While citizens have full legal standing in their country, immigrants may face various legal restrictions and processes before gaining the same rights.
chuck norris
no
The same thing that would happen to a citizen, the person will be taken into custody by authorities and jailed in a local and/or state and/or federal facility. The difference between the citizen and the immigrant obviously would be that after the unlawfully present immigrant has served the imposed sentence(s) he or she will be deported and permanently barred from entering the U.S.
An immigrant is a person. "Immigrant" describes one who moved into a country, as compared to "emigrant" which is the person who left.
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.
Yes. If the illegal immigrant marries a citizen, they can become a citizen from that.
An emigrant is a person who leaves his/her country. An immigrant is a person who arrives and lives in another country
Nothing these days, there's no such thing as an immigrant or illigal.
No.
Citizens have political rights; non-citizens do not
Citizens have political rights; non-citizens do not