Yes, a U.S. citizen can be denied entry back into the USA under certain circumstances, such as if they have committed a serious crime or if there are concerns about their security or health.
yes
passport
you will see as if , if he don't do anything wrong or had another great job he will come back to usa silly :3
If for some reason you are stopped by border security, your visitor's visa will not take precedence.
According to Wikipedia (refer to the link, below), Cat Stevens (now Yusuf Islam) was denied entry to the USA in 2004 because his name was flagged for possible connections to a terrorist group, which may have been due to a mix-up with someone having a nearly identical name. He returned to London, where he currently lives and is a citizen of the United Kingdom, and in 2006 was permitted entry to the USA. Unless there is another security incident, the singer/philanthropist will continue to be allowed into the USA.
no.
Yes, if you've been to Cuba, Mexico, or anywhere in the Middle East and you try to immigrate they will give you a lot of trouble asking for explinations as to why you visted that/those areas.
Denied - 2004 was released on: USA: 27 July 2004
Yes. USA citizen girl marriage Pakistan citizen.my name is amanat ali
Yes, upon entry into the USA, immigration officials typically stamp your passport with the date of entry.
If you are a U.S. Citizen, you need your valid passport. If you are a legal resident, you need your green card.
It depends on what type of illegal you are. There are 2 types: 1) entry without inspection (a person sneeking across the border) and 2) overstay (entry into the U.S, was legal but the stay became illegal (i.e. staying in the U.S. after tourist visa expires) Only the 2nd type of illegal can become legal, and then ONLY IF the spouse is a citizen. The citizen spouse would need to file a I-130 and I-485 petition for you. Actually, there is a way for the first type of illegal to ATTEMPT legal status (unlike the second type where a green card is a sure thing (baring anything negative in the immigrant's background). The illegal would need to return to his country of origin and try to get a I-601 waiver by showing extreme hardship to his citizen spouse. The drawback is that if it is denied, the illegal must stay in that country and can be prevented from entry for either 3 or 10 years. The other way is for the illegal to surrender to ICE and attempt a cancellation of removal (deportation). The drawback to this is if the waiver is denied, the illegal will be deported, and the deportation itself might bar him from any future entry into the U.S.