No, it is not legal for a US citizen to overstay in the Philippines. Violating Immigration laws can result in penalties, deportation, and future travel restrictions.
The child of a US citizen is considered a US citizen.
If you overstay your visa in the US, you may face consequences such as being barred from reentering the country, deportation, and potential legal penalties. It is important to adhere to the terms of your visa to avoid these consequences.
yes
If you overstay your visa in the US, you may face consequences such as being barred from reentering the country, deportation, and difficulty obtaining future visas or legal status. It is important to comply with immigration laws to avoid these consequences.
Can a us citizen with a past felony conviction visit the Philippines.?
The penalties are that you are subject to arrest and deportation at any time. Your visa would be cancelled (if caught) and it will be difficult to get another visa/overstay waiver. Finally, unless you marry a US citizen, you cannot adjust your status while you are an overstay.
You will be under a ban on re entering the US for 3 years. After that you can enter through the marriage visa.
obviously not
NO! yes!my baby is a us citizen even if she born in philippines and not yet married as long as the father acknowledge her and had the DNA test with the US embassy whlle applying with her passport.
One year as long as you were born in the Philippines.
Depending on weather bigamy is legal in the country you are currently residing in, if bigamy is legal no. However if bigamy is illegal than yes.
You can sponsor your sibling by filing to "adjust status." Your sibling is currently "out of status" by the overstay and risking deportation. File the AOS I-485 package immediately. Overstay based on marriage to a US citizen is forgiven at the AOS interview. This could apply to your situation, as well. Go to www.visajourney.com for a great support system and all your immigration questions answered!