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US born but as a child of foreign diplomat

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US born but as a child of foreign diplomat


Casual study in the USADual US/Canadian citizen with an expired passportAs a USA citizen, can I cross the USA-Canada land border with my Hungarian passport?Dual citizenship passports and visasI secured a visa for the US. What happens once I arrive at a US port-of-entry seeking admission into the country?Re-entering Germany, with transit in the US, with only a national ID card and another passportWhat is the penalty for dual US citizens who lie on the ESTA form in order to enter under VWP using their second passport?Is the US border police correct when he says photo ID is no good?USA: What visa should I have entered on?I may have broken ESTA rules without knowing. What to do now?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








3















I was born in US as a child to foreign diplomat. I recently became Canadian citizen and the passport shows birth place ad NY USA. Obviously, I am not and cannot be a US citizen according to US constitution. As all US citizen require to enter US with its passport but I am not, will I have issues at US border and could offspring of foreign diplomat explanation be enough?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Jay Han is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Are you certain that the diplomatic exception applies to you? There is some misunderstanding about exactly which people are covered. If one of your parents was, for example, an employee or officer of the UN, you may in fact be a US citizen. Alternatively, if your NY birth certificate notes your parent's diplomatic status and that you are therefore not a US citizen (which I believe some states do but I don't know about New York) then a copy of that would help your peace of mind.

    – phoog
    17 mins ago











  • My father was a career diplomat serving three times in US as consul, councilor, and minister. He also served in Europe, Japan and Southeast Asia. He later served as ambassador to three other nations. He had full diplomatic passport and I was dependent of diplomat until I was 18. He should be in blue list of US Department of State.

    – Jay Han
    2 mins ago

















3















I was born in US as a child to foreign diplomat. I recently became Canadian citizen and the passport shows birth place ad NY USA. Obviously, I am not and cannot be a US citizen according to US constitution. As all US citizen require to enter US with its passport but I am not, will I have issues at US border and could offspring of foreign diplomat explanation be enough?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Jay Han is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Are you certain that the diplomatic exception applies to you? There is some misunderstanding about exactly which people are covered. If one of your parents was, for example, an employee or officer of the UN, you may in fact be a US citizen. Alternatively, if your NY birth certificate notes your parent's diplomatic status and that you are therefore not a US citizen (which I believe some states do but I don't know about New York) then a copy of that would help your peace of mind.

    – phoog
    17 mins ago











  • My father was a career diplomat serving three times in US as consul, councilor, and minister. He also served in Europe, Japan and Southeast Asia. He later served as ambassador to three other nations. He had full diplomatic passport and I was dependent of diplomat until I was 18. He should be in blue list of US Department of State.

    – Jay Han
    2 mins ago













3












3








3








I was born in US as a child to foreign diplomat. I recently became Canadian citizen and the passport shows birth place ad NY USA. Obviously, I am not and cannot be a US citizen according to US constitution. As all US citizen require to enter US with its passport but I am not, will I have issues at US border and could offspring of foreign diplomat explanation be enough?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Jay Han is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I was born in US as a child to foreign diplomat. I recently became Canadian citizen and the passport shows birth place ad NY USA. Obviously, I am not and cannot be a US citizen according to US constitution. As all US citizen require to enter US with its passport but I am not, will I have issues at US border and could offspring of foreign diplomat explanation be enough?







usa






share|improve this question







New contributor




Jay Han is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




Jay Han is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






New contributor




Jay Han is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 2 hours ago









Jay HanJay Han

161




161




New contributor




Jay Han is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Jay Han is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Jay Han is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • Are you certain that the diplomatic exception applies to you? There is some misunderstanding about exactly which people are covered. If one of your parents was, for example, an employee or officer of the UN, you may in fact be a US citizen. Alternatively, if your NY birth certificate notes your parent's diplomatic status and that you are therefore not a US citizen (which I believe some states do but I don't know about New York) then a copy of that would help your peace of mind.

    – phoog
    17 mins ago











  • My father was a career diplomat serving three times in US as consul, councilor, and minister. He also served in Europe, Japan and Southeast Asia. He later served as ambassador to three other nations. He had full diplomatic passport and I was dependent of diplomat until I was 18. He should be in blue list of US Department of State.

    – Jay Han
    2 mins ago

















  • Are you certain that the diplomatic exception applies to you? There is some misunderstanding about exactly which people are covered. If one of your parents was, for example, an employee or officer of the UN, you may in fact be a US citizen. Alternatively, if your NY birth certificate notes your parent's diplomatic status and that you are therefore not a US citizen (which I believe some states do but I don't know about New York) then a copy of that would help your peace of mind.

    – phoog
    17 mins ago











  • My father was a career diplomat serving three times in US as consul, councilor, and minister. He also served in Europe, Japan and Southeast Asia. He later served as ambassador to three other nations. He had full diplomatic passport and I was dependent of diplomat until I was 18. He should be in blue list of US Department of State.

    – Jay Han
    2 mins ago
















Are you certain that the diplomatic exception applies to you? There is some misunderstanding about exactly which people are covered. If one of your parents was, for example, an employee or officer of the UN, you may in fact be a US citizen. Alternatively, if your NY birth certificate notes your parent's diplomatic status and that you are therefore not a US citizen (which I believe some states do but I don't know about New York) then a copy of that would help your peace of mind.

– phoog
17 mins ago





Are you certain that the diplomatic exception applies to you? There is some misunderstanding about exactly which people are covered. If one of your parents was, for example, an employee or officer of the UN, you may in fact be a US citizen. Alternatively, if your NY birth certificate notes your parent's diplomatic status and that you are therefore not a US citizen (which I believe some states do but I don't know about New York) then a copy of that would help your peace of mind.

– phoog
17 mins ago













My father was a career diplomat serving three times in US as consul, councilor, and minister. He also served in Europe, Japan and Southeast Asia. He later served as ambassador to three other nations. He had full diplomatic passport and I was dependent of diplomat until I was 18. He should be in blue list of US Department of State.

– Jay Han
2 mins ago





My father was a career diplomat serving three times in US as consul, councilor, and minister. He also served in Europe, Japan and Southeast Asia. He later served as ambassador to three other nations. He had full diplomatic passport and I was dependent of diplomat until I was 18. He should be in blue list of US Department of State.

– Jay Han
2 mins ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















5














You will not have trouble entering the US. If you are questioned about your birthplace, you simply state the facts: You were born as a child of a foreign diplomat in the US on official service. That should be enough to satisfy the officer. They will not presume that you are a US citizen and you are not claiming that you are.






share|improve this answer























  • Thks for your clarification.

    – Jay Han
    40 mins ago











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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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active

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oldest

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active

oldest

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5














You will not have trouble entering the US. If you are questioned about your birthplace, you simply state the facts: You were born as a child of a foreign diplomat in the US on official service. That should be enough to satisfy the officer. They will not presume that you are a US citizen and you are not claiming that you are.






share|improve this answer























  • Thks for your clarification.

    – Jay Han
    40 mins ago















5














You will not have trouble entering the US. If you are questioned about your birthplace, you simply state the facts: You were born as a child of a foreign diplomat in the US on official service. That should be enough to satisfy the officer. They will not presume that you are a US citizen and you are not claiming that you are.






share|improve this answer























  • Thks for your clarification.

    – Jay Han
    40 mins ago













5












5








5







You will not have trouble entering the US. If you are questioned about your birthplace, you simply state the facts: You were born as a child of a foreign diplomat in the US on official service. That should be enough to satisfy the officer. They will not presume that you are a US citizen and you are not claiming that you are.






share|improve this answer













You will not have trouble entering the US. If you are questioned about your birthplace, you simply state the facts: You were born as a child of a foreign diplomat in the US on official service. That should be enough to satisfy the officer. They will not presume that you are a US citizen and you are not claiming that you are.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 2 hours ago









Greg HewgillGreg Hewgill

28.5k377105




28.5k377105












  • Thks for your clarification.

    – Jay Han
    40 mins ago

















  • Thks for your clarification.

    – Jay Han
    40 mins ago
















Thks for your clarification.

– Jay Han
40 mins ago





Thks for your clarification.

– Jay Han
40 mins ago










Jay Han is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









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