Your IR-3/IH-3 child has not received a Certificate of Citizenship
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If your child was admitted with an IR-3/IH-3 visa, but has not yet
received his or her Certificate of Citizenship and it has been more than
50 days since admission, we will send you further instructions, please
contact:
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
130 Delaware Avenue
Buffalo, New York, 14202
Attn: CCA Unit
Your child’s name changed and does not match the Certificate of Citizenship
Your child’s name on Certificate of Citizenship is incorrect or contains misspellings
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The name on your child’s certificate may not agree with how you want it to appear
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The information on your child’s certificate is the same as the
information on your child’s legal documents in the Immigrant Data
Summary issued by the American Consulate
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USCIS can not legally change your child’s name. That must be done through court proceedings.
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If the U.S. Embassy, Consulate or USCIS made an error, it will be corrected without fee
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Please file a Form N-565, Application for Replacement
Naturalization/Citizenship Document, with a written explanation of the
error, mail the original Certificate of Citizenship and 2 new photos
to:
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
130 Delaware Avenue
Buffalo, New York, 14202
Attn: CCA Unit
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If there was an error on our part, we will correct it without fee. However,
if the information provided during the Form I-600 adjudication and visa
issuance shows the child’s legal name to be the same as on in the
Certificate of Citizenship, another certificate may not be issued
The date of birth on my child’s Certificate of Citizenship is incorrect
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The date of birth on your child’s certificate may not match the age you believe your child to be
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The information on your child’s certificate is the same information on
the child’s legal documents which were submitted to generate the
biographical information in the Immigrant Data Summary issued by the
U.S. Embassy or consulate
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We must use the age as it appears in the legal documents, as received
from the evidence presented to USCIS or U.S. Embassy or consulate
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If USCIS determines that the U.S. Embassy, consulate, or USCIS made an error, it will be corrected without fee. However,
if the information provided during the Form I-600 adjudication and visa
issuance shows the child’s legal age to be in the same as on the
Certificate of Citizenship, another certificate may not be issued.
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You may file Form N-565, Application for Replacement of
Naturalization/Citizenship Document. Follow the directions on the form
on where to file this application
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Be sure to include the proper fee and evidence of your child’s age. The Form N-565 can be found at the website www.uscis.gov.
Note: Even if USCIS cannot change its official records concerning your
child’s date of birth, the law of your State of residence may permit
you to obtain an amended birth record or other evidence of a different
birth date. You may use that State document, to the extent permitted by
State law, to prove your child’s legal age.
We lost my child’s Certificate of Citizenship
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If your child’s certificate is lost or destroyed you may file Form
N-565, Application for Replacement Naturalization/Citizenship Document,
with fee. Follow the directions on the form on where to file this
application.
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Be sure to include the proper fee and evidence of your child’s legal name. The Form N-565 can be found at the website www.uscis.gov.
We adopted more than one child, and have not received all of their certificates
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The visas of sibling groups of children who entered together may have
been separated during the certificate preparation process. Each child’s
certificate will be mailed separately. Please allow 50 days from the
date of entry into the United States for the receipt of all the
certificates.
Disclaimer
The content on The Wayfarer:Ethiopian Adoption Resource Blog is for informational purposes only. We are adoptive parents, but we are not professionals. The opinions and suggestions expressed here are not intended to replace professional evaluation or therapy, or to supersede your agency. We assume no responsibility in the decisions that families make for their children and families. There are many links on this blog. We believe these other sites have valuable information, but we do not necessarily share all of the opinions or positions represented by each site, nor have we fully researched every aspect of each link. Please keep this in mind when visiting the links from this page.
Thank You.
A Links Disclaimer
I post a lot of links. I do so because I feel that the particular page has good information and much to offer. I do not necessarily support all that each site has to say or promote. I trust you to sift the links for information you feel is worthwhile to you. Each person's story and situation are unique and different things will be useful or not useful to each one in different ways. Please use your own discretion when accessing links and information.
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