Re: Two different takes on deportation




http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/tayside_and_central/6756341.stm

I do not know what the rules were back then, but she probably has
always been a British Citizen, she just was not registered.

The other one seems to have a host of issues:

No mention of her parents being USC's.

She knew she was Cuban.

She had travelled many times it seems and had presented herself as
being a USC.

She voted in circumstances that only USC's could.

I would have thought that the voting aspect was not the main issue,
passing oneself off as a USC for Immigration benefit is much more
serious, no waiver.

What on earth are you on about - did you even read the article? :mad:

"All of her life, Zoila Meyer believed she was an American. .........But
now she is facing a threat of deportation for illegally voting, because
she never became a citizen after being brought to this country from Cuba
when she was 1 year old."

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