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Statement Of Citizenship Alienage And Immigration Status For Application For Dept Of Corps License Or Certificate Form. This is a California form and can be use in Blue Sky Secretary Of State.
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Tags: Statement Of Citizenship Alienage And Immigration Status For Application For Dept Of Corps License Or Certificate, 250.61, California Secretary Of State, Blue Sky
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
DEPARTMENT OF CORPORATIONS
STATEMENT OF CITIZENSHIP, ALIENAGE, AND IMMIGRATION STATUS
FOR APPLICATION OF DEPARTMENT OF CORPORATIONS
LICENSE OR CERTIFICATE
Print Name of Applicant (the applicant is the individual who wants the license or certificate).
Date
Print Name of Person Acting for Applicant, if any.
Relationship to Applicant
LICENSES AND CERTIFICATES TO CITIZENS AND ALIENS
Citizens and nationals of the United States who meet all eligibility requirements and apply for a
license or certificate must fill out Sections A and D of this form.
Aliens who meet all eligibility requirements and apply for a license or certificate must complete
Sections A, B, C (if applicable), and D of this form.
SECTION A: CITIZENSHIP/IMMIGRATION STATUS DECLARATION
1.
Is the applicant a citizen or national of the United States?
Yes ____ No ____
If the answer to the above question is "Yes", where was he/she born?
_____________________________________________________________________
(City/State)
2.
To establish citizenship or nationality, please submit one of the documents on List A
(attached hereto), which must be legible and unaltered to establish proof.
IF YOU ARE A CITIZEN OR NATIONAL OF THE UNITED STATES, PROCEED DIRECTLY TO
SECTION D. IF YOU ARE AN ALIEN, PLEASE COMPLETE SECTION B, SECTION C (IF
APPLICABLE), AND SECTION D.
SECTION B: ALIEN STATUS DECLARATION
IMPORTANT: Please indicate the applicant's alien status below, and submit documents
evidencing such status. The alien status documents listed for each category are the most
commonly used documents that the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service
(INS) provides to aliens in those categories. You can provide other acceptable evidence of
your alien status even if not listed below.
1.
An alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence under the
Immigration and Naturalization Act (INA). Evidence includes:
•
INS Form I-551 (Alien Registration Receipt Card, commonly
known as a "green card"); or
•
Unexpired Temporary I-551 stamp in foreign passport or on INS
Form I-94.
250.61 (7/98)
[ ]
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2.
An alien who is granted asylum under Section 208 of the INA.
Evidence includes:
•
INS Form I-94 annotated with stamp showing grant of asylum
under Section 208 of the INA;
•
INS Form I-688B (Employment Authorization Card) annotated
"274a.12(a)(5)";
•
INS Form I-766 (Employment Authorization Document) annotated
"A5";
•
Grant letter from the Asylum Office of INS; or
•
Order of an immigration judge granting asylum.
[ ]
3.
A refugee admitted to the United States under Section 207
of the INA. Evidence includes:
•
INS Form I-94 annotated with stamp showing admission under
Section 207 of the INA;
•
INS Form I-688B (Employment Authorization Card) annotated
"274a.12(a)(3)";
•
INS Form I-766 (Employment Authorization Document) annotated
"A3"; or
•
INS Form I-571 (Refugee Travel Document).
[ ]
4.
An alien whose deportation is being withheld under Section 243(h) of
the INA (as in effect immediately prior to September 30, 1996) or
Section 241(b)(3) of such Act (as amended by Section 305(a) of Division C of
Public Law 104-208). Evidence includes:
•
INS Form I-688B (Employment Authorization Card) annotated
"274a.12(a)(10)";
•
INS Form I-766 (Employment Authorization Document) annotated
"A10"; or
•
Order from an immigration judge showing deportation withheld
under Section 243(h) of the INA as in effect prior to April 1, 1997,
or removal withheld under Section 241(b)(3) of the INA.
[ ]
5.
An alien who is granted conditional entry under Section 203(a)(7) of
the INA as in effect prior to April 1, 1980. Evidence includes:
•
INS Form I-94 with stamp showing admission under
Section 203(a)(7) of the INA;
•
INS Form I-688B (Employment Authorization Card) annotated
"274a.12(a)(3)"; or
•
INS Form I-766 (Employment Authorization Document) annotated
"A3".
[ ]
6.
An alien who is a Cuban or Haitian entrant (as defined in Section 501(e)
of the Refugee Education Assistance Act of 1980). Evidence includes:
•
INS Form I-551 (Alien Registration Receipt Card, commonly
known as a "green card") with the code CU6, CU7, or CH6;
•
Unexpired temporary I-551 stamp in foreign passport or on INS
Form I-94 with the code CU6 or CU7; or
•
INS Form I-94 with stamp showing parole as "Cuban/Haitian
Entrant" under Section 212(d)(5) of the INA.
[ ]
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7.
An alien paroled into the United States for at least one year under
Section 212(d)(5) of the INA. Evidence includes:
•
INS Form I-94 with stamp showing admission for at least one
year under Section 212(d)(5) of the INA.
(Applicant cannot aggregate periods of admission for less than
one year to meet the one-year requirement.)
[ ]
8.
An alien paroled into the United States for less than one year under
Section 212(d)(5) of the INA. (Evidence includes INS Form I-94 showing this
status.)
[ ]
9.
An alien not in status categories 1 through 8 who has been admitted to
the United States for a limited period of time (a non-immigrant). Non-immigrants
are persons who have temporary status for a specific purpose. (Evidence
includes INS Form I-94 showing this status.)
[ ]
SECTION C: DECLARATION FOR BATTERED ALIENS
IMPORTANT: Complete this section if the applicant, the applicant's child or the applicant
child's parent has been battered or subjected to extreme cruelty in the United States.
1.
Has the INS or the EOIR granted a petition or application filed by or on behalf
of the applicant, the applicant's child, or the applicant's child's parent under the
INA or found that a pending petition sets forth a prima facie case? Evidence
includes one of the documents on List B (attached hereto).
[ ]
2.
Has the applicant, the applicant's child, or the applicant child's parent
been battered or subjected to extreme cruelty in the United States by a spouse
or parent, or by a spouse's or parent's family member living in the same house
(where the spouse or parent consented to, or acquiesced in the battery or
cruelty)?
[ ]
SECTION D:
I DECLARE UNDER PENALTY OF PERJURY UNDER THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF
CALIFORNIA THAT THE ANSWERS I HAVE GIVEN ARE TRUE AND CORRECT TO THE
BEST OF MY KNOWLEDGE.
Applicant's Signature: ____________________________ Date: ______
Signature of Person
Acting For Applicant: _____________________________ Date: ______
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LIST A
A person who is a citizen or national of the United States.
A.
Primary Evidence
•
A birth certificate showing birth in one of the 50 States, the District of Columbia, Puerto
Rico (on or after January 13, 1941), Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands (on or after January 17,
1917), American Samoa, Swain's Island or the Northern Mariana Islands, unless the
person was born to foreign diplomats residing in the U.S.
Note: If the document shows that the individual was born in Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands
or the Northern Mariana Islands before these areas became part of the U.S., the individual may
be a collectively naturalized citizen--see Paragraph C below.
•
United States passport (except limited passports, which are issued for periods of less than
five years);
•
Report of birth abroad of a U.S. citizen (FS-240) (issued by the Department of State to
U.S. citizens);
•
Certificate of birth (FS-545) (issued by a foreign service post) or Certification of Report of
Birth (DS-1350) (issued by the Department of State), copies of which are available from
the Department of State;
•
Certificate of Naturalization (N-550 or N-570) (issued by INS through a Federal or State
court, or through administrative naturalization after December 1990 to individuals who are
individually naturalized: The N-570 is a replacement certificate issued when the N-550
has been lost or mutilated or the individual's name has been changed);
•
Certificate of Citizenship (N-560 or N-561) (issued by the INS to individuals who derive
U.S. citizenship through a parent; the N-561 is a replacement certificate issued when the
N-560 has been lost or mutilated or the individual's name has been changed);
•
United States Citizen Identification Card (I-197) (issued by the INS until April 7, 1983 to
U.S. citizens living near the Canadian or Mexican border who needed it for frequent border
crossings) (formerly Form I-179, last issued in February 1974);
•
Northern Mariana Identification Card (issued by the INS to a collectively naturalized citizen
of the U.S. who was born in the Northern Mariana Islands before November 3, 1986);
•
Statement provided by a U.S. consular officer certifying that the individual is a U.S. citizen
(this is given to an individual born outside the U.S. who derives citizenship through a
parent but does not have an FS-240, FS-545 or DS-1350); or
•
American Indian Card with a classification code "KIC" and a statement on the back
(identifying U.S. citizen members of the Texas Band of Kickapoos living near the
U.S./Mexican border).
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B.
Secondary Evidence
If the applicant cannot present one of the documents listed in A above, the following may be
relied upon to establish U.S. citizenship or nationality:
•
Religious record recorded in one of the 50 States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico
(on or after January 13, 1941), Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands (on or after
January 17, 1917), American Samoa, Swain's Island or the Northern Mariana Islands
(unless the person was born to foreign diplomats residing in such a jurisdiction) within
three months after birth showing that the birth occurred in such jurisdiction and the date of
birth or the individual's age at the time the record was made;
•
Evidence of civil service employment by the U.S. government before June 1, 1976;
•
Early school records (preferably from the first school) showing the date of admission to the
school, the child's date and place of birth, and the name(s) and place(s) of birth of the
parent(s);
•
Census record showing name, U.S. citizenship or a U.S. place of birth, and date of birth or
age of applicant;
•
Adoption Finalization Papers showing the child's name and place of birth in one of the 50
States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico (on or after January 13, 1941), Guam, the
U.S. Virgin Islands (on or after January 17, 1917), American Samoa, Swain's Island or the
Northern Mariana Islands (unless the person was born to foreign diplomats residing in
such a jurisdiction) or, where or adoption is not finalized and the State or other jurisdiction
listed above in which the child was born will not release a birth certificate prior to final
adoption, a statement from a state-approved adoption agency showing the child's name
and place of birth in one of such jurisdictions (NOTE: the source of the information must
be an original birth certificate and must be indicated in the statement); or
•
Any other document that establishes a U.S. place of birth or in some way indicates U.S.
citizenship (e.g., a contemporaneous hospital record of birth in that hospital in one of the
50 States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico (on or after January 13, 1941), Guam, the
U.S. Virgin Islands (on or after January 17, 1917), American Samoa, Swain's Island or the
Northern Mariana Islands (unless the person was born to foreign diplomates residing in
such a jurisdiction).
C.
Collective Naturalization
If the applicant cannot present one of the documents listed in A or B above, the following may be
relied upon to establish U.S. citizenship for collectively naturalized individuals:
Puerto Rico:
•
Evidence of birth in Puerto Rico on or after April 11, 1899 and the applicant's statement
that he or she was residing in the U.S., a U.S. possession or Puerto Rico on January 13,
1941; or
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•
Evidence that the applicant was a Puerto Rican citizen and the applicant's statement that
he or she was residing in Puerto Rico on March 1, 1917 and that he or she did not take an
oath of allegiance to Spain.
U.S. Virgin Islands:
•
Evidence of birth in the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the applicant's statement of residence in
the U.S., a U.S. possession or the U.S. Virgin Islands on February 25, 1927;
•
The applicant's statement indicating residence in the U.S. Virgin Islands as a Danish
citizen on January 17, 1917 and residence in the U.S., a U.S. possession or the U.S.
Virgin Islands on February 25, 1927, and that he or she did not make a declaration to
maintain Danish citizenship; or
•
Evidence of birth in the U.S. Virgin Islands and the applicant's statement indicating
residence in the U.S., a U.S. possession or territory or the Canal Zone on June 28, 1932.
Northern Mariana Islands (NMI) (formerly part of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands (TTPI);
•
Evidence of birth in the NMI, TTPI citizenship and residence in the NMI, the U.S., or a U.S.
territory or possession on November 3, 1986 (NMI local time) and the applicant's
statement that he or she did not owe allegiance to a foreign state on November 4, 1986
(NMI local time);
•
Evidence of TTPI citizenship, continuous residence in the NMI since before November 3,
1981 (NMI local time), voter registration prior to January 1, 1975 and the applicant's
statement that he or she did not owe allegiance to a foreign state on November 4, 1986
(NMI local time); or
•
Evidence of continuous domicile in the NMI since before January 1, 1974 and the
applicant's statement that he or she did not owe allegiance to a foreign state on November
4, 1986 (NMI local time). Note: If a person entered the NMI as a nonimmigrant and lived in
the NMI since January 1, 1974, this does not constitute continuous domicile and the
individual is not a U.S. citizen.
D.
Derivative Citizenship
If the applicant cannot present one of the documents listed in A or B above, the following may be
relied upon for a determination of derivative U.S. citizenship:
Applicant born abroad to two U.S. citizen parents:
•
Evidence of the U.S. citizenship of the parents and the relationship of the applicant to the
parents, and evidence that at least one parent residing in the U.S. or an outlying
possession prior to the applicant's birth.
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Applicant born abroad to a U.S. citizen parent and a U.S. non-citizen parent:
•
Evidence that one parent is a U.S. citizen and that the other is a U.S. non-citizen national,
evidence of the relationship of the applicant to the U.S. citizen parent and evidence that
the U.S. citizen parent resided in the U.S., a U.S. possession, American Samoa or Swain's
Island for a period of at least one year prior to the applicant's birth.
Applicant born out of wedlock abroad to a U.S. citizen mother:
•
Evidence of the U.S. citizenship of the mother, evidence of the relationship to the
applicant and, for births on or before December 24, 1952, evidence that the mother
resided in the U.S. prior to the applicant's birth or, for births after December 24, 1952,
evidence that the mother had resided, prior to the child's birth in the U.S. or a U.S.
possession for a period of one year.
Applicant born in the Canal Zone or the Republic of Panama:
•
A birth certificate showing birth in the Canal Zone on or after February 26, 1904 and
before October 1, 1979 and evidence that one parent was a U.S. citizen at the time of the
applicant's birth; or
•
A birth certificate showing birth in the Republic of Panama on or after February 26, 1904
and before October 1, 1979 and evidence that at least one parent was a U.S. citizen and
employed by the U.S. government or the Panama Railroad Company or its successor in
title.
All other situations where an applicant claims to have a U.S. citizen parent and an alien parent, or
claims to fall within one of the above categories but is unable to present the listed documentation:
•
If the applicant is in the U.S., he or she may contact the local INS office for determination
of U.S. citizenship;
•
If the applicant is outside the U.S., he or she may contact the State Department for a U.S.
citizenship determination.
E.
Adoption of Foreign-Born Child by U.S. Citizen
•
If the birth certificate shows a foreign place of birth and the applicant cannot be
determined to be a naturalized citizen under any of the above criteria, other evidence of
U.S. citizenship may be obtained;
•
Since foreign-born adopted children do not automatically acquire U.S. citizenship by virtue
of adoption by U.S. citizens, the applicant may contact the local INS district office for a
determination of U.S. citizenship if the applicant provides no evidence of U.S. citizenship.
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F.
U.S. Citizenship by Marriage
A woman acquired U.S. citizenship through marriage to a U.S. citizen before
September 22, 1922. Evidence of U.S. citizenship of the husband, and evidence showing the
marriage occurred before September 22, 1922.
Note: If the husband was an alien at the time of the marriage, and became naturalized before
September 22, 1922, the wife also acquired naturalized citizenship. If the marriage terminated,
the wife maintained her U.S. citizenship if she was residing in the U.S. at that time and continued
to reside in the U.S.
LIST B
A.
Documentation Evidencing an Approved Petition or Application
•
INS Form I-551 ("Resident Alien Card" or "Alien Registration Receipt Card" commonly
known as a "green card") with one of the following INS class of admission ("COA") codes
printed on the front of a white card or the back of a pink card; AR1, AR6, C20 through
C29, CF1, CF2, CR1, CR2, CR6, CR7, CX1 through CX3, CX6 through CX8, F20 through
F29, FX1 through FX3, FX6 through FX8, IF1, IF2, IR1 through IR4, IR6 through IR9, IW1,
IW2, IW6, IW7, MR6, MR7, P21 through P23, or P26 through P28.
If an alien claiming approved status presents a code different than those enumerated, or if the
class of admission from the I-551 stamp cannot be determined, INS Form G-845, and G-845
Supplement (mark item six on the Supplement) along with a copy of the document(s) presented
may be filed with the local INS office in order to determine whether the applicant gained his or her
status because he or she was the spouse, widow, or child of a U.S. citizen or the spouse, child, or
unmarried son or daughter of an LPR (lawful permanent resident).
•
INS Form I-551 with one of the following COA codes stamped on the lower left side of the
back of a pink card: IB1 through IB3, IB6 through IB8, B11, B12, B16, B17, B20 through
B29, B31 through B33, B36 through B38, BX1 through BX3, or BX6 through BX8.
•
INS Form I-551 with COA code Z13.
•
Unexpired Temporary I-551 stamp in foreign passport or on INS Form I-94 with one of the
COA codes specified in the Subsections (1)-(3), above.
•
INS Form I-797 indicating approval of an INS I-130 petition (only I-130 petitions describing
the following relationships may be accepted: husbands or wives of U.S. citizens or LPRs,
unmarried children under 21 years old of U.S. citizens or LPRs, or unmarried children 21
or older of LPRs), or approval of an I-360 petition (only I-360 approvals based on status as
a widow/widower of a U.S. citizen or as a self-petitioning spouse or child of an abusive
U.S. citizen or LPR may be accepted).
•
A final order of an Immigration Judge or the Board of Immigration Appeals granting
suspension of deportation under Section 244(a)(3) of the INA as in effect prior to April 1,
1997, or cancellation of removal under Section 240A(b)(2) of the INA.
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B.
Documentation Demonstrating that the Applicant has Established a Prima Facie Case
•
INS Form I-797 indicating that the applicant has established a prima facie case; or
•
An immigration court or Board of Immigration Appeals order indicating that the applicant
has established a prima facie case for suspension of deportation under INA Section
244(a)(3) as in effect prior to April 1, 1997, or cancellation of removal under Section
240A(b)(2) of the INA.
C.
Documentation indicating that the Applicant has Filed a Petition or that a Petition has been
Filed on the Applicant's Behalf, as Applicable, but with no Evidence of Approval of the
Petition or Establishment of a Prima Facie Case
Based on the documentation, the filing date of the petition may be determined and the following
actions may be taken:
•
Applicants with petitions filed before June 7, 1997 should have an INS Form I-797
indicating filing of the I-360 petition by "self-petitioning spouse [or child] of abusive U.S.C.
or LPR," a file-stamped copy of the petition, or another document demonstrating filing
(including a cash register or computer-generated receipt indicating filing of Form I-360).
•
Applicants with petitions filed after June 7, 1997 should have an INS Form I-797 indicating
filing of the I-360 petition.
D.
Documentation Indicating that the Applicant has filed a Petition or that a Petition was filed
on His or Her Behalf, as Applicable
The following must indicate that the applicant is the widow/widower of a U.S. citizen, the husband
or wife of a U.S. citizen or LPR, the unmarried child under age 21 of a U.S. citizen or LPR, or the
unmarried child age 21 or older of an LPR):
•
For aliens on whose behalf a petition has been filed: INS Form I-797 indicating filing of an
INS I-130 petition, a file-stamped copy of the petition, or another document demonstrating
filing (including a cash register or computer-generated receipt indicating filing of Form I130).
•
For self-petitioning widows or widowers: a file-stamped copy of the INS I-360 petition, or
another document demonstrating filing (including a cash register or computer-generated
receipt indicating filing of Form I-360).
E.
Documentation Indicating that the INS has Initiated Deportation or Removal Proceedings
in which Relief may be Available
•
an "Order to Show Cause";
•
a "Notice to Appear"; or
•
a "Notice of Hearing in Deportation Proceedings."
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F.
Minimal or no Documentation Regarding the Claimed Filing
If the applicant has some documentation, but it is insufficient to demonstrate filing, establishment
of prima facie case or approval of a petition, the INS Request Form on agency letterhead, as well
as a copy of any document(s) provided by the applicant, may be faxed to the INS Vermont
Service Center in order to determine the applicant's status. If the applicant has no
documentation, but is certain that a petition has been filed by his or her spouse or parent, the INS
Request Form may be faxed to the INS Vermont Service Center.
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