There is one thing that will doom you with any country’s immigration office.
That means lying about your circumstances, or lying at all, or even being wrong when you should say “I don’t know”.
This is most extreme on matters of asylum. The entire point of an asylum claim is you are claiming that if sent back to your country, they will persecute you, so doing so would endanger your health and safety.
We are making the rather large concession of allowing you to settle, live, take our jobs, use our healthcare and services, and ultimately naturalize.
Further, refugee sources also tend to be terrorist hotbeds, so again we are making a leap of faith, relying on our trust of you and your acquaintances. Of course you know you are a good guy who is not going to do something terrible, but understand for us, it’s a big leap of faith.
In the United States, the penalty for deception is a lifetime ban. It is probably the end of any asylum application. They’d even revoke any US citizenship issued based on deception.
It’s one thing if a misunderstanding is arguable. You say “your friend is no Baathist” but it turns out he is, maybe you just didn’t know.
It’s a different kettle of fish when it’s plain you have actively and willingly deceived. “Sneaking through a third country, and lying about it at re-entry” would be exactly that kind of active deception. On top of which it violates the terms of your asylum even if you were upfront about it. That would make your deportation an open and shut case.
You said your home country will persecute you. You’re sneaking back there anyway. So apparently, that’s not true after all.
Which then begs the question of what else you lied about. It even calls into question anyone else you’ve vouched for, and the good word of anyone who vouched for you.
Lots of people want America for the good life, that is understandable. But what if you’re here for something more nefarious? Nothing personal, but the security services wouldn’t be doing their job if they didn’t look into those questions. Such an inquiry could involve your arrest, extended questioning, and even charging if the inquiry uncovered a crime.
There’s another side effect. Suppose an allied intelligence service surveils you back in the old country using tech they can’t reveal. They tell FBI and CBP “you really want to look into this guy. Can’t tell you why.” Well, that’s not good for you, or your friends and family, is it? Now we’re in the land of unintended consequences. They don’t find any terror but find all the dumb stuff you find if you probe into the lives of random people. Jane is dealing cigarettes to minors, and she just turned 18. That kind of thing.
Don’t do anything stupid ,please excuse my language, but this is not a advice it is a warning!!!!! any one has AS6 on their US green card ,don’t try to go back to your country ,you will eventually lose ur stastuslose ur status ,CBP might let you in airport , but you will get a letter later from immigration court order before an immigration judge ,first you lied to us government, this is very common in Chinese case ,they will claim asylum, and after they will spy for communist party not all the Chiese are same but there are a lot. I work at uscis filed office ,so my friendly warning is wait until u became us citizen. We recently deported a guy from china who went to back china via France turns out he claimed chirsitin on his asylum but he was not ,so not only he went back to his country he lied on his asylum status.
You should seek competent legal advice from someone with experience handling asylum cases, which may include local immigrant legal-aid organizations.
Even with permanent residency, traveling back home or even using the passport of the country you are claiming protection from can put your status at risk:
If your travel abroad suggests that you no longer need the protection
of the U.S., your status as a refugee or asylee may be terminated. If
you return to the country where you experienced past persecution or
claim a fear of future persecution, you may be required, upon your
return to the U.S., to explain your travel to that country to avoid
losing your asylee or refugee status.A person granted permanent residence based on a grant of asylum is
still subject to the possible consequences of returning to the country
of claimed persecution. An person’s asylum status may be terminated
even if the individual has already become a lawful permanent resident.
In some limited circumstances, you may be able to return to the
country you fear if your stay is of a short duration and you can
demonstrate that your return to that particular country was due to
compelling reasons.
Here’s a useful blog post by an immigration lawyer who specializes in asylum matters: You Can Go Home Again (Sort of): Visiting Your Home Country After a Grant of Asylum. He writes on the ways such a trip could jeopardize your immigration status in the US, both now and if you later wish to apply for US citizenship and suggests collecting evidence about the nature of the emergency and consulting an attorney before you travel.
This trip puts your ability to return to and live in the US at risk. That’s too important to rely on advice from strangers on the internet. Please get professional advice.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
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