<blockquote id="quote" class="ffs">quote:The trouble is though Robert the only definitive answer seems to be that there is no definitive answer, it's down to how the person dealing with the case on the day interprets it. This is why the advice has always been from here, that we aren't experts in this field and that you should contact the people who will decide if you can or not have entry/visa if required etc. and that's is the US officials.[/quote]
Steph,
Perhaps I am not making myself clear; or you are playing The Devil’s Advocate?
What person? Dealing with what 'case’? The whole point of this discussion is to avoid there being any case to be discussed with a US Official i.e. to avoid attending at the US embassy.
We are simply talking about someone who wishes to know if he can enter the USA under the Visa Waiver Scheme.(VWS). He reads all the regulations, looks at the I94-W and there is no ambiguity at all.
He then comes onto this website and reads that “if you have ever been arrested you can’t use the VWS”
The US Government regulations, in my post above, are detailed but very clear if you read them. They don’t even mention the word ‘arrest’ and lay down the types of offence, should you be convicted, that MAY disqualify you from entry, under the Visa Waiver Scheme.(VWS) Obviously if you are still in doubt after reading them, then you need to visit the US Embassy.
In fact that is exactly the advice I have had in writing from the US Embassy in London and US Immigration in the USA. They both say “if you cannot understand the regulations, or are in any doubt of your position, you must attend for an interview”
Anyone reading those regulations can be in no doubt that an arrest and acquittal or an arrest in a case of mistaken identity etc etc, does not bar entry under the VWS. It cannot be possibly interpreted any other way.
In fact it is very clear to me from those Regulations that even if convicted for many types of offence, you can enter under the VWS.
That is also confirmed by the wording of the question on the I94-W with its reference to Moral Turpitude and 5 years confinement etc.
As you say, we aren’t experts but we can read regulations.
Yet ‘experts’ or not, post after post on this forum states, with absolute certainty, that “if you have ever been arrested you cannot enter under a Visa waiver”. That statement is repeated and repeated until it becomes accepted as an unquestionable fact. Yet that statement is not supported by any regulation that I can find.
We also have an Immigration lawyer who has unequivocally repeated the statement about an arrest, and yet when his statement was queried has completely avoided the question asking what US regulation he is quoting. I don’t intend to be rude but read his latest posts – they state nothing about an arrest.
So Steph let me ask you a straight question.
If you had been arrested in a case of mistaken identity, or arrested and not charged, would you apply for a Visa because you believe you are not eligible to enter under the Visa Waiver scheme.
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