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Post by AdA on Jul 23, 2015 12:07:50 GMT -5
Hi there, I have a couple of questions more, maybe someone could help me…. First, my mother got her 'certificate relative à un aïeul lux', so she's gonna enter phase 2 as soon as she collects all her papers. I'm an adult, and I'm wondering what I should do, I know I have to go to Lux. too to sign the papers. But should I collect everything too? I don't seem to able to find any answer on the Internet (and the worst thing is that I'm fluent in French). Any link to show me where it's written? (since I'm not the one, just an adult child) Secondly, if, as I suspect, I have to collect all the papers, can anyone tell me what the US equivalent of 'extrait de casier judiciaire' is: where and what should I ask? (I live in the USA) Thanks a lot, AdA
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Post by helena on Jul 23, 2015 19:39:37 GMT -5
Contact the Ministry of Justice.
You might luck out. Maybe you can piggyback on your mother's application.
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Post by heatherk on Jul 25, 2015 0:44:41 GMT -5
I agree that asking is best, but isn't the whole point of the certificate of ancestry to prove that your mother has a Luxembourger ancestor? I would think that, at worst, you can just take that and proof that she is your mother (your birth certificate would probably suffice, overacheiver status would probably be another copy of her birth certificate and marriage certificate), and that would do the trick, I'd imagine. Ask them about that
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Post by moike92 on Jul 25, 2015 8:31:22 GMT -5
You can go off of what your mother has already turned in. You would have to send in the certified photocopy of your birth certificate and your passport. Then I believe you would hair need to write a letter to send in with those documents that states that your mother had already turned in the other documents necessary for the process. You should not need to send in a copy of your mothers birth or anything else since she would have already done that for herself. You should definitely email the ministry of justice and ask them to clear it up a little bit for you though.
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Post by moike92 on Jul 25, 2015 8:36:05 GMT -5
As for the "Etrait de casier judiciare" you just need to go to a sherries office where you live and have them give you a copy of your police record. If you do not have a police record they will make one for you (basically an empty record) that states you have no charges or offences. If you have moved multiple states or cities in the past years (I think 15 years) you will have to get an FBI record.
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Post by ijyelesoduxe on Sept 12, 2019 11:23:30 GMT -5
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