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Passport question
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<blockquote data-quote="Kathy813" data-source="post: 112260" data-attributes="member: 1967"><p>The previous one was in my teens and had my maiden name on it so I don't think that was it. According to the website, all you need is a certified birth certificate and one other piece of government issued ID like a driver's license.</p><p></p><p>All I can think about in your daughter's case is that she changed her name at 18 and then again when she married. Maybe all those name changes sent up a red flag?</p><p></p><p>They did get a little upset when I couldn't produce the expired passport from 35 years ago. Who the heck could? So I had to sign a paper saying that it was lost. Then they asked me what state it was lost in. Gee, I've lived in NY, FL, IL, and Georgia. It must have been in one of them. </p><p> :rofl:</p><p>I probably just threw it out since it was expired. I didn't know you were supposed to keep them and turn them in.</p><p></p><p>I agree with Witz that the permanent address shouldn't be a big problem since people move all of the time. I don't think that I would even worry about it unless it could become a custody issue.</p><p></p><p>~Kathy</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Kathy813, post: 112260, member: 1967"] The previous one was in my teens and had my maiden name on it so I don't think that was it. According to the website, all you need is a certified birth certificate and one other piece of government issued ID like a driver's license. All I can think about in your daughter's case is that she changed her name at 18 and then again when she married. Maybe all those name changes sent up a red flag? They did get a little upset when I couldn't produce the expired passport from 35 years ago. Who the heck could? So I had to sign a paper saying that it was lost. Then they asked me what state it was lost in. Gee, I've lived in NY, FL, IL, and Georgia. It must have been in one of them. [img]:rofl:[/img] I probably just threw it out since it was expired. I didn't know you were supposed to keep them and turn them in. I agree with Witz that the permanent address shouldn't be a big problem since people move all of the time. I don't think that I would even worry about it unless it could become a custody issue. ~Kathy [/QUOTE]
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