Those cases may be appealed then. Please reach us through the contact form for a more detailed and well-oriented consultation on your case : mbersanilaw.com/contatti Sincerely, The Team-
The only potential chance is through the Courts. We talked about it here: ua-cam.com/video/cBWNY32_Z3s/v-deo.htmlsi=jb1rhkCBTV2QWOMt Please reach us for a better detailed analysis of your case and your chances: mbersanilaw.com/contatti Sincerely The Team-
Previouly, if a Italian born ancestor gave birth of a minor in the US who naturaluzed during their minor, would not qualify. My great grandparents from Italy never naturaluzed, thus my grandmother was born of Italian decent. Then San Guinius is present in my case. Correct?
Please reach us through the contact form for a more detailed and well-oriented consultation on your case : mbersanilaw.com/contatti Sincerely, The Team-
Whst is the age considerd minor. My mother was 17 when grand father naturalized. I have all my documents I am in the process getting them apostilled and then was planning on coming to Sicily
@@lawfirmbersani My mother was born in 1926. My father was born in catania But naturalized before I was born. My mother's parents were both born in Santa Margherita de Belice Agrigento. I am as close to an Italian citizen as one can get. I can see them maybe cutting off third and fourth generations but first generation the bureaucracy is mine baffling
Please reach us through the contact form for a more detailed and well-oriented consultation on your case : mbersanilaw.com/contatti Sincerely, The Team-
These cases are making me feel hopeful! I’m going to reach out to you this weekend. I have questions and would love to know how you might be able to help me. Thank you for your fantastic videos!
Thank you, and looking forward to assist you. Please reach us through the contact form for a more detailed and well-oriented consultation on your case : mbersanilaw.com/contatti Sincerely, The Team-
I have a question- my grandfather and father migrated from Sicily in 1960 and my father became a US citizen in 1967. I was born in 1986 in the USA. Would I be considered a ‘minor case’? My mother was also born in Sicily Palermo, she naturalized in 1987 however, I wasn’t close to my mother and I don’t have her birth certificate or anything.. Both my parents are on my American birth certificate
Please reach us through the contact form for a more detailed and well-oriented consultation on your case : mbersanilaw.com/contatti Sincerely, The Team-
@@Behemoth66 Your lineage would be cut off on your father's side because he naturalized before you were born. You would have to go through your mother considering she was still an Italian citizen when you were born. Your line Should be much easier considering your next generation. Your situation is very interesting because You were born an American citizen so you wouldn't have been naturalized As a minor with your mother. The question now becomes did you lose your eligibility because she gave up hers when you were a minor.
@@SALFXEFthat’s an interesting question! Does the ancestor’s naturalization negate their child’s right to citizenship if they were already U.S. citizens from birth? I’m trying to do the research for my wife’s eligibility-her mother was born a US citizen in Italy in 1946 and grandmother naturalized when the mother was 3. Father was an Italian-American GI. If mother’s naturalization was independent from the child’s acquisition of U.S. citizenship at birth, does it still affect their right to citizenship afterwards? It actually resembles the #2 case Bersani refers to in the video.
Waiting for your new video on the developments. Great vid
Good morning, we will post a detailed new video soon , so keep following us for updates.
Sincerely,
The Team-
What courts do you apply to? The court in the town of the Italian ancestors birth? Sciacca?
I just heard today that the Philladelphia Consulate has been telling all Minor cases are to be rejected.
Those cases may be appealed then.
Please reach us through the contact form for a more detailed and well-oriented consultation on your case :
mbersanilaw.com/contatti
Sincerely,
The Team-
So you're saying there is still a chance? 🤞
The cases he is speaking about were "won" in June and July, prior to the October 3 new interpretation/memo.
We think there's still a change, as the October 3rd Nota Ministeriale does not oblige the Courts, but only Consulates and Town Halls.
Assuming with latest changes no chance with minor issue?
The only potential chance is through the Courts. We talked about it here:
ua-cam.com/video/cBWNY32_Z3s/v-deo.htmlsi=jb1rhkCBTV2QWOMt
Please reach us for a better detailed analysis of your case and your chances:
mbersanilaw.com/contatti
Sincerely
The Team-
Are you going to post an update with the recent developments?
Good morning, yes - we will post a detailed new video soon.
Sincerely,
The Team-
Previouly, if a Italian born ancestor gave birth of a minor in the US who naturaluzed during their minor, would not qualify. My great grandparents from Italy never naturaluzed, thus my grandmother was born of Italian decent. Then San Guinius is present in my case.
Correct?
Please reach us through the contact form for a more detailed and well-oriented consultation on your case :
mbersanilaw.com/contatti
Sincerely,
The Team-
Now that the law has gone into effect, how will the minor issue play out in the courts?
Can the minor issue be contested in all courts excluding Rome?
Good morning, we will post a detailed new video soon about that, so keep following us for updates.
Sincerely,
The Team-
Whst is the age considerd minor. My mother was 17 when grand father naturalized. I have all my documents I am in the process getting them apostilled and then was planning on coming to Sicily
Good morning, it depends on the period we are considering - in the past, adult age was 21yo.
@@lawfirmbersani My mother was born in 1926. My father was born in catania But naturalized before I was born. My mother's parents were both born in Santa Margherita de Belice Agrigento. I am as close to an Italian citizen as one can get. I can see them maybe cutting off third and fourth generations but first generation the bureaucracy is mine baffling
Please reach us through the contact form for a more detailed and well-oriented consultation on your case :
mbersanilaw.com/contatti
Sincerely,
The Team-
To my understanding, it was 21 if it was before 1975, 18 if it was after 1975
Unless the child was emancipated, married, not living with the biological parents.
These cases are making me feel hopeful! I’m going to reach out to you this weekend. I have questions and would love to know how you might be able to help me. Thank you for your fantastic videos!
Thank you, and looking forward to assist you.
Please reach us through the contact form for a more detailed and well-oriented consultation on your case :
mbersanilaw.com/contatti
Sincerely,
The Team-
I have a question- my grandfather and father migrated from Sicily in 1960 and my father became a US citizen in 1967. I was born in 1986 in the USA. Would I be considered a ‘minor case’? My mother was also born in Sicily Palermo, she naturalized in 1987 however, I wasn’t close to my mother and I don’t have her birth certificate or anything.. Both my parents are on my American birth certificate
Please reach us through the contact form for a more detailed and well-oriented consultation on your case :
mbersanilaw.com/contatti
Sincerely,
The Team-
@@Behemoth66 Your lineage would be cut off on your father's side because he naturalized before you were born. You would have to go through your mother considering she was still an Italian citizen when you were born. Your line Should be much easier considering your next generation. Your situation is very interesting because You were born an American citizen so you wouldn't have been naturalized As a minor with your mother. The question now becomes did you lose your eligibility because she gave up hers when you were a minor.
@@SALFXEFthat’s an interesting question! Does the ancestor’s naturalization negate their child’s right to citizenship if they were already U.S. citizens from birth? I’m trying to do the research for my wife’s eligibility-her mother was born a US citizen in Italy in 1946 and grandmother naturalized when the mother was 3. Father was an Italian-American GI. If mother’s naturalization was independent from the child’s acquisition of U.S. citizenship at birth, does it still affect their right to citizenship afterwards? It actually resembles the #2 case Bersani refers to in the video.