I am also in similar situation that I am out of my home country for around 2 years. In the meanwhile, I have been to my home country for a visit of 3 weeks.
So, the PCC of my home country should also cover this 3 weeks period ? Like from birth till 2016 and then 3 weeks in 2017.
or the PCC should be from date of birth till last exit from home country ?
I am also in similar situation that I am out of my home country for around 2 years. In the meanwhile, I have been to my home country for a visit of 3 weeks.
So, the PCC of my home country should also cover this 3 weeks period ? Like from birth till 2016 and then 3 weeks in 2017.
or the PCC should be from date of birth till last exit from home country ?
You can just google "fingerprinting near me" and see what options you have. I have seen other people do ink-rolled fingerprinting on their own on a FD-258 sheet too but I would suggest getting it done at the local sheriff/county office. It is even better if you can do digital fingerprints. Make at least 3 copies. Goodluck.
You can just google "fingerprinting near me" and see what options you have. I have seen other people do ink-rolled fingerprinting on their own on a FD-258 sheet too but I would suggest getting it done at the local sheriff/county office. It is even better if you can do digital fingerprints. Make at least 3 copies. Goodluck.
You can send just 1 copy too if you want. Sending more copies increases the chances of having the fingerprints accepted. IdHSC website suggests sending multiple copies. Some people in the forum would tell that you can send upto 5 sets but I do not know where they quoted this information from.
Imagine waiting for 3-3.5 months for FBI PCC which will most likely be the only document you need to complete your e-APR and then when they finally start processing your application, your fingerprints get rejected due to illegibility. That will be an unpleasant situation.
I sent just 1 set of digital fingerprint done at a local sheriff's office though as I was very new to the entire process and still learning. Luckily it got accepted. I feel electronic/digital fingerprints are of better quality than ink-rolled.