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I'm a citizen of Ukraine and I have a B1/B2 visa.

Since obtaining the visa in my passport #1 I have acquired an international passport #2 (it's legal in Ukraine to have two) in which my name is romanized slightly differently (Oleg G.. -> Oleh H...). I don't have any extra documents that would confirm a name change because technically I didn't change it.

Then I have acquired EU residence using my passport #2.

I wish to travel to the US using my passport #1. If I resided in Ukraine I'd have to travel to a different country through the land border where I would get an entry stamp. Then I'd get an exit stamp before boarding a plane to the US.

However, since I reside in EU, I would have to fly directly to the US. Thus my passport #1 won't have any evidence of travel through a 3rd country that is currently necessary to reach the US.

I would like to avoid the following situation:

  1. I show my passport #1 with visa
  2. Border control officer wondering how did I make it to the US
  3. I pull out my passport #2 with my name name spelled slightly differently.
  4. ??? Entry ban ???

What are the chances of border control officer getting curious about how did I teleport to the US? I'm traveling for business reasons.

Relaxed
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1 Answers1

24

If you mean the US CBP officer would find it abnormal that you don't have an exit stamp from wherever you are coming from, then the easy answer is: they won't:

  • Many countries don't stamp on exit (US included!).
  • Many countries don't stamp passports of residents.
  • Tons of people have multiple citizenships or passports or other forms of ID.
  • Many officers forget to stamp even when they should (and vice-versa).

Unless they become very suspicious for some reason and start splitting hairs, the chances they will notice (which would require them flipping through all the pages of the passport looking for an exit stamp from the same day and not finding one) are zero.

They know perfectly well where you are coming from: the airline will have sent all your data to them before you are even allowed to board, so they will have all the info. And they probably don't care much what your status is in wherever you are coming from. What they want to know is:

  • that you have a valid visa
  • that you are coming for a purpose that matches what that visa allows
  • that you have the means to support yourself during your stay
  • that you will leave at the end of your stay

They are interested in you having a return ticket (which, again, they will probably know about if you have both flights on the same ticket). They may ask about how you will enter the country you are going to at the end of your stay, though I'm really not sure this is something CBP officers ask for. Showing your residence permit should be enough for that. They may be puzzled by the different spellings, but they probably have seen worse.

jcaron
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