where would they send you? I'm sure part of the bureaucratic process for this is them asking "what is your other citizenship and can you prove it?" and if you can't they just don't process it. Not because they necessarily care about your personal status but that it would become a bigger hassle to deal with some person who is legal nowhere than to just forgo the $4000.
Is that actually adhered to? I know rendering someone stateless is a crime under international law but idk if states actually care.
where would they send you? I'm sure part of the bureaucratic process for this is them asking "what is your other citizenship and can you prove it?" and if you can't they just don't process it. Not because they necessarily care about your personal status but that it would become a bigger hassle to deal with some person who is legal nowhere than to just forgo the $4000.