It’s not a negative. It would be supported in Canada by some office showing up with paperwork.
Circumstantial evidence would be failure to file IRS tax forms each year as if she no longer had to, or failure to file for baby Ted’s CRBA or birth passport to verify his US citizen status.
“It’s not a negative. It would be supported in Canada by some office showing up with paperwork.”
It IS a negative. If you asked me to provide proof that I had never become a citizen of Canada, I’d be hard pressed to PROVE it. I’ve never been to Canada, but how could I prove it?
In the case of Cruz, his mother did go to Canada. What evidence could she give that would prove she did NOT do something there?
Do YOU have tax forms going back 40 years? Does the IRS keep individual returns that long? And would it prove anything? Depending on income, they might not have been required to file a return while living in Canada...not sure of the exact rules, but people don’t ALWAYS file returns that they should, if it involves a questionable situation.
If someone wants to accuse her of changing her citizenship, don’t THEY need to offer some evidence?