The Charles Harvey, Jr. Foundation is a non-profit educational organization. We provide information and a simplified application process to members of the United States Armed Forces and their spouses, free of charge, who are applying for U.S. Citizenship.


Are you a Member of our US Military Services, and do you want to become a US Citizen? sticky icon

The Challenge is the complexity and time it takes to fill out the number of forms.
The solution is a web based application www.turboimmigration.com/user/register.

In less than sixty minutes you can have:
A personalized cover letter and checklist.
Finish all required forms (N400, G325b, N648, AR11)
A completed application ready to print and sign to submit to your chain of command.
Congratulations your application is complete at this point.

Frequently asked questions
Who qualifies for our service?
All Active Duty Military Personnel

How long does it take?
Old method: Two days according to OMB.
Our method: Under one hour.
(both still take up to six months for USCIS to process your application)

Cost?
$0 for Active Duty Military Personnel. Their is no has no fees or charge of any kind for Active Duty Military Personnel.
This is service is brought to you by the donors of the Charles Harvey, Jr. foundation and a gift from TurboImmigration.com,

Where do I follow up?
Your chain of command.

Pentagon to Host Special All-Military Naturalization Ceremony

American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, April 11, 2008 – Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon England will join U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Director Emilio Gonzalez and deliver the keynote address at a special military naturalization ceremony April 14, at the Pentagon.
Twenty-five service members from 14 countries are scheduled to take the Oath of Allegiance and become citizens of the United States during a rare all-military naturalization ceremony slated to begin at 1 p.m.

Over 23,000 from Latin American and Caribbean serving in US Armed Forces

CaribWorldNews, NEW YORK, NY, Tues. May 27, 2008: Close to 40 percent
of the foreign-born soldiers in active duty in the U.S. military are
from Latin America and the Caribbean.

Statistics on `Immigrants in the US Armed Forces,` compiled by the
Migration Policy Institute, show that foreign-born military personnel
from Latin America and the Caribbean constituted 38.7 percent or
23,926 of all the foreign born in the U.S. armed forces.

Of that number, 3,064 are from Jamaica while 1,372 are from the
Dominican Republic.

Immigration bill offers a military path to US dream

By Bryan Bender, Globe Staff | June 16, 2007

WASHINGTON -- A little-noticed provision in the proposed immigration bill would grant instant legal status and ultimately full citizenship to illegal immigrants if they enlist in the US military, an idea the Pentagon and military analysts say would boost the Pentagon's flagging efforts to find and recruit qualified soldiers.

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