What were to happen if my citizenship were denied?

Im a lawful permanent resident alien in the US for 11 years now and going through the stages of gaining citizenship. I moved here with my parents when i was 12 and really have no family or anything in my home country, Germany. A few month ago i was arrested on some drug charges, i.e. posession of marijuana and paraphenalia. If my citizenship gets denied as a result of this, what am i looking at? Can i be deported or just stay here and reapply in a few years after my record gets expunged? Ive never been in any kind of legal trouble before. I cant seem to find any info anywhere that lets me know exactly what to expect if this happens. Any help would be greatly appreciated!

Answer:
Provided you were not in possession of 30 or more grams, and that this is your one and only offense, you may still go ahead with the naturalization procedure now. If you were arrested for posession of more than 30 grams, you must wait.

The link below is for the Citizenship and Immigration Service page that deals with this.

Hope that helps
you need to consult with an immigration attorney
This totally requires the consultation from a pro in the field of immigration, good luck and may your citizenship be accepted.
Wow thats a tough one.

Well first of all crimes are never expunged? for immigration. Period.

Second are you in deportations proceednings right now?. What heppenned after arrest. How big was your sentence? In which state you got in trounbles?

If you crime was punishable for more then 1 years then you are in big trouble.
Hasta la vista baby,,,,,,,,,
Maybe - But if your application is denied and if you are no longer a legal resident, you are legally here. They could deport you. I'd check with an attorney - I'm not an attorney.

The problem is you are an adult and you screwed up big. You knew better. I highly doubt that this would be expunged from your record. Sorry, but why should they.

Hope things work out for you.
Well, you should have thought about that before you even remotely obtained drug paraphenalia. I would hope that, if your charges are of a misdemeanor nature, the fact that you are in the United States legally and that you are in the process of applying for citizenship would be a point in your favor. While I am strongly opposed to illegal aliens and would not want any kind of special favors for them whatsoever because they are ultimately not to be trusted for their lawbreaking, I would be inclined to extend the time before you could become a U.S. Citizen by tying it to the punishment for your offense. If, after your offense was expunged, you remained law-abiding, for say five more years, then I'd say you can stay. But only if you stay out of trouble. If you are looking at a serious drug charge -- high class felony, then you did the crime, do the time and deportation would be a good option. If you were an illegal alien, then there would be nothing for you, period, except deportation.

The immigration information post by website user , MyTend.com not guarantee correctness

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