gigimarie6 wrote:Do I really need to file a lawsuit against my dead ancestor to do that? That sounds so ridiculous, and kind of disrespectful. But if thats what it takes....
Why he said this is beyond me and simply not true. When you need to correct a document you file against the department that issued the original document. I had to do
this to fix numerous errors.
I don't think any court or department in the US would have jurisdiction to change your GGF's birth records as they are from Italy. I'm also pretty sure that you can't change information on naturalization records.
Here's what I'd do:
I'd suggest obtaining his marriage record and see if his birthdate is listed. You could also try contacting the church where his birth was recorded and see if they can send you a copy of that. There could have been an error in transcribing the date or your GGF just didn't know his correct date of birth. Another possibility is that he was born on the 18th but the birth wasn't recorded until the 21st.
Once you have these in hand, compare all of the dates. You'll then want to go back to his comune and request a letter that no one with his name was born in that comune between the birthdate listed on his birth certificate and the one on the naturalization forms.
Then contact the court where he filed his Declaration of Intent and ask for a letter that no one with the same name and dates of birth listed above filed in that time period. Do the same at NARA and USCIS.
It's a total pain but you need as much information as you can get your hands on to build a case.
Then you'll file in court asking that the judge find that you're GGF on his birth certificate and your GGF on the naturalization records are one and the same. If you're successful, that should satisfy the consulates request.