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ytide
Joined: 26 Jul 2009
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Posted: Fri Aug 12, 2011 6:45 pm Post subject: Getting your Apostille in person, Washington DC |
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It is easy and quick to get a U.S. federal apostille on your FBI criminal background check, if you do it in person in Washington DC. Just walk-in, and walk-out. (Of course, you have to be physically in Washington DC for this).
I will write a bit about my experience doing this, for the benefit of those that follow. Note that I actually did this in this past week; the below is not based on what I've read/heard, but is from personal experience.
The whole process has the feel of going to the DMV. I will describe it below, step-by-step, and make a few observations -- which I hope are of interest to somebody, somewhere, sometime (besides myself ) (You can read a cringingly-dry account of the process here).
How to Easily Get an Apostille In-Person, Washington DC
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Assemble Documents
1.) Assemble the following: a.) CBC(s) with the seal of an FBI official (request when sending for CBC); b.) check or money-order for $8 per CBC; c.) a filled-out apostille request form (you must fill this in and hand it in with your docs -- they also have copies at the office you can fill out).
Getting There (to the Authentication [Apostille] Office, 518 23rd Street NW, Washington DC)
[Preliminary Note: Seemingly the only place to do this in person is at the Authentications Office in Washington, DC. The below instructions are predicated on you being in, or being able to get to, the Washington DC Metro area:]
2.) Use the Metro system to ride to "Foggy Bottom" station. Get off here and exit. [WMATA.com will easily direct you on how to get there, regarding parking at a suburban station from which you can ride in, and regarding costs -- Fare from a suburban station is max $5.25 for a one-way rush-hour trip paid in cash. Make sure to not re-enter the Metro system before 9:30 AM to save a few dollars. Parking at a suburban station is under $5/day].
3.) After exiting station, stay on the side of the street from which you exit [There is only one exit from this station]. Turn right immediately after getting out of station, walk three blocks. You are walking through part of George Washington University campus. Three blocks south of the station, you're at Virginia Avenue. Cross Virginia Avenue, and you will see a sign saying "Columbia Plaza" on the right. Enter this plaza.
4.) Inside Columbia Plaza is a large open area with stone picnic tables and benches, lined by stationary stores, coffee shops, and the like. In one corner is the "Office of Authentications".
5.) Get there at 7.30 AM. (In theory, they are open till 11 AM. The way I observed the process working, I don't see how getting there are 10.30 AM would have gotten the job done). -- I got there at 7.30, and there was already a large crowd. The 30 or so seats inside were filled, with a dozen or two standing or sitting on the picnic tables outside.
Procedure Once "In"
6.) Take a number from the little machine just inside the door. (There are two buttons: One says "1-4 documents", another "5-15" documents. 15 is the limit per person.) Note that the piece of paper you get with a number also has a time printed on it, but ignore this. They called my number much sooner than was printed.
7.) Hang around waiting. There is a screen above the service counter at the front that will display your number, eventually. Once your number is displayed, line up, hand in your documents (but not payment yet). Note: If you are #30 and they're only on #10, don't wander off. They call numbers in bursts when they are ready, requiring people to line up.
8.) Once they have your documents, wait again. Your document(s) are being sent back to someone who will check that it is real. This person produces the apostille. This time, be sure to stay inside the building, because when your documents are ready, the clerk just shouts your number; it is not displayed on any screen.
9.) Within a half hour of handing in my documents, they called my number. My apostille was ready. I handed in payment. I was finished. I left.
Duration of Process
7.35 AM: Took my number.
8.30 AM: My number was called. Handed in my documents.
9.00 AM: I was out the door, with apostilled CBC in hand.
Observations
It was a rather strange mix of people that gathered at this place, to get document authentications. I was able to identify two principal groups, who together formed close to half of the "customers" that morning, by my estimation:
-- Group 1.) English teachers. A few girls and women were going to one or another of the Arab oil-statelets to teach, and of course there were a couple of us going to old Dae-Han-Min-Gook.
-- Group 2.) Apostille-getting couriers. These guys (and they were all guys, males) must work on behalf of the paid services that will expedite the mail-away process for you, which you can find online. At least, this is my conjecture based on the way they looked and behaved. Many of the people who I suspect were "professionals" in the field of getting apostilles had a "bike-messenger" vibe about them, (indeed, a couple of them rode bikes). They seemed at-home there, and used to the process. Most of the rest of us were a little intimidated, as any normal person is when dealing with Leviathan in a process with which we are unfamiliar. These couriers seemed neither unfamiliar nor intimidated. They were very knowledgeable about the whole thing, chatting with the rest of us standing outside about the database that the State Dept drones behind the scenes were using to check that our documents were real.
A third group were nondescript middle-aged men in business attire. I could not begin to guess why they were getting apostilles, and they probably had various and sundry reasons.
A fourth possible group, not that I could identify anyone doing this, would have been persons adopting foreign children. Apostilles are for dealing with foreign governments, so it makes sense. I only realized that this group would need apostilles upon seeing a large framed picture celebrating "Foreign Adoptions" on the wall of this drab, DMV-esque office.
One thing I couldn't quite understand, at first, was why a not-insignificant share of the customers looked only a-cut-above homeless. One middle-aged black guy in-particular looked a very, very thin cut above homeless. I couldn't understand why they were there (surely they are not going abroad or adopting), unless they were also couriers, which is probably what they were. The guy that looked barely-above-homeless was one of the lot of us that seemed mostly highly at-ease with the process, like it was his day job. It may have been. He joked with a few others in that familiar manner used by people who see each other every day.
"Conclusion"
Getting an apostille quickly is more-or-less simple, in-person -- If you're lucky enough to live close by. If you're within driving distance of Washington, do it. It will save you headache and time, and is an excuse to travel to Washington. Park at an outlying metro station and ride in, follow the simple instructions above, and you're done. I even feel guilty about how easy this was for me, considering that others are waiting weeks after mailing it in . |
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DLat
Joined: 05 Apr 2011
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Posted: Sat Aug 13, 2011 4:17 am Post subject: |
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Thanks for the detailed explanation of how to do this for those of us fortunate to live near Washington. |
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ForeverWanderlust
Joined: 27 Jun 2011
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Posted: Sat Aug 13, 2011 5:14 am Post subject: |
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Check with your State Secretary FIRST.
Alot of states will apostille the FBI CBC for you.
I know NC does it for a fact. |
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isitts
Joined: 25 Dec 2008 Location: Korea
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Posted: Sat Aug 13, 2011 11:14 am Post subject: Re: Getting your Apostille in person, Washington DC |
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Thanks much! Be doing this next week. |
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isitts
Joined: 25 Dec 2008 Location: Korea
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Posted: Wed Aug 17, 2011 9:36 am Post subject: Re: Getting your Apostille in person, Washington DC |
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ytide wrote: |
Assemble Documents
1.) Assemble the following: a.) CBC(s) with the seal of an FBI official (request when sending for CBC); b.) check or money-order for $8 per CBC; c.) a filled-out |
You can pay with credit card for walk-ins. Just did it today. You'll need your drivers license (or photo on your bank card works, too).
From the website:
"Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and American Express are accepted for walk-in service only."
Though, maybe no one cares. This got kicked to the second page pretty quickly. |
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ytide
Joined: 26 Jul 2009
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Posted: Tue Aug 23, 2011 6:05 pm Post subject: Re: Getting your Apostille in person, Washington DC |
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isitts wrote: |
ytide wrote: |
Assemble Documents
1.) Assemble the following: a.) CBC(s) with the seal of an FBI official (request when sending for CBC); b.) check or money-order for $8 per CBC; c.) a filled-out |
You can pay with credit card for walk-ins. Just did it today. You'll need your drivers license (or photo on your bank card works, too).
From the website:
"Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and American Express are accepted for walk-in service only." |
Thanks, isitts. I'm glad to hear you also had no problems with this.
I should also note that Isitts' processing-time was even faster than mine. From another thread:
isitts wrote: |
I showed up [at the Office of Authentications in Washington] at 7:00. Got out at 8:40. |
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ytide
Joined: 26 Jul 2009
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Posted: Sat Sep 03, 2011 4:17 pm Post subject: |
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In another thread, Gringo17 wondered if a family friend could do this for him in person.
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I just found out that I have a family friend that lives in the DC area who would be willing to help |
The answer is Yes! Remember, all the State Dept is checking is that the FBI federal official's signature and seal are real. They don't care if you are Zippy the Pinhead getting an apostille on Johnny B. Goode's document. (This is the principle behind the "professional apostilling services", as described above).
To repeat: One could get a State Dept apostille quickly and cheaply without going to Washington in-person, if one has a trusted confidant (close friend, family member..) in the Washington region. Process: 1.) Send the CBC to your confidant, 2.) They do the simple, neat and tidy process as outlined above, then 3.) that very morning they send the CBC with appended apostille back to you. Costs are minimal if using USPS; time involved is as rapid as the mail takes. There will be no wait in the State Dept mail-order backlog.
That a third-party can do this is confirmed by isitts:
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I saw people at the DOS [Department of State] getting the CBC apostilled for their friend. |
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Fillzer
Joined: 15 Sep 2011
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Posted: Thu Oct 06, 2011 6:10 am Post subject: |
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Do I need to get my CBC notarized first before bringing it in, and can this notarization be done in a state outside of DC (say, MD or VA)?
Also, can I bring a copy of my notarized diploma and get that apostllized as well at this office, or does that have to be done at the state department of my specific state?
Thanks for any input anyone can provide? |
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ytide
Joined: 26 Jul 2009
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Posted: Sat Oct 08, 2011 7:20 pm Post subject: |
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Fillzer wrote: |
Do I need to get my CBC notarized first before bringing it in, and can this notarization be done in a state outside of DC (say, MD or VA)? |
There is no need for notarization for the FBI CBC. All you need is the CBC paper with an FBI official's signature/seal on it.
One must include, in the envelope when mailing-in one's FBI CBC request, a note saying: "Please provide an FBI seal and signature from a Division Officer, for the purpose of obtaining a Federal Apostille."
The process of federal apostillization amounts to a State-Dept person authenticating that this federal seal/sig is real.
Fillzer wrote: |
Also, can I bring a copy of my notarized diploma and get that apostllized as well at this office, or does that have to be done at the state department of my specific state? |
Send the diploma cop(y)ies, once notarized, to your state secretary-of-state. (Google '[state name] apostille', find a .gov link, follow directions).
State-Dept only deals with federal stuff (i.e., in this case, federal-level criminal checks), which universities are not. |
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isitts
Joined: 25 Dec 2008 Location: Korea
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Posted: Wed Nov 02, 2011 9:00 pm Post subject: |
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bumping this in case it's helpful.
Is there any way this can be stickied? |
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katbrady
Joined: 11 Sep 2011 Location: USA
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Posted: Mon Nov 14, 2011 6:06 am Post subject: |
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Thanks for all the helpful info!
I went there myself today.
Arrived at 7:30 AM.
Left with my documents at 8:00 AM. |
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Tyshine
Joined: 04 Apr 2011
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Posted: Mon Nov 14, 2011 9:44 am Post subject: |
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katbrady wrote: |
Thanks for all the helpful info!
I went there myself today.
Arrived at 7:30 AM.
Left with my documents at 8:00 AM. |
Nice. Is there a FedEx nearby? |
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katbrady
Joined: 11 Sep 2011 Location: USA
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Posted: Mon Nov 14, 2011 9:50 am Post subject: |
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Tyshine wrote: |
katbrady wrote: |
Thanks for all the helpful info!
I went there myself today.
Arrived at 7:30 AM.
Left with my documents at 8:00 AM. |
Nice. Is there a FedEx nearby? |
A pleasant 15 minute walk! Googlemaps on my phone sure helped a lot |
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