Citizenship revocation cases are now a priority for the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ). The DOJ gave U.S. attorneys a wider discretion on pursuing citizenship revocation cases in court. The formal revocation of person’s U.S. citizenship as punishment for crimes is called denaturalization.
Denaturalization was heavily used during the 1940s and 1950s. Its’ use expanded during the last few presidential administrations. The process is used, primarily, when individuals fail to provide full details about their criminal history on their initial citizenship applications. Grounds for U.S. citizenship removal includes immigration fraud and being a member of a designated terrorist organization.
The focus on denaturalization is the latest method of the government’s growing immigration enforcement measures. The online memo also stated the DOJ will pursue denaturalization cases via civil litigation. This means individuals’ citizenship can be removed without criminal charges. Civil charges naturalized citizens can be convicted of include personal injury, contract, family law, and class action lawsuits could face denaturalization.
It’s unclear if children who acquired citizenship through their parents will lose it if their parent’s citizenship is revoked via the new guidelines. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) guidelines state citizen children that gained their status via their parents may lose it if their parent’s citizenship is revoked. There’s no clarification if civil charges mandate similar consequences.
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