DOJ ramps up effort to strip US citizenship from naturalized Americans

President Donald Trump’s administration is preparing to file hundreds of cases this year to strip foreign-born Americans of their citizenship in a bid to surpass the number of cases filed in the past two decades combined.

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Trump, 79, has vowed to make denaturalization a priority, with the Department of Justice compiling a list of 385 foreign-born Americans it wants to target for denaturalization and pressuring attorneys to accept transfers from other departments to work on the cases.

Over a two-month period this year, the Department of Justice filed 29 cases accusing naturalized U.S. citizens of fraudulently obtaining U.S. citizenship, CNN reported.

The administration plans to file at least 250 denaturalization cases by October, compared to 166 cases filed between 2008 and June of this year.

Cases are also being referred to U.S. attorney offices nationwide, which could result in “several hundred more” cases, a senior DOJ official told CNN.

Federal law gives the government the authority to revoke citizenship of individuals who make false statements relevant to the naturalization process, or if the personal illegally received citizenship for which they weren’t eligible.

The cases are either civil or criminal depending on the circumstances, and previous administrations have tended to focus on defendants accused of war crimes and terrorism.

So far, the Trump administration has targeted people accused of committing fraud, sexual abuse of a minor, and terrorism-related activities—similar to the types of cases pursued by prior administrations.

The cases are intensive and time-consuming, and DOJ lawyers have traditionally focused on more clear-cut cases involving people found guilty of major crimes.

Story by Janna Brancolini