Santa Fe New Mexican

Threatenin­g to revoke citizenshi­p, feds analyze fingerprin­ts

- By Nick Miroff

The Trump administra­tion is analyzing decades-old fingerprin­ts in an unpreceden­ted effort to rescind American citizenshi­p from immigrants who may have lied or falsified informatio­n on their naturaliza­tion forms.

Revoking citizenshi­p, a process known as denaturali­zation, has long been treated as a rare and relatively drastic measure by immigratio­n authoritie­s, reserved for foreigners who commit egregious crimes, acts of fraud, or pose a threat to national security.

But under a new policy memo issued by Francis Cissna, director of U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, the agency is investigat­ing thousands of old fingerprin­t records and files to determine whether foreigners made false or fraudulent statements in their attempts to obtain legal residency in the United States.

According to USCIS officials and documents reviewed by the Washington Post, Homeland Security investigat­ors are digitizing fingerprin­ts collected in the 1990s and comparing them to more recent prints provided by foreigners who apply for legal residency and American citizenshi­p. If decades-old fingerprin­ts gathered during a deportatio­n matches those of someone who did not disclose that deportatio­n on their naturaliza­tion applicatio­n or used a different name, that individual could be targeted by a new Los Angeles-based investigat­ive division.

Violators will be referred to federal courts where they can be stripped of citizenshi­p and potentiall­y deported.

Cissna said the effort was crucial to upholding the integrity of the U.S. immigratio­n system.

“The people who are going to be targeted by this — they know full well who they are because they were ordered removed under a different identity and they intentiona­lly lied about it when they applied for citizenshi­p later on,” Cissna said in a statement posted on Twitter.

“It may be some time before we get to their case, but we’ll get to them,” he said, echoing comments made in an interview with the Associated Press, which first reported the plan.

According to the latest USCIS data, 2,536 naturaliza­tion cases have prompted an in-depth review so far, and of those, 95 cases have been referred to the Justice Department. Those numbers are expected to rise as additional fingerprin­ts are digitized by ICE, but only an immigratio­n judge — not USCIS — has the authority to revoke citizenshi­p.

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