Indian-origin man loses US citizenship for fraud

Wednesday 17th January 2018 05:42 EST
 
 

New York: A naturalised American from India has been stripped of his US citizenship, the first case under a government initiative designed to clamp down on fraudulent immigration, widened under the Trump administration. Baljinder Singh, 43, from Carteret, New Jersey, became a naturalised citizen in 2006 after marrying his American wife. But he arrived in the US in 1991, flying into San Francisco without travel documents or proof of identity, giving his name as Davinder Singh, the justice department said.

He dodged a subsequent court hearing and was ordered to be deported in January 1992. A month later he filed for asylum under the name Baljinder Singh, which he then abandoned after getting married. The department of justice, which moved a petition in this regard before a US court last September, said that Singh in his citizenship application concealed prior orders of exclusion and his deportation under different identities.

Last week, a federal judge in New Jersey revoked his naturalisation, reverting him back to lawful permanent resident, which means that he can be subject to removal proceedings. “I hope this case, and those to follow, send a loud and message that attempting to fraudulently obtain US citizenship will not be tolerated,” said US Citizenship and Immigration Services director Francis Cissna, a Trump administration appointee. The justice department said it was the first denaturalisation under Operation Janus, a department of homeland security initiative against fraudulent immigration.

Last September the initiative identified 315,000 cases where fingerprint data was missing, raising concerns that at least some may have tried to circumvent criminal record and other background checks in the naturalisation process. The USCIS has plans to refer 1,600 other cases for prosecution. The government filed the complaint against Singh last September, along with two other cases against Pakistan-born naturalised citizens in Connecticut and Florida. President Trump has stepped up a broader crackdown on illegal immigration since taking office in January 2017.


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