The Justice Department announced Wednesday the creation of a new division within its immigration office designed to strip naturalized immigrants of their citizenship. This would provide the Trump Administration more power to broaden its ef
forts to remove immigrants from the U.S. This department will replace teams of immigration lawyers created to focus on cases that involve revoking the citizenship for those who have committed war crimes, human rights violations, acts of terrorism, and sex offenses.The Denaturalization Section “underscores the department’s commitment to bring justice to terrorists, war criminals, sex offenders and other fraudsters who illegally obtained naturalization,” Joseph H. Hunt, the head of the Justice Department’s civil division, said in a statement. “The Denaturalization Section will further the department’s efforts to pursue those who unlawfully obtained citizenship status and ensure that they are held accountable for their fraudulent conduct.”
The department has cited successful denaturalization cases as a defense for the formation which includes a naturalized citizen who had recruited for Al Qaeda in the United States and one who had sexually abused a 7-year-old family member. The new office will join the existing sections within the Civil Division’s Office of Immigration Litigation — the District Court Section and the Appellate Section.
Critics have argued that this is an attempt to further the administration’s agenda on deporting immigrants, pushing the narrative that naturalized citizens have fewer rights than those born in the United States. Some immigration lawyers worry that denaturalizations could be broadly used to strip citizenship. Cases have ramped up under the Trump administration with a 40 percent increase on new cases between 2017-2018.
The department has called the move a step in bringing justice “to terrorists, war criminals, sex offenders and other fraudsters.” It has yet to announce who will lead the new division,