The Trump administration has officially escalated its immigration crackdown to unprecedented heights, launching the largest-ever coordinated legal campaign to strip foreign-born Americans of their U.S. citizenship. In a massive departure from decades of American legal precedent, the Department of Justice announced on Monday that it is actively seeking to denaturalize 17 U.S. citizens, signaling a major structural expansion of the administration’s historic deportation blitz.
Dismantling Decades of Legal Precedent
Denaturalization, the legal process of revoking an individual’s U.S. citizenship, has historically been one of the most rarely used powers in federal law. Between 1990 and 2017, the Justice Department filed an average of just 11 denaturalization complaints per year, viewing the stripping of citizenship as an extreme, last-resort measure. The process requires federal officials to undergo lengthy, complex court proceedings to convince a federal judge that an individual committed deliberate fraud during their original naturalization process.
However, since returning to the White House, the Trump administration has aggressively moved to systematically dismantle these protections. In 2025, the Justice Department quietly broadened the categories of naturalized citizens prioritized for denaturalization. Following a wave of a dozen cases last month, Monday’s filing against 17 citizens represents an unprecedented application of federal power, turning a once-rare legal mechanism into a standardized tool for immigration enforcement.

Targeting Violent Crimes, Fraud, and Visas
The federal complaints, filed in courts across the nation, argue that the targeted individuals concealed past criminal activity or lacked the mandatory “good moral character” required during their original immigration proceedings. The 17 individuals targeted in this wave span a wide geographical and demographic spectrum:
Child Sex Offenses: The list includes a Haitian immigrant, a man from the former Yugoslavia, an immigrant from Mexico, a former Catholic priest from Colombia, and a Filipino-born man, all convicted of or accused of serious child sex crimes or possessing explicit images of minors.
The administration is targeting an Indian immigrant accused of filing fraudulent H-1B visa petitions, a Jamaican-born man convicted of wire fraud, and a Cuban-born woman accused of defrauding a tribal casino. The targets include the daughter of a Colombian drug trafficker accused of money laundering, alongside several individuals accused of utilizing false identities to secure entry.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche declared “zero tolerance” for immigration fraud, labeling the individuals “criminal aliens” who lied about their pasts. Supporting the blitz, Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin stated, “American citizenship is a privilege, and it must be earned honestly. If you come here, break our laws, and lie… you forfeit that privilege.”
If the government wins these federal lawsuits, the individuals will immediately lose all legal benefits of American citizenship, revert to permanent resident status, and face swift deportation.
Creating Two Classes of Citizens
The Trump administration’s aggressive expansion of denaturalization is a terrifying and un-American overreach that turns naturalized citizens into second-class Americans. By transforming a rare legal tool meant for extreme national security threats into a routine deportation weapon, the White House is sending a chilling message to every single foreign-born American: your citizenship is not permanent; it is a temporary privilege that can be revoked by the state at any time. The individuals listed in this specific complaint, especially the sexual predators and child abusers, are detestable criminals who deserve to spend the rest of their lives behind bars. But they should be punished through the American prison system like any other citizen.
Using their horrific crimes as a public relations shield to normalize the stripping of citizenship is a calculated, deeply manipulative political move.
Once you give the government the infrastructure to routinely strip citizenship from “bad” people, it is only a matter of time before that same infrastructure is weaponized against political dissidents, peaceful protesters, or anyone the administration deems undesirable.
By allowing the DOJ to dig through decades-old paperwork to find minor inconsistencies or subjective lapses in “good moral character,” the administration is undermining the very foundation of constitutional equality. A system where one group of Americans has permanent rights and another group can have their passports canceled by a politician is not a democracy; it is an autocracy in the making.



