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Denaturalization

Miami Denaturalization Attorneys

We Fight to Protect Your Rights

You are a proud naturalized American citizen and you love this country with all your heart. It is your home and you are living the American dream. Then one day, you are arrested or receive a letter from the U.S. Department of Justice notifying you of their intent take away your U.S. citizenship. It sinks in and questions begin to swirl in your mind: Why is this happening if you have not broken any laws since becoming a citizen? Will you go to prison? Will you be deported?

In June 2018, the Trump administration announced it would launch a denaturalization task force, dedicated to targeting naturalized citizens that were:

  • Accused of providing false information on their naturalization application
  • Convicted of crimes before they were granted citizenship

The consequences may include incarceration, being placed in removal proceedings, deportation, permanent bars to immigration status, and members of your family could lose citizenship if their citizenship was based on your citizenship status.

Contact Hubbs Law Firm at (305) 570-4802 for a free consultation with our Miami denaturalization defense attorneys.

Grounds for Denaturalization

Denaturalization can either be based on illegal procurement of citizenship or concealment of a material fact or willful misrepresentation.

Illegal procurement of citizenship means that the individual gained citizenship through fraud and is a federal criminal charge

Concealment of a material fact or willful misrepresentation means that you willfully concealed or misrepresented facts on prior immigration applications. Examples of this include but are not limited to failing to disclose prior aliases, criminal charges, orders of removal, and prior petitions to USCIS. The motive behind failing to disclose this information generally is because the information would hurt the applicant’s chances of obtaining a visa, green card, or citizenship.

Other more uncommon grounds for denaturalization include failure to testify at a congressional hearing, membership in subversive groups, such as the Nazi Party or Al Qaeda, or a dishonorable discharge from the military.

Process for Denaturalization

Denaturalization can either be a civil or criminal process depending on the nature of the government’s allegations. The civil process involves the U.S. government filing a complaint in Federal District Court. The individual, or his or her attorney, then has 60 days to file a response to the complaint. The government has a high burden in proving denaturalization. The law requires the government to prove its claims of denaturalization by clear, convincing, and unequivocal evidence.

Denaturalization can also result in a federal criminal charge if it involves a false claim to citizenship or fraud in obtaining citizenship. Criminal charges must be proven in every criminal case beyond and to the exclusion of every reasonable doubt. A false claim to citizenship is one of the most serious immigration violations, as it imposes a mandatory permanent bar on entering the United States and there are no available waivers.

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Attorneys E.J. & Erika Hubbs

As professional Miami criminal defense attorneys, we take every case personally give every client the deliberate care it deserves. Our clients become part of our family and we fight relentlessly for their rights. Read more about us to find out how we can help you.

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Client Testimonials

  • Mr. Hubbs’ consistency throughout our case had us feeling at ease

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  • "Erika, por mucho, es la mejor abogada de inmigración, me ayudó cuando nadie más lo haría y gracias a todo su trabajo, pude resolver mi asunto de inmigración con la nota personal que te trata como a una familia y la recomi"
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