@kenwhite.bsky.social I say this as an immigrant who had to speed run immigration law: mostly fraud, like marriage fraud, or lying on your application, abandoning it (by leaving the country for a long time), or by having committed aggravated felonies
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Adrianna Tan (skinnylatte@hachyderm.io)'s status on Monday, 10-Mar-2025 10:03:22 JST Adrianna Tan
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Adrianna Tan (skinnylatte@hachyderm.io)'s status on Monday, 10-Mar-2025 10:12:14 JST Adrianna Tan
@kenwhite.bsky.social process might be triggered by an action (a report of marriage fraud, entering the country and being found that your recent marriage was fraudulent, being sentenced for a felony); but in this case going out to cast a wide net for people to revoke, feels like the wrong direction from how it’s usually done. A great guy to talk to about this is Jim Hacking the immigration attorney.
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Adrianna Tan (skinnylatte@hachyderm.io)'s status on Monday, 10-Mar-2025 10:39:12 JST Adrianna Tan
@jonhendry @kenwhite.bsky.social indeed there is due process for rescinding but none for revoking. It’s important to see which one this falls under. They can cancel and revoke the current green card without due process.
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Jonathan Hendry (jonhendry@iosdev.space)'s status on Monday, 10-Mar-2025 10:39:14 JST Jonathan Hendry
@skinnylatte @kenwhite.bsky.social
I think he's asking whether the administration can revoke it or if due process is involved. My understanding is that an immigration court can revoke it but government agencies can't do it by fiat.
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