The Sovereign

The view from the situation room

Justice Department Escalates Citizenship Revocations For Twelve Naturalized Americans #

Tuesday, 12 May 2026 · words

4K HDR professional photography. A stack of thick cardstock federal legal documents resting on a polished wooden podium. Natural overcast light through an unseen window, muted blue-grey colour palette. Shallow depth of field, restrained and clinical.
4K HDR professional photography. A stack of thick cardstock federal legal documents resting on a polished wooden podium. Natural overcast light through an unseen window, muted blue-grey colour palette. Shallow depth of field, restrained and clinical.

Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche stood behind a wooden Justice Department podium on Friday, gripping a stack of federal indictments printed on heavy cardstock. The agency systematically unsealed proceedings to revoke the naturalized citizenship of twelve foreign-born Americans, signaling a rapid expansion of internal border enforcement. The targeted individuals represent extreme institutional liabilities, including a Colombian-born Catholic priest convicted of sexually assaulting a minor, a Moroccan national with alleged al Qaeda affiliations, and a Somali immigrant who formally pleaded guilty to supporting the al Shabaab militant network.

Blanche confirmed the scale of the impending legal campaign against fraudulent naturalization, stating bluntly that "there are a lot of U.S. citizens who shouldn't be." He expanded on the administration's localized sovereign protection directive, warning that anyone "who intentionally concealed their criminal histories or misrepresented themselves during the naturalization process will face the fullest extent of the law."

Denaturalization functions as the ultimate macroeconomic friction applied to human capital. By liquidating the legal standing of high-risk biological operators, the state actively purges its internal liabilities and re-establishes the absolute primacy of its sovereign borders.