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REVOCATION INFORMATION

What is Revocation

The controlling statute for revocation of citizenship or denaturalization is the Immigration and Nationality Act ("INA") § 340 [8 U.S.C. 1451] (1994). A U.S. citizen may lose his/her citizenship either voluntarily (renouncing citizenship) or involuntarily.

In sum, the grounds for involuntarily losing one's naturalized U.S. citizenship include:

  • Lying to the USCIS during the naturalization process

  • Service in the native country's Armed Forces (if said country is at war or engaged in hostilities with the United States)

  • Serving in the native country's Armed Forces as an officer or a non-commissioned officer

  • Holding an elected or policy-level position in the native country

  • Conviction for an act of treason against the United States

  • Refusal to testify before Congress about one's subversive activities



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