Can someones citizenship be revoked ?
Answer:
Under certain circumstances, yes, such as if they were naturalized under fraudulent information. A guy was recently stripped of citizenship after drug charges, but they were major and he was bad enough his own country refused to take him back.
It isn't common.
All libtards should be revoked.
All the time, yes. One good reason would be to be convicted of a crime. This question is under immigration.
Yes, its call Expatriated...See article below
Yes
REVOCATION OF CITIZENSHIP
The Immigration and Naturalization Service has authority to institute either administrative or judicial proceedings to denaturalize citizens whose criminal convictions disqualified them from citizenship as a matter of law. Whether the proceedings are administrative or judicial, the INS must establish the allegations in its complaint by clear, unequivocal, and convincing evidence.
Although proceedings for denaturalization have traditionally been judicial in character, administrative denaturalization is also permissible in some circumstances. We understand that, if the INS institutes denaturalization proceedings with regard to any of the naturalization cases approved between September 1995 and September 1996 that are currently the subject of a congressional investigation, those proceedings will ordinarily be administrative.
yes. if you've committed a crime is one reason
Pursuant to the 14th Amendment to the Constitution and, in Afroyim v. Rusk (1967) and Vance v. Terrazas (1980), Congress is prevented from revoking a person’s U.S. citizenship, who was born in the United States, without evidence of his or her intent to give up said citizenship. Only a person giving up their citizenship voluntarily or a naturalized citizen who has committed a violation of the terms of their naturalized citizenship can have their citizenship revoked.
yes
The immigration information post by website user , MyTend.com not guarantee correctness
