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India-born CEO to lose US citizenship over H-1B visa fraud

Neeraj Sharma, an India-born CEO convicted of H-1B visa fraud, is among 17 naturalised Americans who are set to lose their citizenship as the Trump administration launches the largest denaturalisation drive in recent US history.
9 June 2026 by
India-born CEO to lose US citizenship over H-1B visa fraud
TCO News Admin
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An India-born CEO is among 17 naturalised Americans facing the loss of their US citizenship as the Trump administration launches what officials describe as the among the largest denaturalisation efforts in American history. The campaign targets foreign-born US citizens accused of obtaining naturalisation through fraud, concealment or misrepresentation, as well as those convicted of violent and sexual crimes.

The US Department of Justice announced on Monday (June 8) that it had filed denaturalisation actions against 17 naturalised citizens accused of obtaining citizenship through fraud, concealment or misrepresentation. According to the department, the group includes individuals accused or convicted of offences ranging from child sexual abuse and drug trafficking to wire fraud and immigration fraud.

Among those named is Neeraj Sharma, a 50-year-old Indian-born businessman who owned and served as CEO of New Jersey-based staffing company Magnavision LLC. According to the Justice Department, Sharma signed and filed 11 fraudulent H-1B visa petitions that falsely claimed foreign workers would be employed by a major global financial institution. The petitions contained forged executive signatures and fabricated supporting documents.

The department further alleges that when Sharma applied for US citizenship in 2017, he falsely stated under oath that he had never committed an offence for which he had not been arrested, never provided false information to U.S. government officials and never lied to obtain immigration benefits. He subsequently became a US citizen in December 2017.

Sharma was later convicted of visa fraud relating to conduct that allegedly took place between 2015 and 2017. The Justice Department is now seeking to revoke his citizenship, arguing that he concealed unlawful acts and obtained naturalisation through material misrepresentations.

Alongside Sharma, the US Justice Department is seeking to denaturalise 16 other individuals convicted for violent or serious crimes, including sex offences against children. Others were convicted of fraud crimes or accused of committing immigration fraud.

Those slated to lose their US citizenships include a Haitian immigrant who allegedly sexually abused his daughter; a man from the former Yugoslavia convicted of sexually abusing a child under the age of 15, an immigrant from Mexico convicted of receiving sexually explicit images of minors, a former Catholic priest born in Colombia accused of child sex abuse, and a Filipino-born man who pleaded guilty to a child sex crime, reported the US-based outlet, CBS News.

The daughter of a Colombian drug trafficker accused of money laundering; a man born in Jamaica convicted of wire fraud, and a Cuban-born woman accused of defrauding a tribal casino were also among those whose citizenship is being revoked.

NEERAJ SHARMA'S PROCEEDINGS PART OF BROADER DENATURALISATION PUSH IN THE US

The action against Sharma and the 16 others forms part of a broader Trump administration campaign to dramatically increase the use of denaturalisation proceedings.

Under the Immigration and Nationality Act, the US government has the power to revoke the citizenship of naturalised Americans if it can prove they were never legally entitled to obtain it.

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India-born CEO to lose US citizenship over H-1B visa fraud
TCO News Admin 9 June 2026
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