yes you can if u are wanted in anouther country they can arest you and deport you back to where you are wanted
Austin
Are you asking that if you are a citizen can you be deported if you commit fraud? Deportation means you are from another country, but if you arent from another country they can't deport you. Either way you get jail time for the fraud.
Yes the illegal would be deported and the U.S. citizen who entered into this fraud marriage fined and possibly jailed.
He was convicted of fraud
No, you cannot sponsor a deported spouse. This is considered deportation fraud and can result in fines and prison time.
Yes, he is an undocumented alien, therefore illegal. Once he is reported or apprehended in the commission of a crime (sometimes as simple as a traffic stop), he is likely to be deported.
If there is illegal entry- only on the basis of marriage to a U.S. citizen AND you are granted a waiver for the deportation. The waiver is not easy to obtain, and those that were deported merely for illegal presence have a better chance that those who were deported with criminal records. Moreover, if it is a serious crime such as robbery, rape, murder, fraud- then a waiver would be impossibly difficult to get.
NOAnother View: If the person who committed the fraud is a foreign citizen and a permanent resident of a their foreign country and the check was written by them while out of the US, the above answer would be true. But if the person who committed the fraud is a US resident and just happens to be travelling abroad, there is no bar to issuing a warrant for their arrest, which can be served on them when they return back to the US.
Individuals have no say in whether a non-citizen in the United States should be deported such decisions are made by the USCIS. Unless the person who has been granted permanent resident status commits a federal or state crime which constitutes a felony conviction he or she is not in danger of deportation.
He was convicted of fraud.
I am not a lawyer, and as such I am not entitled to give legal counsel, but if the marriage can be proven to be a sham, it can be dissolved and the alien can be deported. This is fairly rare, has happened in few cases, but the other party in such can be held liable for fraud.
No. If you are a a native-born or naturalized American citizen your citizenship cannot be removed from you - UNLESS - you used fraud in order to gain your American citizenship. In THAT case you could be deported to your country of origin.
Can they be deported? Sure, but probably not just for a misdemeanor, but if the person shows a trend towards accumulating misdemeanors, and/or if a falony is committed following misdemeanors, I don't think they would hesitate to seek a deportation order.