This is the accessible text file for GAO report number GAO-03-798 
entitled 'Border Security: New Policies and Procedures Needed to Fill 
Gaps in the Visa Revocation Process' which was released on June 18, 
2003.

This text file was formatted by the U.S. General Accounting Office 
(GAO) to be accessible to users with visual impairments, as part of a 
longer term project to improve GAO products' accessibility. Every 
attempt has been made to maintain the structural and data integrity of 
the original printed product. Accessibility features, such as text 
descriptions of tables, consecutively numbered footnotes placed at the 
end of the file, and the text of agency comment letters, are provided 
but may not exactly duplicate the presentation or format of the printed 
version. The portable document format (PDF) file is an exact electronic 
replica of the printed version. We welcome your feedback. Please E-mail 
your comments regarding the contents or accessibility features of this 
document to Webmaster@gao.gov.

This is a work of the U.S. government and is not subject to copyright 
protection in the United States. It may be reproduced and distributed 
in its entirety without further permission from GAO. Because this work 
may contain copyrighted images or other material, permission from the 
copyright holder may be necessary if you wish to reproduce this 
material separately.

Report to Congressional Requesters:

June 2003:

Border Security:

New Policies and Procedures Are Needed to Fill Gaps in the Visa 
Revocation Process:

GAO-03-798:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-03-798, a report to the Subcommittee on National 
Security, Emerging Threats, and International Relations, House 
Committee on Government Reform, and the Senate Committee on 
Finance

Why GAO Did This Study:

The National Strategy for Homeland Security calls for preventing the 
entry of foreign terrorists into our country and using all legal means 
to identify; halt; and, where appropriate, prosecute or bring 
immigration or other civil charges against terrorists in the United 
States. GAO reported in October 2002 that the Department of State had 
revoked visas of certain persons after it learned they might be 
suspected terrorists, raising concerns that some of these individuals 
may have entered the United States before or after State’s action. 
Congressional requesters asked GAO to (1) identify the policies and 
procedures of State, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), 
and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) that govern their 
respective visa revocation actions and (2) deter-mine the 
effectiveness of the process.

What GAO Found:

The U.S. government has no specific written policy on the use of visa 
revocations as an antiterrorism tool and no written procedures to 
guide State in notifying the relevant agencies of visa revocations on 
terrorism grounds. Further, State, INS, and the FBI do not have 
written internal procedures for notifying their appropriate personnel 
to take specific actions on visas revoked by the State Department. 
State and INS officials said they use the revocation process to 
prevent suspected terrorists from entering the country, but none of 
the agencies has a policy that covers investigating, locating, and 
taking action when a visa holder has already entered.

This lack of formal written policies and procedures has contributed to 
systemic weaknesses in the visa revocation process that increase the 
possibility of a suspected terrorist entering or remaining in the 
United States. In our review of 240 visa revocations, we found that 

* appropriate units within INS and the FBI did not always receive 
notifications of all the revocations;

* names were not consistently posted to the agencies’ watch lists of 
suspected terrorists;

* 30 individuals whose visas were revoked on terrorism grounds had 
entered the United States either before or after revocation and may 
still remain; and

*INS and the FBI were not routinely taking actions to investigate, 
locate, or resolve the cases of individuals who remained in the United 
States after their visas were revoked.

What GAO Recommends:

GAO makes recommendations to the Department of Homeland Security, in 
conjunction with the Departments of State and Justice, to ensure that 
when State revokes a visa because of terrorism concerns, the 
appropriate units within State, INS, and the FBI are notified 
immediately and that proper actions are taken. Homeland Security 
agreed that the visa revocation process needed to be strengthened. 
State and Justice did not comment on our recommendations.

[End of section]


Letter:

Results in Brief:

Background:

Visa Revocation Policies and Procedures:

Weaknesses Existed in the Visa Revocation Process:

Conclusions:

Recommendations for Executive Action:

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:

Appendixes:

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology:

Appendix II: Legal Process for Visa Revocations:

Authority to Revoke Visas:

Timing and Effect of Visa Revocations:

The Legal Process for Removing an Alien Who Is Already in the Country: 

Appendix III: Detailed Information on Revoked Visas:

Appendix IV: Example of a Revocation Cable the Department of State Sent
to the INS and the FBI:

Appendix V: Sample of a Revocation Certificate the Department of State
Sent to the Immigration and Naturalization Service Lookout Unit:

Appendix VI: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security:

Appendix VII: Comments from the Department of State:

GAO Comments:

Table 1: Number of Individuals Whose Visas Were Revoked on Terrorism 
Grounds, by Region and Nationality (Sept. 11, 2001, through Dec. 31, 
2002):

Table 2: Number of Visa Revocations, by Class and Type of Visa Revoked:

Figures :

Figure 1: Overview of the Border Security Process for Controlling 
Entries and Visits of Foreign Visitors:

Figure 2: Diagram of Visa Revocation Notification System That, If Fully 
and Consistently Implemented, Would Provide Information to the 
Appropriate Units at State, Homeland Security, and the FBI:

Figure 3: Diagram of Gaps in the Visa Revocation Notification System:

Figure 4: INS Lookout Unit Receipt of Revocation Notification for 240 
Cases:


Abbreviations: 

CLASS: Consular Lookout and Support System:

FBI: Federal Bureau of Investigation:

IBIS: Interagency Border Inspection System:

INA: Immigration and Nationality Act:

INS: Immigration and Naturalization Service:

NIIS: Nonimmigrant Information System:

VGTOF: Violent Gang and Terrorist Organization File:

Letter June 18, 2003:

The Honorable Christopher Shays 
Chairman, 
Subcommittee on National Security, Emerging Threats, and International 
Relations 
Committee on Government Reform 
House of Representatives:

The Honorable Charles E. Grassley 
Chairman, 
Committee on Finance 
United States Senate:

As stated in the President's National Strategy for Homeland 
Security,[Footnote 1] the U.S. government has no more important mission 
than protecting the homeland from future terrorist attacks. The 
strategy calls for preventing the entry of foreign terrorists into our 
country and using all legal means to identify; halt; and, where 
appropriate, prosecute or bring immigration or other civil charges 
against terrorists in the United States. In October 2002,[Footnote 2] 
we reported that the visa process should be strengthened as an 
antiterrorism tool. We found that the Department of State had revoked 
the visas[Footnote 3] of certain persons as a precautionary measure 
after it learned that they might be suspected terrorists, raising 
concerns that some of these individuals may have entered the United 
States before or after their visas were revoked.

At your request, we assessed how the visa revocation process is being 
used as an antiterrorism tool. Specifically, we (1) determined the 
policies and procedures of the State Department, the Immigration and 
Naturalization Service (INS),[Footnote 4] and the Federal Bureau of 
Investigation (FBI) that govern their respective actions in the visa 
revocation process and (2) assessed the effectiveness of the visa 
revocation process, specifically (a) the steps State took to notify the 
appropriate units within INS and the FBI of revocations; (b) the 
procedures used by the three agencies to post lookouts on these 
revocations to their terrorist watch lists;[Footnote 5] (c) whether any 
of the individuals whose visas had been revoked were able to enter the 
United States before or after the revocation; and (d) the actions taken 
by INS and the FBI to investigate; locate; and, where appropriate, 
clear, remove, or prosecute the individuals who did enter the United 
States and may still remain in the country after their visas had been 
revoked. Our review covered only visas that the State Department 
revoked on terrorism grounds from September 11, 2001, through December 
31, 2002.[Footnote 6]

To identify the policies and procedures governing the visa revocation 
process, we interviewed officials from State, INS, and the FBI and 
reviewed relevant documents. To evaluate the effectiveness of the visa 
revocation process, we reviewed all 240 of State's visa revocations on 
terrorism grounds from September 11, 2001, through December 31, 2002. 
For each of these cases, we obtained information from the State 
Department to determine if, and when, State notified INS and the FBI of 
the revocations. We also obtained information from these agencies to 
determine if, and when, they posted appropriate lookouts on their 
terrorist watch lists. We reviewed INS arrival and departure data to 
assess whether any of the individuals whose visas had been revoked had 
entered the United States either before or after revocation and whether 
they may still remain in the country. Where available, we supplemented 
the INS data with information from the State Department. We interviewed 
INS, FBI, and Department of Justice officials to discuss what actions 
INS and the FBI had taken to investigate; locate; and, where 
appropriate, clear, remove, or prosecute those individuals who may 
remain in the United States. Appendix I provides more information on 
our scope and methodology, including the limitations to INS and State 
data that we reviewed.

Results in Brief:

Our analysis indicates that the U.S. government has no specific written 
policy on the use of visa revocations as an antiterrorism tool and no 
written procedures to guide State in notifying the relevant agencies of 
visa revocations on terrorism grounds. State and INS have written 
procedures that guide some types of visa revocations; however, neither 
they nor the FBI have written internal procedures for notifying their 
appropriate personnel to take specific actions on visas revoked by the 
State Department. State and INS officials could articulate their 
informal policies and procedures for how and for what purpose their 
agencies have used the process to keep terrorists out of the United 
States, but neither they nor FBI officials had policies or procedures 
that covered investigating, locating, and taking appropriate action in 
cases where the visa holder had already entered the country.

The lack of formal, written policies and procedures may have 
contributed to systemic weaknesses in the visa revocation process that 
increase the probability of a suspected terrorist entering or remaining 
in the United States. In our review of the 240 visa revocations, we 
found that (a) appropriate units within INS and the FBI did not always 
receive notification of the revocations; (b) lookouts were not 
consistently posted to the agencies' watch lists of suspected 
terrorists; (c) 30 individuals whose visas were revoked on terrorism 
grounds entered the United States either before or after revocation and 
may still remain in the country;[Footnote 7] and (d) INS and the FBI 
were not routinely taking actions to investigate,[Footnote 8] locate, 
or resolve the cases of individuals who remained in the United States 
after their visas were revoked. For instance:

* In a number of cases, notification between State and the appropriate 
units within INS and the FBI did not take place or was not completed in 
a timely manner.[Footnote 9] For example, INS officials said they did 
not receive any notice of the revocations from State in 43 of the 240 
cases. In another 47 cases, the INS Lookout Unit received the 
revocation notice only via a cable, State's backup method of 
notification. However, these cables took, on average, 12 days to reach 
the Lookout Unit. Although State generally sent information cables to 
the FBI's main communications center to notify it of the revocations, 
FBI officials could not provide us with evidence that the 
communications center sent these cables to the appropriate 
counterterrorism units.

* In cases where the INS Lookout Unit could document that it received a 
notification, it generally posted information on these revocations in 
its lookout database within 1 day of receiving the notice. When the 
Lookout Unit did not receive notification, it could not post 
information on these individuals in its lookout database, precluding 
INS inspectors at ports of entry from knowing that these individuals 
had had their visas revoked. Moreover, the State Department neglected 
to enter the revocation action for 64 of the 240 cases into its own 
watch list. As a result, these individuals could apply at an overseas 
post for a new visa, and consular officers would not necessarily know 
that their previous visas had been revoked for terrorism concerns. FBI 
officials in mid-May 2003 had not determined whether the agency's 
Terrorist Watch and Warning Unit had received any notice of visa 
revocations.

* Twenty-nine individuals entered the United States before their visas 
were revoked and may still remain in the country. INS inspectors 
admitted at least 4 other people after the visa revocation, 1 of whom 
may still remain in the country. However, INS inspectors prevented at 
least 14 others from entering the country because the INS watch list 
included information on the revocation action or had another lookout on 
them.

* INS and the FBI did not routinely attempt to investigate or locate 
any of the individuals who entered the United States either before or 
after their visas were revoked and who may still remain in the country. 
Due to congressional interest in specific cases, INS investigators 
located 4 individuals in the United States; however, they did not 
attempt to locate other revoked visa holders who may have entered the 
country. INS officials told us that they generally do not investigate 
these cases because it would be challenging to remove these individuals 
unless they were in violation of their immigration status even if the 
agency could locate them. A visa revocation by itself is not a stated 
grounds for removal under the Immigration and Nationality Act 
(INA).[Footnote 10] FBI officials told us that they were not being 
alerted by State that persons with revoked visas could be "possible 
terrorists." As a result, the FBI did not routinely attempt to 
investigate and locate individuals with revoked visas who may have 
entered the United States.

On March 1, 2003, the Secretary of Homeland Security became responsible 
for issuing regulations and administering and enforcing provisions of 
U.S. immigration law relating to visa issuance.[Footnote 11] Therefore, 
we are making recommendations to the Secretary of Homeland Security, in 
conjunction with the Secretary of State and the Attorney General, to 
ensure that when State revokes a visa because of terrorism concerns, 
the appropriate units within State, Homeland Security, and the FBI are 
notified immediately and that the appropriate actions are taken. We 
provided a draft of this report to the Departments of Homeland 
Security, State, and Justice for their comment. Homeland Security 
agreed that the visa revocation process should be strengthened as an 
antiterrorism tool and said that it looked forward to working with 
State and Justice to develop and revise current policies and procedures 
that affect the interagency visa revocation process. State and Justice 
did not comment on our recommendations.

Background:

Our nation's border security process for controlling the entry and 
visits of foreign visitors[Footnote 12] consists of three primary 
functions: (1) issuing visas; (2) controlling entries through 
inspection of passports, visas, and other travel documents as well as 
controlling exits; and (3) managing stays of foreign visitors--that is, 
monitoring these individuals while they are in the country. As shown in 
figure 1, the Departments of State, Homeland Security, and Justice play 
key roles in this process.

Figure 1: Overview of the Border Security Process for Controlling 
Entries and Visits of Foreign Visitors:

[See PDF for image]

[A] Now within the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection.

[B] Now within the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

[End of figure]

The border security process begins at the State Department's overseas 
consular posts, where consular officers adjudicate visa applications 
for foreign nationals who wish to temporarily enter the United States 
for visits related to business, tourism, or other reasons. At the port 
of entry, an INS inspector determines whether the visa holder is 
admitted to the United States and, if so, how long he or she may remain 
in the country. Until recently, after INS successfully screened and 
admitted foreign visitors, these individuals were generally not 
monitored unless they came under the scrutiny of INS or a law 
enforcement agency, such as the FBI, for suspected immigration 
violations or other illegal activity.[Footnote 13]

On March 1, 2003, the Department of Homeland Security assumed 
responsibility for many elements of the border security process. For 
example, the new department incorporated the INS Inspections Unit into 
its Bureau of Customs and Border Protection, which will focus its 
operations on the movement of goods and people across U.S. borders. It 
also folded the INS National Security Unit into its Bureau of 
Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which is designed to enforce the 
full range of immigration and customs laws within the United States. 
According to Department of Homeland Security officials, the new 
department also gained broad authority over the visa process under 
section 428 of the Homeland Security Act, covering the development of 
policies, regulations, procedures, and any other guidance that may 
affect visa issuance or revocation.[Footnote 14]The State Department 
remains responsible for managing the consular corps and the function of 
issuing visas.

The FBI's Counterterrorism Division, within the Justice Department, 
plays a key role in the border security process. The division includes 
the Foreign Terrorist Tracking Task Force, which is now part of the 
FBI's Office of Intelligence. The mission of the task force, an 
interagency group, is to (1) deny entry into the United States of 
aliens associated with, suspected of being engaged in, or supporting 
terrorist activity and (2) aid in supplying information to locate, 
detain, prosecute, or deport any such aliens already present in the 
United States. The National Joint Terrorism Task Force is comprised of 
36 federal agencies co-located in the Strategic Information and 
Operations Center at FBI headquarters. This task force provides a 
central fusion point for terrorism information and intelligence to the 
66 Joint Terrorism Task Forces, which include state and local law 
enforcement officers, federal agents, and other federal personnel who 
work in the field to prevent and investigate acts of terrorism.

At each stage of the process, the responsible departments and agencies 
rely on terrorist or criminal watch list systems--sometimes referred to 
as tip-off or lookout systems--in fulfilling their respective border 
security missions. For example, State relies on its Consular Lookout 
and Support System (CLASS) as the primary basis for identifying 
potential terrorists among visa applicants. CLASS incorporates 
information on suspected terrorists from State's interagency terrorist 
watch list, known as TIPOFF, as well as from the FBI, INS, and many 
other agencies. Further, INS inspectors at ports of entry use the 
Interagency Border Inspection System (IBIS) to check whether foreign 
nationals are inadmissible and should be denied entry into the United 
States. When a person enters the United States by air or by sea, INS 
inspectors are required to check that person against watch lists before 
the person is allowed to enter the country. INS inspectors may check 
persons arriving at land borders against the watch lists, but they are 
not required to do so.[Footnote 15] The exception is for males aged 16 
or over from certain countries who are required to be checked.

Visa Revocation Policies and Procedures:

Our analysis indicates that the U.S. government has no specific written 
policy on the use of visa revocations as an antiterrorism tool and no 
written procedures to guide State in notifying the relevant agencies of 
visa revocations on terrorism grounds. State and INS have written 
procedures that guide some types of visa revocations; however, neither 
they nor the FBI have written internal procedures for notifying their 
appropriate personnel to take specific actions on visas revoked by the 
State Department. State and INS officials could articulate their 
informal policies and procedures for how and what purpose their 
agencies have used the process as an antiterrorism tool to keep 
terrorists out of the United States, but neither they nor FBI officials 
had policies or procedures that covered investigating, locating, and 
taking appropriate action in cases where the visa holder had already 
entered the country. We summarized how information on visa revocations 
would ideally flow among and within these three agencies on the basis 
of our interviews with officials from State, Homeland Security, and the 
FBI and on our analysis of the current visa revocation process.

Most Policies Are Informal:

According to State Department officials, the U.S. government has no 
specific written policy on how agencies should use visa revocations as 
an antiterrorism tool and no written procedures to guide the 
interagency process for revoking visas on terrorism or other grounds. 
These officials explained that prior to September 11, 2001, State 
revoked only a small number of visas for terrorism-related reasons. 
This relatively small number resulted in State and INS operating in an 
informal manner when cooperating on denying admission to revoked visa 
holders at ports of entry. State officials said that State and Justice 
had agreed to informal notification procedures between the two agencies 
and had crafted language for the visa revocation certificates several 
years ago; however, the two agencies did not develop formal written 
procedures. These officials said that State did not coordinate its visa 
revocations with the FBI. In commenting on a draft of this report, 
State said that the Visa Office generally worked under the impression 
that, under long-standing practice, INS was passing relevant 
information onto the FBI as appropriate.

State and INS officials articulated their agencies' policies on how 
revocations help their agencies prevent suspected terrorists from 
entering the United States. State officials told us that they envision 
the revocation process as taking place before the visa holder enters 
the country. This would allow State and other agencies more time to 
investigate and determine whether a suspected terrorist is in fact 
ineligible for a visa on terrorism grounds before allowing the visa 
holder to enter the country. As these officials explained, since the 
September 11 attacks, State's Bureau of Consular Affairs has been 
receiving a large volume of information on suspected terrorists from 
the intelligence community, law enforcement agencies, overseas posts, 
and other units within State. The department reviews this information 
to determine if a suspected terrorist has a U.S. visa. If the 
identifying information is incomplete, as is often the case, State may 
have difficulty in determining whether a visa holder with the same or a 
similar name as a suspected terrorist is in fact the suspected 
terrorist. The department may also lack sufficient proof of a specific 
act that would render the suspected terrorist ineligible for a visa, as 
required by the INA.[Footnote 16] In these cases, State would revoke 
the person's visa under the Secretary of State's discretionary 
authority, requiring the person to reapply for a visa if he or she 
still intended to visit the United States. State would then use the 
visa issuance process to obtain additional biographic and other data on 
the visa applicant and make a determination on the person's 
eligibility.

INS officials viewed the process as a means of notifying INS inspectors 
to deny suspected terrorists entry into the United States. These 
officials did not view a visa revocation, even if based on terrorism 
concerns, as a reason for investigating someone who had already entered 
the United States. They said the INA does not specify visa revocation 
as a reason for removing a person from the country. (App. II provides 
more information on legal issues associated with visa revocations.):

According to Justice and FBI officials, the FBI does not yet have a 
policy on how to use the visa revocation process in its 
counterterrorism efforts. The FBI has not developed such a policy 
because the visa revocation information State sends to the bureau does 
not indicate that the FBI may want to take follow-up action in these 
cases. For instance, the notice of visa revocation does not explicitly 
state that the reason for revocation is terrorism-related.

State and INS had written policies that covered some aspects of visa 
revocations. State's policies and procedures, contained in the Foreign 
Affairs Manual, specify when and for what reason a consular officer may 
or may not revoke a visa, including for terrorism-related reasons. The 
manual instructs consular officers to obtain a security advisory 
opinion from the department before determining that a visa holder is 
ineligible for a visa on terrorism grounds. In practice, according to 
State officials, this means that department officials at headquarters 
acting under the authority of the Secretary of Stateænot the consular 
officers at overseas postsærevoke visas on the basis of terrorism 
concerns. State Department officials told us that they follow specific, 
but unwritten, operating procedures when the department revokes visas, 
as described in more detail later in this report. INS has some general 
policies related to the posting of lookouts for inadmissible aliens and 
for the revocation of visas by immigration officers at ports of entry. 
However, these policies do not call for specific actions by appropriate 
INS personnel with regard to visas revoked by the State Department.

How the Visa Revocation Process Should Work:

Since the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, State has constantly 
received new information on suspected terrorists from the intelligence 
community, law enforcement agencies, and overseas posts. In some cases, 
State received this information after it had already issued visas to 
the individuals in question; the department would then revoke these 
visas. Under the INA, the Secretary of State has discretionary 
authority to revoke any visa that a consular officer has issued, 
including cases in which the Secretary believes that the visa holder 
may be ineligible for a visa under the INA's terrorism 
provision.[Footnote 17] According to State Department officials and 
documents, State revoked visas held by 240 individuals from September 
11, 2001, through December 31, 2002, on terrorism grounds.[Footnote 18] 
All of these visas were revoked as a prudent measure under the 
Secretary of State's discretionary authority because, as discussed 
earlier, State believed more research on the individuals was necessary 
before they should be allowed to enter the United States. Appendix III 
provides more information on these visas and the persons who held them.

Figure 2 shows how information should flow if State were to notify the 
appropriate homeland security agencies, that is, those agencies charged 
with controlling entry into the United States and investigating 
potentially dangerous terrorists, that the individual with the revoked 
visa may attempt to enter, or may have already entered, the United 
States. The diagram is based on what officials from State, Homeland 
Security, and the FBI described as the way the process should work, if 
all of the agencies involved were fulfilling their roles.

Figure 2: Diagram of Visa Revocation Notification System That, If Fully 
and Consistently Implemented, Would Provide Information to the 
Appropriate Units at State, Homeland Security, and the FBI:

[See PDF for image]

[A] Now within the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection.

[B] Now within the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

[End of figure]

As the diagram in figure 2 illustrates, State should notify its 
consular officers at overseas posts, the Department of Homeland 
Security, and the FBI at the time of visa revocation. State should 
notify its consular officers so that they would ask for a security 
advisory opinion before issuing a new visa to the person whose visa had 
been revoked. In addition, State would have to provide notice of the 
revocation, along with supporting evidence, to Homeland Security and 
the FBI. This would allow Homeland Security to notify its inspectors at 
ports of entry so that they could prevent the individuals from entering 
the United States.[Footnote 19] It also would allow Homeland Security 
and the FBI to determine whether the person had already entered the 
country and, if so, to investigate, locate, and take appropriate action 
in each case. Depending on the results of the investigations, 
appropriate actions could include clearing persons who were wrongly 
suspected of terrorism, removing suspected terrorists from the country, 
or prosecuting suspected terrorists on criminal charges.

Weaknesses Existed in the Visa Revocation Process:

We identified systemic weaknesses in the visa revocation process, many 
of which resulted from the informal policies and procedures governing 
actions that State, INS, and the FBI take during the process. In our 
review of the 240 visa revocations, we found that (a) notification of 
revocations did not always reach the appropriate unit within INS and 
the FBI; (b) State did not consistently post lookouts on the 
individuals; (c) 30 individuals whose visas were revoked on terrorism 
grounds entered the United States either before or after the revocation 
and may still remain in the country; and (d) INS and the FBI were not 
consistently taking action to investigate; locate; or, where 
appropriate, clear, prosecute, or remove any of the people who had 
entered the country before or after their visas were revoked.

Inconsistencies in Notification Procedures:

There were weaknesses at several junctures of the notification process 
that caused information on many visa revocations not to be shared among 
units that needed the information at State, INS, and the FBI. Some of 
these weaknesses were due to a breakdown in the notification process 
from State to INS and the FBI, and some were due to problems in the 
distribution of notifications within these agencies to the appropriate 
unit. For 43 of the 240 revocations we reviewed, INS Lookout Unit 
officials said that they did not receive any notification. In cases 
where they did receive notification, some of them were not received at 
the Lookout Unit in a timely manner because of slow intraagency 
distribution of the notifications. FBI officials said that the agency's 
main communications center received the notifications, but the 
officials could not confirm if the notifications were then distributed 
internally to the appropriate investigative units at the FBI (see fig. 
3).

Figure 3: Diagram of Gaps in the Visa Revocation Notification System:

[See PDF for image]

[A] Now within the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection.

[B] Now within the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

[End of figure]

State's Procedures for Notifying INS, the FBI, and Overseas Posts of 
Revocations:

State Department officials from the Visa Office described the 
procedures they use to notify INS, the FBI, and State's overseas posts 
of visas that are revoked by the department in Washington. According to 
State officials, once the Deputy Assistant Secretary signs a revocation 
certificate, the department is supposed to take the following actions, 
as soon as possible after the visa is revoked: (1) notify the INS 
Lookout Unit via a faxed copy of the revocation certificate so that the 
unit can enter the individual into the National Automated Immigration 
Lookout System, which is uploaded into IBIS; (2) notify consular 
officers at all overseas post that the individual may be a suspected 
terrorist by entering a lookout on the person into State's watch list, 
CLASS; and (3) notify the issuing post via cable so that the post can 
attempt to contact the individual to physically cancel his visa. 
Information-only copies of these cables, which do not explicitly state 
that the reason for the revocation is terrorism-related, are also sent 
to INS's and FBI's main communications centers. State officials told us 
they rely on INS and FBI internal distribution mechanisms to ensure 
that these cables are routed to the appropriate units within the 
agencies. According to these officials, they considered faxing the 
revocation certificate to be the primary notification method for the 
INS Lookout Unit, but the cable was an additional backup method. The 
cables were the only notification method used to inform the FBI of the 
revocation.

The State Visa Office did not keep a central log of visas it revoked on 
the basis of terrorism concerns, nor did it monitor whether 
notifications were sent to other agencies. When we asked for a list of 
all revoked visas between September 11, 2001, and December 31, 2002, 
Visa Office officials had to search through the office's cable database 
to create such a list. State Department officials said they did not 
have fax transmission receipts to confirm that they sent revocation 
certificates for each of the 240 cases we reviewed. They were able to 
provide us with 238 revocation cables, almost all of which addressed 
informational copies to INS and the FBI. In commenting on a draft of 
our report, State said that the Visa Office now keeps a log of 
revocation cases and maintains all signed certificates in a central 
file.

INS Lookout Unit Said It Did Not Consistently Receive Notification:

Officials from the INS Lookout Unit provided us with documentation 
indicating that they received notification from the State Department in 
197 of the 240 cases but did not receive notification in the other 43 
cases (see fig. 4).

Figure 4: INS Lookout Unit Receipt of Revocation Notification for 240 
Cases:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Lookout Unit officials had documentation to show that 150 faxed 
revocation certificates were received in the unit. These faxed 
certificates reached the unit, on average, within 1 to 2 days of State 
enacting the revocation. For 90 cases, however, the documentation 
provided to us did not indicate that the Lookout Unit had received a 
fax. This was mitigated in 47 of these cases by the receipt of a 
revocation cable, although this backup method of notification was less 
timely than the fax. In cases where the cable was the only notification 
received at the Lookout Unit, it took, on average, 12 days for the 
Lookout Unit to receive the cable, although in 1 case it took 29 days. 
According to an official from the INS communications center, because 
the cables were marked "information only," they were routed through the 
Inspections Division first, which then was supposed to forward them to 
the Lookout Unit. He told us that if the cables had been marked as 
"action" or "urgent," they would have been sent immediately to the 
Lookout Unit. See appendix IV for an example of a revocation cable.

The Assistant Chief Inspector at the Lookout Unit stressed the 
importance of timeliness in receiving notification, noting that delays 
of even a few days could increase the possibility that an individual 
with a revoked visa would travel to the United States before INS 
inspectors were aware of the revocation.

The FBI Received Revocation Cables but May Not Have Distributed Them 
Internally to the Appropriate Investigative Units:

The State Department generally included the FBI as an addressee on the 
visa revocation cables. FBI officials with whom we spoke were able to 
verify that State's revocation cables[Footnote 20] were received 
electronically in the FBI communications center, but they were not able 
to tell us whether this information was distributed to appropriate 
coordinating and investigative units. An FBI official said that after 
the cables arrived in the communications center, they became part of 
the FBI's Automated Case Support database and a hard copy of the cable 
was sent to analysts in relevant country desk units. The Assistant 
Director for the Office of Intelligence told us that for the FBI to 
take action on the cables, they would have to be directed to the 
bureau's Counterterrorism Division. FBI officials could not provide 
evidence that the revocation information reached the Counterterrorism 
Division. Again, the cables did not specify that the reason for the 
revocation was related to terrorism. The cables were described by State 
as information only and did not request or specify any action from the 
FBI.

Weaknesses Existed in Visa Revocation Watch List Procedures:

In our review of 240 revocations, we identified weaknesses in the steps 
that State, INS, and the FBI took to place these individuals on watch 
lists as a result of the revocation. The State Department did not 
consistently post lookouts on individuals in CLASS after revoking their 
visas. Moreover, State had not started to use a new revocation code 
created in August 2002 that was designed to allow revocation lookouts 
to be shared between State's and INS's watch lists. The INS Lookout 
Unit consistently posted lookouts on its watch list but was only able 
to do so in cases where it received notification of the revocation. 
Some of the lookouts posted by the Lookout Unit did not contain 
accurate information due to misinterpretation of State's revocation 
certificates.

As of mid-May 2003, FBI officials could not determine which FBI unit, 
if any, added lookouts to their watch lists on individuals with revoked 
visas as a result of receiving the revocation notification from State.

State Did Not Consistently Post Lookouts on Individuals with Revoked 
Visas:

We reviewed CLASS records on all 240 individuals whose visas were 
revoked and found that the State Department did not post lookouts 
within a 2-week period of the revocation on 64 of these individuals. 
Many of the 64 individuals had other lookouts posted on them on earlier 
or later dates, but the department had not followed its informal policy 
of entering a lookout at the time of the revocation. State officials 
said that they post lookouts on individuals with revoked visas in CLASS 
so that, if the individual attempts to get a new visa, consular 
officers at overseas posts will know that they must request a security 
advisory opinion on the individual before issuing a visa. Without a 
lookout, it is possible that a new visa could be issued without 
additional security screening.

According to State Department officials, State and INS agreed to create 
a specific code for visa revocation lookouts, the VRVK code, which 
would be picked up automatically by INS's system, IBIS, in its real-
time interface with CLASS.[Footnote 21] This new code would allow INS 
inspectors at ports of entry to see revocation lookouts that State had 
posted. According to Department of Homeland Security officials, this 
code should be State's primary method of notifying immigration 
inspectors at ports of entry that an individual's visa had been 
revoked, rather than the faxed revocation certificate. State said that 
this code was required for all revocation lookouts as of August 15, 
2002, yet in our review of CLASS records for the 240 visa revocations, 
we saw no evidence that the department was using the VRVK code. The 
department did not enter a lookout using the VRVK code for any of the 
27 visas it revoked between August 15, 2002, and December 31, 
2002.[Footnote 22]

INS Consistently Posted Lookouts but Misread Some Information on 
Revocation Certificates:

When the INS Lookout Unit received notification from State, it 
consistently posted lookouts in IBIS[Footnote 23] to indicate that 
State had revoked the visa. The Lookout Unit had a policy to post 
lookouts in IBIS the same day that it received the notification. In the 
43 cases for which Lookout Unit officials said they did not receive 
notification, they did not post a revocation lookout in IBIS because 
the lookout unit did not have an independent basis for posting a 
revocation absent a notification from State.

In 21 of the 240 cases, Lookout Unit officials misread information on 
State's revocation certificate and, as a result, entered incorrect 
information in IBIS on individuals who were born in one country but 
hold citizenship in another. In 16 of these cases, the revocation 
certificates clearly listed the individual's date and place of birth or 
nationality, but the lookout unit entered place of birth or other 
erroneous information into IBIS's nationality field. In the remaining 5 
cases where the individuals' place of birth data were entered into the 
nationality field, the revocation certificate did not clearly state 
that the country listed was the individuals' place of birth. A Lookout 
Unit official confirmed that this error in the lookout could hinder an 
inspector at the port of entry from detecting the person since the 
individual's passport would indicate a nationality different from his 
place of birth. Lookout Unit officials said it would be helpful if the 
State Department included more information on the revocation 
certificates, including country of citizenship, passport numbers, visa 
foil numbers, and intended itineraries and addresses in the United 
States if they were listed in the visa application. See appendix V for 
a sample revocation certificate. In commenting on a draft of this 
report, State said that additional information is available to Homeland 
Security officers at ports of entry through State's shared Consular 
Consolidated Database.

The FBI Did Not Know If Lookouts Were Posted on Individuals with 
Revoked Visas:

FBI officials could not determine which unit, if any, received the 
revocation cables or whether any unit posted lookouts on these 
individuals as a result of receiving notification of the revocation 
from State. In technical comments on a draft of this report, the 
Department of Justice said that the FBI maintains only one watch list, 
the Violent Gang and Terrorist Organization File (VGTOF) that is 
accessed by local and state law enforcement officials via the National 
Crime Information Center. To add a person to that list, according to 
the comments, the following information must be provided to the FBI: 
the person's full name, complete date of birth, physical descriptors, 
at least one numeric identifier, a contact person with a telephone 
number, and VGTOF-specific classification information.

Many Individuals with Revoked Visas Entered the United States before or 
after Revocation; Some Still Remain:

In our review of the 240 visa revocations, we found that 30 individuals 
whose visas were revoked on terrorism grounds entered the United States 
either before or after the revocation and may still remain in the 
country.[Footnote 24] Our analysis of INS arrival and departure 
information shows that many individuals had traveled to the United 
States before their visas were revoked and had remained after the 
revocation. Several have subsequently departed the country, but we 
determined that 29 of the individuals who entered before the revocation 
may still remain in the country.

INS data also show that INS inspectors admitted at least 4 people after 
their visas were revoked; 3 of these individuals have since departed 
but 1 may still remain in the country. In 1 of these 4 cases, the INS 
Lookout Unit did not receive any revocation notice from State; thus, it 
did not post a lookout in IBIS that could have alerted an inspector at 
a port of entry to deny admission to the individual. In another case, 
the unit received a notification cable 4 days after State had signed 
the revocation certificate, but the individual had already entered the 
country 2 days earlier. In the third case, the unit had posted a 
lookout the day after the revocation but had incorrectly entered the 
individual's place of birth, which differed from his nationality, in 
the nationality field. In the last case, INS had received a 
notification from State and had posted lookouts on the INS watch list 
right after the revocation, but an INS inspector allowed the individual 
to enter the United States 1 month later. INS officials could not 
explain how an inspector could miss the lookout and allow this person 
into the country.

Despite these problems, we noted cases where the visa revocation 
process prevented possible terrorists from entering the country or 
cleared individuals whose visas had been revoked. For example, INS 
inspectors successfully prevented at least 14 of the 240 individuals 
from entering the country because the INS watch list included 
information on the revocation action or had other lookouts on them. In 
addition, State records showed that a small number of people reapplied 
for a new visa after the revocation. State used the visa issuance 
process to fully screen these individuals and determined that they did 
not pose a security threat. In one case, for example, the post took a 
set of fingerprints from an individual whose name matched a record in 
an FBI database. The individual's fingerprints did not match those of 
the individual in the database, so he was cleared and issued a new 
visa.

INS and the FBI Did Not Routinely Take Action on Individuals with 
Revoked Visas Who Had Entered the United States:

The appropriate units in INS and the FBI did not routinely investigate, 
locate, or take any action on individuals who might have remained in 
the United States after their visas were revoked. INS and FBI officials 
cited a variety of legal and procedural challenges to their taking 
action in these cases.

INS Did Not Routinely Attempt to Locate Individuals with Revoked Visas:

In cases where they received the revocation notification from State, 
INS Lookout Unit officials said that they did not routinely check to 
see whether these individuals had already entered the United States, 
nor did they pass information on visa revocations to investigators in 
the National Security Unit.[Footnote 25]The National Security Unit, 
unlike the Lookout Unit, did not receive copies of the faxed revocation 
certificates or cables from the State Department. Investigators in this 
unit said that the Lookout Unit occasionally notified them about a 
revocation for an individual with a hit in TIPOFF, State's interagency 
terrorist watch list, but that they were not typically notified of 
other visa revocations.

National Security Unit investigators said that they generally did not 
investigate or locate individuals whose visas were revoked for 
terrorism concerns but who may still be in the United States. These 
investigators said that even if they were to receive a revocation 
notice, the revocation itself does not make it illegal for individuals 
with revoked visas to remain in the United States. They said they could 
investigate the individuals to determine if they were violating the 
terms of their admission, for example, by overstaying the amount of 
time they were granted to remain in the United States, but the 
investigators believed that under the INA, the visa revocation itself 
does not affect the alien's legal status in the United States.

This issue of whether a visa revocation, after an alien is admitted on 
that visa, has the effect of rendering the individual out-of-status is 
unresolved legally, according to officials in the Department of 
Homeland Security's Office of the Principal Legal Advisor to the Bureau 
of Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Bureau of Citizenship and 
Immigration Services. These officials said that the language that the 
State Department has been using on visa revocation certificates 
effectively forecloses the U.S. government from litigating the issue. 
The revocation certificates state that the revocation shall become 
effective immediately on the date the certificate is signed unless the 
alien is present in the United States at that time, in which case it 
will become effective immediately upon the alien's departure from the 
United States (see app. V). Homeland Security officials said that if 
State were to cease using the current language on the revocation 
certificates, the government would no longer be effectively barred from 
litigating the issue and, if a policy decision were made to pursue an 
aggressive litigation strategy, could seek to remove aliens who have 
been admitted but have subsequently had their visas revoked.

Attempting to remove these aliens on the underlying reason for the 
revocation may not be possible for various reasons, according to INS 
officials. First, INS officials stated that the State Department 
provides very little information or evidence relating to the terrorist 
activities when it sends the revocation notice to INS. Without 
sufficient evidence linking the alien to any terrorist-related 
activities, INS cannot institute removal proceedings on the basis of 
that charge. Second, even if there is evidence, INS officials said, 
sometimes the agency that is the source of the information will not 
authorize the release of that information because it could jeopardize 
ongoing investigations or reveal sources and methods. Third, INS 
officials state that sometimes the evidence that is used to support a 
discretionary revocation from the Secretary of State is not sufficient 
to support a charge of removing an alien in immigration proceedings 
before an immigration judge. (See app. II.) In commenting on a draft of 
our report, State said that most of the time, the information on which 
these revocations is based is classified. If an interested agency seeks 
to review the information for immigration purposes, it is available 
from State's Bureau of Intelligence and Research or the source agency.

National Security Unit investigators told us that, because of 
congressional interest, they had investigated and attempted to locate 7 
individuals whose visas were revoked as a result of delayed security 
checks and who had entered the country. They found that 4 of the 7 
individuals were in the United States and in compliance with the terms 
of their admission. One individual had departed to Canada; the 
remaining 2 individuals were not located.

The FBI Did Not Routinely Investigate Individuals with Revoked Visas:

Although the FBI's Foreign Terrorist Tracking Task Force followed up on 
many cases in response to congressional interest, FBI officials told us 
that the bureau was not routinely opening investigations as the result 
of visa revocations on terrorism grounds. They said that State's method 
of notifying the FBI did not clearly indicate that visas had been 
revoked because the visa holder was a possible terrorist. Further, the 
cables were sent as "information only" and did not request specific 
follow-up action from the FBI. State did not attempt to make other 
contact with the FBI that would indicate any urgency in the matter. 
Moreover, the Department of Homeland Security has not yet requested 
that the FBI take any action with regards to visa revocations on 
terrorism grounds.

In response to congressional interest, the Foreign Terrorist Tracking 
Task Force in late 2002 and early 2003 followed up on the 105 cases of 
visas that were revoked as a result of the Visas Condor name check 
procedures. In February 2003, we asked the task force for information 
on these 105 cases. The task force provided us with some information in 
a written response on May 21, 2003. We did not have time to fully 
evaluate the response before publication of this report because of the 
nature and volume of additional information needed to do so.

Conclusions:

The visa process can be an important tool to keep potential terrorists 
from entering the United States. Ideally, information on suspected 
terrorists would reach the State Department before it decides to issue 
a visa. However, there will always be some cases when the information 
arrives too late and State has already issued a visa. Revoking a visa 
can mitigate this problem, but only if State promptly notifies the 
appropriate border control and law enforcement agencies and if these 
agencies act quickly to (1) notify border patrol agents and immigration 
inspectors to deny entry to persons with a revoked visa and (2) 
investigate persons with revoked visas who have entered the country. 
Currently there are major gaps in the notification and investigation 
processes. One reason for this is that there are no comprehensive 
written policies and procedures on how notification of a visa 
revocation should take place and what agencies should do when they are 
notified. As a result, there is heightened risk that suspected 
terrorists could enter the country with revoked visas or be allowed to 
remain after their visas are revoked without undergoing investigation 
or monitoring.

Recommendations for Executive Action:

To strengthen the visa revocation process as an antiterrorism tool, we 
recommend that the Secretary of Homeland Security, in conjunction with 
the Secretary of State and the Attorney General:

* develop specific policies and procedures for the interagency visa 
revocation process to ensure that notification of visa revocations for 
suspected terrorists and relevant supporting information is transmitted 
from State to immigration and law enforcement agencies, and their 
respective inspection and investigation units, in a timely manner;

* develop a specific policy on actions that immigration and law 
enforcement agencies should take to investigate and locate individuals 
whose visas have been revoked for terrorism concerns and who remain in 
the United States after revocation; and:

* determine if persons with visas revoked on terrorism grounds are in 
the United States and, if so, whether they pose a security threat.

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:

We provided a draft of this report to the Departments of Homeland 
Security, State, and Justice for their comment.

The Department of Homeland Security agreed that the visa revocation 
process should be strengthened as an antiterrorism tool. It indicated 
that it looked forward to working with State and Justice to develop and 
revise current policies and procedures that affect the interagency visa 
revocation process. Their written comments are in appendix VI. In 
addition, Homeland Security provided technical comments which we have 
incorporated in the report where appropriate.

The Department of State did not comment on our recommendations. 
Instead, State said that the persons who hold visas that the department 
revoked on terrorism grounds were not necessarily terrorists or 
suspected terrorists. State noted that it had revoked the visas because 
some information had surfaced that may disqualify the individual from a 
visa or from admission to the United States, or that in any event 
warrants reconsideration of the individual's visa status. State cited 
the uncertain nature of the information it receives from the 
intelligence and law enforcement communities on which it must base its 
decision to revoke an individual's visa. State said that it revoked 
these visas as a precautionary measure to preclude a person from 
gaining admission to this country until his or her entitlement to a 
visa can be reestablished.

Our report recognizes that the visas were revoked as a precautionary 
measure and that the persons whose visas were revoked may not be 
terrorists. Although we have not reviewed the intelligence or law 
enforcement data provided to State or reviewed by various agencies as 
part of the security check process, there was enough concern that these 
240 persons could pose a terrorism threat to cause State to revoke 
their visas. Our recommendations are designed to ensure that persons 
whose visas have been revoked because of potential terrorism concerns 
be denied entry to the United States and those who may already be in 
the United States be investigated to determine if they pose a security 
threat. State's comments are reprinted in appendix VII. The State 
Department also provided technical comments that we have incorporated 
in the report where appropriate.

The Department of Justice did not provide official comments on the 
report. However, it did make technical comments that we incorporated in 
the report where appropriate.

:

We are sending copies of this report to other interested Members of 
Congress. We are also sending copies to the Secretary of Homeland 
Security, the Secretary of State, and the Attorney General. We will 
make copies available to others upon request. In addition, the report 
will be available at no charge on the GAO Web site at http://
www.gao.gov.

If you or your staff have any questions about this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-4128. Key contributors to this report were John 
Brummet, Judy McCloskey, Kate Brentzel, Mary Moutsos, and Janey Cohen.

Signed by:

Jess T. Ford Director, International Affairs and Trade:

[End of section]

Appendixes:

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology:

The scope of our work covered the interagency process in place for 
visas revoked by the Department of State headquarters and overseas 
consular officers on the basis of terrorism concerns between September 
11, 2001, and December 31, 2002. To assess the policies and procedures 
governing the visa revocation process, we interviewed officials from 
State, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), and the 
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and reviewed relevant documents.

To evaluate the effectiveness of the actual visa revocation process, we 
relied on data provided by State's Visa Office to determine the total 
number of visa revocations from September 11, 2001, through December 
31, 2002. Visa Office officials provided us with the names of 240 
individuals whose visas were revoked during that time. These officials 
were able to provide documentation on the revocation for 238 of the 240 
individuals. They gave us database sheets from the Consular 
Consolidated Database, which provided us with the individuals' names, 
biographic data such as dates and places of birth, passport numbers, 
and visa information such as issuing posts and types of visa. In 5 
cases, the database sheets did not indicate that the person held a 
valid visa at the time of revocation. We kept these cases in our scope 
because State provided us with revocation cables for these individuals, 
indicating that it had revoked at least one visa for them. State's Visa 
Office also provided us with 238 revocation cables. We also compared 
information in the revocation cable with information contained in 
revocation certificates.

To determine if, and when, State notified INS of the revocations, we 
asked the Visa Office to provide us with documentation to show that 
either the visa revocation was faxed to the INS Lookout Unit or that 
the revocation cables were sent to INS. State did not have 
documentation that it had faxed any of the certificates. Through 
examining the cables, we determined which ones were addressed to INS 
and when they were sent. To determine if, and when, INS received these 
notifications, we asked the INS Lookout Unit for copies of the 
revocation certificates and cables it received for each of the 240 
cases. In cases where the Lookout Unit had received a faxed copy of the 
revocation certificate, we collected copies of the certificates and 
examined the time/date stamp on these documents to determine when State 
faxed it to INS. In cases where the Lookout Unit had received a copy of 
the revocation cable, we collected copies of these cables and examined 
handwritten notations on the cables that reflected when they were 
received at the unit.

To determine if, and when, State notified the FBI of the revocations, 
we examined copies of the revocation cables we received from State to 
determine (1) if the FBI was included as an addressee on the cable and 
(2) the date that the cable was sent. To determine whether the FBI had 
received these cables, we interviewed FBI officials from the Office of 
Intelligence, the National Namecheck Program, and the Counterterrorism 
Division.

We obtained information from State, INS, and the FBI to determine if, 
and when, they posted lookouts on the individuals with revoked visas on 
their agencies' terrorist watch lists. We asked State to provide us 
with the lookouts they posted for each individual in the Consular 
Lookout and Support System (CLASS). A CLASS operator entered the 
individual's name, date and place of birth, and nationality in the same 
way that these data were listed on the revocation cable or certificate 
and gave us the printouts reflecting all of the CLASS records for that 
entry. We examined the records to ascertain whether, and when, the 
department entered the individual into CLASS and what refusal code was 
used.

To determine what steps INS took to post lookouts on the individuals 
with revocations, we provided the Lookout Unit with the list of 240 
individuals and requested copies of the revocation lookouts from the 
Interagency Border Inspection System (IBIS). We examined these records 
to assess whether, and when, the INS Lookout Unit posted a lookout on 
the individuals.

To assess the FBI's action to post lookouts on these individuals, we 
interviewed officials from the Office of Intelligence to determine 
whether any units posted lookouts as a result of receiving notification 
of the revocations.

To assess INS's and the FBI's actions to investigate; locate; and, 
where appropriate, clear, remove, or prosecute the individuals who may 
have entered the United States, we first reviewed INS entry/exit data 
to determine how many individuals entered the country, either before or 
after revocation, and how many may still remain in the country. The INS 
Lookout Unit provided us with all records available from the 
Nonimmigrant Information System (NIIS) on each of the 240 individuals. 
This system records arrivals of foreign citizens through the collection 
of an I-94 form. Some aliens are required to fill out and turn in these 
forms to inspectors at air and sea ports of entries, as well as at land 
borders. Canadians and U.S. permanent residents are not required to 
fill out I-94 forms when they enter the United States. Aliens keep one 
section of the I-94 with them during their stay in the United States 
and are required to turn this in when they depart the country. If 
aliens fail to turn in the bottom portion of their I-94s when they 
depart, NIIS will not have departure information for them. Where 
available, we supplemented NIIS data with information regarding certain 
cases from INS's National Security Unit and from the State Department's 
CLASS records. We received additional arrival data on the individuals 
in late May 2003 but have not been able to fully evaluate them for this 
report. We also interviewed INS and FBI officials to discuss what 
actions they had taken to investigate; locate; and, where appropriate, 
clear, remove, or prosecute those individuals who may remain in the 
United States.

We attempted to review the evidence on which State based the 
revocations for a subset of the 240 visa revocations. We could not do 
so, however, because the sources of the information--the Central 
Intelligence Agency and the FBI--did not grant us access to this 
information.

We conducted our work from December 2002 through May 2003, in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards.

[End of section]

Appendix II: Legal Process for Visa Revocations:

Authority to Revoke Visas:

The legal process for revocations can begin either with the Secretary 
of State, the consular officer, or an immigration officer. Under the 
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), the Secretary of State has the 
discretionary authority to revoke a visa previously issued to an 
alien.[Footnote 26] The Secretary of State has delegated this 
discretionary authority to the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Visa 
Services. According to State officials, the department's discretionary 
revocation authority is an important and useful tool for State to use 
to send questionable aliens back to the consulates to undergo more 
scrutiny as they reapply for new visas.

Consular officers may revoke a visa in instances prescribed by 
regulation (22 CFR § 41.122). Such instances include if (1) the 
consular officer finds that the alien is no longer entitled to 
nonimmigrant status specified in the visa; (2) the alien has, since the 
time that the visa was issued, become ineligible to receive a visa 
under the INA; or (3) the visa has been physically removed from the 
passport in which it was issued. Moreover, regulations also allow 
immigration officers to revoke visas under certain circumstances (22 
CFR § 41.122). For example, an immigration officer at a port of entry 
may revoke a visa if the officer notifies the alien that he or she 
appears to be inadmissible to the United States and the alien requests 
and is granted permission to withdraw the application for admission.

Timing and Effect of Visa Revocations:

If an alien arrives at a port of entry in the United States and learns 
that his visa has already been revoked, as was the case with some of 
the revocations that we reviewed, then the alien is deemed inadmissible 
and the INS agent can deny the alien admission into the United States. 
The authority to refuse admission to such aliens is done under the 
expedited removal process allowed under section 235 of the INA. Under 
section 212(a)(7)(B) of the INA, an alien is inadmissible if he does 
not have a valid passport, nonimmigrant visa, or border crossing 
identification card at the time of application for admission. Under the 
INA's expedited removal process, if an alien is inadmissible under 
section 212(a)(7), the inspection officer may order the alien removed 
from the United States, without further hearing or review, unless the 
alien can demonstrate a credible fear of returning to his home country.

If, however, the alien is already in the country when his visa is 
revoked, then INS is not authorized to simply send the alien home, as 
it could have done had the alien arrived at the port of entry with the 
revoked visa. Rather, if INS determines that the alien falls within the 
class of aliens who are removable on the grounds specified in the 
INA,[Footnote 27] INS may institute removal proceedings against the 
alien. Such proceedings could be based either on an immigration 
violation after admission[Footnote 28] or on the evidence relating to 
the reason for the visa revocation, such as terrorist-related 
activities. However, INS officials said that in many of these cases, 
INS does not receive much evidence in support of the terrorist charge 
when they receive a revocation from State. Without sufficient evidence, 
INS cannot institute removal proceedings against these aliens.

Revocation of a visa is not a stated grounds for removal under the INA. 
However, the issue of whether a visa revocation, after an alien is 
admitted on that visa, has the effect of rendering the alien out-of-
status is unresolved legally, according to officials in the Department 
of Homeland Security's Office of the Principal Legal Advisor to the 
Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Bureau of 
Citizenship and Immigration Services. These officials said that the 
language that the State Department has been using on visa revocation 
certificates effectively forecloses the U.S. government from litigating 
the issue. The revocation certificates state that the revocation shall 
become effective immediately on the date the certificate is signed. 
However, if the alien is present in the United States at that time, it 
will become effective immediately upon the alien's departure from the 
United States. Homeland Security officials said that if State were to 
cease using this language on the revocation certificates, the 
government would no longer be effectively barred from litigating the 
issue, and, if a policy decision were made to pursue an aggressive 
litigation strategy, the government could seek to remove aliens who 
have been admitted but have subsequently had their visas revoked.

The Legal Process for Removing an Alien Who Is Already in the Country:

If INS does receive sufficient evidence to support a removal charge 
against an alien and chooses to initiate removal proceedings, then the 
alien is afforded certain due process rights under the INA. For 
example, section 240 of the INA states that an immigration judge shall 
conduct proceedings to determine if an alien is removable. During such 
proceedings, the alien is afforded rights that include being apprised 
of the charges against him and the basis for them, having a reasonable 
opportunity to examine the evidence against him, presenting evidence on 
his behalf, having the opportunity to cross-examine witnesses presented 
by the government, and filing administrative and judicial appeals. 
Moreover, during such removal proceedings, once an alien establishes 
that he was admitted to the United States as a nonimmigrant, the 
government has the burden of proof to establish by clear and convincing 
evidence that the alien is removable.[Footnote 29]

Initiating such proceedings against an alien whose visa has been 
revoked on the basis of terrorist-related activities can be 
challenging, according to INS attorneys. At some point in the 
proceedings, either in establishing that the alien is removable or at 
the time the alien requests to be released on bond, the government 
could be called on to disclose any classified or law enforcement 
sensitive information that serves as the basis of the charges against 
the alien. According to INS attorneys, this can be challenging since 
many times the law enforcement or intelligence agencies that are the 
source of the information may not authorize the release of that 
information because it could jeopardize ongoing investigations or 
reveal sources and methods.

In addition to the general removal proceedings, the INA also contains 
special removal proceedings for alien terrorists.[Footnote 30] These 
proceedings are reserved for alien terrorists as described in section 
237 (a)(4)(B) of the INA and take place before a special removal court 
comprised of federal court judges. Such proceedings are triggered when 
the Attorney General certifies to the removal court that the alien is a 
terrorist, that he is physically present in the United States, and that 
using the normal removal procedures of the INA would pose a risk to the 
national security of the United States. If the court agrees to invoke 
the special removal procedures, then a hearing is held before the 
removal court. Special provisions are made for the use of classified 
information in such proceedings to minimize the risk of its disclosure. 
However, similar to the removal proceedings under section 240, the 
alien has the right to appeal a decision by the removal court. 
According to INS officials, this court has never been used since its 
inception in 1996.

[End of section]

Appendix III: Detailed Information on Revoked Visas:

This appendix provides information on nonimmigrant visas that the State 
Department revoked on terrorism grounds from September 11, 2001, 
through December 31, 2002--specifically, the nationality of the 
individuals whose visas were revoked and the types of visas that were 
revoked.

As shown in table 1, the individuals holding visas that the State 
Department revoked on terrorism grounds came from at least 39 
countries. Five countries--Saudi Arabia, Iran, Egypt, Pakistan, and 
Lebanon--accounted for 53 percent of these individuals. Overall, most 
of the 240 people were citizens of countries in the Near East and North 
Africa region.

Table 1: Number of Individuals Whose Visas Were Revoked on Terrorism 
Grounds, by Region and Nationality (Sept. 11, 2001, through Dec. 31, 
2002):

Region/Nationality: Africa.

Region/Nationality: Kenya; Number of individuals: 1; 

Region/Nationality: Sudan; Number of individuals: 2; 

Region/Nationality: Subtotal;  Number of individuals: 3.

Region/Nationality: East Asia and Pacific.

Region/Nationality: Indonesia; Number of individuals: 8; 

Region/Nationality: Malaysia; Number of individuals: 3; 

Region/Nationality: Subtotal;  Number of individuals: 11.

Region/Nationality: Europe and Eurasia.

Region/Nationality: Armenia; Number of individuals: 2; 

Region/Nationality: Austria; Number of individuals: 1; 

Region/Nationality: Bosnia and Herzegovina; Number of individuals: 1; 

Region/Nationality: Croatia; Number of individuals: 1; 

Region/Nationality: Greece; Number of individuals: 1; 

Region/Nationality: Netherlands; Number of individuals: 3; 

Region/Nationality: Romania; Number of individuals: 2; 

Region/Nationality: United Kingdom;  

Region/Nationality: Subtotal;  Number of individuals: 12.

Region/Nationality: Near East and North Africa.

Region/Nationality: Algeria; Number of individuals: 3; 

Region/Nationality: Bahrain; Number of individuals: 2; 

Region/Nationality: Egypt; Number of individuals: 21; 

Region/Nationality: Iran; Number of individuals: 22; 

Region/Nationality: Jordan; Number of individuals: 9; 

Region/Nationality: Kuwait; Number of individuals: 4; 

Region/Nationality: Lebanon; Number of individuals: 17; 

Region/Nationality: Morocco; Number of individuals: 6; 

Region/Nationality: Oman; Number of individuals: 2; 

Region/Nationality: Qatar; Number of individuals: 2; 

Region/Nationality: Saudi Arabia; Number of individuals: 50; 

Region/Nationality: Syria; Number of individuals: 7; 

Region/Nationality: Tunisia; Number of individuals: 1; 

Region/Nationality: United Arab Emirates; Number of individuals: 12; 

Region/Nationality: Yemen; Number of individuals: 2; 

Region/Nationality: Subtotal;  Number of individuals: 160.

Region/Nationality: South Asia.

Region/Nationality: Afghanistan; Number of individuals: 2; 

Region/Nationality: Bangladesh; Number of individuals: 3; 

Region/Nationality: India; Number of individuals: 3; 

Region/Nationality: Pakistan; Number of individuals: 18; 

Region/Nationality: Subtotal;  Number of individuals: 26.

Region/Nationality: Western Hemisphere.

Region/Nationality: Brazil; Number of individuals: 2; 

Region/Nationality: Colombia; Number of individuals: 7; 

Region/Nationality: Cuba; Number of individuals: 2; 

Region/Nationality: El Salvador; Number of individuals: 1; 

Region/Nationality: Mexico; Number of individuals: 4; 

Region/Nationality: Panama; Number of individuals: 1; 

Region/Nationality: Paraguay; Number of individuals: 5; 

Region/Nationality: Uruguay; Number of individuals: 1; 

Region/Nationality: Subtotal;  Number of individuals: 23.

Region/Nationality: Unknown;  Number of individuals: 5.

Region/Nationality: Total;  Number of individuals: 240.

[End of table]

Table 2 provides information on the types of visas that the State 
Department revoked on terrorism grounds. About 70 percent of the visas 
were for temporary visits for business, pleasure, or both. Seven of 
these visas were in the form of border crossing cards for Canada and 
Mexico.

Table 2: Number of Visa Revocations, by Class and Type of Visa Revoked:

Visa class: Business/Pleasure.

Visa class: B1; Type of visa: Temporary visitor for 
business; Number of revocations: 5.

Visa class: B1/B2; Type of visa: Temporary visitor 
for business and pleasure; Number of revocations: 
135.

Visa class: B1/B2/BBBCC; Type of visa: Border 
crossing card (Mexico); Number of revocations: 3.

Visa class: B2; Type of visa: Temporary visitor for 
pleasure; Number of revocations: 19.

Visa class: BCC; Type of visa: Border crossing card 
(Canada); Number of revocations: 4.

Visa class: Subtotal; Number of revocations: 166.

Visa class: Other.

Visa class: A1; Type of visa: Ambassador, public 
minister, or career diplomat or consular officer, immediate family; 
Number of revocations: 1.

Visa class: 2; Type of visa: Other foreign 
government official or employee, or immediate family; Number of 
revocations: 2.

Visa class: C1/D; Type of visa: Combined transit and 
crewman visa; Number of revocations: 7.

Visa class: D; Type of visa: Crewmember (sea or 
air); Number of revocations: 7.

Visa class: E2; Type of visa: Treaty investor, 
spouse or child; Number of revocations: 3.

Visa class: F1; Type of visa: Student; Number of 
revocations: 26.

Visa class: H1B; Type of visa: Alien in a specialty 
occupation (profession); Number of revocations: 9.

Visa class: H3; Type of visa: Trainee; Number of 
revocations: 1.

Visa class: J-1; Type of visa: Exchange visitor; 
Number of revocations: 5.

Visa class: L1; Type of visa: Intracompany 
transferee; Number of revocations: 1.

Visa class: L2; Type of visa: Spouse or child of 
intracompany transferee; Number of revocations: 1.

Visa class: M1; Type of visa: Vocational or other 
nonacademic student; Number of revocations: 6.

Visa class: M2; Type of visa: Spouse or child of M-
1; Number of revocations: 1.

Visa class: P1; Type of visa: Internationally 
recognized athlete or member of internationally recognized 
entertainment group; Number of revocations: 2.

Visa class: Subtotal; Number 
of revocations: 72.

Visa class: Unknown; Number 
of revocations: 2.

Visa class: Total; Number of 
revocations: 240.

[End of section]

Appendix IV: Example of a Revocation Cable the Department of State Sent 
to the INS and the FBI:

UNCLASSIFIED:

Cable Text: UTE7045 ORIGIN VO-03:

INFO LOG-00 NP-00 CIAE-00 COME-00 FBIE-00 UTED-00 TEDE-00 INR-00 INSE-
00 NEA-00 NSAE-00 IRM-00 TEST-00 SAS-00 /003R:

140439; 

SOURCE: [BLACKED OUT]; [BLACKED OUT].

DRAFTED BY: CA/VO/L/A: --07/18/02; [BLACKED OUT].

APPROVED BY: CA/VO: [BLACKED OUT].

CA/VO/L: CA/VO/L/C: CA/VO: [BLACKED OUT].

INR/IC: (INFO); [BLACKED OUT].

------------------CEBB02; 222329Z.

P 222324Z JUL 02 FM SECSTATE WASHDC TO AMEMBASSY ABU DHABI PRIORITY:

/38:

UNCLAS STATE: [BLACKED OUT]

E.O. 12958: N/A TAGS: CVIS [BLACKED OUT]
( SUBJECT: N0089322; CERTIFICATE OF 
REVOCATION:

REF: (A) VISTA N0089322, (B) ABU DHABI 630:

1. THIS IS AN ACTION MESSAGE. PLEASE SEE PARAGRAPH 5.

2. ON JULY 18, THE DEPARTMENT REVOKED ANY AND ALL:

VISAS HELD BY [BLACKED OUT], DPOB: [BLACKED OUT]UNITED ARAB EMIRATES, 
ON THE GROUNDS THAT HE MIGHT BE INELIGIBLE FOR A VISA UNDER INA 212
(A)(3).

3. FOLLOWING IS THE TEXT OF THE CERTIFICATE OF REVOCATION SIGNED BY 
DEPUTY ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE FOR VISA SERVICES 
[BLACKED OUT] ON 18 JULY 2002 
AND SENT TO THE IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE ON 18 JULY 2002.

4. QUOTE THIS IS TO CERTIFY THAT I, THE UNDERSIGNED DEPUTY ASSISTANT 
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR VISA SERVICES, ACTING IN PURSUANCE OF THE 
AUTHORITY CONFERRED BY SECTION 221(1) OF THE IMMIGRATION AND 
NATIONALITY ACT (8 U.S.C. 1201(1)), AND BY DELEGATION OF AUTHORITY NO. 
74 AND BY REDELEGATION OF AUTHORITY NO. 74-3-A, HEREBY REVOKE ANY AND 
ALL NONIMMIGRANT VISAS THAT MAY BE HELD BY: [BLACKED OUT]

DPOB: [BLACKED OUT], UNITED ARAB EMIRATES.

THIS ACTION IS BASED ON THE FACT THAT SUBSEQUENT TO VISA ISSUANCE, IT 
WAS DETERMINED THAT THE ALIEN MAY BE 
INELIGIBLE FOR A VISA UNDER SECTION 212 (A)(3) OF THE INA (8 U.S.C. 
1182(A)(3)), SUCH THAT THE ALIEN SHOULD BE REQUIRED TO REAPPLY FOR A 
VISA TO ESTABLISH HIS ELIGIBILITY BEFORE A U.S. CONSULAR OFFICER.

THIS REVOCATION SHALL BECOME EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY, UNLESS THE ALIEN IS 
CURRENTLY IN THE UNITED STATES, IN WHICH CASE IT SHALL BECOME EFFECTIVE 
ON THE DATE ON WHICH THE ALIEN NEXT DEPARTS THE UNITED STATES. UNQUOTE.

5. PER THE INSTRUCTIONS IN REF C, POST IS REQUESTED TO NOTIFY THE 
APPLICANT, IF POSSIBLE, THAT HIS VISA HAS BEEN REVOKED. POST SHOULD TRY 
TO PHYSICALLY CANCEL THE VISA. POST MUST THEN REPORT THE RESULTS OF ITS 
EFFORTS TO THE DEPARTMENT VIA CABLE, AND ALSO VIA E-MAIL, TO 
[BLACKED OUT]

6. BECAUSE THIS IS A PRUDENTIAL REVOCATION, APPLICANT MAY REAPPLY IF HE 
DESIRES. POST SHOULD THEN SUBMIT A SECURITY ADVISORY OPINION TO THE 
DEPARTMENT BEFORE TAKING ANY ACTION ON THE APPLICATION. ASSISTANCE 
APPRECIATED.

POWELL:

End Cable Text:

[End of section]

Appendix V: Sample of a Revocation Certificate the Department of State 
Sent to the Immigration and Naturalization Service Lookout Unit:

United States Department of State Washington, D. C. 20510:

CERTIFICATE OF REVOCATION:

This is to certify that 1, the undersigned Deputy Assistant Secretary 
of State for Visa Services, acting pursuant to the authority conferred 
on the Secretary of State by Section 221(1) of the Immigration and 
Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1201(1)), which has been delegated to the 
Assistant Secretary of State for Consular Affairs and to me by 
delegation of Authority No. 74 and redelegation of Authority No. 74-3-
A, hereby revoke any and all non-immigrant visas that may be held by 
[name, date and place of birth].

This revocation is based on the fact that, subsequent to visa issuance 
information has been discovered indicating that the alien may be 
inadmissible to the United States and ineligible to receive a visa 
under Section 212(a)(3) of the Immigration and Nationality 
Act, such that the alien should be required to re-appear before a U.S. 
Consular Officer to establish his eligibility for a visa before being 
permitted to apply for entry to the United States.

This revocation shall become effective immediately on the date on which 
this certificate is signed unless the alien is present in the United 
States at that time, in which case it will become effective immediately 
upon the alien's departure from the United States.

Date	[name of Deputy Assistant Secretary]

[End of section]

Appendix VI: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security:

U.S. Department of Homeland Security:

June 11, 2003:

Jess T. Ford:

Director, International Affairs and Trade U.S. General Accounting 
Office:

441 G St., NW Washington, DC 20548:

Dear Mr. Ford:

Thank you for the opportunity to review your draft report, "BORDER 
SECURITY: New Policies and Procedures Needed to Fill Gaps in the Visa 
Revocation Process," GAO-03-798.

I appreciate the efforts of the GAO to work with and accept many of the 
informal comments from my staff. I also understand that the GAO has 
considered the technical comments we provided and incorporated many of 
them into the final report. I agree that the visa revocation process 
needs to be strengthened as an antiterrorism tool. I look forward to 
working with the Departments of State and Justice to develop and revise 
current policies and procedures that affect the interagency visa 
revocation process.

If you have any questions concerning this response, please contact C. 
Stewart Verdery, Jr., Senior Advisor, as (202) 282-8471.

Asa Hutchinson 
Undersecretary 
Border and Transportation Security Directorate:

Signed by Asa Hutchinson 

[End of section]

Appendix VII: Comments from the Department of State:

United States Department of State:

Washington, D.C.	20520:

June 10, 2003:

Dear Ms. Westin:

We appreciate the opportunity to review your draft report, "BORDER 
SECURITY: New Policies and Procedures Needed to Fill Gaps in the Visa 
Revocation Process," GAO-03-798, GAO Job Code 320172.

The enclosed Department of State comments are provided for 
incorporation with this letter as an appendix to the final report.

If you have any questions concerning this response, please contact Hale 
Vankoughnett, Bureau of Consular Affairs, at (202) 663-1152.

Christopher B. Burnham 
Assistant Secretary and Chief Financial Officer:

Signed by Christopher B. Burnham:

Enclosure:

As stated.

cc: GAO/IAT - John Brummet State/OIG - Luther Atkins State/CA - Maura 
Harty:

Ms. Susan S. Westin, Managing Director, International Affairs and 
Trade, U.S. General Accounting Office.

Department of State Comments on the Draft Report Border Security: New 
Policies and Procedures Needed to Fill Gaps in the Visa Revocation 
Process (GAO Code 320172):

State appreciates the opportunity to offer some clarification of the 
visa revocation process and the issues touched on in the draft report 
"Border Security: New Policies and Procedures Needed to Fill Gaps in 
the Visa Revocation Process" (Job Code 320172).

The report focuses on 240 visas that were prudentially revoked by the 
Department of State pursuant to the Secretary of State's authority 
under Section 221(1) of the Immigration and Nationality Act. We believe 
it is very important that all concerned parties understand the 
character of these visa revocations. It is not accurate, nor fair to 
the persons who held these visas to suggest that all of the persons 
whose visas were revoked were terrorists or suspected terrorists. 
Unlike consular officers, the Secretary of State or the Deputy 
Assistant Secretary for Visa Services as his designee may revoke a visa 
on a prudential basis, without a finding of inadmissibility. (In 
contrast, Department of State regulations permit consular officers to 
revoke a visa only if they find an alien to be inadmissible, and 
therefore ineligible for a visa, under the INA or other relevant law.) 
Such revocations often are undertaken because some information has 
surfaced that may disqualify the individual from a visa or from 
admission to the U.S., or that in any event warrants reconsideration of 
the individual's visa status. The information available at the time of 
a prudential revocation is often insufficient by itself to support a 
formal finding of inadmissibility. In some cases, for example, it may 
not be clear whether the available intelligence relates to the visa 
holder.

A prudential visa revocation thus constitutes a precautionary measure 
to preclude an alien from gaining admission to this country until his 
or her entitlement to a visa can be reestablished. It precludes 
admission to the United States unless the alien reapplies for a visa. 
At the time of any such subsequent visa application, there is an 
opportunity to explore fully the alien's qualifications for a visa. 
Identity issues can often be resolved, and in addition the new visa 
application triggers a more thorough analysis of the intelligence 
reporting on the individual, which is assessed along with the 
information obtained in connection with the new application and any 
interview. Often at the time of the subsequent visa application, the 
information that initiated a revocation is found not to relate to the 
individual whose visa was revoked.

The 240 revocations that are focused on in this report involved two 
broad classes of cases: 1) cases involving individuals about whom the 
State Department (through its Bureau of Intelligence and Research) 
received potentially derogatory information from 
the intelligence or law enforcement community, and 2) 105 visa cases in 
which the FBI did not respond to the Department in a timely fashion 
regarding security clearances. In the first class of cases, the 
Department decided, after analysis of intelligence reporting, that the 
available information was sufficient to warrant precautionary 
revocation of the visas. As explained above, however, it cannot be 
assumed that the individual visa holder 
in fact is ineligible for a visa. The second class differs greatly from 
the first. A new interagency clearance program, known as Visas Condor, 
was established in January 2002 for counter-terrorism purposes. The 
participating agencies agreed to review visa cases on a "clock" basis, 
meaning that the consular officer would be free to issue the visa 
absent a "hold" request from another agency (relayed through the 
Department) within 30 days. A "hold" request did not necessarily imply 
that the applicant was ineligible, but rather indicated a desire for 
more time in light of possible agency interest. Given a "hold" request, 
the Department would then instruct the post to hold the visa 
application in abeyance pending resolution. Subsequent to institution 
of these procedures, the number of the visa condor cases overwhelmed 
resources and the clearing agencies did not possess the capacity to 
review all cases within the 30-day period. Once we became aware of this 
problem, we eliminated the 30-day clock. We also revoked all visas that 
had been issued pursuant to standard procedures but in which a clearing 
agency had in effect requested a "hold" after the 30-day period. The 
revocation of these 105 visas was precautionary and simply restored the 
cases to their "pending clearance" status. Thus, it does these visa 
applicants a disservice to suggest that they were terrorists or even 
suspected terrorists. In fact, a number of these cases were later 
cleared by the Foreign Terrorist Tracking Task Force of the FBI.

We believe it is also important that the GAO understand the reasons for 
the language used in the certificate of revocation. As the study 
pointed out, the certificate indicates that the revocation is effective 
immediately unless the person is in the United States, in which case 
the revocation is effective upon the person's departure from the United 
States. This longstanding practice has its roots in legal 
considerations, including the respective authorities of the Immigration 
and Naturalization Service (now the Department of Homeland Security) 
and the Department of State and litigation risks. It was reviewed by 
the INS General Counsel and the State Department in 1999 in 
consultation with the Justice Department's Office of Immigration 
Litigation. After that review, INS and State agreed that the Secretary 
of State's authority to revoke should continue to be administered as 
reflected in the certificate.

More recently, at the request of DHS, the Department agreed, subject to 
establishment of clear interagency procedures, to consider revoking 
visas effective immediately in potential security cases involving 
persons who are undergoing inspections at ports of entry and have not 
yet been admitted. DHS did not ask the Department to change the 
effective date of its visa revocations in cases of aliens already 
admitted to the United States. As the GAO report notes, lack of a valid 
visa is not a ground for removal from the United States. Indeed, many 
aliens enter the United States on single-entry visas and thus 
inherently have no valid visa after admission. They are nevertheless in 
lawful status if in compliance with the conditions of admission imposed 
by the Department of Homeland Security (the conditions being duration 
of and purpose of stay). Thus, the only reason to change the effective 
date of the Department's visa revocations in cases of aliens already 
admitted to the United States would be to test the ability of the 
Executive branch to remove an alien who has been admitted to the United 
States on a valid visa that was subsequently revoked effective 
retroactively; i.e., to the time of admission or of visa issuance). 
This would entail instituting removal proceedings under Section 237 of 
the INA on the ground that the alien was inadmissible at time of entry. 
Such an approach would require taking the position that the alien as a 
matter of law entered without a valid 
visa because after admission his visa was revoked under INA section 
222(1) retroactive to a time prior to admission. Neither State nor any 
of the other concerned agencies have to our knowledge wished to 
undertake such a course of action, with its attendant litigation risks.


GAO Comments:

The following are GAO's comments on the Department of State's letter 
dated June 10, 2003.

1. The scope of our review covered all visas revoked on terrorism 
concerns by the State Department, including headquarters officials and 
State's overseas consular officers, from September 11, 2001, through 
December 31, 2002. State Department officials determined that the total 
universe of such revocations consisted of 240 cases during that period 
and provided documentation for almost all of them. Headquarters 
officials, acting under the authority of the Secretary of State, 
revoked the visas in all of the cases. As noted in State's comments, in 
none of the cases did State believe that it had sufficient evidence to 
support a formal finding of inadmissibility; thus, all of the 
revocations were done as a precautionary measure.

2. Pages 10 and 11 of our report includes information on this matter.

3. We agree that these individuals may not be terrorists. However, the 
State Department has revoked their visas because of terrorism concerns. 
Our recommendations are designed to ensure that persons whose visas 
have been revoked because of potential terrorism concerns be denied 
entry to the United States and those that may already be in the United 
States be investigated to determine if they pose a security threat.

4. The Departments of State and Homeland Security have different views 
on this issue. Homeland Security believes that the language that the 
State Department has been using on visa revocation certificates 
effectively forecloses the U.S. government from litigating the issue of 
whether a visa revocation has the effect of rendering the individual as 
out-of-status (see p. 25 of our report). Our recommendations, if 
implemented, would help resolve these conflicting views.

(320172):

FOOTNOTES

[1] Office of Homeland Security, National Strategy for Homeland 
Security (Washington, D.C.: July 2002).

[2] U.S. General Accounting Office, Border Security: Visa Process 
Should be Strengthened as an Antiterrorism Tool, GAO-03-132NI 
(Washington, D.C.: Oct. 21, 2002).

[3] In this report, we use the term "visa" to refer to nonimmigrant 
visas only. The United States also grants visas to people who intend to 
immigrate to the United States. A visa is a travel document that allows 
a foreign visitor to present himself or herself at a port of entry for 
admission to the United States. Citizens of 27 countries that 
participate in the Visa Waiver Program, Canada, and certain other 
locations are not required to obtain visas for business or pleasure 
stays of short duration. See GAO-03-132NI for more information on the 
visa adjudication process and U.S. General Accounting Office, Border 
Security: Implications of Eliminating the Visa Waiver Program, GAO-03-
38 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 22, 2002), for more information on the Visa 
Waiver Program.

[4] On March 1, 2003, INS became part of three units within the 
Department of Homeland Security. INS inspection functions transferred 
to the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection; its investigative and 
enforcement functions transferred to the Bureau of Immigration and 
Customs Enforcement; and its immigration services function became part 
of the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services. Because our work 
focused on visa revocation cases that took place before the March 1 
reorganization, our report refers to the U.S. government's immigration 
agency as "INS."

[5] These watch lists are automated databases that contain information 
about individuals who are known or suspected terrorists so that these 
individuals can be prevented from entering the country, apprehended 
while in the country, or apprehended as they attempt to exit the 
country. Specific entries on watch lists are sometimes referred to as 
"lookouts." 

[6] The State Department also revokes visas for reasons other than 
terrorism, such as alien smuggling, drug trafficking, and 
misrepresentation. State Department officials told us that visas 
revoked on terrorism grounds represent a significant portion of all 
revoked visas, but they did not have data available on this matter.

[7] This number is based on our analysis of data we received from INS 
as of May 19, 2003. On May 20 and 21, INS and the FBI, respectively, 
provided additional information related to this matter. We were not 
able to complete anlaysis of the data prior to the release of this 
report due to the nature and volume of the data. The data could show 
that the actual number of persons is higher or lower than 30.

[8] The Attorney General's Guidelines on General Crimes, Racketeering 
Enterprise and Terrorism Enterprise Investigations provide for 
graduated levels of investigative activity by the FBI, allowing the 
bureau to act well in advance of the commission of planned terrorist 
acts or other federal crimes. The three levels of investigative 
activity defined in the guidelines are (1) the prompt and extremely 
limited checking of initial leads, (2) preliminary inquiries, and (3) 
full investigations. In this report, we are not prescribing which level 
of investigative activity is appropriate for persons with revoked visas 
who may be in the United States.

[9] We found no evidence of written procedures that define timeliness, 
but State officials told us that they try to send notification to the 
Lookout Unit the same day the revocation certificate is signed.

[10] 8 U.S.C. § 1101 et seq. The 1952 Immigration and Nationality Act 
has been amended several times, more recently by the Illegal 
Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-
208), the Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate 
Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism (USA PATRIOT) Act of 
2001 (P.L. 107-56), the Enhanced Border Security and Visa Entry Reform 
Act of 2002 (P.L. 107-173), and the Homeland Security Act of 2002 (P.L. 
107-296).

[11] See section 428 of the Homeland Security Act of 2002. 

[12] For purposes of this report, we define the term "foreign visitors" 
to mean nonimmigrant visa holders.

[13] The U.S. government has initiated a number of programs to register 
and monitor some categories of nonimmigrants--including foreign 
students and exchange visitors, as well as certain citizens of selected 
countries--during their visits to the United States.

[14] According to Department of Homeland Security officials, the 
Departments of State and Homeland Security are negotiating a memorandum 
of understanding to address the scope of this authority and the manner 
in which the two agencies will coordinate visa issuance.

[15] For more information on the overall border security process and 
the associated terrorist watch lists, see U.S. General Accounting 
Office, Information Technology: Terrorist Watch Lists Should Be 
Consolidated to Promote Better Integration and Sharing, GAO-03-322 
(Washington, D.C.: Apr. 15, 2003).

[16] The Departments of State and Justice hold different views on 
whether evidence of a specific act of terrorism is required before a 
visa can be denied under the INA's terrorism provision (GAO-03-132NI). 
In July 2002, an Associate Deputy Attorney General told us that (1) the 
State Department applies too high a standard of evidence to deny a visa 
under that provision and (2) name checks provide sufficient evidence to 
deny a visa to applicants. According to Homeland Security officials, 
this dispute between the two departments had not been resolved as of 
June 2003.

[17] Section 221(i) of the INA gives the Secretary of State and 
consular officers discretionary authority to revoke a visa. INA section 
212(a)(3)(B) contains the grounds that an alien can be deemed 
inadmissible to the United States for terrorist-related activities. 
Consular officers may revoke a visa in instances prescribed by 
regulation (22 CFR § 41.122). Such instances include if (1) the 
consular officer finds that the alien is no longer entitled to 
nonimmigrant status specified in the visa; (2) the alien has, since the 
time that the visa was issued, become ineligible to receive a visa 
under the INA; or (3) the visa has been physically removed from the 
passport in which it was issued. Moreover, regulations also allow 
immigration officers to revoke visas under certain circumstances (22 
CFR § 41.122).

[18] In 105 of these 240 cases, the FBI did not complete a new special 
clearance procedure for certain visa applicants in a timely manner. The 
U.S. government instituted this new clearance procedure, known as the 
Visas Condor name check, in late January 2002 as a means of identifying 
and denying visas to suspected terrorists. In the 105 cases, State had 
to revoke the visas because the consular officers had already issued 
the visas before the FBI had indicated any interest in the cases. In 
July 2002, the State Department and the FBI changed the Visas Condor 
procedures to ensure that consular officers do not issue visas to the 
Visas Condor applicants until the FBI clears them. See GAO-03-132NI for 
more information on delays in, and changes to, the Visas Condor name 
check procedures. In the remaining 135 cases, State revoked the visas 
based on potentially derogatory intelligence information, that might 
eventually lead to a finding of inadmissibility under the INA, if that 
information was found to pertain to the individual in question. 

[19] It is possible for an individual to present to an immigration 
inspector a revoked visa that appears to be valid, if the visa had not 
been physically cancelled by writing or stamping across the face of the 
visa to indicate that it had been revoked.

[20] In 228 cases, the State Department included the FBI as an 
addressee on the revocation cable.

[21] Revocation lookouts posted by State officials in CLASS prior to 
August 15, 2002, were coded with either a "00" (indicating that a 
security advisory opinion is required before a visa can be granted) or 
a "P3B" (indicating that the individual might be refused a visa for 
terrorist activities); IBIS did not pick up lookouts with either of 
these codes in its interface with CLASS. State Department officials 
said that INS elected not to receive P3B lookouts from CLASS. In 
commenting on this report, Homeland Security officials told us that INS 
had not asked for the P3B code to be uploaded into IBIS because State 
had never told INS that it would be using the code to indicate that a 
visa had been revoked on terrorism grounds. 

[22] The consular post in Jeddah made VRVK entries in cases where it 
was notified by the department that a visa issued at the post had been 
revoked.

[23] The Lookout Unit posts lookouts on its own watch list, the 
National Automated Immigration Lookout System. These lookouts are then 
uploaded into IBIS every evening.

[24] We determined this number on the basis of INS data in the 
Nonimmigrant Information System (NIIS), which does not have complete 
arrival and departure records for all non-U.S. citizens. NIIS records 
arrivals and departures of foreign citizens through the collection of 
I-94 forms. Some aliens are required to fill out and turn in these 
forms to inspectors at air and seaports of entries as well as at land 
borders. (Canadians and U.S. permanent residents are not required to 
fill out I-94 forms when they enter the United States). NIIS does not 
have departure data for aliens if they fail to turn in the bottom 
portion of their I-94 when they depart. In late May 2003, we received 
additional data from INS and the FBI. We have not been able to fully 
analyze these data due to the nature and volume of the information; 
however, the data may indicate that the number is higher or lower than 
30.

[25] In May 2003, an official from the Lookout Unit said that her unit 
recently established a procedure in which, upon receiving notification 
of a revocation, she will query INS databases to determine if the 
individual recently entered the country. She will then give this 
information to investigators in the Bureau of Immigration and Customs 
Enforcement.

[26] See INA § 221(i) (8 U.S.C. § 1201(i)).

[27] See INA § 237 (8 U.S.C. 1227).

[28] One example of such an immigration violation would be if an alien 
obtains a nonimmigrant visa and subsequently engages in unauthorized 
work. Such activities would violate the alien's immigration status and 
render the alien removable under section 237(a)(1)(C) of the INA.

[29] This standard is different from the standard applied to aliens 
seeking admission to the United States. Such aliens bear the burden of 
proof to establish that they are clearly and beyond a doubt entitled to 
be admitted to the United States and that they are not inadmissible 
under section 212 of the INA. See section 240 of the INA (8 U.S.C. 
1229a).

[30] See the INA, §§ 501-507 (8 U.S.C. §§ 1531-1537).

GAO's Mission:

The General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress, 
exists to support Congress in meeting its constitutional 
responsibilities and to help improve the performance and accountability 
of the federal government for the American people. GAO examines the use 
of public funds; evaluates federal programs and policies; and provides 
analyses, recommendations, and other assistance to help Congress make 
informed oversight, policy, and funding decisions. GAO's commitment to 
good government is reflected in its core values of accountability, 
integrity, and reliability.

Obtaining Copies of GAO Reports and Testimony:

The fastest and easiest way to obtain copies of GAO documents at no 
cost is through the Internet. GAO's Web site ( www.gao.gov ) contains 
abstracts and full-text files of current reports and testimony and an 
expanding archive of older products. The Web site features a search 
engine to help you locate documents using key words and phrases. You 
can print these documents in their entirety, including charts and other 
graphics.

Each day, GAO issues a list of newly released reports, testimony, and 
correspondence. GAO posts this list, known as "Today's Reports," on its 
Web site daily. The list contains links to the full-text document 
files. To have GAO e-mail this list to you every afternoon, go to 
www.gao.gov and select "Subscribe to e-mail alerts" under the "Order 
GAO Products" heading.

Order by Mail or Phone:

The first copy of each printed report is free. Additional copies are $2 
each. A check or money order should be made out to the Superintendent 
of Documents. GAO also accepts VISA and Mastercard. Orders for 100 or 
more copies mailed to a single address are discounted 25 percent. 
Orders should be sent to:

U.S. General Accounting Office

441 G Street NW,

Room LM Washington,

D.C. 20548:

To order by Phone:  

 Voice: (202) 512-6000:

 TDD: (202) 512-2537:

 Fax: (202) 512-6061:

To Report Fraud, Waste, and Abuse in Federal Programs:

Contact:

Web site: www.gao.gov/fraudnet/fraudnet.htm E-mail: fraudnet@gao.gov

Automated answering system: (800) 424-5454 or (202) 512-7470:

Public Affairs:

Jeff Nelligan, managing director, NelliganJ@gao.gov (202) 512-4800 U.S.

General Accounting Office, 441 G Street NW, Room 7149 Washington, D.C.

20548: