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Testimony:

Before the Subcommittee on National Security, Emerging Threats, and 
International Relations, Committee on Government Reform, House of 
Representatives:

United States Government Accountability Office:

GAO:

For Release on Delivery Expected at 10:00 a.m. EDT:

Tuesday, July 13, 2004:

Border Security:

Additional Actions Needed to Eliminate Weaknesses in the Visa 
Revocation Process:

Statement of Jess T. Ford, Director, International Affairs and Trade:

GAO-04-899T:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-04-899T, a testimony before the Subcommittee on 
National Security, Emerging Threats, and International Relations, 
Committee on Government Reform, House of Representatives: 

Why GAO Did This Study:

The National Strategy for Homeland Security calls for preventing 
foreign terrorists from entering 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 June 2003 that the visa revocation process 
needed to be strengthened as an antiterrorism tool and recommended that 
the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), in conjunction with the 
Departments of State (State) and Justice, develop specific policies and 
procedures to ensure that appropriate agencies are notified of 
revocations based on terrorism grounds and take proper actions. GAO 
examined whether weaknesses in the visa revocation process identified 
in our June 2003 report were addressed.

What GAO Found:

GAO’s analysis shows that the Departments of State and Homeland 
Security took some actions in summer 2003 to address weaknesses in the 
visa revocation process that we identified in June 2003. However, GAO’s 
review of visas revoked from October to December 2003, including a 
detailed review of a random sample of 35 cases, showed that weaknesses 
remained. 
* Delays existed in matching names of suspected terrorists with names 
of visa holders and in forwarding necessary information to consular 
officials at State. In at least 3 of the 35 cases, it took State 6 
months or longer to revoke visas after receiving a recommendation to do 
so. 
* In 3 cases, State took a week or longer after deciding to revoke 
visas to post a lookout or notify DHS. Without these notifications, 
DHS may not know to investigate those individuals who may be in the 
country.
* In 10 cases, DHS either failed or took several months to notify 
immigration investigators that individuals with revoked visas may be in 
the country. It then took more than 2 months for immigration 
investigators to initiate field investigations of these individuals.
After GAO initiated its inquiry for this report in January 2004, 
additional actions were taken to improve the process. DHS and State 
believe these actions will help avoid the delays experienced in the 
past. In April and May, State revised its procedures and formalized 
its tracking system for visa revocation cases. In March, DHS developed 
new written procedures and acted to ensure that immigration 
investigators were aware of all individuals with revoked visas who may 
be in the country. State and DHS also took some steps to address legal 
and policy issues related to visa revocations. Further, in April, the 
Terrorist Screening Center (TSC), an interagency group organized under 
the Federal Bureau of Investigation, identified the visa revocation 
process as a potential homeland security vulnerability and developed an 
informal process for TSC to handle visa revocation cases. However, 
weaknesses remain. For example, State’s and DHS’s procedures are not 
fully coordinated and lack performance standards, such as specific time 
frames for completing each step of the process. Moreover, outstanding 
legal and policy issues continue to exist regarding removing 
individuals based solely on their visa revocation.

Points of Delay Observed in the Visa Revocation Process: 

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

What GAO Recommends:

To improve the visa revocation process as an antiterrorism tool, we 
recommend that the Secretaries of Homeland Security and State jointly 
(1) develop a written governmentwide policy that clearly defines 
agencies’ roles and responsibilities and sets performance standards and 
(2) address outstanding legal and policy issues in this area or provide 
Congress with specific actions it could take to resolve them. DHS 
generally concurred with these recommendations. State agreed to 
consult with DHS regarding our recommendations.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-899T.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click 
on the link above. For more information, contact Jess T. Ford at 
(202) 512-4128 or fordj@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee:

I am pleased to be here to discuss the report[Footnote 1] we are 
issuing today on the visa revocation process and the steps that the 
Departments of State (State) and Homeland Security (DHS) and other 
federal agencies have taken to improve the use of this process as an 
antiterrorism tool. In June 2003 we reported[Footnote 2] that agencies 
lacked written procedures to ensure that appropriate personnel are 
notified and take specific actions when the Department of State revokes 
visas[Footnote 3] on terrorism grounds.[Footnote 4] As a result, 
lookouts were not always posted, other agencies were not always 
notified of visa revocations, and there were potential investigative 
gaps on individuals with visas revoked based on terrorism concerns who 
were in the United States. We recommended 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 information is 
transmitted to the appropriate immigration and law enforcement agencies 
in a timely manner. We also recommended that they develop a specific 
policy on actions that immigration and law enforcement agencies should 
take to investigate and locate individuals who remain in the United 
States after their visas are revoked.

At your request, we examined whether weaknesses in the visa revocation 
process identified in our June 2003 report were addressed. To 
accomplish our objective, we obtained information on policies and 
procedures put in place to improve the visa revocation process; 
interviewed key State and DHS officials responsible for visa 
revocations; determined the steps taken to resolve legal and policy 
issues raised in our June 2003 report; and analyzed data on all visas 
revoked on terrorism grounds over a 3-month period,[Footnote 5] 
including detailed information on a random sample of 35 cases selected 
from data provided by State in February 2004. We did not review 
activities by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to investigate 
suspected terrorists. This testimony is based on a published report 
that was done in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards.

Summary:

The Departments of State and Homeland Security took some actions in the 
summer of 2003 to address the weaknesses identified in our June 2003 
report. State and U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), a component 
of DHS, developed procedures outlining their respective processes for 
handling visa revocations. However, our analysis of visas revoked based 
on terrorism concerns from October through December 2003 revealed that 
weaknesses remained in the implementation of the visa revocation 
process, especially relating to the timely transmission of information 
among federal agencies. For instance, we found that backlogs or long 
delays sometimes occurred in:

* screening names of terrorists against State's database of current 
visa holders,

* transmitting recommendations to revoke individual visas,

* revoking individual visas after receiving a recommendation to do so,

* posting appropriate lookouts used to alert border inspectors of the 
revocation,

* notifying DHS of visa revocations, and:

* requesting that field offices investigate individuals with visas 
revoked on terrorism grounds who may be in the country.

We also found that agencies involved in the visa revocation process had 
conflicting records of how many visas were revoked for terrorism 
concerns and whether individuals who held these visas may be in the 
country. In addition, officials from DHS's Customs and Border 
Protection could not document that they consistently notified 
immigration officials of individuals with revoked visas who were 
present in the United States. Our review of visa revocations shows that 
DHS has located individuals in the country whose visas were revoked 
because they may be suspected or actual terrorists. DHS officials told 
us that some are still being investigated, three have been arrested on 
immigration charges, and others have been cleared. With respect to an 
alien already present in the United States, the Department of State's 
current visa revocation certificate makes the revocation effective only 
upon the alien's departure. Therefore, according to DHS officials, if 
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) special agents locate an 
alien for whom State has issued a revocation certificate that states 
the revocation is effective upon his or her departure, ICE would be 
unable to place the alien in removal proceedings based solely on a visa 
revocation that had not yet taken place.[Footnote 6]

After we initiated our inquiry for this report in January 2004, State 
and DHS took additional actions to address the weaknesses we identified 
through our analysis. State and DHS believe these actions will avoid 
delays experienced in the past. In April and May, State made 
significant revisions to its procedures and formalized its tracking 
system for visa revocation cases. Between January and May, DHS took 
steps to develop additional written procedures, improve the sharing of 
information on visa revocation cases, and ensure that immigration 
investigators are aware of individuals whose visas were revoked and who 
may be in the country. Finally, State and DHS began discussing how to 
address the legal and policy issues regarding the removal of 
individuals with revoked visas. In addition, the Terrorist Screening 
Center (TSC), an interagency organization established under the FBI in 
December 2003, recently took some steps to improve the visa revocation 
process, including developing written standard operating procedures 
related to the screening of intelligence information and training 
additional staff to perform this function. We did not fully assess the 
effectiveness of these actions because they were taken after the 
October to December 2003 time period that we reviewed. Nonetheless, 
additional measures are needed to further improve the process. The 
written policies and procedures often neither contain performance 
standards such as time frames for completing individual steps of the 
visa revocation process, nor do they reflect a fully coordinated 
approach to implementing the process. Further, State and DHS have not 
concluded their discussion of legal and policy issues related to 
removing individuals with revoked visas from the country.

In light of our past work and the weaknesses we identified through our 
review, we are recommending that the Secretaries of Homeland Security 
and State work jointly and with other appropriate agencies to develop a 
written, governmentwide policy that clearly defines roles and 
responsibilities and sets performance standards for the agencies 
involved in the visa revocation process. We also recommend that DHS and 
State address outstanding legal and policy issues related to removing 
individuals with revoked visas from the country or, by October 1, 2004, 
provide Congress with a list of specific actions that could help 
resolve them.

Background:

Our nation's border security process involves multiple tools for 
addressing potential terrorist threats to the United States. These 
tools generally include (1) preventing potential terrorists from 
entering the country and (2) identifying, locating, and investigating 
potential terrorists already in the United States. One such tool is the 
visa revocation process, which involves multiple federal agencies 
including the Terrorist Screening Center and the Departments of State 
and Homeland Security. The visa revocation process typically begins 
with the development of derogatory information about individuals by 
various federal agencies. This information is then forwarded to TSC, 
which, along with State, identifies visa holders who may be suspected 
or actual terrorists. State then posts lookouts regarding the 
revocation for these individuals; revokes their visas; and notifies the 
overseas post that issued the visa, DHS, and other agencies. Based on 
the notification from State, DHS then determines if any of these 
individuals may be in the country. If so, DHS attempts to locate, 
investigate, and, as appropriate, remove them from the country.

Initial Actions Taken to Address Weaknesses Were Inadequate:

Mr. Chairman, following our June 2003 report, State and DHS's U.S. 
Customs and Border Protection developed written policies outlining 
their respective processes for handling visa revocations. However, our 
analysis of subsequent visa revocations shows that weaknesses remained 
in the implementation of the visa revocation process.

Delays Occurred at Many Steps in the Visa Revocation Process:

State's July 7, 2003, standard operating procedures outlined its 
internal process for handling visa revocations, including posting 
lookouts and notifying other agencies of the visa revocation. U.S. 
Customs and Border Protection's procedures developed following our June 
2003 report explained the process for determining whether an individual 
with a revoked visa may be in the country and, if so, taking 
appropriate steps to notify investigators. Despite these initial 
efforts, our review of visas revoked on terrorism grounds from October 
through December 2003 showed that weaknesses remained in the visa 
revocation process, especially regarding timely transmission of 
information among federal agencies. As shown in figure 1, we found 
delays in agency efforts to:

* Identify individuals whose visas should be revoked. In August and 
September 2003, there was a backlog of approximately 5,000 names of 
suspected terrorists that had not been screened to identify any visa 
holders.

* Transmit recommendations to consular officials to revoke certain 
individuals' visas. Instead of sending the typical average of 2 to 6 
recommendations to revoke per day, intelligence screeners waited until 
they had large batches of nearly 100 recommendations or more before 
sending them to consular officials at State.

* Post lookouts to alert border inspectors of visa revocations. 
Although State's standard operating procedures directed Consular 
Affairs officials to post lookouts regarding the revocation before 
finalizing it, we found that in 6 of the 35 cases we examined in 
detail, Consular Affairs did not do so until after the revocation was 
finalized.

* Revoke individual visas. State officials told us it should take no 
more than a week to revoke an individual's visa after receiving a 
recommendation to do so. In 6 cases, we had sufficient information to 
determine how long it took State to revoke a visa after receiving a 
recommendation to do so. In 3 of these cases, it took State at least 6 
months and, in one case, as long as 17 months to revoke the 
individual's visa.

* Notify DHS of visa revocations. Of the 35 cases we reviewed in 
detail, DHS received notification from State the same day a revocation 
was finalized in 9 cases; in 1 to 6 days in 23 cases; and in 7 days or 
longer in 3 cases. It is particularly important that these 
notifications are timely when the alien may already be in the country 
so that DHS can locate and investigate him or her.

* Investigate individuals with visas revoked on terrorism grounds who 
may be in the country. After receiving notification from State, DHS's 
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) determined that field 
offices should investigate 8 of the 35 cases we examined in detail. In 
all 8 of these cases, ICE waited more than 2 months to initiate field 
investigations.

Figure 1: Points of Delay in the Visa Revocation Process:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Conflicting Data among Agencies:

We also found that for the October to December 2003 time period, State, 
CBP, and ICE reported different numbers of revocations based on 
terrorism concerns. As shown in figure 2, State listed 338; ICE, 347; 
and CBP, 336. We found that only 320 names were on all three lists and 
that some lists contained names that were not on either of the other 
lists. Instances where a name did not appear on all three lists show a 
potential breakdown in the visa revocation process and raise concern 
because DHS may not have been able to take timely action to determine 
if these individuals were in the country and, if so, to locate and 
investigate them.

Figure 2: Inconsistencies among Agencies on Number of Visas Revoked 
from October through December 2003:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Our detailed review of 35 visa revocations on terrorism grounds also 
showed that CBP's[Footnote 7] and ICE's records conflicted on whether 
certain individuals may have been in the country. In 3 of the 35 cases, 
CBP and ICE disagreed about whether an individual might have been in 
the country at the time of visa revocation and whether he or she might 
still be in the country. In 2 of the cases, CBP did not believe the 
individual was in the country and, therefore, did not refer the cases 
to ICE for investigation. However, ICE special agents determined that 
both of these individuals were and still are in the country--one is 
awaiting adjudication of a political asylum claim, and the other has a 
pending application to become a lawful permanent resident of the United 
States.[Footnote 8] In another instance, CBP believed an individual was 
in the country when his visa was revoked and subsequently notified ICE 
of the need to locate and investigate him. However, ICE performed its 
own search of immigration records based on State's notification and 
concluded that the individual was not in the country. Therefore, it did 
not investigate him. According to CBP data, this individual has been in 
the country for more than a year.

Lapses in Notification, Provision of Derogatory Information:

We further found that although Customs and Border Protection officials 
are supposed to immediately notify Immigration and Customs Enforcement 
of individuals with revoked visas who may be in the country, CBP could 
not document that it had notified ICE promptly or, in several cases, 
that it notified ICE at all. According to CBP data on the 35 cases in 
our sample, 10 aliens might have been in the United States at the time 
of their revocation. In 3 of these cases, CBP records indicate that ICE 
was never notified; in the other 7 cases, CBP notified ICE but could 
not document that the notification occurred until at least 3 months 
after the revocation.

In addition, Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials stated that 
they often received no derogatory information showing that individuals 
whose visas State had revoked on terrorism concerns may pose a national 
security threat. Without this information, ICE may expend resources 
conducting investigations on individuals who they believe may pose 
little or no threat to national security. According to ICE officials, 
the growing number of visa revocation cases based on terrorism concerns 
places a significant strain on their investigative resources, forcing 
ICE to pull agents off active investigations of known national security 
threats to investigate visa revocation cases.

State officials told us that the vast majority of visa revocations on 
terrorism grounds are based on derogatory information in the TIPOFF 
database. However, in May 2004, ICE officials told us that they were 
not aware that most of State's visa revocations on terrorism grounds 
are based on information in TIPOFF. According to TSC, of the 35 cases 
we examined in detail, 32 of the individuals appeared in TIPOFF. In 
June 2004, ICE informed us that its records check located only 6 of the 
35 individuals from our sample in TIPOFF. Also in June, State officials 
told us they recently began providing the TIPOFF record number to DHS 
for each individual whose revocation was based on derogatory 
information in TIPOFF.

Majority of ICE Investigations Concluded, but Legal and Policy Issues 
Regarding Removing Aliens Remain:

Separate from our detailed review of 35 visa revocation cases, we 
obtained information on the more than 330 visa revocations on terrorism 
grounds from October through December 2003. According to ICE records, 
ICE identified 64 individuals whose visas were revoked on national 
security grounds between October and December 2003 and may be in the 
country, initiated investigations of all these individuals, and 
concluded a majority of these investigations. Data provided by ICE show 
that these investigations resulted in confirming departure of some 
aliens, clearing others, and arresting 3 on administrative immigration 
charges.[Footnote 9] On June 8, 2004, ICE investigators told us that 
they have no specific derogatory information that would indicate that 
any of the individuals remaining in the United States currently 
represent a threat to national security. We also noted several cases 
where the visa revocation process prevented individuals with visas 
revoked based on terrorism concerns from entering the United States or 
helped remove them from the United States.

While ICE has investigated individuals with visas revoked on terrorism 
grounds, if ICE special agents told us that if they locate an alien in 
the United States for whom State has issued a revocation certificate 
using its current wording, ICE would be unable to remove the individual 
based solely on the visa revocation. State's current visa revocation 
certificate states that the revocation shall become effective 
immediately on the date the certificate is signed unless the alien is 
already in the United States, in which case the revocation will become 
effective immediately upon the alien's departure.

Actions Have Been Taken Recently to Address Identified Weaknesses:

Since we initiated our inquiry in January 2004, State and DHS have 
taken additional steps to address identified weaknesses in the visa 
revocation process. These include revising procedures, reviewing past 
visa revocation cases, and taking steps to address legal and policy 
issues. In addition, in mid-April, TSC identified visa revocations as a 
potential homeland security vulnerability and developed an informal 
process for coordinating actions and sharing information on visa 
revocations. However, we identified some weaknesses that still need to 
be addressed.

State Revised Standard Operation Procedures and Formalized Its 
Revocation Tracking System:

In the course of responding to our inquiries, State's Visa Office 
discovered that its standard operating procedures had not always been 
followed correctly. As a result, in April and May, State made 
significant revisions to its procedures to provide more explicit 
instructions for each step in the process.[Footnote 10] Also in April, 
a State official told us that the Visa Office planned to formalize its 
previously informal system for tracking visa revocations to make it a 
definitive reference point for information about all visa revocations.

DHS Acted to Improve Policies and Information Sharing, Review Visa 
Revocations, and Resolve Legal and Policy Issues:

DHS also took several actions following the initiation of our inquiry. 
In January, ICE assigned a special agent to CBP to assist with 
information exchange and coordination of visa revocation issues and in 
March issued written standard operating procedures for visa revocation 
investigations. In May, CBP reviewed all visa revocations in its 
lookout database to ensure that all appropriate notifications had been 
sent to ICE and sent additional notifications. This review identified 
656 individuals with revoked visas who may be in the country. We 
reviewed these data and determined that 34 of these individuals' visas 
were revoked on terrorism grounds during the period of our review.

In February 2004, DHS officials also told us that they were considering 
a regulation relating to visa revocations that could allow the removal 
of individuals from the United States because their visas have been 
revoked by State. In June 2004, DHS officials told us that they were 
still considering this regulation and were coordinating with State and 
the Department of Justice. Also in June 2004, DHS officials told us 
that they had reached an informal understanding with State that, on a 
case-by-case basis, DHS may ask that State change its revocation 
certificate related to an admitted alien to make the revocation 
effective retroactively to the date of issuance of the visa, and State 
will consider such a request in consultation with DHS and the 
Department of Justice. State and DHS further agreed that should the 
wording of the revocation certificate be changed, it would not be 
changed in all instances, but only on a case-by-case basis. According 
to DHS officials, if State changed the wording of the certificate to 
make the revocation effective retroactively to the date of issuance of 
the visa, the government would no longer be effectively barred from 
litigating the issue. Nonetheless, revocation of a visa is not 
explicitly a stated grounds for removal under the Immigration and 
Nationality Act.[Footnote 11] Moreover, the issue of whether, under 
current statute and regulations, DHS would have the authority to 
initiate removal proceedings solely on the basis of a visa revocation 
has not been litigated and remains unresolved legally. As of June 2004, 
DHS did not have any specific time frame for completing discussions 
with State and other agencies regarding legal and policy issues 
relating to visa revocations.

TSC Developed Procedures, Trained Additional Staff, and Assessed the 
Visa Revocation Process:

Since its formation in December 2003, TSC has taken actions to clarify 
its role, increase its capacity to handle visa revocation cases, and 
analyze the visa revocation process as an antiterrorism tool. 
Specifically, in March 2004, TSC developed written standard operating 
procedures outlining the process for screening intelligence information 
to identify visa holders who may be terrorists. TSC also recently began 
training additional staff to screen terrorism intelligence for matches 
with visa holders.[Footnote 12] TSC officials told us that, in mid-
April 2004, TSC identified the visa revocation process as a potential 
vulnerability to homeland security. As a result, it developed a process 
to enable the Center to coordinate the sharing of information on visa 
revocation cases without relying on formal notifications transmitted 
among the agencies.

Additional Actions Still Needed:

While steps have been taken to improve the visa revocation process, 
which State and DHS believe will help avoid delays experienced in the 
past, additional actions are needed to further improve it. There is no 
governmentwide policy outlining roles and responsibilities for the visa 
revocation process. Although CBP and ICE have written internal 
procedures related to their respective roles and responsibilities in 
the visa revocation process, DHS has still not developed an agencywide 
policy governing the process. The written procedures also often lack 
specific time frames for completing individual steps in the process. 
For instance, State's procedures lack guidance on how quickly Consular 
Affairs officials should act on recommendations from TSC to revoke 
individuals' visas, and ICE's written procedures do not specify a time 
frame for referring cases to field offices. In addition, State and DHS 
have not concluded their discussions on legal and policy issues related 
to removing individuals with revoked visas from the United States.

Mr. Chairman, in light of the weaknesses we identified in our most 
recent review of the visa revocation process as an antiterrorism tool, 
we are recommending that the Secretary of Homeland Security work 
jointly with the Secretary of State and other appropriate agencies to 
take the following two actions:

* Develop a written, governmentwide policy that clearly defines the 
roles and responsibilities of the agencies involved in the visa 
revocation process, including the Terrorist Screening Center. This 
policy should include directions for sharing information and tracking 
visa revocation cases throughout the interagency visa revocation 
process. It should incorporate performance standards (e.g., time frames 
for completing each step in the process) and periodic interagency 
assessments to determine whether information is being shared among the 
agencies involved, appropriate follow-up action is being taken, and 
data differences, if they occur, are being reconciled; and:

* Address outstanding legal and policy issues regarding the status of 
aliens with visas revoked on national security grounds who are in the 
United States at the time of the revocation. If these issues cannot be 
addressed, the executive branch should, by October 1, 2004, provide 
Congress with a list of specific actions (including any potential 
legislative changes) that could help resolve them.

In commenting on a draft of our report, the Department of Homeland 
Security said it generally concurred with the report and its 
recommendations. It added that our identification of areas where 
improvements are needed will contribute to ongoing efforts to 
strengthen the visa revocation process. The Department of State 
indicated that it believes that its handling of the revocation process 
overall has been excellent and has improved over time. State indicated 
that it would consult with DHS regarding implementation of our 
recommendations.

Mr. Chairman, this concludes my prepared statement. I would be happy to 
answer any questions you or other Members of the Subcommittee may have 
at this time.

GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

For further information on this testimony, please call Jess Ford or 
John Brummet at (202) 512-4128. Individuals making key contributions to 
this testimony include Jason Bair, Elizabeth Singer, Mary Moutsos, 
Janey Cohen, and Etana Finkler.

FOOTNOTES

[1] U.S. General Accounting Office, Border Security: Additional Actions 
Needed to Eliminate Weaknesses in the Visa Revocation Process, 
GAO-04-795 (Washington, D.C.: July 13, 2004).

[2] U.S. General Accounting Office, Border Security: New Policies and 
Procedures Are Needed to Fill Gaps in the Visa Revocation Process, 
GAO-03-798 (Washington, D.C.: June 18, 2003).

[3] In this testimony, 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.

[4] The Department of State revokes a person's visa as a precautionary 
measure after it learns that person may be a suspected terrorist. The 
purpose of this revocation is to obtain additional information from the 
person to determine if the individual is the same person who is 
suspected of being a terrorist by requiring him or her to return to the 
consulate that issued the visa. According to State officials, this 
authority is an important and useful tool for more closely scrutinizing 
the individual as he or she reapplies for a new visa. State also 
revokes visas for reasons other than terrorism, such as alien 
smuggling, drug trafficking, and misrepresentation. State officials 
told us that visas revoked on terrorism grounds account for the vast 
majority of all visas revoked on national security grounds.

[5] Our review covered only nonimmigrant visas that State revoked on 
terrorism grounds from October 1, 2003, through December 31, 2003. In 
this testimony, when we refer to individuals whose visas have been 
revoked, we are referring to those individuals for whom the Department 
of State has issued a visa revocation certificate. According to the 
terms of the certificate, the revocation is effective immediately on 
the date the certificate is signed unless the alien is already in the 
United States, in which case the revocation becomes effective 
immediately upon the alien's departure from the United States.

[6] DHS could also attempt to remove these aliens based on the 
derogatory information that led State to revoke the individual's visa.

[7] CBP's data come from 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 sea ports of entry 
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.

[8] On June 8, 2004, ICE investigators told us that they have no 
specific derogatory information that would indicate that any of the 
individuals remaining in the United States currently represent a threat 
to national security. 

[9] ICE provided us a breakdown of results of the 64 investigations, 
but we have not included these data because DHS classified them as law 
enforcement sensitive.

[10] State officials told us that, in light of the evolving 
relationships among the agencies involved in the visa revocation 
process, they revise their procedures as necessary. 

[11] 8 U.S.C. § 1101 et seq.

[12] Previously, the center had one full-time staff member dedicated to 
performing this function. 

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