On Aug. 8, Chief Judge James C. Dever III of the U.S.
District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina entered an order that
revoked the naturalized U.S. citizenship of a child sex offender; restrained
and enjoined him from claiming any rights, privileges, or advantages of U.S.
citizenship; and ordered him to immediately surrender and deliver his
Certificate of Naturalization and any other indicia of U.S. citizenship to
federal authorities.
“The Justice Department is committed to preserving the
integrity of our nation’s immigration system and the propriety of the
government’s adjudication of immigration benefits,” said Acting Assistant
Attorney General Chad A. Readler of the Justice Department’s Civil Division.
“We will aggressively pursue the denaturalization of individuals who lie on
their naturalization applications or lie during the naturalization interview,
especially in a circumstance like this one, which involved an alien who
repeatedly sexually abused the minor victim on almost a daily basis.”
“Under our laws, United States citizenship is conferred on
those who demonstrate honesty and integrity, who respect our laws, and who can
demonstrate the moral character necessary to be a positive and cultivating
member of American society,” said U.S. Attorney Robert J. Higdon. “The defendant fell short of that mark in
every regard and we are satisfied that this Court saw fit to revoke his
naturalized citizenship. As part of the
Justice Department’s mission to enforce the nation’s immigration laws, we will
seek denaturalization in cases where individuals are dishonest and where
criminal activity demonstrated the lack of moral character necessary for
American citizenship.”
Prempeh Ernest Agyemang, a native of Ghana, was admitted to
the United States in 1989. Agyemang then
married a United States citizen who had a young child. When the child was in fourth grade, Agyemang
began sexually abusing her starting in late 1999 or early 2000. Notably, after the sexual abuse began, while
under oath during his naturalization interview, Agyemang stated that he had
never committed a crime or offense for which he had not been arrested. Relying
on this answer, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) granted his
naturalization application and Agyemang became a U.S. citizen later that year.
On Nov. 5, 2003, Mr. Agyemang pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting his minor
stepchild on April 1, 2000.
Specifically, Agyemang pleaded guilty to sexual activity by a Substitute
Parent or Custodian.
“This order sends a clear message to individuals who commit
any type of sexual offense, particularly those involving children, during the
naturalization process – we will investigate you and seek you out to ensure
that justice is done,” said U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
Acting Director Ronald D. Vitiello. “ICE will continue to work with our
partners at the Justice Department’s Office of Immigration Litigation –
District Court Section to hold individuals responsible for sexual offenses,
especially those involving child victims.”
"Mr. Agyemang repeatedly sexually abused a minor child
and then lied about the sexual abuse to obtain naturalization," said USCIS
Director L. Francis Cissna. "By
doing so, he threatened to undermine the hard work our officers do every day to
protect the integrity of the immigration system. USCIS is glad to see him held accountable
and applauds our partners at the Justice Department for helping bring him to
justice.”
This case was investigated by ICE Homeland Security
Investigations and the Civil Division’s Office of Immigration Litigation,
District Court Section (OIL-DCS). The case was litigated by John Inkeles of
OIL-DCS, with support from ICE Assistant Chief Counsel Cori White, Gaston
County District Attorney Locke Bell, and the United States Attorney’s Office
for the Eastern District of North Carolina.
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