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

United States General Accounting Office:

GAO:

July 2004:

Border Security:

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

GAO-04-795:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-04-795, a report to the Chairman, 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 its June 2003 report were addressed.

What GAO Found:

GAO’s analysis shows that the Departments of State and Homeland 
Security took some actions in the summer of 2003 to address weaknesses 
in the visa revocation process identified in its June 2003 report. 
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 in the implementation of the revocation process, 
especially in the timely transmission of information among federal 
agencies. For example: 

* Delays existed in matching names of suspected terrorists with names 
of visa holders and in forwarding necessary information to State. In 
at least 3 of the 35 cases, it took State 6 months or more 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 to notify or took several months to 
notify immigration investigators that individuals with revoked visas 
may be in the country. It then took over 2 months for immigration 
investigators to request field investigations of these individuals.

After GAO initiated its inquiry for this report in January 2004, 
additional actions were taken to improve the process, including 
revising procedures and reassessing 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 
are 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. In April, the Terrorist 
Screening Center (TSC), an interagency group organized under the FBI, 
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. Outstanding legal and policy issues continue to exist 
regarding the removal of 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, GAO 
recommends that the Secretaries of Homeland Security and State jointly 
(1) develop a written governmentwide policy that clearly defines 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 the report and recommendations. State agreed to consult 
with DHS regarding our recommendations.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-795.
 
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]

Contents:

Letter:

Results in Brief:

Background:

Initial Actions Taken to Address Weaknesses Were Inadequate:

Recent Actions Taken to Address Identified Weaknesses in the Visa 
Revocation Process:

Conclusions:

Recommendations for Executive Action:

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology:

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security:

GAO Comments:

Appendix III: Comments from the Department of State:

GAO Comments:

Figures:

Figure 1: The Visa Revocation Process in Effect from October through 
December 2003:

Figure 2: Points of Delay in the Visa Revocation Process:

Figure 3: Inconsistencies among Agencies on Number of Visas Revoked 
from October through December 2003:

Abbreviations:

CBP: U.S. Customs and Border Protection:
CLASS: Consular Lookout and Support System: 
DHS: Department of Homeland Security: 
FBI: Federal Bureau of Investigation: 
IBIS: Interagency Border Inspection System: 
ICE: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement: 
NIIS: Nonimmigrant Information System: 
TSC: Terrorist Screening Center:

United States General Accounting Office:

Washington, DC 20548:

July 13, 2004:

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

Dear Mr. Chairman:

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 initiate immigration or other proceedings 
against terrorists in the United States. The U.S. homeland security 
strategy, involving a variety of federal agencies, has multiple tools 
for preventing potential terrorists from entering the country and 
identifying potential terrorists that have already entered. The visa 
revocation process is one such 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 (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.[Footnote 5] We recommended that the 
Secretary of Homeland Security, in conjunction with the Secretary of 
State and Attorney General, develop specific policies and procedures 
for the interagency visa revocation process to ensure that revocation 
notices and related information are 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 Homeland Security officials responsible for 
visa revocations; determined the steps taken to address policy and 
legal issues regarding removal of individuals with revoked visas raised 
in our June 2003 report; and analyzed data on all visas revoked on 
terrorism grounds over a 3-month period,[Footnote 6] including detailed 
information on a random sample of 35 cases selected from data provided 
by the Department of State in February 2004. This sample is not 
projectable because of data problems discussed in appendix I. We did 
not review Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) activities to 
investigate suspected terrorists. We conducted our evaluation in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards.

Results in Brief:

State and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) took some actions 
in the summer of 2003 to address the weaknesses identified in our June 
2003 report. State issued new procedures for revoking visas and 
notifying DHS and other agencies of the revocation, and U.S. Customs 
and Border Protection (CBP), a component of DHS, developed a workflow 
outline for determining if individuals with revoked visas are in the 
country and, if so, notifying officials responsible for enforcing our 
immigration laws. 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 in the U.S. government's 
most complete database of potential terrorists (called TIPOFF) against 
State's database of current visa holders, in transmitting 
recommendations to revoke individual visas, and in revoking individual 
visas after receiving a recommendation to do so. We also found that 
agencies involved in the visa revocation process had conflicting 
records of how many visas were revoked for terrorism concerns between 
October and December 2003 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 the need to locate and investigate individuals 
with revoked visas who were present in the United States. Additionally, 
we found that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), a 
component of DHS, requested that field offices investigate individuals 
with visas revoked on terrorism grounds who may be in the country more 
than 2 months after receiving notification of the visa revocation. 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. ICE 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 revocation effective only upon the alien's departure. 
Therefore, according to DHS, if ICE special agents locate an alien in 
the United States 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 7]

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. DHS and State believe these actions will avoid 
delays experienced in the past. In April and May, State made 
significant revisions to its procedures[Footnote 8] and formalized its 
tracking system for visa revocation cases. Starting in March, CBP took 
steps to ensure that ICE officials are aware of individuals whose visas 
were revoked and who may be in the country. Also in March, ICE 
developed written procedures instructing personnel to determine if 
individuals with revoked visas are in the country and, if necessary, 
investigate them. 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 group organized under the FBI and 
established in December 2003, recently took some steps to improve the 
visa revocation process. In March 2004, TSC developed written standard 
operating procedures related to the screening of intelligence 
information and later began training additional staff to perform this 
function. Although the recent actions are important steps to improve 
the visa revocation process, additional measures are needed to further 
improve the process. There is no governmentwide policy regarding visa 
revocations, and the individual agencies' written policies and 
procedures often do not 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 continue their discussions of the legal 
and policy issues, with assistance from the Department of Justice.

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 the 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 or, by October 1, 
2004, provide Congress with a list of specific actions that could help 
resolve them. We provided a draft of this report to the Departments of 
Homeland Security, State, and Justice for their comments. DHS generally 
concurred with the report and recommendations. State said it would 
consult with DHS regarding the recommendations, with a view to 
addressing GAO's concerns. The Department of Justice did not provide 
comments.

Background:

Our nation's border security process includes multiple mechanisms for 
addressing potential terrorist threats to the United States. One of 
these mechanisms is the visa revocation process. The visa revocation 
process is a homeland security tool that can prevent potential 
terrorists from entering the United States and can help immigration and 
law enforcement officials identify and investigate potential terrorists 
already in the country. The visa revocation process begins after 
consular officers at the Department of State's overseas consular posts 
adjudicate visa applications for foreign nationals who wish to 
temporarily enter the United States for business, tourism, or other 
reasons. After receiving a visa, foreign nationals travel to ports of 
entry within the United States. At ports of entry, inspectors from 
DHS's Customs and Border Protection determine whether the visa holder 
is admitted to the United States and, if so, how long he or she may 
remain in the country. Once foreign nationals have entered the United 
States, DHS's Immigration and Customs Enforcement assumes 
responsibility for enforcing our immigration laws, including ensuring 
that foreign nationals are eligible to remain in the United States.

According to State officials, most visa revocations on terrorism 
grounds begin with information from the TIPOFF database, the U.S. 
government's primary terrorist watch list. The TIPOFF database includes 
individuals the U.S. government suspects may have ties to terrorism. 
Information in the TIPOFF database is provided by various federal 
agencies including the FBI, State, and others. At the time of our 
previous report, this information was managed by State's Bureau of 
Intelligence and Research. In December 2003, TSC assumed responsibility 
for this function. TSC was officially formed in December 2003 as a 
result of a presidential directive designed to increase information 
sharing across agencies and to facilitate better understanding between 
the intelligence and investigation communities. As an interagency 
organization under the administration of the FBI with representatives 
from State, DHS, and other federal agencies, part of its role is to 
work with federal agencies to provide access to the TIPOFF database. 
Figure 1 depicts the visa revocation process in effect during the 
October to December 2003 time period we analyzed for this report as 
described in agency procedures and as explained to us by agency 
officials.

Figure 1: The Visa Revocation Process in Effect from October through 
December 2003:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

State uses information in TIPOFF to determine if visa holders may be 
suspected or actual terrorists. When TSC adds individuals in TIPOFF to 
the Department of State's Consular Lookout and Support System (CLASS), 
it provides a list of these names to Consular Affairs. State officials 
told us that the entry of these names into CLASS and the Interagency 
Border Inspection System (IBIS) should help prevent any of those 
individuals from entering the United States because border inspectors 
will be alerted to deny them entry. This lookout process does not 
completely address the potential vulnerability posed by individuals 
already in the country. Therefore, the visa revocation process is an 
important tool to help identify individuals whom immigration and law 
enforcement officials should locate and investigate. After TSC adds 
names to CLASS and IBIS, Consular Affairs compares these names with its 
database of all visa holders and sends an electronic spreadsheet back 
to TSC containing probable or possible matches. TSC refines this list 
by identifying direct matches and recommends that Consular Affairs 
revoke these individuals' visas. It also sends Consular Affairs an 
information package containing a summary of the derogatory information 
that led TSC to the recommendation to revoke.

After determining that the revocation is appropriate, the Consular 
Affairs officer posts a lookout in CLASS for the individual.[Footnote 
9] According to State and DHS officials, this lookout is then 
accessible in near real time to DHS inspectors at border ports of entry 
through the IBIS database. CBP inspectors at ports of entry use IBIS to 
check whether foreign nationals are inadmissible and should be denied 
entry into the United States. When a person comes to the United States 
by air or by sea, CBP inspectors are required to check that person's 
name in IBIS before he or she is allowed to enter the country. After 
posting the lookout, the Consular Affairs officer writes an internal 
case file memo summarizing the derogatory information, creates a draft 
revocation certificate and cable for management review, and forwards 
these materials to the appropriate officials within State. Once these 
officials clear and sign the revocation certificate, Consular Affairs 
sends a cable instructing the overseas post that issued the visa to 
contact the visa holder, physically cancel the visa, and report all 
actions taken to State. State also notifies other federal agencies of 
visa revocations. Specifically, Consular Affairs' Visa Office faxes a 
copy of the revocation certificate to CBP. In addition, the Visa Office 
sends a copy of the cable by email that includes the wording of the 
revocation certificate to various other agencies, including CBP and 
ICE.

Upon receiving the notification from State, CBP determines whether the 
individual may have already legally entered the United States by 
electronically searching immigration records. If CBP determines that 
the individual may be in the country, it notifies ICE. ICE officials 
also attempt to determine whether the individual may be in the country. 
Once ICE determines that an individual with a visa revoked on national 
security grounds may be in the United States, ICE employees query law 
enforcement and open source information to attempt to locate the 
individual. If they determine that the individual is in the country, 
they conduct an additional investigation in law enforcement and 
intelligence databases and forward the results of this preliminary 
research to the appropriate Special Agent in Charge (field) office or 
offices. The ICE Special Agent in Charge office then coordinates with 
the FBI and conducts an investigation to locate the individual and 
determine if the alien is in compliance with all terms of his or her 
admission.[Footnote 10]

FBI's Role in Border Security:

While FBI investigators do not play a formal role in the visa 
revocation process, they play a key role in the U.S. government's 
overall border security efforts, including investigating suspected 
terrorists in the United States. The FBI supports border security by 
(1) working to deny entry into the United States of aliens associated 
with, suspected of being engaged in, or supporting terrorist activity 
and (2) aiding in supplying information to locate, detain, prosecute, 
or deport any such aliens already present in the United States. 
According to FBI officials, the TIPOFF database is central to the FBI's 
efforts to track suspected terrorists in the United States. When names 
of suspected terrorists are added to TIPOFF, this information may 
originate from the FBI. When names are added to TIPOFF, the FBI may 
forward investigative leads to the Foreign Terrorist Tracking Task 
Force, which in turn may relay information to one or more of the 84 
Joint Terrorist Tracking Task Forces throughout the country for 
investigation.

Initial Actions Taken to Address Weaknesses Were Inadequate:

Following our June 2003 report, State and DHS took some actions to 
address weaknesses we identified in the visa revocation process, but 
these actions did not adequately address all of the weaknesses we 
found. State developed written procedures providing detailed 
instructions for personnel to follow when revoking visas. DHS did not 
develop an agencywide policy for visa revocations, but DHS's Customs 
and Border Protection developed a workflow outline related to its role 
in the visa revocation process. Our review of visas revoked from 
October through December 2003 showed that despite State's and CBP's 
initial actions, weaknesses persisted in the visa revocation process.

State Developed Initial Procedures in 2003, but DHS Did Not:

After our June 2003 report, State developed written standard operating 
procedures for processing visa revocations. These procedures were 
issued on July 7, 2003, and included written instructions for consular 
officers to follow once they decide to revoke an individual's visa. 
Specifically, they included directions for posting lookouts, preparing 
and finalizing revocation certificates, and notifying appropriate State 
personnel of the action taken. Additionally, these procedures provided 
instructions for notifying both the overseas post that issued the visa 
and Homeland Security officials. State published a less detailed 
version of these procedures in its Foreign Affairs Manual on July 17, 
2003, for use by consular officers.

DHS did not develop an intra-agency policy regarding responsibilities 
for handling visa revocation cases. However, following our June 2003 
report, DHS's Customs and Border Protection developed a workflow 
outline showing the steps for determining whether individuals with 
revoked visas may be in the United States and, if so, notifying ICE 
immigration officials to take specific actions. These procedures were 
designed to ensure that appropriate lookouts were recorded and that, in 
cases in which the visa holder had entered the United States prior to 
the visa revocation, all research information from CBP was immediately 
relayed to DHS's Immigration and Customs Enforcement for investigation.

Review of Revocation Process Identified Several Weaknesses:

Our review of visas revoked based on terrorism concerns from October 
through December 2003 indicated that, despite State's and CBP's initial 
efforts, weaknesses remained in the visa revocation process. We found 
that backlogs in cases to be screened, delays in forwarding the 
appropriate intelligence to State, and delays in taking action to 
revoke visas all created weaknesses in the visa revocation process. 
(See fig. 2 for the points of delay we observed in our review of visas 
revoked over a 3-month period.) We also found instances of delays in 
State's notification to DHS. In addition, conflicting records of how 
many individuals' visas were revoked for terrorism concerns during our 
reporting period and which of these people may be in the United States 
suggest a risk that agencies may have been prevented from taking 
appropriate action in some cases. Further, we found that ICE was not 
consistently or promptly notified after CBP determined that aliens with 
revoked visas might be in the United States. We also found that ICE 
officials were generally unaware of the basis for individual 
revocations. Additionally, we found that ICE waited more than 2 months 
to request that field offices investigate individuals with visas 
revoked on terrorism grounds who may be in the country. Finally, 
outstanding legal and policy issues continue to exist regarding the 
removal of individuals based solely on their visa revocation.

Figure 2: Points of Delay in the Visa Revocation Process:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Delays Before Revoking Visas Posed Significant Risks:

Our review of all visas revoked on terrorism grounds from October 
through December 2003 showed that delays occurred in identifying 
individuals whose visas should be revoked. According to a State 
official, in August and September 2003, there was a backlog of 
approximately 5,000 names of suspected terrorists in TIPOFF that had 
not been screened to identify any visa holders. Therefore, there was a 
delay between identifying individuals who may be suspected terrorists 
and determining whether they had a visa. This official explained that 
the backlog developed in part because of a quadrupling in the amount of 
counterterrorism intelligence gathered after September 11 without a 
commensurate increase in staff allocated to screen this intelligence 
information. She added that the backlog was cleared in December 2003 
following the temporary assignment of additional staff from Consular 
Affairs.

Our review of a sample of 35 visas revoked based on terrorism concerns 
showed that delays occurred in transmitting recommendations to Consular 
Affairs to revoke visas. To eliminate the backlog of names to be 
checked, Consular Affairs temporarily assigned two full-time employees 
to screen these intelligence data from TIPOFF. TSC officials told us 
that terrorism intelligence should be screened to identify visa holders 
as quickly as possible. A TSC contractor who typically performs this 
duty said that TSC normally sends an average of no more than six 
recommendations for visa revocation per day. However, according to a 
TSC official, during the time that the Consular Affairs staff were 
temporarily assigned to screen intelligence, these staff waited until 
they had collected large quantities of recommendations and sent them to 
Consular Affairs in large batches. As a result, about 260 visa 
revocations on terrorism grounds during the 3-month period we examined 
were processed on 2 days, November 25 and December 1. This delay 
increased the risk that some of these individuals could have entered 
the United States before State was able to post the appropriate 
lookouts or revoke their visas.

State's Lookouts Were Not Always Timely:

Based on our review of a sample of visa revocations, the Department of 
State did not always post lookouts in a timely manner. According to 
State and DHS officials, posting this lookout is a key step in the 
border security process because it is the primary mechanism for 
notifying border inspectors that individuals' visas have been revoked 
and should not be admitted to the United States. State's standard 
operating procedures issued in July 2003 directed Consular Affairs 
officials to post a lookout for an individual before the revocation is 
finalized. Although State posted lookouts in all 35 visa revocations we 
examined in detail, we found that in six instances, Consular Affairs 
did not do so until after the revocation was finalized. In one case it 
took 8 days after the revocation certificate was signed for Consular 
Affairs to post the lookout.

Delays Occurred in Revoking Visas:

Our review of 35 visas revoked based on terrorism concerns also showed 
that delays occurred in Consular Affairs' decisions to revoke visas 
after receiving a recommendation to do so.[Footnote 11] State officials 
told us that it should not take more than a week for them to complete 
the visa revocation process after receiving a recommendation to revoke. 
We attempted to determine how long it took Consular Affairs to revoke 
visas after receiving a recommendation to do so for our sample of 35. 
However, this information only existed for 6 of the 35 cases. In 3 of 
these cases, Consular Affairs revoked the individuals' visas within 10 
days of receiving the recommendation. However, in the other 3 cases, 
Consular Affairs took much longer to act on the recommendation. For 
example, in one instance, a Consular Affairs official told us that 
State officials deliberated for more than 6 months before deciding to 
revoke the individual's visa. According to this official, Consular 
Affairs was deliberating whether the individual's connection to 
terrorism was strong enough to warrant revoking his or her visa. In 
another instance, more than 17 months elapsed between the 
recommendation to revoke and the actual revocation.

State's Notifications to DHS Were Not Always Timely:

We also observed delays in the Department of State notification to DHS 
of visa revocations. It is particularly important that these 
notifications are timely when the alien whose visa is revoked may 
already be in the United States so that DHS can locate and investigate 
him or her. Of the 35 cases we reviewed in detail, CBP told us it 
received notification from State the same day a revocation was 
finalized in 9 cases; within 1 to 6 days in 23 cases; and in 7 days or 
more in three cases.

Agencies Reported Conflicting Information on Visa Revocations:

State, CBP, and ICE each maintain separate records on visa revocations. 
We found that for the October through December 2003 time period, each 
agency reported different numbers of revocations based on terrorism 
concerns. As shown in figure 3, 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.

Figure 3: Inconsistencies among Agencies on Number of Visas Revoked 
from October through December 2003:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Instances where a name did not appear on all three lists show a 
potential breakdown in the visa revocation process. We could not 
determine why all of the names were not on all lists. However, we 
determined that some of the names were not included because the 
agencies disagreed over whether some of these individuals' visas were 
revoked on terrorism grounds or when their visas were revoked, and 
others were not included because we were provided incomplete 
information. Regardless of the reason, this discrepancy is a cause for 
concern because CBP and ICE may not have taken timely action to 
determine if these individuals were in the country and, if so, to 
locate and investigate them.

In our June 2003 report, we noted that State's Visa Office neither kept 
a central log of visas it revoked on the basis of terrorism concerns, 
nor did it monitor whether notifications were sent to other agencies. 
In commenting on that report, State said the Visa Office had changed 
its practices to keep a log of revocation cases and maintain all signed 
certificates in a central file. However, in conducting this review, 
Visa Office officials told us that State did not maintain a formal list 
of all visas revoked. We also learned that State, CBP, and ICE did not 
have a system in place to regularly reconcile their separate records of 
visa revocations to ensure that each agency has consistent information.

CBP and ICE Disagreed on Which Individuals May Have Been in the 
Country:

Our review of a sample of 35 visa revocations on terrorism grounds 
shows that CBP[Footnote 12] and ICE records also conflicted regarding 
whether certain individuals may have been in the country. In 3 of the 
35 cases, CBP and ICE disagreed about whether an individual may have 
been in the country at the time of visa revocation and whether they 
might still be in the country. In two of the instances, 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.

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, because ICE did not use CBP's 
notification, it 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.

These disagreements are due in part to the lack of clearly defined 
responsibilities for each of the DHS components. Because of DHS's lack 
of an agencywide written policy regarding visa revocations, its 
component units' procedures are sometimes duplicative. For example, 
CBP's written procedures require its personnel to determine if 
individuals with revoked visas may be in the United States and notify 
ICE of any such individuals. According to ICE officials, they conduct 
their own record checks to determine if individuals with revoked visas 
are in the country and rely primarily on notifications from State to 
identify individuals on whom they need to conduct records checks.

An ICE official told us that CBP and ICE have different 
responsibilities regarding visa revocations and, as a result, may have 
different levels of sensitivity to information regarding whether 
individuals with revoked visas may be in the country. CBP's primary 
responsibility is to post lookouts to prevent individuals from entering 
the country. ICE's primary responsibility is to prevent any national 
security threats by enforcing immigration laws once individuals have 
already entered the country. Therefore, ICE officials told us that they 
initiate investigations of individuals out of an abundance of caution, 
even if CBP may not believe the individual may be in the country. They 
added that notifications from CBP merely supplement ICE's efforts to 
determine if individuals may be in the country.

ICE May Not Have Been Informed of Aliens with Revoked Visas Who May Be 
in the Country:

Once they receive notification of a visa revocation from State, DHS 
personnel at CBP should notify ICE if they determine that the 
individual whose visa was revoked may be in the country. CBP's workflow 
outline states that CBP verifies that any lead information on 
individuals whose visas are revoked and may be in the United States is 
immediately provided to ICE for investigation. A CBP official confirmed 
that, because these cases are highly urgent, they should be handled 
immediately. However, 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 may 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 that the alien might 
be in the country. In the other 7 cases, CBP notified ICE but could not 
document that the notification occurred until at least 3 months after 
the revocation.

ICE Officials Are Generally Unaware of Basis for Individual 
Revocations:

While ICE could readily identify which visa revocation cases were based 
on terrorism concerns, agency officials stated that they often received 
no derogatory information showing that individuals whose visas State 
had revoked on terrorism concerns might pose a national security 
threat. Because ICE personnel are responsible for fully investigating 
every case in which the individual may be in the country, they 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, and ICE was forced to pull agents off active investigations 
of known national security threats to investigate visa revocation 
cases.

As discussed earlier, State officials told us that the vast majority of 
visas revoked for terrorism concerns are based on derogatory 
information contained in TIPOFF. According to TSC, of the 35 cases we 
examined in detail, 32 of the individuals whose visas were revoked 
appeared in TIPOFF. 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. In June 2004, they informed 
us that their 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 DHS with the TIPOFF record number for each 
individual whose revocation was based on derogatory information in 
TIPOFF.

ICE Initiated Field Investigations More Than 2 Months after Receiving 
Notification of Visa Revocation:

Our review of 35 visa revocations on terrorism grounds from October 
through December 2003 shows that ICE forwarded requests for field 
offices to initiate investigations of individuals who may be in the 
United States more than 2 months after receiving notification of the 
visa revocation. ICE officials explained that requests sent to field 
offices specify a date by which the field offices should complete their 
investigations. These officials added that, in instances when the 
individual is in TIPOFF and in the country, they take immediate action 
to locate and investigate him or her. After receiving notification from 
State, 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. In 2 cases, ICE 
received notification from the Department of State of the visa 
revocation in mid-October 2003 but did not send a request to field 
offices to investigate these individuals until the end of February 
2004. In the other 6 cases, ICE received notification from the 
Department of State of the visa revocation in early December but again 
did not send a request to field offices to investigate these 
individuals until the end of February.

ICE officials told us that it might have taken longer than it usually 
takes to initiate these investigations because of an increase in their 
workload resulting from the raising of the nationwide terror threat 
level to "code orange" (high) during the period of our review. On 
December 21, 2003, DHS raised the terror threat level from "code 
yellow" (elevated) to "code orange" for 19 days. In June, ICE officials 
told us they were considering revising their policies to ensure that 
all future investigations are initiated promptly.

DHS Investigated Individuals with Visas Revoked on Terrorism Grounds:

Separate from our sample of 35 visa revocations, we reviewed the more 
than 300 visa revocations based on terrorism concerns from October 
through December 2003. According to ICE records, ICE determined that 64 
of these individuals needed to be investigated because they might have 
been in the United States at the time of revocation. ICE indicated it 
had initiated investigations on all 64 of these individuals and has 
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 13] On June 8, 2004, ICE officials told us that they 
have no specific derogatory information that would indicate that any of 
the individuals remaining in the United States 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.

Existing Law Does Not Expressly Provide for the Removal of Aliens Based 
Solely on Visa Revocations:

Revocation of a visa is not explicitly a stated grounds for removal 
under the Immigration and Nationality Act.[Footnote 14] State's 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 from the 
United States. Therefore, if ICE special agents locate an alien in the 
United States for whom the Department of State has issued a revocation 
certificate that states that the alien's visa is revoked 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. In light of the Department of State's current revocation 
certificate, the issue whether, under the current statute and 
regulations, DHS would have the authority to initiate removal 
proceedings on the basis solely of a visa revocation has not been 
litigated and remains unresolved legally. 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. However, in June 2004 State and DHS officials told us that they 
had reached an informal understanding 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. In commenting on a draft 
of this report, DHS stated 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.

Recent Actions Taken to Address Identified Weaknesses in the Visa 
Revocation Process:

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

State Revised Its Procedures and Formalized Its System for Tracking 
Cases:

In April and May 2004, State took several actions to improve its 
performance in the visa revocation process, including revising its 
procedures and formalizing its tracking of visa revocations. In the 
course of responding to our inquiries, State's Visa Office discovered 
that its standard operating procedures had not always been followed 
correctly. In response, the Assistant Secretary of State for Consular 
Affairs informed us on April 27, 2004, that in light of the importance 
of visa revocation cases, the procedures were revised to provide more 
explicit details for each step in the process. For example, the 
procedures were revised to highlight the importance of posting a 
lookout code into CLASS before the revocation certificate is signed. 
Additionally, the Visa Office now requires its personnel performing 
visa revocations to certify that they have completed all steps in the 
process and to provide the date on which each step was completed. At 
the end of the process, a designated supervisor must now review the 
revocation file and certify that the standard operating procedures were 
completed correctly. State revised these procedures again in late May 
2004 to further clarify which federal agencies should receive 
notification of the revocation. Finally, the Assistant Secretary for 
Consular Affairs 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.

CBP Reviewed Past Revocations to Provide Additional Information to ICE:

Officials from CBP took two steps following the initiation of our 
review to ensure that appropriate action was taken on prior visa 
revocations. On March 25, 2004, CBP officials sent notifications to ICE 
regarding individuals with visas revoked from October through December 
2003 who may be in the country. CBP officials told us that they sent 
these notifications to ICE because, in responding to our inquiry, they 
determined that they could not document previous notifications to ICE 
of these individuals.

In May 2004, a CBP official informed us that CBP was performing a 
review of all visa revocations in its lookout database to ensure that 
all appropriate notifications had been sent to ICE. This review 
identified 656 individuals with revoked visas who may be in the 
country. CBP provided this information to ICE. We reviewed these data 
and determined that 34 of these individuals' visas were revoked based 
on terrorism concerns from October through December 2003.

ICE Assigned Staff to CBP and Developed Written Standard Operating 
Procedures:

In January 2004, ICE assigned a special agent to CBP in order to assist 
with information exchange and coordination of visa revocation issues. 
According to DHS, if CBP determines that an individual whose visa was 
revoked is in the country, ICE is notified immediately. Also, on March 
1, 2004, ICE issued written standard operating procedures for all visa 
revocation investigations. ICE officials acknowledged that prior to 
March 2004, ICE did not have a policy that specifically addressed visa 
revocations. However, ICE explained that it had procedures for handling 
all investigative leads received, including visa revocations. ICE's 
March 2004 procedures outline the steps that ICE officials should take 
for cases where an individual has entered the United States and 
subsequently has a visa revoked. These procedures begin with the 
receipt of a visa revocation cable from State and include steps for 
determining if individuals are in the country, conducting records 
searches to determine where the individual may be, and forwarding 
necessary information to field offices for further investigation.

State and DHS Took Steps to Address Legal and Policy Issues:

In February 2004, officials from DHS, which has overall responsibility 
for visa policy, told us 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. Additionally, DHS was working with Justice to address 
questions regarding DHS's authority to issue such a regulation. State 
officials told us that making changes regarding removal of persons with 
revoked visas would require both State and DHS to make legal and policy 
decisions and establish a formal written agreement regarding 
procedures.

TSC's Efforts to Improve 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 and for recommending 
that Consular Affairs revoke these individuals' visas. TSC also 
recently began training additional staff to screen terrorism 
intelligence for matches with visa holders. Previously, the center had 
one full-time staff member dedicated to performing this function.

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 for TSC to coordinate the sharing 
of information on visa revocation cases. This process outlines 
responsibilities for representatives from State, CBP, ICE, and the FBI 
who are assigned to TSC. According to a TSC official, this process is 
designed to coordinate the efforts of these representatives, without 
relying on formal notifications transmitted among the agencies. When 
new names are added to the TIPOFF database, all the agency 
representatives receive this information at the same time. According to 
TSC's new process, State personnel assigned to TSC determine if the 
person has a valid visa; CBP personnel determine if the individual may 
be in the country; and, if the individual is in the country, ICE and 
FBI personnel determine if they have open investigations of the 
individual. Because this process was developed after the October to 
December 2003 time period, we did not assess its effectiveness.

In April 2004, TSC also initiated a review of pending visa revocation 
cases based on terrorism concerns to determine whether any of the 
individuals in question were in the United States and whether DHS and 
FBI were aware of their presence and had open investigations on them. A 
senior FBI official assigned to TSC told us that as of May 27, 2004, 
this review was not complete, but that, in some instances, law 
enforcement or immigration officials needed to open investigations on 
some of these individuals.

Additional Actions Are Needed to Improve the Visa Revocation Process:

Despite the steps taken by State and DHS, additional actions are needed 
to improve the visa revocation process. There is no governmentwide 
policy outlining roles and responsibilities for the visa revocation 
process, and State and DHS have not completed their discussions on 
legal and policy issues related to removing individuals with revoked 
visas from the United States. 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. As a result, CBP 
and ICE take responsibility for performing some of the same tasks. 
While CBP's workflow outline states that CBP is responsible for 
determining if individuals with revoked visas are in the United States 
and referring cases to ICE, ICE's standard operating procedures 
indicate that ICE staff are also responsible for performing this 
function. In some cases, State, CBP, and ICE are not familiar with what 
the different agencies' policies and procedures expect of them. Because 
agency officials do not always recognize what other agencies' written 
policies expect of them, important information may not be passed from 
one agency to the next, and efforts may be duplicated. Further, since 
the agencies do not have a system in place for routinely reconciling 
their visa revocation records, there is a heightened chance that 
individuals with visas revoked for terrorism concerns and who are in 
the country will not be investigated.

State's and DHS's written procedures also lack specific time frames for 
completing individual steps in the process. For instance, State's 
procedures dated May 20, 2004 lack guidance on how quickly Consular 
Affairs officials should act on recommendations from TSC to revoke 
individuals' visas. Further, they lack guidance on how quickly Consular 
Affairs officials should notify the overseas post and other federal 
agencies once the revocation certificate is signed. In addition, ICE's 
written procedures do not specify a time frame for referring cases to 
Special Agent in Charge offices. This general lack of time frames is 
significant, given the extent of delays we observed in the visa 
revocation process and the potential threat posed by the individuals 
whose visas have been revoked.

State's and DHS's discussions of legal and policy issues regarding the 
visa revocation process have not been completed. DHS officials told us 
that the agencies continue to discuss possible mechanisms for 
addressing these issues, including possibly changing the wording of 
State's revocation certificate or studying the feasibility of drafting 
a regulation to address these issues. According to State and DHS, the 
complexity of these issues have required an extraordinary amount of 
review and coordination with various interested government agencies. As 
of June 2004, neither State nor DHS could provide a time line for 
addressing these legal and policy issues.

Conclusions:

Our testing of the visa revocation process from October through 
December 2003 identified several gaps in the process. Since then, DHS 
and State have taken several actions to improve the process. DHS and 
State believe that these actions will avoid the delays that were 
experienced in the past. TSC's recent initiative to coordinate the 
sharing of information on potential terrorists should also improve the 
process. Nevertheless, some additional actions are needed to further 
improve the process. A governmentwide commitment is necessary to 
address the weaknesses in the implementation of the visa revocation 
process so that it can be a more effective antiterrorism tool.

Recommendations for Executive Action:

To strengthen and improve the visa revocation process as an 
antiterrorism tool, we recommend 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 TSC. 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 and appropriate follow-up action is being taken and to 
reconcile data differences if they occur; 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.

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:

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

The Department of Homeland Security said it generally concurred with 
the report and its recommendations. DHS believes that our 
identification of areas where improvements are needed will contribute 
to ongoing efforts to strengthen the visa revocation process. DHS 
emphasized that persons whose visas have been revoked for terrorism 
concerns may not be terrorists and that revoking a visa is a 
precautionary measure to preclude an alien from gaining admission to 
the United States until more information is obtained to decide if the 
person should be admitted to the United States.

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 it would consult with DHS regarding 
implementation of our recommendations. State also provided additional 
information on the visa revocation process and the procedures currently 
in effect.

DHS and State also provided technical comments, which we have 
incorporated where appropriate.

We are sending copies of this report to other interested Members of 
Congress. We are also sending copies to the Secretary of State, 
Secretary of Homeland Security, and the Attorney General. We also 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, Jason Bair, Elizabeth Singer, Mary Moutsos, Janey 
Cohen, and Etana Finkler.

Sincerely yours,

Signed by: 

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

[End of section]

Appendix I Scope and Methodology:

The scope of our work covered the interagency process for visas revoked 
by the Department of State (State) headquarters on the basis of 
terrorism concerns between October 1 and December 31, 2003. To assess 
the policies and procedures governing the visa revocation process, we 
obtained copies of written procedures from the Department of State and 
the Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) U.S. Customs and Border 
Protection (CBP) and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). In 
addition, we interviewed officials from State, DHS, the Terrorist 
Screening Center (TSC), and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

To assess the process for revoking visas on terrorism grounds, we 
examined data and records provided by State's Visa Office on visa 
revocations from October through December 2003. The Visa Office 
provided us an initial list of such revocations in February 2004 and an 
amended list in April 2004. We also obtained information from CBP and 
ICE on the number of visas revoked on terrorism grounds during this 
time period and compared these data with that provided by State's Visa 
Office. We found that the total number of visa revocations differed 
among these three data sources. We identified discrepancies and 
discussed these with agency officials. In addition, we obtained copies 
of the official revocation certificates for individuals whose visas 
State revoked during that time. We determined that State made at least 
338 visa revocations during this time period, but we also determined 
that the data on visa revocations were not sufficiently reliable to 
provide an exact count of the number of revocations. However, the data 
were sufficiently reliable for purposes of this report.

We used the Visa Office's February 2004 list of 318 cases to draw a 
random sample of 35 to review in detail. We cannot generalize from this 
sample to the full universe of all cases because, after we had drawn 
our sample, the Visa Office subsequently supplied us with an amended 
list of 338 cases. For the individuals in our sample of 35, we obtained 
printouts from State's 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. We also obtained a copy of the cable sent by 
State headquarters to the post that issued the visa that was revoked. 
This cable included a reference to the specific section of the 
Immigration and Nationality Act that was used as the basis for the 
revocation as well as a list of other agencies the cable was sent to. 
The Visa Office also provided documentation of the lookouts it posted 
in the Consular Lookout and Support System (CLASS).

We met with officials from TSC and State's Visa Office to determine the 
steps taken prior to finalizing visa revocations. TSC officials 
provided copies of their written policies and procedures for dealing 
with visa revocations and described the process it follows in such 
cases. TSC officials also informed us whether individuals in our sample 
of 35 visa revocations are in the TIPOFF database and, if so, when a 
recommendation to revoke these visas was sent to State. To calculate 
the length of time between the recommendation to revoke and the actual 
revocation, we compared the information provided by TSC with the dates 
on the revocation certificates provided by State.

To determine when State posted lookouts and notified other agencies of 
visa revocations, we obtained information from the Visa Office. This 
included printouts from the CLASS system showing when a lookout was 
posted, who posted the lookout, and what lookout code was used. In 
addition, we examined the revocation cables sent to other agencies. We 
also obtained information from CBP and ICE regarding when they received 
notification from State. We determined that the CLASS system was 
sufficiently reliable for the purposes of showing when lookouts were 
posted.

To determine if and when ICE officials were informed by CBP of 
individuals with revoked visas who might be in the country, we obtained 
documents from and spoke with officials from CBP. These officials 
provided an electronic version of CBP's Visa Revocation Case Tracking 
Spreadsheet for the period we examined. This spreadsheet contained 
information on all visa revocations during the period, not just those 
based on terrorism concerns. The spreadsheet included the names, dates 
the notifications of the revocations were received, dates of the most 
recent entry and exit from the United States, and the date on which CBP 
informed ICE that the individual might be in the country.

We also compared State, CBP, and ICE records regarding the number and 
names of individuals with visas revoked based on terrorism concerns 
from October through December 2003. We obtained lists of all such cases 
during the period from State and ICE. We then compared these lists to 
one another and to CBP's Visa Revocation Case Tracking Spreadsheet.

To determine which individuals with revoked visas might be in the 
country, we examined CBP's entry and exit data in its Visa Revocation 
Case Tracking Spreadsheet. These data are based on information from the 
Nonimmigrant Information System, which does not have complete entry and 
exit data (e.g., it does not include departure information if aliens 
fail to turn in the bottom portion of their I-94 form when they leave 
the country). As such, we determined that these data are not 
sufficiently reliable for the purpose of determining which individuals 
with visas revoked on terrorism grounds are in the country. In 
addition, because ICE officials told us they do not rely on CBP to 
determine which individuals might be in the country, we obtained 
additional entry and exit data from ICE for our sample of 35 cases. To 
assess the reliability of the ICE data, we interviewed officials who 
were knowledgeable about the data and compared it with CBP's data. 
Where we found discrepancies, we discussed these cases with officials 
from both CBP and ICE. We determined that the ICE data were 
sufficiently reliable for the purposes of providing the ongoing results 
of investigations of individuals that had been in the United States 
with revoked visas; however, some investigations were still outstanding 
and, in some cases, ICE officials were not completely certain whether 
the individuals had actually departed the United States.

We obtained information on actions taken to locate and investigate 
individuals in the United States with visas revoked based on terrorism 
concerns. ICE officials provided us with summary data on all visa 
revocations based on terrorism concerns during the period. In addition, 
they provided detailed information on their efforts to locate and 
investigate each of the 35 individuals in our sample. We also met with 
officials from the FBI and the Foreign Terrorist Tracking Task Force to 
determine their activities regarding investigating individuals with 
visas revoked based on terrorism concerns.

To determine the steps taken to improve the visa revocation process 
since our June 2003 report, we met with State, DHS, FBI, and TSC 
officials. From these officials we obtained copies of policies and 
procedures developed since our previous report. We also obtained 
information on changes in the visa revocation process since our prior 
report. In addition, we met with State and DHS officials regarding the 
steps taken to resolve outstanding legal issues regarding visa 
revocations. These officials described the discussions they have had 
regarding changing the wording of State's certificate of revocation and 
DHS's regulations. DHS declined to provide us with a copy of a draft 
regulation they had prepared, noting that it was the subject of ongoing 
intra-and interagency discussions.

We were briefed by FBI officials regarding their efforts to investigate 
suspected terrorists in the TIPOFF database. However, we did not review 
these efforts.

We conducted our work from January through June 2004 in accordance with 
generally accepted government auditing standards.

[End of section]

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security:

Note: GAO comments supplementing those in the report text appear at the 
end of this appendix.

U.S. Department of Homeland Security: 
Washington, DC 20528:

June 17, 2004:

Jess T. Ford:

Director, International Affairs and Trade:
U.S. General Accounting Office:
441 G St., NW: 
Washington, DC 20548:

Dear Mr. Ford:

RE: GAO 04-795: Additional Actions Needed to Eliminate Weaknesses in 
the Visa Revocation Process (GAO Job Code 320248):

Thank you for the opportunity to review your draft report, "BORDER 
SECURITY: Additional Actions Needed to Eliminate Weaknesses in the Visa 
Revocation Process," GAO-04-795. 

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) appreciates the work done in 
this report to identify areas where the visa revocation process can be 
enhanced to ensure the prevention, detection, prosecution, and/or the 
initiation of immigration proceedings against aliens associated with or 
suspected of being engaged in terrorist activity. DHS believes that the 
General Accounting Office's (GAO's) identification of areas where 
improvements are needed will contribute to ongoing efforts to 
strengthen the visa revocation process. We generally concur with the 
report and its recommendations and appreciate the discussion of 
challenges and next steps. However, there are a number of areas within 
the report that require our comments.

The draft report notes that in March 2004, 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" 
and "developed written procedures instructing personnel to determine if 
individuals with revoked visas are in the country and, if necessary, 
investigate them." This might lead the reader to mistakenly conclude 
that such procedures were not in place before March 2004. In fact, 
prior to March 2004, the National Security and Threat Protection Unit 
(NSTP) within Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and the 
former Immigration and Naturalization Service's National Security 
Unit, operated under written standard operating procedures which 
governed the investigative process for all investigative leads 
received, including visa revocation investigations. Consequently, what 
occurred in March 2004 was not the creation of written procedures 
regarding visa revocation. Rather, what occurred in March 2004 was the 
re-issuance of written procedures, procedures that NSTP revised and 
updated, largely to reflect the agency's organizational enhancements.

The draft report seems to suggest that the individuals whose visas were 
revoked were necessarily suspected or actual terrorists. However, as 
previously stated by the Department of State (DOS) in June 2003, in 
almost all cases revocations are prudential rather than based on a 
definite finding that an alien is inadmissible for security reasons. 
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. A 
prudential visa revocation thus constitutes a precautionary measure to 
preclude an alien from gaining admission to the United States until his 
or her visa eligibility can be reestablished, and its purpose is to 
require another look at the applicants' admissibility and hence 
eligibility for a visa. Thus, it is not accurate to suggest that 
individuals whose visas were revoked were necessarily terrorists or 
suspected terrorists; and in fact, after aggressive investigations of 
the referenced individuals, and pursuit of investigative leads to field 
offices with the highest precedence, DHS concluded that these 
individuals should not be regarded as such.

At present, DOS' visa revocation certificate normally makes revocation 
effective only upon the alien's departure (although DOS will make a 
revocation effective immediately upon request in certain cases 
involving aliens stopped at a port of entry). Therefore, if ICE 
investigators locate an alien who has been admitted to the United 
States, and who is the subject of a DOS certificate advising that the 
alien's visa is revoked effective upon his or her departure, ICE is 
unable to place the alien in removal proceedings predicated solely on a 
visa revocation that has not yet taken place. As a practical matter, 
however, DHS and DOS recently reached an informal understanding, which 
they are in the process of formalizing, that on a case-by-case basis 
DHS may ask that DOS change its revocation certificate relating to an 
admitted alien to make the revocation effective retroactively to the 
date of issuance of the visa, and DOS will consider such a request in 
consultation with DHS and the Department of Justice (DOJ). Such a 
retroactive revocation may allow DHS to remove the alien on the ground 
that he or she entered without a valid visa. Additionally, DHS in 
consultation with the DOS and DOJ is contemplating drafting a proposed 
regulation to address this issue. While the problem appears facially 
straightforward, it in fact involves very complex legal and policy 
questions. In addition to the regulatory remedy, DHS is contemplating a 
proposed statutory remedy to address the issue.

The report expresses concern about information sharing between 
agencies. Acting upon recommendations made in the GAO's June 2003 
report, ICE, CBP, and DOS established a protocol to receive visa 
revocation cables electronically and directly from DOS. Current 
procedures and personnel assignments ensure that both ICE and CBP are 
receiving all visa revocation cables, and that cables received by 
either agency are investigated thoroughly. Given that ICE directly 
receives visa revocation data from DOS, the report perhaps places too 
great a stress on CBP's role in conveying the same data to ICE. ICE's 
coordination with CBP on visa revocation investigations is crucial to 
ensuring operational continuity, but it remains secondary to ICE's 
receipt of the actual visa revocation information from DOS. ICE did not 
initiate this practice because of concerns about transmissions of data 
from CBP, but did so in order to conform to GAO's recommendation in the 
June 2003 report that DHS "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..."

The report also appears to express concern about whether ICE and CBP 
agree whether some of the individuals with visas revoked may have been 
in the country at the time of visa revocation, and whether they may 
still be in the country. When ICE receives a visa revocation cable from 
DOS or CBP, NSTP initiates a preliminary investigation to determine if 
the subject of the revocation is present in the United States. During 
this preliminary investigation, NSTP queries numerous law enforcement 
and open source databases that may indicate if a person has ever 
entered the United States, is present, was present, and whether the 
individual has departed the United States. ICE and CBP use many of the 
same systems to query whether an individual is present in the United 
States, and numerous explanations exist as to why the agencies may have 
achieved different results, not the least of which being the date their 
investigation was initiated and the various databases queried.

Finally, the report gives the wrong impression in stating that "ICE's 
written procedures do not specify a time frame for referring cases to 
Special Agent in Charge offices." It is important to note that all visa 
revocation investigations referred to Special Agent in Charge (SAC) 
offices during the period covered in the 2004 draft report directed SAC 
offices to forward an initial report to NSTP within 7 days and, 
thereafter, a progress report every 30 days.

GAO Recommendations for Executive Action:

RECOMMENDATION 1: 

Develop a written government wide 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 and appropriate follow-up action is being taken and to 
reconcile data differences if they occur.

RESPONSE:

DHS agrees that the agencies involved in the visa revocation process 
must have a full understanding of the procedures that must be followed 
to ensure that data is accurately and timely transmitted, and that 
investigations are initiated timely and pursued vigorously. DHS 
believes that these objectives can be formalized by having each agency 
in the process exchange letters which set forth standard operating 
procedures explaining how information is shared, how cases are 
tracked, and what deadlines are imposed, so that each agency is 
conscious fully of its partners' procedures.

RECOMMENDATION 2:

Address outstanding legal issues regarding the visa revocation process, 
especially those relating to the status of aliens with visas revoked on 
national security grounds who are in the United States at the time of 
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.

RESPONSE:

DHS, in consultation and coordination with DOS and DOJ, currently is 
considering a proposed regulation to allow removal of aliens whose 
visas have been revoked. In addition to pursuing the regulatory remedy, 
DHS is considering formulating a statutory remedy.

Sincerely,

Signed by: 

Anna F. Dixon,

Director, Bankcard Programs and GAOIOIG Liaison:

The following are GAO's comments on the Department of Homeland 
Security's letter dated June 17, 2004.

GAO Comments:

1. We have revised the report to reflect the fact that, while ICE did 
not have procedures specific to visa revocations prior to March 2004, 
it had procedures that applied more generally to all investigative 
leads.

2. Our report did not indicate that any of the individuals included in 
our review were necessarily suspected or actual terrorists. The 
Department of State revokes a person's visa as a precautionary measure 
after it learns that person might be a suspected terrorist. The purpose 
of this revocation is to obtain additional information from the person 
to determine if they are the same person that is suspected to be a 
terrorist by requiring them to return to the consulate that issued 
their visa. In commenting on our draft report, State explained that all 
of these revocations were based on information suggesting possible 
terrorist activities or links.

3. Based on our analysis, we reported that ICE and CBP records 
conflicted regarding whether specific individuals whose visas were 
revoked on terrorism grounds were or may still be in the country. With 
regard to one of these individuals, ICE concluded that the individual 
was not in the country and therefore, it did not investigate him. 
According to CBP data, this individual has been in the country for more 
than a year. As a result of such discrepancies between agency records, 
we are recommending that State and DHS conduct periodic interagency 
assessments to determine whether information is being shared among the 
agencies involved in the visa revocation process and appropriate 
follow-up action is being taken and to reconcile data differences if 
they occur.

4. We acknowledge that ICE requests sent to field offices specify a 
date by which they should complete their investigations. However, our 
statement refers to a lack of time frames for sending requests to field 
offices, not to a lack of time frames for those field offices to 
complete their investigations.

[End of section]

Appendix III: Comments from the Department of State:

Note: GAO comments supplementing those in the report text appear at the 
end of this appendix.

United States Department of State: 
Assistant Secretary and Chief Financial Officer:
Washington, D.C. 20520:

JUN 23 2004

Ms. Jacqueline Williams-Bridgers: 
Managing Director:
International Affairs and Trade: 
General Accounting Office: 
441 G Street, N.W. 
Washington, D.C. 20548-0001:

Dear Ms. Williams-Bridgers:

We appreciate the opportunity to review your draft report, "BORDER 
SECURITY: Additional Actions Needed to Eliminate Weaknesses in the Visa 
Revocation Process," GAO Job Code 320248.

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 Paul 
Doherty, Division Chief, Bureau of Consular Affairs, Visa Office at 
(202) 663-1246.

Sincerely,

Signed by: 

Christopher B. Burnham: 

cc: GAO - John Brummet 
CA - Maura Harty 
State/OIG - Mark Duda 
State/H - Paul Kelly:

Department of State Comments on GAO Draft Report BORDER 
SECURITY:Additional Actions Needed to Eliminate Weaknesses in the Visa 
Revocation Process (GAO-4-795, GAO Code 320248):

The Department of State appreciates the opportunity to review and 
comment on the GAO draft report, "Border Security: Additional Actions 
Needed to Eliminate Weaknesses in the Visa Revocation Process."

Since long before the tragic events of September 11, 2001, the State 
Department has aggressively used its discretionary authority to revoke 
visas issued to known or suspected terrorists. Section 221(i) of the 
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) grants the Secretary of State 
visa revocation authority and the Department has used this authority to 
revoke more than 1,250 visas since 9/11. All of these revocations were 
based on information suggesting possible terrorist activities or links.	
The use of the revocation authority is one element in a multi-layered, 
interlocking system of border security measures. Its present value as a 
counter-terrorist measure cannot be evaluated without reference to the 
creation of the Terrorist Threat Integration Center (TTIC) and the 
Terrorist Screening Center (TSC), which were built on and incorporated 
the Department's Intelligence and Research Bureau (INR/TIPOFF) TIPOFF 
program. The revocation process now supplements the terrorist 
watchlisting work of TSC, which provides the vast majority of the 
derogatory information on specific individuals that prompts the 
Department of State to revoke a visa.

It is important to note that the standard procedures of TIPOFF and now 
of TSC are to enter the subject's name in the Department's Consular 
Lookout and Support System (CLASS) data base and the Department of 
Homeland Security's IBIS data base PRIOR to determining whether the 
subject has been issued a visa. Thus, the name is in both agencies' 
lookout systems prior to the Department's receipt of any request for 
revocation from TSC. These lookouts immediately put safeguards in place 
that prevent further visa issuance or admission to the United States 
and in effect provide "breathing room" for the revocation process to 
proceed from the very first step. The Department's subsequent entry of 
a revocation lookout serves to further inform the lookout users that a 
visa that had been issued has been revoked, but is not essential to 
ensure that the subject is not admitted to the United States.

In almost all cases the revocation has been prudential rather than 
based on a definite finding that the alien is inadmissible. This is in 
part because, at the time of revocation, we are unable to conclude with 
certainty that the visa holder is the subject of the derogatory 
information. Nevertheless, given the terrorism-related nature of the 
information that may relate to the visa holder, we deem it prudent to 
take the action to revoke the visa promptly after that information 
becomes available and to rely on the visa application process to 
resolve identity and other questions at a later time, should the visa 
holder wish to reapply for a visa. If the holder of the revoked visa 
reapplies for a visa at one of our embassies or consulates abroad, a 
consular officer carefully screens his application at that time to 
determine admissibility. The alien whose visa was revoked may well be 
issued a new visa, if it is determined that the information that led to 
the revocation does not pertain to the alien or that the alien is in 
any event admissible.

The Visa Office (VO) of the Consular Affairs Bureau manages the visa 
revocation process for the Department. Initially after 9/11, the 
majority of requests to revoke visas came from INR/TIPOFF, which 
managed the TIPOFF terrorist database. Since December 2003, requests 
have come from TSC, INR/TIPOFF's successor. VO has also on occasion 
received requests to revoke visas directly from other agencies, such as 
FBI and DHS, especially when the agencies suspected imminent travel of 
the individual. (VO also receives requests to revoke visas for reasons 
unrelated to terrorist concerns; such revocations are not discussed 
here.):

Before revoking a visa, the Department satisfies itself that there is 
sufficient information available to indicate that the visa holder may 
be ineligible for a visa under Section 212(a)(3) of the Immigration and 
Nationality Act (INA). The information on which the Department acts is 
rarely sufficient to meet the standards required for a formal finding 
of inadmissibility under the INA. VO instead reviews the derogatory 
information carefully to ensure that there is some minimal nexus to 
terrorist activities falling within the purview of the INA. When asked 
to revoke a visa for terrorist-related reasons, we have nearly always 
concluded that there were sufficient grounds to warrant revoking the 
visa. There have been only a handful of cases in which we have 
determined that the information was not sufficient to support a visa 
revocation. However, regardless of the Department's decision, it is 
made after a deliberative process involving the application of U.S. 
law and not an automatic or ministerial response to a recommendation 
from TSC. This is an important point that the draft report completely 
ignores, suggesting at some points that any delay in revoking a visa 
after receiving a request to do so is inherently a sign that the 
process is not working. To the contrary, it generally is an indication 
that the Department is carefully exercising the discretion given to 
the Secretary of State.

The process of deliberation can take time, but in no way does it 
compromise the security of our borders. The very first action that we 
take is to place a revocation lookout ("VRVK") in CLASS that replicates 
in real time to the DHS's IBIS lookout system. The action is taken by 
close of business on the same day that VO receives the revocation 
request. The lookout is thus available to DHS inspectors at all Ports 
of Entry into the United States should the person whose visa has been 
revoked seek to enter the country.

Furthermore, as noted above, before TSC sends us a request to revoke a 
visa, they enter the individual into CLASS and IBIS. Therefore, even 
before the case comes to the Department's attention, there is already 
a lookout in DHS's computer system at the Port of Entry that would 
require a port inspector to detain the individual should he seek to 
enter the country.

The Department has worked closely with its partners in the revocation 
process to make sure that the fact that a visa has been revoked is 
disseminated to those in other agencies who may need to carry out 
follow-up action. When we determine that a visa should be revoked, we 
prepare a revocation certificate and a revocation cable to the embassy 
or consulate where the visa was issued. The certificate is the official 
document showing that the visa has been revoked. The cable to the post 
contains the language of the revocation certificate and instructs the 
consular officer to call the visa holder in so that the revoked visa 
can be physically canceled.

The Deputy Assistant Secretary for Visa Services signs the revocation 
certificate. VO then immediately sends the cable electronically to the 
appropriate post as well as to FBI and to Immigration and Customs 
Enforcement (ICE) within DHS. At the same time, VO emails the 
revocation cable to the National Targeting Center (NTC) and to elements 
of Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) and ICE within DHS. We also fax the 
cable to the NTC. Through these means, by cable, email and fax, we 
inform our partners in the revocation process in a timely manner of 
each visa that is revoked. However, long before all of this 
communication and coordination takes place, the revocation code has 
already been entered into the lookout system and the traveler is not 
able to enter the United States. As noted above, the lookout system 
already has the TSC entry for a suspected or actual terrorist.

Internally, VO has a very clear Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) for 
visa revocations that has been continually updated over time as the 
process has been refined and as DHS has clarified the mission and 
operating practices of its new institutional structure. We have shared 
the SOP with our revocation partners. VO has a designated revocation 
officer, who reviews incoming requests to make sure they meet the 
standard for prudential revocation, and a revocation assistant who 
prepares all of the appropriate documents. We have internal 
accountability built into the process as the revocation assistant must 
complete a checklist of steps taken which is reviewed and verified by a 
senior officer before the case can be closed.

Following the attacks of 9/11, VO was inundated with a large number of 
requests to revoke visas from a number of agencies. In the haste to 
respond to these requests, the VO staff concentrated on executing the 
relevant documents to effect revocations as quickly as possible. After 
the initial period of heavy revocation activity ended and we began to 
receive requests on a steadier basis, we established a system of 
revocation record keeping that is now truly excellent. Our database 
systems have always been the single official electronic record of cases 
revoked. We now also maintain a master spreadsheet that contains 
information on all visas that have been revoked since 9/11, and we have 
established a designated location for easy access to all of the 
revocation case files.

The GAO report is at best a snapshot in time that reflects the 
processing of only 35 cases out of the more than 300 that were revoked 
during the three month period of the GAO study (October through 
December 2003) and out of a total of more than 1,250 that have been 
revoked since September 11, 2001. We consider that our handling of the 
revocation process overall has been excellent and has improved over 
time to where we believe there is no opportunity for error. Again, the 
visa revocation process works in tandem with the watchlisting work of 
TSC. The watchlist is the most effective measure to stop suspected or 
actual terrorists since it is used by many federal agencies, not just 
DHS port of entry inspectors and consular officers overseas. Visa 
revocation is another measure in a multi-layered and interlocking 
system of border security.

The report cites specific weaknesses in the revocation process during 
the three-month period of the GAO study. One concerns the Department's 
failure to revoke visas in a timely manner for 3 out of the study's 
random sampling of 35 cases. As the report does not identify these 
three cases, we can only speculate about what may have transpired. As 
mentioned above, revoking visas on request is not a ministerial act, 
but one that requires the careful exercise of discretion vested by law 
in the Secretary of State. There have been a few cases in which the 
Department decided not to revoke the visa as the derogatory information 
was not sufficient to find the person ineligible under Section 
212(a)(3) of the INA. In several of these cases, we later received a 
renewed request to revoke the visa based on additional derogatory 
information that we deemed sufficient to warrant revocation. The time 
between the initial request to revoke and the actual revocation based 
on the follow-up request may explain the apparent time lag in these 
cases. However, the VRVK code should have been in the lookout system 
during this period of deliberation in addition to the TSC entry, which 
would have prevented the visa holders from entering the United States.

The report also states that in 3 out of the 35 cases, the Department 
took a week or longer after deciding to revoke a visa to enter a 
lookout in the CLASS system and to notify other agencies. Again, not 
knowing the specific cases cited, it is difficult to comment on the 
circumstances of what happened. VO's Revocation SOP is crystal clear 
in directing those who carry out revocations to enter the VRVK lookout 
as soon as the process has begun. The SOP states in underlined capital 
letters, "IT IS CRITICAL THAT YOU ENTER THE VRVK HIT IN CLASS AT THIS 
POINT IN THE PROCESS." The revocation preparer must show a printout of 
the CLASS lookout to the VO supervisor to prove that the VRVK hit has 
been entered immediately. This is done and verified in all cases. We 
cannot comment on why, between October and December 2003, a revocation 
preparer may have failed to enter the lookout immediately in a very 
small number of cases or to alert other agencies in a similar fashion. 
There could be a variety of explanations or it just may have been human 
error. It is certainly not anything that can and does happen now.

The important point is that during the period of study the Department 
of State added a revocation entry to the TSC lookout entry in CLASS 
and IBIS in a timely manner in over 90% of the cases in question. It 
appears that the other cases were the object of appropriate 
deliberation regarding the nature of the derogatory information, and 
whether the subject of the intelligence information was the same as the 
visa holder, and other appropriate and relevant issues.

The report comments that the Department's SOP does not include 
performance standards such as timeframes. The orientation on 
revocations that VO personnel receive and the language of the SOP make 
it clear that actions should be taken immediately and with no delay. 
While we are confident that VO personnel understand clearly the need to 
act as quickly as possible in processing revocations, we have added 
further indicators to the SOP explicitly stating the need to act within 
one business day. There will always be exceptions, however, such as 
might arise if the Department were asked to revoke a visa held by a 
diplomat, when further consideration of options and implications would 
likely be required.

The report mentions that agencies had conflicting records of the number 
of revocation cases during the three-month period of the study. The 
numbers vary by very little (the illustration of superimposed circles 
is highly misleading in this regard), and can probably be explained by 
agencies using different methodologies to compile their statistics. For 
example, we believe that there was some confusion among GAO, State, and 
other agencies as to what the standard was for a case falling within 
the three-month period. Some agencies used the date the VRVK hit was 
entered into CLASS as the standard while others used the date the 
revocation certificate was signed. Thus the universe of revokees may 
well have been the same, with accounting differences making for 
slightly different numbers. In any event, the important issue is not 
matching precise numbers but that all of the cases were placed into the 
lookout system to prevent the revokees from entering the country, which 
was the case.

The report describes "unresolved legal issues" surrounding the visa 
revocation process that prevent DHS from removing from the U.S. 
individuals whose visas have been revoked. Further, the report suggests 
that there are legal disputes between State and DHS.	This is not the 
case. Since State opened a dialog with DHS on the relevant legal and 
policy issues in September 2003, both have worked cooperatively on 
DHS's efforts to draft a regulation that would facilitate DHS in 
appropriate cases removing from the United States an alien who has been 
admitted but whose visa has been revoked. Both agencies also agree on 
the potential legal issues raised by a regulatory approach; DHS has 
consulted the Department of Justice on these issues with State's 
support and is also contemplating formulating a statutory remedy.

In addition, DHS and State have an informal understanding, which they 
are in the process of formalizing, for dealing with cases involving 
significant security concerns that may arise. Specifically, on a case-
by-case basis, DHS may ask that State revoke a visa effective either 
immediately, in certain port of entry cases, or retroactively to the 
date of issuance of the visa, in certain cases of persons already 
admitted to the United States. Such a retroactive revocation in an 
appropriate case might allow DHS to initiate immigration proceedings 
against an alien. State is prepared to take such revocation action in 
an appropriate case after consultation with DHS and the Department of 
Justice; State has already revoked a visa effective immediately in at 
least one case arising at a port of entry, thereby allowing DHS to deny 
entry because the alien did not have a valid visa. Thus we do not 
understand the basis for GAO's assertions that there are legal 
disagreements.

In this connection, the report is inaccurate insofar as it states, on 
the bottom of page 29, that DOS stated that any action of this nature 
must await promulgation of a new DHS regulation or a statutory 
amendment. We believe GAO is mischaracterizing our statement that DOS 
does not plan to make any across-the-board change in the standard 
language in its certificate of revocation at this time; rather it will 
address the need for different language in the certificate with DHS on 
a case-by-case basis.

In conclusion, we take note of the report's two recommendations on 
developing a written government-wide policy and resolving outstanding 
issues. We will consult with DHS officials with a view to addressing 
these concerns as best we can consistent with the fact that the 
decision whether to revoke a visa is committed by law to the discretion 
of the Secretary of State. 

The following are GAO's comments on the Department of State's letter 
dated June 23, 2004.

GAO Comments:

1. The posting of lookouts in CLASS and IBIS is an important tool for 
preventing potential terrorists from entering the country. However, 
posting these lookouts is not designed to track individuals who entered 
the United States before the Department of State revokes their visas. 
As such, the visa revocation process remains a useful tool for promptly 
identifying, locating, and investigating individuals who may be in the 
United States and may pose a threat to homeland security.

1. We acknowledge that the Department of State should appropriately 
deliberate over visa revocation cases. However, State officials told us 
that their involvement in the entire visa revocation process should 
take no longer than one week. Given this standard, State's delay in 
three cases of more than 6 months appears excessive.

1. This report includes a review of all 330+ visas revoked on terrorism 
grounds from October through December 2003, including a detailed review 
of a random sample of 35 cases. We chose to review this 3-month period 
to allow some time for the agencies involved to implement our 
recommendations for improving the visa revocation process contained in 
our June 2003 report. In addition to this report, we previously 
reviewed all 240 visas revoked on terrorism grounds from September 11, 
2001 through December 31, 2002, and found similar weaknesses. As noted 
earlier, posting CLASS and IBIS lookouts is not intended to track 
individuals who entered the United States before the Department of 
State revoked their visas. As such, the visa revocation process remains 
a useful tool for promptly identifying, locating, and investigating 
individuals who may be in the United States and may pose a threat.

1. In February 2004, we requested detailed information from State on 35 
individuals whose visas State had revoked on terrorism grounds from 
October through December 2003. In April, we received this information. 
After reviewing the data, we discussed our preliminary findings with 
the Managing Director of State's Office of Visa Services, including 
delays in State's decisions to revoke three individuals' visas. The 
same day, we provided State the names of these three individuals and 
requested information on why these delays occurred. In May, a State 
official provided an explanation of State's actions regarding these 
individuals. However, we chose to exclude this information from our 
report due to the sensitivity of the type of information involved.

1. In February 2004, we requested detailed information (including when 
lookout codes were entered) for a random sample of 35 visa revocation 
cases. In April 2004, the Assistant Secretary of State for Consular 
Affairs informed us that in researching and gathering this information, 
State discovered that, in some cases, the officer responsible for 
handling revocations did not enter the revocation lookout code 
immediately into CLASS before the revocation certificate was signed.

1. Based on information State provided during the course of our review, 
we note that State revises its standard operating procedures for visa 
revocations as necessary. After reviewing our draft report, State 
provided us with a revised copy of its standard operating procedures 
dated June 17, 2004, which included more explicit time frames. We 
believe this is a good step toward implementing our recommendation.

2. In conducting this review, we requested a list of individuals whose 
visas were revoked based on terrorism concerns from October through 
December 2003 from State, CBP, and ICE. State asserts that the 
conflicting records were probably due to different methodologies for 
compiling various agencies' lists. We note that we observed multiple 
instances where conflicting records could not be explained by differing 
methodologies. For example, in some cases the agencies disagreed over 
whether the individuals' visas were revoked based on terrorism grounds 
and, in other cases, agencies did not initially provide names that they 
later acknowledged should have been included in their lists.

Given these conflicting records and the possible threat to homeland 
security, we are recommending that State and DHS conduct periodic 
interagency assessments to determine whether information is being 
shared among the agencies involved in the visa revocation process and 
appropriate follow-up action is being taken and to reconcile data 
differences if they occur.

3. We have updated our report to reflect the current status of State's 
and DHS's discussions of legal and policy issues and have removed all 
references to unresolved legal disagreements. We have added information 
reflecting a recent informal understanding reached by State and DHS 
that, on a case by case basis, DHS may ask that State revoke a visa 
retroactively. However, we note that legal and policy issues regarding 
the removal of individuals based solely on their visa revocations 
continue to exist, and agency discussions on how to address these 
issues have not been completed.

4. During the course of our review, State's and DHS's discussions 
evolved regarding legal and policy issues relating to removing 
individuals from the United States based on visa revocations. Based on 
discussions with State and DHS officials, we have removed any implied 
linkage between revising the visa revocation certificate and a 
regulatory or statutory amendment.

FOOTNOTES

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

[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 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. 

[4] The Department of State revokes a person's visa as a precautionary 
measure after it learns that person might be a suspected terrorist. The 
purpose of this revocation is to obtain additional information from the 
person to determine if they are the same person that is suspected to be 
a terrorist by requiring them to return to the consulate that issued 
their visa. According to State officials, this authority is an 
important and useful tool for more closely scrutinizing the individual 
as they reapply for a new visa. The Department of 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] In this report, 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] Our review covered only nonimmigrant visas that the Department of 
State revoked on terrorism grounds from October 1, 2003, through 
December 31, 2003.

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

[8] State told us that, in light of the evolving relationships between 
State, DHS, and TSC, State revises its standard operating procedures as 
necessary.

[9] The lookout entry--known by the acronym VRVK--is used for all visa 
revocations, regardless of whether the reason for the revocation is 
related to terrorism or other concerns.

[10] As we have previously reported, efforts to locate aliens once they 
have entered the United States are often complicated by incomplete or 
inaccurate information provided at the time of entry. For example, see 
U.S. General Accounting Office, Overstay Tracking: A Key Component of 
Homeland Security and a Layered Defense, GAO-04-82 (Washington, D.C.: 
May 21, 2004). Additional information provided by aliens as a result of 
US-VISIT may help ICE special agents locate individuals whose visas are 
revoked after they enter the United States. US-VISIT is a 
governmentwide program for collecting, maintaining, and sharing 
information on certain foreign nationals who enter and exit the United 
States.

[11] State officials told us that there was no homeland security 
vulnerability during its deliberations because procedures call for 
posting lookouts to alert border inspectors to stop these individuals. 

[12] 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 seaports 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.

[13] 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.

[14] 8 U.S.C. § 1101 et seq. An alien may be placed in removal 
proceedings under a charge of inadmissibility based on terrorist 
activities as defined in Section 212(a)(3)(B) of the INA. See 8 U.S.C. 
§ 1229a(a)(2). 

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