Trump Administration Halts Immigrant Visa Processing Based on Fraud by Less Than 100 People

Today, the State Department announced an indefinite pause on immigrant visa processing for 75 countries worldwide, effective January 21, 2026. The justification? Fraud cases in Minnesota involving less than 100 individuals—primarily from one community—are now being used to shut the door on millions of law-abiding families across three-quarters of the globe.

This is collective punishment masquerading as immigration policy. And it’s about to destroy countless families.

What Just Happened

According to an internal State Department memo first reported by Fox News, consular officers have been directed to refuse all immigrant visa applications from 75 countries while the department “reassesses screening and vetting procedures” related to the “public charge” rule—a provision of immigration law meant to identify applicants likely to become reliant on government benefits.

The affected countries include:

  • Latin America: Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and more
  • Africa: Somalia, Nigeria, Egypt, Ethiopia, Kenya, Ghana, Senegal, and dozens more
  • Middle East: Iraq, Yemen, Afghanistan, Iran
  • Asia: Thailand, Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan
  • Europe: Russia
  • Caribbean: Haiti, Jamaica, Dominican Republic

The pause applies to immigrant visas only—meaning:

  • ✅ Family reunification visas (spouses, children, parents of U.S. citizens): FROZEN
  • ✅ Employment-based green cards: FROZEN
  • ✅ Diversity visa lottery winners: FROZEN
  • ❌ Tourist/business visas (B-1/B-2): NOT affected (for now)
  • ❌ Student visas (F-1): NOT affected (for now)

Translation: If you’re a U.S. citizen trying to bring your spouse from Brazil to the United States, you’re out of luck. If you’re a company that spent months securing approval for an employment-based green card for a critical employee from Nigeria, that process just stopped. If you won the diversity visa lottery from Egypt, congratulations—your winning ticket just became worthless.

All of this begins in 7 days.

The Minnesota Fraud Scandal: How Less Than 100 Cases Became Justification for Blocking Millions

The Trump administration points to fraud cases in Minnesota as the driving rationale for this unprecedented visa freeze. Specifically, they cite the “Feeding Our Future” scandal and related fraud investigations involving misuse of federal funds for child nutrition programs, housing assistance, and autism services.

The facts:

  • Beginning in 2020, individuals associated with the nonprofit Feeding Our Future fraudulently claimed to provide meals to needy children during COVID-19, siphoning approximately $250 million in taxpayer funds
  • As of November 2025, 98 people have been charged with fraud across multiple Minnesota programs
  • 85 of the 98 defendants are of Somali descent
  • 64 have been convicted (many through guilty pleas)
  • The ringleader of the Feeding Our Future scheme—Aimee Bock—is a white American woman, though most of her co-conspirators were Somali Americans

President Trump has used this fraud to justify not only targeting Minnesota’s Somali community—calling them “garbage” and claiming they “contribute nothing”—but now to shut down immigrant visa processing for 75 entire countries representing hundreds of millions of people.

Let me be clear: Fraud is a crime. Those who steal taxpayer dollars should be prosecuted and punished. The Justice Department has done exactly that, charging 98 people and securing 64 convictions.

But collective punishment is also wrong. Using the criminal actions of less than 100 individuals to deny visas to millions of innocent people across 75 countries is not justice—it’s discrimination dressed up as policy.

The “Public Charge” Rule: A Weapon of Mass Exclusion

The stated justification for the visa freeze is enforcement of the “public charge” rule, which allows consular officers to deny visas to applicants deemed likely to become dependent on government benefits.

The problem: This rule has existed for decades, but its interpretation and enforcement have varied wildly depending on the administration.

  • Trump’s 2019 expansion broadened the definition to include a wide range of public benefits: SNAP (food stamps), Medicaid, housing vouchers, and more. It was challenged in court and partially blocked.
  • Biden’s 2022 rule narrowed the scope primarily to cash assistance and long-term institutional care.
  • Trump’s 2025 reinstatement is reverting to the broader 2019 standard—and now pausing visa processing for 75 countries while they “reassess procedures.”

What this means in practice:

  • Applicants who are older or overweight could be denied based on potential healthcare costs
  • Applicants who previously received any government assistance—even legally while on work authorization—could be deemed inadmissible
  • Families with children could be denied based on speculation about future benefit use
  • Consular officers have broad discretion with little oversight or appeal

The State Department claims exceptions to the freeze will be “very limited” and only allowed after applicants “clear public charge considerations”—a standard so vague and subjective that it amounts to a blank check for denials.

Who This Actually Hurts

1. U.S. Citizens Separated From Their Families

Imagine you’re a U.S. citizen who married someone from Colombia. You filed a spousal visa petition, waited months for approval, and were finally scheduled for a consular interview in Bogotá.

As of January 21, that process stops. Indefinitely. You don’t know when—or if—your spouse will be allowed to join you in the United States.

2. Lawful Permanent Residents Trying to Reunite With Parents

You’ve lived in the U.S. for 15 years. You became a citizen. You filed a petition to bring your elderly parents from the Philippines to live with you in their retirement.

As of January 21, that’s frozen. Your parents, who have never committed a crime and have no intention of seeking public benefits, are lumped in with fraud cases in Minnesota they’ve never heard of.

3. Companies That Invested in Employment-Based Green Cards

You’re a tech company that spent $15,000 and 18 months securing PERM labor certification and I-140 approval for a senior engineer from Nigeria. The final step—consular processing—was scheduled for February.

As of January 21, that engineer’s green card is on indefinite hold. You’ve invested time and money, and now you’re facing the possibility that your employee will never be able to join your U.S. operations.

4. Diversity Visa Lottery Winners

You won the diversity visa lottery—a program specifically designed to promote immigration from underrepresented countries. You sold your belongings, quit your job, and prepared to move to the United States.

As of January 21, your visa is frozen. The lottery ticket that was supposed to be your pathway to America is now worthless.

The Broader Pattern: Weaponizing Immigration Policy

This visa freeze is not an isolated incident. It’s part of a systematic pattern:

  • Travel bans now cover 39 countries (expanded from 19 in June 2025)
  • H-1B visa lottery now weighted by salary, decimating odds for entry-level workers
  • Birthright citizenship targeted by executive order
  • Social media vetting causing months-long delays
  • Temporary Protected Status terminated for hundreds of thousands
  • Now: immigrant visa processing frozen for 75 countries

The common thread: using isolated incidents or administrative concerns to justify sweeping restrictions that affect millions of innocent people.

Fraud in Minnesota? Freeze visas for Brazil, Thailand, Nigeria, and 72 other countries.

It’s not policy—it’s punishment.

What You Must Do Now

If you’re a U.S. citizen or permanent resident with family members in the affected 75 countries:

  • Your family’s visa process is frozen as of January 21
  • There is no timeline for when processing will resume
  • “Very limited” exceptions exist but are undefined
  • Contact an immigration attorney immediately to explore all options

If you’re an employer with pending employment-based green card cases:

  • All consular processing for the 75 countries is frozen
  • Employees already in the U.S. may be able to adjust status domestically (not affected by this freeze)
  • Consult with immigration counsel to pivot strategy where possible

If you’re a diversity visa lottery winner from one of the 75 countries:

  • Your visa is frozen indefinitely
  • Diversity visas expire at the end of the fiscal year (September 30)
  • Time is running out—seek legal advice immediately

If you’re affected by this freeze in any way:

  • Document everything
  • Maintain copies of all approvals, receipts, and correspondence
  • Do NOT assume this will be resolved quickly
  • Get expert legal representation now

Why Expert Legal Counsel Is Non-Negotiable

When visa processing freezes indefinitely for 75 countries with 7 days’ notice, you cannot afford to wait and hope for the best.

I’ve been practicing immigration law for over two decades. I’ve seen administrations come and go, policies shift overnight, and families caught in the crossfire of political decisions that have nothing to do with their individual circumstances.

This visa freeze is one of the most sweeping and arbitrary actions I’ve seen.

The “public charge” rule gives consular officers enormous discretion. The lack of clear guidelines means denials will be subjective, inconsistent, and difficult to challenge. The indefinite timeline means families could be separated for months—or years.

If you’re affected by this freeze:

  • You need someone who understands both the law and the bureaucratic realities
  • You need someone who can identify alternative pathways when the primary route is blocked
  • You need someone who has successfully navigated consular processing across dozens of countries
  • You need someone who won’t give up when the government says “no”

At SMA Immigration Law Firm, I’ve represented clients in U.S. embassies and consulates across three continents. I’ve successfully challenged visa denials, navigated administrative processing delays, and secured approvals in cases where others said it was impossible.

This visa freeze affects 75 countries. It will devastate millions of families. But that doesn’t mean your case is hopeless.

The Bigger Picture: When Policy Becomes Punishment

As an immigration attorney—and as the grandson of Hungarian immigrants who came to the United States in 1933 on separate boats—I understand what’s at stake when immigration policy shifts from welcoming opportunity to weaponizing exclusion.

My grandparents didn’t have much when they arrived. They had hope, determination, and the belief that America offered something worth the risk. They found each other here, built a family here, and gave their children—including my mother, the artist Joan Maggi—the opportunity to contribute their gifts to this country.

Immigration policy should be about protecting that opportunity for future generations, not using the criminal actions of a few dozen people in Minnesota to slam the door on millions of law-abiding families across 75 countries.

But here we are.

The visa freeze takes effect in 7 days. If you’re affected, don’t wait. Contact SMA Immigration Law Firm today.