Table of Contents

Social Media, ChatGPT, AI Content, Deleted Posts, WhatsApp Messages, Reddit Activity, and What Immigrants Need to Know in 2026

By Richard Herman, Immigration Attorney

Quick Answer

Yes.

In 2026, immigration agencies increasingly examine an applicant’s digital footprint when evaluating immigration benefits as part of the broader vetting process.

Your digital footprint can include:

  • Facebook posts
  • Instagram content
  • TikTok videos
  • X (formerly Twitter) posts
  • Reddit activity
  • LinkedIn profiles
  • YouTube channels
  • WhatsApp communications
  • Telegram groups
  • Public websites
  • Online business profiles
  • Comments on forums
  • News articles mentioning you
  • Court records available online
  • AI-generated content
  • Information submitted through immigration applications

On certain immigration forms, applicants may be required to disclose all social media handles used over the past five years.

In some circumstances, online activity can contribute to:

  • Requests for Evidence (RFEs)
  • Notices of Intent to Deny (NOIDs)
  • Visa denials
  • Green card denials
  • Naturalization denials
  • Fraud investigations
  • National security reviews
  • Border inspection problems

The bigger question is not whether USCIS can see something online.

The real question is:

How can USCIS use digital information against you, and what can immigrants do to protect themselves?

This guide answers those questions in depth.

Why This Matters More Than Ever

For decades, immigration cases were largely paper-based.

An officer reviewed:

  • forms
  • supporting documents
  • interviews
  • fingerprints
  • background checks

Today, immigration adjudications increasingly occur in a digital environment.

Federal agencies now possess unprecedented abilities to compare information from:

  • immigration filings
  • government databases
  • public websites
  • social media platforms
  • border inspections
  • financial records
  • law enforcement databases

In recent years, DHS and USCIS have openly announced expanded screening initiatives involving social media review and additional vetting measures. USCIS has also confirmed that it uses multiple artificial intelligence tools to assist with immigration-related functions and records review.

For immigrants, this means the issue can affect the immigration process more broadly, not just a single filing, and applicants should be paying attention to inconsistencies between what appears online and what appears in their filings.

What Is Your Digital Footprint?

A digital footprint is the collection of information about you that exists online, including your broader digital presence, not just isolated activity on one platform.

Many immigrants assume this means only Facebook.

In reality, it includes much more, including online posts.

Social Media Platforms

Facebook

USCIS officers may review publicly available:

  • posts
  • comments
  • photos
  • relationship status updates
  • employment claims
  • location check-ins

Example:

An applicant claims a bona fide marriage but publicly identifies another partner on Facebook.

That discrepancy may trigger additional scrutiny, and officers may also review Facebook activity to identify discrepancies suggesting a sham marriage.

TikTok

TikTok videos often reveal:

  • employment activity
  • travel history
  • relationships
  • business operations
  • lifestyle claims

A person claiming inability to work due to disability while regularly posting videos showing commercial activities may face credibility concerns.

X (Twitter)

Political opinions alone should not normally result in immigration penalties.

However, statements that appear to support violence, criminal conduct, terrorist activity, immigration fraud, or other unlawful conduct may attract government attention depending upon the circumstances, especially if posts suggest ties to extremist groups, a terrorist organization, or criminal gang affiliations. USCIS announced in 2025 that certain antisemitic activity reflected on social media may be considered in immigration benefit adjudications and may be reviewed for public safety threats.

Reddit

Many people incorrectly believe Reddit is anonymous.

It often is not.

Investigators may connect Reddit accounts to:

  • email addresses
  • usernames
  • photographs
  • linked social media accounts
  • past posts

Reddit activity can reveal:

  • immigration intent
  • unauthorized employment
  • marriage fraud discussions
  • criminal conduct
  • admissions against interest

It can also reveal criminal activity or discussions of illegal activities when users post incriminating details.

LinkedIn

LinkedIn may be one of the most important platforms in employment-based immigration cases.

USCIS officers may compare:

  • petition information
  • job descriptions
  • educational credentials
  • work history

against LinkedIn profiles.

Common issues include:

  • inflated credentials
  • conflicting employment dates
  • inconsistent job titles

Can USCIS Read WhatsApp Messages?

Usually not simply because they exist. Private social media accounts and private messages are not automatically available to USCIS just because they exist.

WhatsApp messages are generally private.

However, messages may become available through:

  • phone inspections
  • device searches
  • screenshots provided by third parties
  • litigation
  • criminal investigations
  • voluntary disclosure

At ports of entry, CBP has authority under border-search rules to inspect electronic devices in certain circumstances. CBP publicly states that electronic device searches may occur during inspections, although such searches remain relatively uncommon.

This is why immigrants should never assume private messages are permanently private.

Can USCIS See Deleted Posts?

Possibly.

Many immigrants believe deleting a post removes all evidence.

That assumption is often wrong.

Deleted content may still exist:

  • in screenshots
  • archives
  • cached pages
  • internet archives
  • platform records
  • devices
  • cloud backups

CBP and other agencies may also encounter content retained on electronic devices during lawful inspections.

A deleted post is not necessarily a disappeared post, because online activity can still operate like a permanent record even after deletion attempts.

Can USCIS See What You Search on Google?

Generally, no.

USCIS does not receive a list of your Google searches.

Likewise, USCIS cannot simply access your private ChatGPT conversations whenever it wants.

However, search activity can become relevant if:

  • it appears on seized devices
  • it is voluntarily disclosed
  • it becomes evidence in another proceeding
  • it appears in browser history reviewed during lawful inspections

For most immigrants, ordinary Google and ChatGPT searches are not directly reviewed by USCIS.

Can USCIS Tell If You Used ChatGPT?

This is one of the fastest-growing immigration questions.

The answer is complicated.

USCIS generally does not care whether you used ChatGPT to:

  • improve grammar
  • organize ideas
  • draft outlines
  • translate concepts

The concern arises when AI is used to create:

  • false evidence
  • fabricated employment records
  • fake recommendation letters
  • fake relationships
  • fake business plans
  • fraudulent asylum narratives

The immigration problem is not the AI tool.

The problem is fraud.

Can USCIS Deny a Case Because AI Generated the Evidence?

Potentially.

Federal agencies are increasingly focused on document authenticity and fraud detection.

If USCIS determines that evidence is fabricated, altered, misleading, or materially false, the consequences can be severe.

Possible consequences include:

  • denial
  • fraud findings
  • inadmissibility allegations
  • removal proceedings

The issue is truthfulness—not whether AI assisted in drafting the material.

Is USCIS Using Artificial Intelligence?

Yes.

DHS maintains a public AI Use Case Inventory describing numerous USCIS-related AI functions. These tools are intended to assist with records review, classification, workflow management, and other immigration-related functions.

AI does not replace immigration officers.

However, AI increasingly assists agencies in identifying patterns, inconsistencies, and records requiring additional review.

Richard Herman’s Prediction

Over the next five years, immigration adjudications will become increasingly digital.

We expect:

  • more social media review
  • more AI-assisted fraud detection
  • more Requests for Evidence
  • more credibility challenges
  • more scrutiny of online identities
  • greater use of publicly available internet information

The immigrants most at risk will not be those with controversial opinions.

The immigrants most at risk will be those whose online activity contradicts their immigration applications.

Consistency will become one of the most important factors in successful immigration cases.

Below is Part 2 of the flagship article.

How USCIS Uses Your Digital Footprint in Green Card, Marriage, Naturalization, Student Visa, and H-1B Cases

Can USCIS Use Social Media Evidence in Marriage Green Card Cases?

Absolutely.

In fact, marriage-based immigration cases may be the immigration category most affected by digital footprint reviews as part of the broader background check process.

USCIS officers routinely evaluate whether a marriage is genuine or entered into solely for immigration purposes.

Historically, officers focused on:

  • joint tax returns
  • leases
  • bank statements
  • insurance policies
  • children’s birth certificates
  • interview testimony

Today, online activity can either strengthen or undermine a marriage case, and USCIS may compare social media information with the details provided in the filing.

Examples That May Raise Questions

A petitioner claims to live with a spouse, but Facebook check-ins show both spouses regularly living in different states.

A beneficiary claims a bona fide marriage but publicly identifies another romantic partner.

LinkedIn profiles show employment in different cities than those listed on immigration filings.

TikTok videos show a lifestyle inconsistent with information submitted to USCIS, and publicly available content is often fair game for review when it conflicts with sworn filings.

The issue is not social media itself.

The issue is inconsistency.

USCIS officers are trained to assess credibility. When online information conflicts with sworn immigration filings, troubling posts can raise red flags and lead to further investigation, Requests for Evidence (RFEs), Notices of Intent to Deny (NOIDs), more extensive interviews, or referral for fraud investigation.

For marriage-based applicants, consistency across:

  • Forms I-130 and I-485
  • Social media profiles
  • Public records
  • Interview testimony

is becoming increasingly important.

Can USCIS Use Social Media When Deciding Whether to Approve Adjustment of Status?

Increasingly, yes.

This issue has become even more significant following USCIS’s 2026 guidance emphasizing discretionary review in adjustment-of-status cases.

Adjustment of status is not merely a technical eligibility determination.

USCIS has repeatedly described adjustment as a discretionary benefit.

As a result, officers may consider a broad range of information relevant to credibility, truthfulness, and discretionary factors, and that review may also help detect fraud.

Examples include:

  • online statements contradicting applications
  • evidence suggesting fraud
  • undisclosed employment
  • undisclosed travel
  • misrepresentations regarding family relationships
  • online claims that undermine a visa application or adjustment filing when they conflict with the record

The biggest risk is not controversial opinions.

The biggest risk is inconsistency.

Many applicants unintentionally create problems by forgetting that statements made online may later be compared against immigration filings.

Important USCIS Resources

Naturalization Cases: Can Online Activity Affect U.S. Citizenship?

Potentially.

Naturalization officers evaluate several requirements, including:

  • good moral character
  • attachment to constitutional principles
  • truthfulness during the application process

The primary concern is not political disagreement.

The concern is whether online activity demonstrates:

  • criminal conduct
  • fraud
  • false testimony
  • misrepresentation
  • support for prohibited activities under immigration law
  • hate speech if it reflects character or security concerns

Applicants should understand that naturalization cases often involve a review of conduct during the statutory good moral character period and, in some cases, conduct outside that period as well, and older online conduct by naturalized citizens can also become relevant in certain enforcement contexts.

Example

Suppose an applicant claims on an N-400 that they have never engaged in unauthorized employment.

But public LinkedIn posts advertise years of freelance business activity that was never disclosed.

That discrepancy may trigger questions.

Relevant Resources

Student Visas, Campus Speech, and Social Media

One of the most controversial developments in immigration law has involved expanded social media scrutiny affecting international students.

In April 2025, DHS announced that USCIS would begin considering certain antisemitic activity reflected on social media as a negative factor in immigration benefit adjudications. The announcement specifically referenced lawful permanent residence applicants, foreign students, and individuals associated with educational institutions linked to antisemitic activity, and authorities may interpret posts praising violence or showing support for a terrorist organization negatively. (USCIS)

The policy immediately sparked significant debate among immigration lawyers, universities, civil rights advocates, and constitutional scholars. Critics argued that vague standards could chill protected speech and academic expression, while supporters framed the issue in terms of public safety concerns. (Brennan Center for Justice)

What Students Should Understand

Not every controversial opinion creates an immigration problem.

However, online activity that immigration authorities interpret as:

  • supporting terrorism
  • promoting violence
  • threatening others
  • encouraging unlawful conduct

may draw additional scrutiny depending on the facts of the case. (USCIS)

This area is evolving rapidly and will likely remain the subject of litigation.

H-1B Professionals and LinkedIn Risks

Employment-based immigration cases create a different type of digital footprint issue within the broader immigration system, and online résumé-style claims are often checked against the record.

LinkedIn often functions as a public résumé.

USCIS officers may compare LinkedIn information against:

  • H-1B petitions
  • PERM applications
  • I-140 petitions
  • Adjustment applications

Common problems include:

Inflated Credentials

Claiming degrees, licenses, or experience not reflected in immigration filings.

Different Job Titles

A worker listed as a software engineer on LinkedIn but described as a project manager in immigration filings.

Employment Dates That Do Not Match

Inconsistent timelines often trigger questions regarding experience requirements.

Unauthorized Employment Admissions

Applicants sometimes unknowingly create evidence against themselves by discussing freelance work, consulting, or side businesses online.

Related HLG Resources

Can USCIS See Reddit Posts?

Many immigrants assume Reddit is anonymous.

That assumption can be dangerous.

Reddit posts frequently reveal:

  • immigration plans
  • prior immigration violations
  • unauthorized work
  • marriage fraud schemes
  • travel history

Sometimes users voluntarily provide enough details to identify themselves.

Immigration officers are unlikely to spend time reviewing random Reddit accounts.

However, when credibility becomes an issue, publicly available information can become relevant.

Can USCIS See WhatsApp, Signal, Telegram, or Private Messages?

Generally speaking, USCIS does not have automatic access to your private messages.

However, private communications sometimes become evidence through:

  • phone searches
  • screenshots
  • criminal investigations
  • civil litigation
  • voluntary disclosure

Applicants should never assume that private messages can never become public.

Border Searches: Can CBP Inspect Your Phone?

This is one of the most misunderstood areas of immigration law.

The answer is yes (even the phones and computers of US citizens)

CBP maintains authority to inspect electronic devices at the border under its border-search policies. (USCIS)

According to publicly reported CBP statistics, device searches have increased dramatically over the past decade. Reports indicate that more than 55,000 electronic device searches occurred during fiscal year 2025, although they still represented a very small percentage of all travelers entering the United States. (WIRED)

What Can Be Reviewed?

Depending on the circumstances, border inspections may involve:

  • emails
  • photographs
  • text messages
  • social media applications
  • documents
  • contacts
  • browser history

More advanced searches may involve forensic tools capable of analyzing data stored on a device. (WIRED)

Why This Matters

Many immigrants assume deleted content no longer exists.

Modern forensic tools may recover information that ordinary users believe has disappeared. (WIRED)

Can Deleted Posts Hurt an Immigration Case?

Potentially.

Deleting content is not the same thing as eliminating evidence.

Information may continue to exist in:

  • screenshots
  • archived webpages
  • backups
  • cloud storage
  • third-party devices
  • forensic extractions

For this reason, immigrants should avoid posting information online that they would not be comfortable explaining to an immigration officer later.

Can USCIS Use AI to Analyze Social Media?

The answer increasingly appears to be yes.

DHS publicly maintains an AI Use Case Inventory documenting numerous artificial intelligence projects and systems used across immigration-related agencies. AI-assisted systems are being used for record management, identity verification, fraud detection support, document processing, and other operational functions. (WIRED)

Importantly, AI generally assists human decision-makers rather than replacing them.

The concern for immigrants is not whether a human officer or a computer identifies a discrepancy.

The concern is that discrepancies are becoming easier to detect.

The Digital Consistency Rule

If there is one lesson immigrants should take away from this article, it is this:

Your immigration application should match your digital footprint.

Not because USCIS will necessarily review every post.

But because if USCIS does review your online activity, inconsistencies can become evidence.

The future of immigration adjudications will likely involve:

  • more social media screening
  • more AI-assisted fraud detection
  • greater digital record integration
  • expanded identity verification tools
  • increased scrutiny of credibility issues

Applicants who are truthful, consistent, and transparent generally have far less to fear than applicants whose online activity contradicts their sworn immigration filings.

Richard Herman’s View

For decades, immigration lawyers focused on preparing forms, collecting documents, and preparing clients for interviews.

Today, competent immigration representation increasingly requires a fourth task:

Digital Risk Assessment

Before filing major immigration cases, applicants should ask:

  • Does my online presence match my application?
  • Are there public statements that can be misunderstood?
  • Does LinkedIn accurately reflect my employment history?
  • Are there social media posts that contradict my filings?
  • Are there photos or videos that create credibility issues?

In the coming years, digital due diligence may become as important as document preparation.

The immigrants who succeed will not necessarily be those with perfect social media histories.

They will be the immigrants whose online footprint is truthful, consistent, and explainable.

ChatGPT, AI-Generated Content, Deepfakes, Fake Evidence, AI Detection Tools, and the Future of Immigration Adjudications

Can USCIS Tell If You Used ChatGPT?

This may be the most common immigration-and-AI question being asked today.

The short answer is:

Usually, USCIS does not care whether you used ChatGPT.

There is no immigration law that prohibits applicants from using:

  • ChatGPT
  • Claude
  • Gemini
  • Microsoft Copilot
  • Perplexity
  • Grammarly AI
  • AI translation tools
  • AI writing assistants

Using AI to improve grammar, organize ideas, translate content, or draft a first version of a document is generally not the problem.

The problem arises when AI is used to create false evidence, misleading information, fabricated narratives, or fraudulent documents.

The key legal issue is not artificial intelligence.

The key legal issue is truthfulness.

Under U.S. immigration law, fraud and material misrepresentation can result in severe consequences, including denial of immigration benefits, inadmissibility findings, and removal proceedings.

Government Resources

Can You Use ChatGPT to Draft an Immigration Declaration?

Generally, yes.

Many applicants already use AI tools to help organize:

  • asylum declarations
  • hardship affidavits
  • personal statements
  • letters of support
  • business plans
  • cover letters

The danger arises when applicants allow AI to create facts that never happened.

For example:

Acceptable

“Please help me organize my life story into chronological order.”

Dangerous

“Please create a stronger persecution story so my asylum case sounds more convincing.”

The first example uses AI as an editing assistant.

The second risks creating fabricated evidence.

Immigration officers are trained to identify inconsistencies, implausibilities, and narratives that appear rehearsed or artificially generated.

Can USCIS Deny a Case Because an Affidavit Was Written with AI?

Generally, no.

USCIS is concerned with whether the content is truthful, not whether artificial intelligence helped draft it.

Think about it this way.

For decades, lawyers, paralegals, translators, and family members have helped applicants draft statements.

AI is simply another drafting tool.

The critical question is:

Is the statement true?

If the answer is yes, the use of AI is unlikely to matter.

If the answer is no, the consequences can be serious.

The Growing Problem of AI Hallucinations

One of the greatest risks facing immigrants today is the phenomenon known as hallucination.

AI systems occasionally generate information that sounds convincing but is entirely false.

This can include:

  • fake legal citations
  • nonexistent court decisions
  • invented facts
  • incorrect dates
  • fabricated statistics

Academic researchers have repeatedly documented this problem.

Important Research

Stanford University researchers found that large language models can generate plausible but inaccurate information and that AI-detection tools themselves are frequently unreliable.

The practical lesson:

Never submit AI-generated immigration documents without carefully reviewing every fact.

Can USCIS Detect AI-Written Documents?

This is where things become interesting.

The answer is:

Not reliably.

Despite marketing claims, most AI-detection tools have significant limitations.

Researchers from Stanford University and other institutions have demonstrated that many AI detectors generate false positives and false negatives.

In one widely cited study, AI detectors disproportionately misclassified writing produced by non-native English speakers.

Academic Research

“GPT Detectors Are Biased Against Non-Native English Writers”

https://arxiv.org/abs/2304.02819

“Humans Are Poor at Detecting AI-Generated Text”

https://arxiv.org/abs/2206.07271

This research has significant implications for immigration cases because many immigration applicants are not native English speakers.

As a result, AI-detection software should not be treated as definitive proof that a document was or was not generated by artificial intelligence.

The Bigger Risk: AI Makes Fraud Easier

Although AI detection remains imperfect, AI dramatically lowers the cost of creating fraudulent materials.

Today, a bad actor can generate:

  • fake recommendation letters
  • fake business plans
  • fake employment verification letters
  • fake social media conversations
  • fake photographs
  • fake audio recordings
  • fake videos

in minutes.

This reality is one reason why government agencies are investing heavily in fraud detection technologies.

USCIS Fraud Detection Resources

https://www.uscis.gov/about-us/directorates-and-program-offices/fraud-detection-and-national-security-directorate

Deepfakes and Immigration Cases

A deepfake is synthetic media created or modified using artificial intelligence.

Deepfakes can involve:

  • video
  • audio
  • photographs
  • facial imagery
  • voice cloning

The technology is improving rapidly.

In some cases, deepfakes are becoming difficult even for experts to identify.

Why This Matters for Immigration

Many immigration cases rely on:

  • photographs
  • videos
  • relationship evidence
  • communications
  • identity verification

As deepfake technology becomes more sophisticated, immigration officers may become increasingly skeptical of digital evidence.

Future immigration cases may require additional verification methods to establish authenticity.

DHS Research

DHS Science and Technology Directorate has publicly discussed synthetic media and deepfake detection initiatives.

https://www.dhs.gov/science-and-technology

Can AI-Generated Photos Be Used as Evidence?

They should never be used to create false evidence.

Examples include:

  • fake wedding photos
  • fake travel photos
  • fake family gatherings
  • fake business meetings
  • fake employment activities

Submitting fabricated evidence can create serious immigration consequences.

Potential consequences include:

  • denial
  • fraud findings
  • inadmissibility
  • removal proceedings
  • criminal investigations

No immigration benefit is worth risking a fraud finding.

Marriage Green Cards and AI-Generated Evidence

Marriage-based cases may be particularly vulnerable.

Suppose an applicant generates:

  • fake wedding photographs
  • fake text messages
  • fake WhatsApp conversations
  • fake social media interactions

to strengthen a relationship case.

If discovered, the result could be devastating.

Marriage fraud findings can affect:

  • current applications
  • future immigration benefits
  • naturalization eligibility

Related HLG Resources

Marriage Green Card Resources:

https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/marriage-green-card/

AI-Generated Employment Evidence

Employment-based cases face similar risks.

Examples include:

  • fake experience letters
  • fake project portfolios
  • fake recommendation letters
  • fake performance reviews
  • fake business records

Employment-based immigration increasingly relies on digital evidence.

USCIS officers may compare submitted materials against:

  • LinkedIn
  • company websites
  • public databases
  • corporate filings
  • professional licenses

AI-generated fabrication becomes especially risky when those sources do not align.

Can USCIS Use AI Against Applicants?

A better question may be:

How is AI already helping immigration agencies?

According to DHS’s public AI Use Case Inventory, federal immigration agencies are already deploying artificial intelligence in numerous operational contexts.

Examples include:

  • records management
  • workflow automation
  • fraud detection support
  • identity verification
  • document processing
  • language services

DHS AI Inventory

https://www.dhs.gov/ai/use-case-inventory

Importantly, DHS generally describes these systems as assisting human decision-makers rather than replacing them.

Nevertheless, AI makes it easier to identify:

  • inconsistencies
  • duplicate records
  • suspicious patterns
  • identity anomalies

This trend will likely accelerate.

Can USCIS Use Social Media Monitoring Software?

Potentially.

Various government agencies have long used commercial tools that aggregate publicly available online information.

Public reporting has documented government contracts involving social media analysis and monitoring platforms.

Additional Reading

Electronic Frontier Foundation:

https://www.eff.org

Brennan Center for Justice:

https://www.brennancenter.org

Government Accountability Office:

https://www.gao.gov

The exact scope of current immigration-related monitoring activities continues to evolve.

The Future: AI-Assisted Immigration Adjudications

Over the next decade, immigration adjudications will likely become more data-driven.

Possible developments include:

  • automated fraud-risk scoring
  • enhanced identity verification
  • synthetic media detection
  • cross-platform consistency analysis
  • expanded database integration
  • AI-assisted interview preparation tools
  • document authentication systems

Whether these developments improve accuracy or create new concerns about privacy and due process remains a subject of active debate.

Richard Herman’s Prediction

Artificial intelligence will not replace immigration officers.

But it will transform immigration investigations.

In the next five years, I expect:

  • More Requests for Evidence based on digital inconsistencies.
  • Increased scrutiny of online identities.
  • Greater attention to LinkedIn and employment records.
  • Expanded use of fraud-detection technologies.
  • More litigation involving AI-generated evidence.
  • New USCIS guidance addressing synthetic media and deepfakes.

The immigrants who will be safest are not those who avoid technology.

They are those who use technology honestly.

AI can help organize your story.

AI can help improve your writing.

AI can help translate your ideas.

But AI should never be used to create facts that do not exist.

That principle will remain true no matter how advanced the technology becomes.

Key Takeaway

Using ChatGPT is not an immigration violation.

Using Gemini is not an immigration violation.

Using Claude is not an immigration violation.

Using AI to improve writing is not an immigration violation.

What creates immigration risk is submitting information that is false, misleading, inconsistent, or fraudulent.

As immigration agencies become more sophisticated and artificial intelligence becomes more powerful, the most valuable asset an applicant can possess will be the same asset that has always mattered:

Credibility.

Digital Footprint Audit Checklist

50 Things Every Immigrant Should Review Before Filing a Green Card, Citizenship, H-1B, F-1, Asylum, Marriage-Based Immigration, or Other USCIS Application

Introduction

Most immigration denials involving online activity do not occur because an applicant posted something controversial.

They occur because information found online contradicts information submitted to the government.

The purpose of a Digital Footprint Audit is not to erase your online history.

It is not to hide evidence.

It is not to delete truthful information.

Instead, the purpose is to identify inconsistencies, inaccuracies, misunderstandings, and potential credibility issues before they become problems.

Think of it as the digital equivalent of reviewing your tax returns, passports, travel history, and immigration documents before filing an application.

At Herman Legal Group, we increasingly advise clients to review their online presence as part of overall case preparation.

The goal is simple:

Make sure your immigration filings and your public digital footprint tell the same story.

Section 1: Identity and Biographical Information

1. Review Every Name You Use Online

Check:

  • legal name
  • maiden name
  • former married names
  • nicknames
  • aliases
  • usernames

Make sure they do not create confusion regarding identity.

2. Review Birth Date Information

Verify that publicly available profiles do not contain incorrect birth dates that could raise identity questions.

3. Review Nationality References

Ensure online profiles do not create confusion regarding:

  • citizenship
  • nationality
  • country of birth

4. Review Public Biographies

Check:

  • LinkedIn
  • business websites
  • speaker profiles
  • professional directories

for consistency.

5. Review Profile Photos

Make sure photographs do not create confusion regarding identity or marital status.

Section 2: Marriage-Based Cases

6. Review Relationship Status on Facebook

A common issue:

USCIS receives an application claiming a bona fide marriage while Facebook identifies the applicant as:

  • single
  • divorced
  • separated
  • in a relationship with someone else

7. Review Tagged Photos

Look for photographs that could be misunderstood.

8. Review Wedding Photos

Ensure publicly available wedding information is consistent with application materials.

9. Review Anniversary Posts

Marriage timelines should generally align with immigration filings.

10. Review Family References

Do family members publicly acknowledge the relationship?

This is not required, but inconsistencies may raise questions.

Helpful HLG Resources

Marriage Green Card Guide

https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/marriage-green-card/

Adjustment of Status Guide

https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/adjustment-of-status/

Section 3: Employment-Based Cases

11. Review LinkedIn Job Titles

Do they match:

  • H-1B filings
  • PERM applications
  • I-140 petitions

12. Review Employment Dates

Employment dates should generally be consistent across:

  • résumés
  • immigration filings
  • LinkedIn profiles

13. Review Education Credentials

Ensure degrees and certifications are accurately described.

14. Review Professional Licenses

Confirm licenses are current and accurately represented.

15. Review Public Business Ownership Claims

Business ownership statements may affect:

  • employment-based petitions
  • investor visas
  • adjustment applications

HLG Resources

H-1B Visa Guide

https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/h1b-visa/

Section 4: Travel and Residence History

16. Review Location Check-Ins

Do social media check-ins contradict:

  • claimed residence
  • employment location
  • travel disclosures

17. Review Travel Photos

Travel history often becomes relevant in:

  • naturalization
  • adjustment of status
  • asylum cases

18. Review Geotagged Content

Location metadata sometimes reveals information applicants forget to disclose.

19. Review International Travel Posts

Confirm travel timelines match immigration records.

20. Review Residence Claims

Online statements about where you live should generally align with official records.

Section 5: Student Visa Cases

21. Review Employment Discussions

Unauthorized employment can become a significant issue for F-1 students.

22. Review Freelancing Advertisements

Posts offering services may suggest unauthorized work.

23. Review Gig-Economy Activity

Examples:

  • Uber
  • DoorDash
  • Fiverr
  • Upwork

24. Review Business Promotion

Student visa holders should evaluate whether online business activity is consistent with immigration status.

25. Review Academic Status Claims

Ensure educational information is accurate.

HLG Resources

F-1 Student Visa Guide

https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/f1-student-visa/

Section 6: Naturalization Cases

26. Review Statements Regarding Criminal Conduct

Never assume old posts cannot be found; posts suggesting drug use can create serious eligibility problems, and evidence of drug use on social media can lead to application denial.

27. Review Tax Discussions

Tax compliance remains an important issue in many citizenship cases.

28. Review Public Admissions

Avoid surprises.

Review what you have publicly stated online.

29. Review Character References

Ensure online content does not contradict representations made during the naturalization process.

30. Review Good Moral Character Issues

Consider consulting counsel if concerned.

USCIS Resources

Naturalization Information

https://www.uscis.gov/n-400

USCIS Policy Manual

https://www.uscis.gov/policy-manual

Section 7: Asylum Cases

31. Review Political Activity

Political activity should be accurately represented.

32. Review Travel to Country of Feared Persecution

Travel posts can become relevant evidence.

33. Review Statements About Fear

Consistency matters.

34. Review Country Conditions References

Make sure public statements align with case facts.

35. Review Public Interviews

News articles and public speaking engagements may become evidence.

HLG Resources

Asylum Guide

https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/asylum/

Section 8: Artificial Intelligence and ChatGPT

36. Review AI-Generated Affidavits

Verify every fact.

37. Review AI-Generated Timelines

Check dates carefully.

38. Review AI-Generated Translations

Translation errors can create major problems.

39. Review AI-Generated Recommendation Letters

Never submit letters that contain invented facts.

40. Review AI-Generated Personal Statements

Ensure they accurately reflect your experiences.

Section 9: Social Media Content

41. Review Facebook

Look for:

  • relationship inconsistencies
  • employment inconsistencies
  • travel inconsistencies

42. Review Instagram

Photos often tell stories applicants forget.

43. Review TikTok

Videos may reveal information not reflected elsewhere.


44. Review X (Twitter)

Consider how posts could be interpreted, since a public twitter account may be reviewed if posts appear to support violence or unlawful conduct.

45. Review Reddit

Many users reveal more information than they realize.

Section 10: Phone and Device Review

46. Review Cloud Storage

Documents stored online may become relevant.

47. Review Downloaded Documents

Ensure records are authentic and accurate.

48. Review Messaging Applications

Consider whether messages could create credibility concerns if later reviewed.

49. Review Shared Devices

Information stored on shared devices can create confusion.

50. Review Everything Through the Eyes of an Immigration Officer

Ask yourself:

If an immigration officer saw this tomorrow, would it support my case, contradict my case, or require explanation?

That single question may identify more potential issues than any software program.

Digital Footprint Audit for Specific Immigration Cases

Marriage Green Card Cases

Pay special attention to:

  • relationship status
  • wedding photos
  • travel records
  • shared residence evidence

H-1B Cases

Pay special attention to:

  • LinkedIn
  • employment dates
  • credentials
  • side businesses

F-1 Student Cases

Pay special attention to:

  • unauthorized work
  • freelancing
  • gig-economy activity

Naturalization Cases

Pay special attention to:

  • criminal issues
  • tax compliance
  • honesty and consistency

Asylum Cases

Pay special attention to:

  • political activity
  • country-condition statements
  • travel history

Richard Herman’s Advice

The best digital footprint strategy is not censorship.

The best strategy is accuracy.

Do not panic and start deleting everything.

Do not attempt to rewrite your online history.

Do not create fake content.

Instead:

  • be truthful
  • be consistent
  • review your online presence
  • identify potential issues early
  • discuss concerns with experienced legal counsel before filing or making major online changes

Immigration law has always been about credibility.

Artificial intelligence, social media, and digital investigations have not changed that principle.

They have simply made credibility easier to test.

Before You File: A Final Checklist

Ask yourself:

✓ Does my LinkedIn profile match my immigration filings?

✓ Does my social media accurately reflect my marital status?

✓ Do my travel posts match my travel history?

✓ Do my public employment claims match my immigration records?

✓ Have I reviewed AI-generated documents for accuracy?

✓ Am I prepared to explain anything that appears online?

If the answer is yes, you are already ahead of most applicants.

If the answer is no, now is the time to address those issues—before USCIS asks the questions.

Need Help Evaluating Immigration Risks?

The attorneys at Herman Legal Group regularly assist immigrants, students, professionals, entrepreneurs, families, and employers with complex immigration services involving credibility issues, discretionary review, Requests for Evidence, Notices of Intent to Deny, fraud allegations, and evolving government screening practices. These concerns can affect the case currently under review as well as other immigration benefits.

Schedule a consultation:

https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/book-consultation/

Call:

1-800-808-4013

Frequently Asked Questions, Myths, Statistics, Resources, and the Future of Digital Screening in Immigration Cases

Frequently Asked Questions

Can USCIS look at my Facebook account?

USCIS can review information that is publicly available online. If your Facebook profile, posts, photos, comments, or relationship information are publicly accessible, they may be reviewed during the adjudication of an immigration benefit.

USCIS does not have unlimited access to private accounts simply because an application has been filed.


Can USCIS see my private Facebook messages?

Generally, no.

Private messages are not automatically available to USCIS.

However, messages may become available through:

  • screenshots
  • voluntary disclosure
  • litigation
  • criminal investigations
  • device inspections conducted under lawful authority

Can USCIS see my Instagram account?

If your Instagram profile is public, USCIS may be able to review publicly available content.


Can USCIS see my TikTok videos?

Yes, if they are publicly available.


Can USCIS see my X (Twitter) posts?

Public posts can generally be viewed by anyone, including government officials. What you post online on X can raise concerns if it appears inconsistent with your case or suggests unlawful conduct.

Can USCIS see my LinkedIn profile?

Yes.

LinkedIn is often one of the most important public sources of information in employment-based immigration cases.


Can USCIS see my Reddit account?

Potentially.

If a Reddit account can be connected to an applicant and contains publicly available information, it may become relevant in certain cases.


Can USCIS see my WhatsApp messages?

Generally not unless the messages become available through other lawful means.


Can USCIS see my Telegram messages?

Generally not unless access is obtained through lawful investigative means.


Can USCIS see my Signal messages?

Generally not unless they become available through lawful investigative means.


Can USCIS see deleted social media posts?

Possibly.

Deleted content may continue to exist in:

  • screenshots
  • archives
  • backups
  • cached pages
  • forensic device extractions

Can USCIS see deleted photographs?

Sometimes.

Deletion does not always eliminate recoverable data.


Can USCIS see my Google search history?

Generally no.

USCIS does not receive routine access to private search histories.


Can USCIS see my ChatGPT conversations?

There is no public evidence that USCIS routinely receives access to private ChatGPT conversations.

However, information can become available if voluntarily disclosed or obtained through lawful legal processes.


Can USCIS tell if I used ChatGPT to write my affidavit?

Not reliably.

Current AI-detection tools remain imperfect and frequently produce inaccurate results.

More importantly, USCIS is primarily concerned with whether the content is truthful.


Is it illegal to use ChatGPT for an immigration application?

No.

Using ChatGPT is not an immigration violation.


Can ChatGPT help me write a hardship affidavit?

Yes.

However, every statement must be accurate and truthful.


Can ChatGPT help write an asylum declaration?

Yes.

But applicants should carefully verify all facts and ensure the declaration reflects their actual experiences.


Can USCIS deny my case because I used AI?

Generally no.

USCIS is concerned with fraud and misrepresentation, not the use of drafting tools.


Can USCIS deny my case because AI created false information?

Potentially yes.

False evidence can lead to serious immigration consequences.


Can USCIS detect fake AI-generated documents?

Sometimes.

Fraud detection techniques continue to evolve.


Can USCIS detect deepfake photographs?

Technology continues to improve, but detection capabilities vary.


Can USCIS detect AI-generated voice recordings?

Increasingly, yes.

Government agencies and private experts are developing tools to identify synthetic media.


Can USCIS use AI during adjudications?

DHS publicly reports multiple AI-related use cases supporting immigration operations.

Human officers continue to make immigration decisions.


Can USCIS compare my LinkedIn profile to my H-1B petition?

Yes.

Inconsistencies may trigger additional scrutiny.


Can USCIS compare my social media posts to my marriage green card application?

Yes.

Consistency matters.


Can USCIS compare my online activities to my asylum application?

Potentially.

Online activity may become relevant in credibility determinations.


Can social media affect naturalization?

In some situations, yes.

Particularly if online activity relates to:

  • fraud
  • criminal conduct
  • false testimony
  • credibility concerns

Can political speech affect an immigration case?

Political speech alone generally should not result in immigration penalties.

However, alleged support for terrorism, violence, or other prohibited activities may be treated differently under immigration law.


Can CBP inspect my phone at the airport?

Yes.

CBP maintains authority to conduct electronic device searches at the border.

CBP Information:

https://www.cbp.gov/travel/cbp-search-authority/border-search-electronic-devices


Can CBP inspect my laptop?

Yes.


Can CBP inspect my cloud storage?

The scope of permissible searches continues to evolve and remains the subject of legal debate and litigation.


Should I delete my social media before filing an immigration case?

Usually not.

Deleting information after concerns arise may create additional questions.

Consult qualified immigration counsel before making major changes.


Should I make my accounts private?

Privacy settings are personal decisions.

However, privacy settings do not guarantee information will never become available through other lawful means.


Can old social media posts cause problems years later?

Potentially yes.

Online content often remains accessible longer than people expect.


What is the biggest digital-footprint risk?

Inconsistency.

Most immigration problems arise when online information conflicts with immigration filings.

Myth vs. Reality

Myth

USCIS reads every immigrant’s social media account.

Reality

USCIS does not have the resources to manually review every post from every applicant.

However, online information may become relevant in particular cases.


Myth

Deleting a post makes it disappear forever.

Reality

Deleted information often survives through screenshots, archives, backups, and forensic recovery.


Myth

ChatGPT use is immigration fraud.

Reality

Using AI is not fraud.

Submitting false information is fraud.


Myth

Reddit is completely anonymous.

Reality

Many users reveal identifying information without realizing it.


Myth

LinkedIn does not matter.

Reality

LinkedIn may be one of the most important public records in employment-based immigration cases.

Ultimate Research Library: USCIS Digital Footprint Screening, Social Media Vetting, AI-Assisted Adjudications, Credibility Assessments, Electronic Device Searches, and Immigration Surveillance

Why This Resource Directory Matters

Modern immigration adjudications increasingly occur in a digital environment.

USCIS officers no longer evaluate applications solely through forms and interviews.

Government agencies now have access to:

  • social media identifiers
  • public online content
  • biometric databases
  • facial recognition systems
  • identity-resolution technologies
  • AI-assisted record matching tools
  • border device searches
  • fraud detection systems
  • cross-agency information sharing

At the same time, government systems can make mistakes.

False positives, mistaken identity matches, inaccurate facial recognition results, AI errors, and misunderstandings of online content can affect real immigration cases.

This research library is designed to help immigrants, attorneys, journalists, policymakers, and researchers understand both sides of that equation.

SECTION 1

USCIS Social Media Screening and Digital Vetting

DHS Announces Expanded Social Media Screening

USCIS announced that social media content may be considered as part of discretionary immigration adjudications.

https://www.uscis.gov/newsroom/news-releases/dhs-to-begin-screening-aliens-social-media-activity-for-antisemitism

Why it matters:

  • Confirms USCIS review of online activity.
  • Demonstrates social media can become a factor in discretionary decisions.
  • Shows DHS willingness to expand digital vetting programs. (USCIS)

USCIS Collection of Social Media Identifiers

Federal Register Notice

https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2025/03/05/2025-03492/agency-information-collection-activities-new-collection-generic-clearance-for-the-collection-of

Why it matters:

USCIS formally proposed collecting social media identifiers to support:

  • identity verification
  • national security screening
  • fraud detection
  • vetting procedures. (Federal Register)

AILA Analysis

USCIS Notice on Collection of Social Media Identifiers

https://www.aila.org/library/uscis-notice-on-collection-of-social-media-identifiers-on-immigration-forms

Why it matters:

Provides legal analysis regarding the expansion of social media screening into immigration adjudications. (AILA)

SECTION 2

USCIS Artificial Intelligence Systems

DHS AI Use Case Inventory

https://www.dhs.gov/ai/use-case-inventory

The single most important government source for understanding how DHS uses AI.

USCIS AI Use Cases

https://www.dhs.gov/ai/use-case-inventory/uscis

Why it matters:

This page reveals that USCIS already uses identity-resolution tools, record-linking technologies, workflow automation, and AI-assisted systems that help adjudicators locate records and identify relationships among data sources. Human officers remain responsible for final decisions. (Department of Homeland Security)

Questions raised:

  • What happens when identity matching is wrong?
  • What happens when records are linked incorrectly?
  • How are false positives corrected?
  • What due-process protections exist?

DHS Artificial Intelligence Portal

Tracks AI deployment across immigration and homeland security operations. (Department of Homeland Security)

SECTION 3

Identity Resolution and Data Matching

Why Identity Resolution Matters

USCIS increasingly relies on systems that connect:

  • names
  • aliases
  • social media identifiers
  • biometrics
  • immigration records
  • border encounters
  • law-enforcement records

Identity-resolution technology is designed to identify whether multiple records belong to the same individual. (Department of Homeland Security)

Potential risks:

  • mistaken identity
  • duplicate records
  • false matches
  • incorrect fraud indicators

SECTION 4

Border Device Searches and Digital Evidence

CBP Electronic Device Search Policy

https://www.cbp.gov/travel/cbp-search-authority/border-search-electronic-devices

The definitive government source regarding searches of:

  • phones
  • laptops
  • tablets
  • cameras
  • electronic devices

CBP confirms that electronic devices may be searched at ports of entry. (U.S. Customs and Border Protection)

CBP Directive on Border Searches

https://www.cbp.gov/document/guidance/border-search-electronic-devices-tear-sheet

Explains:

  • basic searches
  • advanced searches
  • data retention
  • traveler rights

(U.S. Customs and Border Protection)

DHS Privacy Impact Assessment

https://www.dhs.gov/publication/border-searches-electronic-devices

The government’s own privacy analysis of electronic-device search programs. (Department of Homeland Security)

CBP Monthly Update

https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/national-media-release/cbp-releases-march-2025-monthly-update

Explains CBP’s legal authority to inspect devices during admissibility determinations. (U.S. Customs and Border Protection)

SECTION 5

Facial Recognition and Biometric Surveillance

DHS Mobile Fortify

Wired Investigation

https://www.wired.com/story/cbp-ice-dhs-mobile-fortify-face-recognition-verify-identity

One of the most important investigations published in 2026.

Key findings discussed by reporters:

  • facial recognition systems may generate possible matches rather than verified identities
  • systems can create accuracy concerns
  • immigration agencies increasingly use biometric technologies in field operations. (WIRED)

Questions every immigration lawyer should ask:

  • What is the error rate?
  • How are false matches corrected?
  • Can respondents challenge biometric matches?

SECTION 6

Social Media Monitoring and Government Errors

Brennan Center for Justice

Continuous Vetting Report

https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/research-reports/continuous-vetting-all-visa-holders-impossible-threat-alone-chills-free

One of the most important critiques of large-scale social media screening.

Highlights concerns regarding:

  • effectiveness
  • scalability
  • false positives
  • chilling effects
  • due process

The report notes prior DHS findings questioning whether social media screening programs could be effectively scaled. (Brennan Center for Justice)

Electronic Frontier Foundation

https://www.eff.org/issues/privacy

https://www.eff.org/issues/border-searches

Extensive resources regarding:

  • government surveillance
  • border searches
  • digital privacy
  • technology accountability

SECTION 7

Academic Research on AI Mistakes

Stanford Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence

https://hai.stanford.edu

One of the world’s leading AI research centers.

Stanford AI Index

https://aiindex.stanford.edu

Annual reports documenting AI capabilities and limitations.

GPT Detectors Are Biased Against Non-Native English Writers

https://arxiv.org/abs/2304.02819

Why immigration lawyers should read this:

Many immigration applicants are non-native English speakers.

Researchers found significant concerns regarding AI-detection accuracy and bias.


Humans Cannot Reliably Detect AI-Generated Text

https://arxiv.org/abs/2206.07271

Important because immigration agencies increasingly confront AI-generated content.

SECTION 8

Media Investigations into Immigration Technology

Wired

CBP Searched a Record Number of Phones at the Border

https://www.wired.com/story/cbp-searched-a-record-number-of-phones-at-the-us-border-over-the-past-year

Reports more than 55,000 electronic-device searches during FY 2025 and discusses forensic extraction technologies and surveillance concerns. (WIRED)

Washington Post

Travelers’ Rights at U.S. Borders

https://www.washingtonpost.com/travel/2025/03/21/travelers-entering-united-states-rights/

Useful overview of:

  • device searches
  • admissibility decisions
  • traveler rights
  • noncitizen risks at ports of entry. (The Washington Post)

Guardian

Phone Searches and Privacy at the Border

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/mar/26/phone-search-privacy-us-border-immigration

Practical discussion of privacy risks and border-crossing strategies. (The Guardian)

SECTION 9

Questions Researchers Should Be Asking

The next generation of immigration litigation may focus on:

Transparency

How exactly are digital-vetting systems used?

Accuracy

What error rates exist?

Bias

Do algorithms disproportionately affect certain populations?

Explainability

Can applicants challenge AI-assisted conclusions?

Due Process

How can immigrants discover and correct incorrect data?

First Amendment Issues

Can social media activity become a proxy for protected speech?

Privacy

How much digital information should government agencies collect?

SECTION 10

Herman Legal Group Resources

To understand how these technologies affect real immigration cases, see:

Adjustment of Status

https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/adjustment-of-status/

Marriage Green Cards

https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/marriage-green-card/

H-1B Visas

https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/h1b-visa/

F-1 Student Visas

https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/f1-student-visa/

Asylum

https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/asylum/

Removal Defense

https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/deportation-defense/

Consultation Scheduling

https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/book-consultation/

Bottom Line

The immigration question is no longer simply:

“Did USCIS read my application?”

The emerging question is:

What digital information was reviewed, how was it analyzed, what technology was involved, and what happens if the technology gets it wrong?

That question will likely define immigration litigation, policy debates, and adjudications for years to come.

Richard Herman’s Predictions: 2027–2030

Over the next several years, I expect immigration adjudications to become increasingly digital.

Prediction #1

USCIS will issue more guidance involving AI-generated evidence.

Prediction #2

Deepfake detection protocols will become common.

Prediction #3

LinkedIn reviews will become increasingly important in employment-based cases.

Prediction #4

Digital consistency reviews will become routine in fraud investigations.

Prediction #5

Applicants will increasingly seek “digital footprint audits” before filing major immigration cases.

Prediction #6

Federal courts will see significant litigation involving AI-assisted government decision-making.

Prediction #7

Privacy and immigration law will become one of the fastest-growing areas of legal controversy.

Final Takeaway

Can USCIS use your digital footprint against you?

Sometimes.

Can USCIS deny a case because of social media?

Potentially.

Can USCIS deny a case because of ChatGPT?

Generally not.

The central issue is not technology.

It is credibility.

Whether evidence comes from:

  • Facebook
  • TikTok
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • ChatGPT
  • AI-generated content
  • electronic devices
  • public records

the question remains the same:

Is the information truthful?

The immigrants who are most likely to succeed are not those with perfect online histories.

They are those whose online presence, immigration filings, and real-world lives are consistent, accurate, and honest.

If you have concerns about how your digital footprint may affect your immigration case, consult experienced immigration counsel before filing.

A proactive review today may prevent a costly immigration problem tomorrow.

Concerned About What USCIS May Find Online?

If you are applying for a:

  • Marriage Green Card
  • Family-Based Green Card
  • Employment-Based Green Card
  • Adjustment of Status (I-485)
  • H-1B Visa
  • F-1 Student Visa
  • Naturalization (N-400)
  • Asylum Application
  • Immigration Waiver
  • Removal Defense Case

you should not assume that USCIS, DHS, CBP, or other government agencies will evaluate only the documents you submit.

Today’s immigration cases exist in a digital world.

Public social media posts, LinkedIn profiles, online business activities, public records, travel histories, AI-generated content, electronic devices, and other digital information can sometimes become part of the immigration review process. More importantly, misunderstandings, inconsistencies, mistaken identity matches, inaccurate records, credibility concerns, and controversial content can create immigration problems when they appear inconsistent with the case or suggest fraud or security concerns, even when an applicant has done nothing wrong.

The question is no longer:

“Can USCIS see my digital footprint?”

The better question is:

“Does my digital footprint tell the same story as my immigration application?”

At Herman Legal Group, we help immigrants, students, professionals, entrepreneurs, families, and employers navigate increasingly complex immigration cases in an era of enhanced screening, artificial intelligence, social media vetting, discretionary adjudications, Requests for Evidence (RFEs), Notices of Intent to Deny (NOIDs), fraud investigations, and evolving government technology, where digital-footprint review can matter from the initial application through interviews, RFEs, and other immigration benefits.

For more than 30 years, Richard Herman and the Herman Legal Group team have represented immigrants throughout the United States and around the world, helping clients overcome difficult immigration challenges involving:

  • Credibility issues
  • Alleged inconsistencies
  • Marriage-based immigration scrutiny
  • USCIS fraud allegations
  • Social media concerns
  • Immigration interviews
  • Green card denials
  • Naturalization issues
  • Student visa complications
  • H-1B and employment-based immigration matters
  • Removal and deportation defense

Before you file, before you respond to an RFE, before you attend your interview, and before a small digital issue becomes a major immigration problem, speak with an experienced immigration attorney.

Schedule a Consultation

https://www.lawfirm4immigrants.com/book-consultation/

Call Herman Legal Group

1-800-808-4013

Related Resources

The Future of Immigration Is Digital. Your Immigration Strategy Should Be Too.

Whether the issue involves social media screening, AI-assisted immigration adjudications, online credibility concerns, digital evidence, electronic device searches, or evolving USCIS review practices, informed preparation can make the difference between approval and denial.

The strongest immigration cases are not built merely on forms and documents.

They are built on credibility, consistency, preparation, and experienced legal guidance.

If you are concerned about how your online presence, social media activity, digital footprint, or AI-generated content could affect your immigration case, contact Herman Legal Group today and develop a strategy before USCIS develops questions.

Written By Richard Herman
Founder
Richard Herman is a nationally recognizeis immigration attorney, Herman Legal Group began in Cleveland, Ohio, and has grown into a trusted law firm serving immigrants across the United States and beyond. With over 30 years of legal excellence, we built a firm rooted in compassion, cultural understanding, and unwavering dedication to your American dream.

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