While Donald Trump can struggle to maintain the same position on any topic for more than a few hours, he's been remarkably consistent on one thing: His administration, all the way back to his presidential campaign, is explicitly anti-immigrant. While he and his officials may say they're opposed to undocumented immigrants, their actions and policies have been overtly antagonistic even to immigrants who came into the country legally. He's cut back the already pitifully low number of refugees the US admits and stripped thousands of immigrants of their protected status.

Now, they're taking aim at yet another group: naturalized citizens. Last month, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, an agency of the Department of Homeland Security, announced that it would be forming a task force dedicated to investigating "naturalization fraud," tracking down people who may have lied or falsified their identity to get citizenship. The task force would then bring charges to have that person stripped of their citizenship and immediately deported.

At The New Yorker, Masha Gessen wrote that the new task force's objective "sounds reasonable enough. It’s the apparent underlying premise that makes this new effort so troublesome: the idea that America is under attack by malevolent immigrants who cause dangerous harm by finding ways to live here." And immigration rights activists have worried that the Trump administration would bring the same aggressive, disdainful, and accountability-free approach that it's shown with deportation and border detention.

Those concerns appear justified. On Monday the Miami Herald published a report about Norma Borgono, a 63-year-old secretary and grandmother who immigrated from Peru in 1989. The Department of Justice is now suing to have her denaturalized and deported. The DOJ's justification is Borgono's "minor role" in a $24 million fraud scheme perpetrated by the company that she worked for—specifically she prepared paperwork for her boss who then pocketed money from fraudulent loan applications. According to the Herald:

When the feds caught wind of the scheme, Borgono cooperated. The secretary never made any money beyond her regular salary and helped the FBI make a case that put her former boss behind bars for four years. On May 17, 2012, Borgono took a plea deal and was sentenced to one year of house arrest, four years of probation and $5,000 of restitution.