of this character are continually being brought to
the notice of the Government by our representatives
abroad, and also those of persons resident in other
countries, most frequently those who, if they have
remained in this country long enough to entitle them
to become naturalized, have generally not much overpassed
that period, and have returned to the country of their
origin, where they reside, avoiding all duties to
the United States by their absence, and claiming to
be exempt from all duties to the country of their nativity
and of their residence by reason of their alleged
naturalization. It is due to this Government
itself and to the great mass of the naturalized citizens
who entirely, both in name and in fact, become citizens
of the United States that the high privilege of citizenship
of the United States should not be held by fraud or
in derogation of the laws and of the good name of
every honest citizen. On many occasions it has
been brought to the knowledge of the Government that
certificates of naturalization are held and protection
or interference claimed by parties who admit that
not only they were not within the United States at
the time of the pretended naturalization, but that
they have never resided in the United States; in others
the certificate and record of the court show on their
face that the person claiming to be naturalized had
not resided the required time in the United States;
in others it is admitted upon examination that the
requirements of law have not been complied with; in
some cases, even, such certificates have been matter
of purchase. These are not isolated cases, arising
at rare intervals, but of common occurrence, and which
are reported from all quarters of the globe. Such
occurrences can not, and do not, fail to reflect upon
the Government and injure all honest citizens.
Such a fraud being discovered, however, there is no
practicable means within the control of the Government
by which the record of naturalization can be vacated;
and should the certificate be taken up, as it usually
is, by the diplomatic and consular representatives
of the Government to whom it may have been presented,
there is nothing to prevent the person claiming to
have been naturalized from obtaining a new certificate
from the court in place of that which has been taken
from him.
The evil has become so great and of such frequent occurrence that I can not too earnestly recommend that some effective measures be adopted to provide a proper remedy and means for the vacating of any record thus fraudulently made, and of punishing the guilty parties to the transaction.
In this connection I refer also to the question of expatriation and the election of nationality.