Washington — President Donald Trump ordered a full re-examination of green cards for nationals from 19 'countries of concern' after a Wednesday shooting near White House that injured two National Guard members, one fatally. USCIS Director Joseph Edlow said the policy is effective immediately and allows negative, country-specific factors for pending and new requests as of November 27, 2025. Authorities identified suspect Rahmanullah Lakanwal, an Afghan national who entered the United States in 2021 and is in custody. Trump also proposed pausing migration and revoking certain immigrants' legal status. Based on 7 articles reviewed and supporting research.
The administration and national security agencies, along with political constituencies advocating tougher immigration controls, benefited from expedited vetting authority and public momentum for stricter policy measures following the attack.
Immigrants and permanent residents from the 19 designated 'countries of concern', their families, and resettlement programs face increased scrutiny, processing delays, denials, and potential revocations of legal status under the new guidance.
After reading and researching latest news.... USCIS has implemented immediate guidance to re-examine green cards from 19 designated countries after a November 27 shooting near Washington that killed a guard member; authorities detained Afghan national Rahmanullah Lakanwal, who arrived in 2021. Policy changes permit country-specific negative factors in vetting nationwide.
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US orders Green Card re-examination after DC shooting
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