Washington, D.C. — In a drastic and controversial move, the Trump administration has reclassified over 6,000 living immigrants as deceased, canceling their Social Security numbers in a sweeping effort to eliminate their ability to work, bank, or access basic services — a strategy reportedly aimed at forcing “self-deportation.”
According to sources familiar with the operation, federal authorities have transferred the names and legally issued Social Security numbers of thousands of immigrants into a database used to track the dead. That change effectively renders them invisible to the systems that enable legal employment and financial stability, dramatically upending their lives overnight.
“This isn’t just bureaucratic cruelty — it’s a calculated attempt to erase people without laying a legal finger on them,” said a source briefed on the plan, who requested anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the revelations.
The targeted individuals reportedly entered the U.S. through programs implemented during President Joe Biden’s term, including the CBP One mobile app system, which allowed more than 900,000 individuals to temporarily live and work in the country under presidential parole. On Monday, the Department of Homeland Security revoked their legal status, triggering mass uncertainty and leaving many vulnerable to deportation.
The newly invalidated Social Security numbers are now impacting immigrants’ ability to access banking, secure housing, or maintain employment—critical functions that require a valid SSN. This development follows an aggressive immigration agenda under President Trump aimed at undoing key Biden-era programs.
Legal experts warn that the move could violate federal statutes and constitutional protections. “This is a textbook case of administrative overreach — the government is weaponizing record-keeping to coerce people out of the country,” said Skye Perryman, president of legal advocacy group Democracy Forward, who signaled that her team is preparing legal action.
The Social Security Administration has not responded to media requests for comment, though its “Death Master File” — the database in question — contains over 142 million entries dating back to 1899 and is typically used to verify deaths for benefit programs.
In another escalatory measure, a new agreement between the Department of Homeland Security and the Treasury Department will now permit Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to access tax data from the IRS. The plan allows ICE to submit names and addresses for cross-verification, potentially leading to further identification and removal of undocumented immigrants.
The agreement has already caused fallout: Acting IRS Commissioner Melanie Krause resigned over the deal earlier this week.
These developments come amid wider legal battles. A federal judge recently blocked the administration from expelling hundreds of thousands of immigrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela who were granted temporary legal status under earlier policies.
In March, a court also temporarily halted a controversial team led by Elon Musk — tasked with shrinking the federal workforce — from accessing Social Security data systems, citing their actions as a “fishing expedition.”
Civil rights groups and immigration advocates have condemned the new Social Security maneuver as an unethical and legally questionable act of administrative coercion. “This President continues to engage in lawless behavior, violating the law and abusing our systems of checks and balances,” Perryman said.
As the legal community gears up for battle and affected individuals face the sudden loss of their legal identity, critics say this strategy may go down as one of the most dystopian tactics yet in a growing playbook of immigration crackdowns.