The visa lottery program that allowed the suspect in the Brown University shooting entry into the United States has been suspended by President Donald Trump’s administration.
According to the US government, the lottery awards approximately 50 000 immigrant visas annually.
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Trump has long opposed the Diversity Immigrant Visa Program, also known as the DV Program. His secretary of homeland security, Kristi Noem, revealed on Friday that he had instructed her to immediately stop the lottery.
She also identified the suspect as Portuguese national Claudio Manuel Neves Valente, who won a green card and a permanent residency certificate in 2017 by lottery.
Noem wrote in a statement on social media that “this vile person should never have been allowed in our country.”
I’m directing USCIS [US Citizenship and Immigration Services] to halt the DV1 program immediately to prevent further Americans from being harmed by this disastrous program, according to President Trump.
campaign to end the visa lottery
Trump has not attempted to end the diversity visa lottery before with Friday’s announcement.
Trump has long sought to constrict immigration paths for citizens, and he has used crime as a pretext.
In response to an attack in New York City where a truck struck a crowd of people, killing eight, Noem herself remarked that Trump “fought” to end the diversity visa lottery in 2017.
Trump, who was then in his first term as president, demanded from Congress to “end the visa lottery system” during a graduation ceremony held for the FBI in December 2017.
They are in the lottery, they claim. You decide who to pick. Do you believe that our nation has the best people there is? Trump responded, “no”.
What kind of system, exactly? They enter via lottery. They treat us like we are their worst enemies.
In 1990, the Diversity Immigrant Visa Program was established to ensure that underrepresented countries’ applicants had access to the US immigration system.
Immigration rights advocates have long argued that those without a spouse, a relative, or some other type of sponsor in the country have limited access to permanent residency.
By providing an alternative route to residency, the visa lottery addresses that need.
Although the lottery system randomly chooses visa recipients, critics contend that even successful applicants must still go through a rigorous screening process after the lottery.
The American Immigration Council claims that the Diversity Immigrant Visa Program used to accept 55, 000 applicants annually but that number was dropped to its current level in 2000.
Identified suspect
Following a nationwide manhunt, Neves Valente, a physics researcher, was found dead in a storage unit in New Hampshire, and Friday made the decision to immediately suspend the lottery.
Gunfire erupted on the Providence, Rhode Island campus of Brown University on December 13 to start the search.
The exam season had just begun and the school’s fall semester was coming to an end. Two students were reportedly killed and nine others were hurt when a suspect who was covered in black stormed into the Barus and Holley physics lab while they were taking their end-of-course exams.
The suspect managed to escape on foot without being noticed because the physics lab was close to the campus’ edge.
Authorities claimed they quickly detained a person of interest before releasing them without charges, leading to a number of false starts during the manhunt.
Then, on November 15, law enforcement announced that Nuno Loureiro, a plasma physics expert, had been found dead at his home after receiving numerous gunshot wounds.
Loureiro, a Portuguese immigrant, previously held positions of authority professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), a prestigious academic institution.
As the manhunt raged on, it became increasingly difficult to find out whether the two shooting incidents were related.
However, on Thursday night, authorities announced that they had discovered Neves Valente dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound and that they thought he was to blame for both attacks.
Neves Valente had previously been Loureiro’s classmate in Portugal and had previously completed his degree.
Revocations of visas
Following a string of scandalous attacks, the Trump administration has a track record of terminating immigration programs and revoking visas.
As part of Trump’s crackdown on crime in the capital, two West Virginia National Guard members were shot on November 26 while on patrol in Washington, DC.
Rahmanullah Lakanwal, an Afghan national who had previously collaborated with allies during the US-led invasion of Afghanistan, was the suspect in that case.
Sarah Beckstrom, a 20-year-old member of the National Guard, ultimately passed away from her injuries.
Despite the outcry from human rights and veteran groups, Trump responded to the incident by saying he would stop all requests for visas and asylum from Afghan nationals.
The Republican leader added that “all third-world nations” would be subject to a “permanent pause” for immigrants entering.
In response to the shooting, Trump’s administration increased the list of restrictions to 20 more nations and tightened entry for 19 of the country it had labeled “high risk” in June.
Following the shootings, Trump has also taken specific actions to deport people from their immigration status.
The Trump administration announced it would yank visas from six foreign nationals who had posted hateful remarks or memes about the attack after Charlie Kirk was killed in September. They were from nations as diverse as Argentina, Brazil, Germany, and Paraguay.
The decision, according to free-speech advocates, was a clear violation of the US Constitution’s First Amendment, which guarantees freedom of expression.
However, the Trump administration has threatened to kick foreign nationals out of their homes on numerous occasions because of their divergent political views.
The US State Department wrote in response that “aliens who take advantage of America’s hospitality while celebrating the assassination of our citizens will be removed.”
A 22-year-old Utah resident named Tyler James Robinson is the suspect in the Kirk shooting.





