
The US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) announced that federal authorities will fine an Indian-origin attorney $250,000 for allegedly filing false asylum claims and fraudulent documents on behalf of Indian nationals.
Vinod Doddamani, an immigration attorney based in California, was served five notices of intent by the Homeland Security Investigations, the investigative arm of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The agency said that Doddamani allegedly filed 32 immigration cases with 64 fraudulent documents.
The days of attorneys abusing and defrauding our immigration system are OVER. @HSI_HQ has filed FIVE notices of intent to fine attorney Vinod Doddamani more than $250,000 for filing 64 fraudulent documents on behalf Indian nationals.
Our message to immigration attorneys is… pic.twitter.com/rfYVYqP4xl
— Homeland Security (@DHSgov) June 24, 2026
Investigation uncovers patterns of fabricated narratives
An ABC News report stated that it is the first time that ICE has registered such a case. The agency said Doddamani, who operates a countrywide practice in the United States, primarily represents Indian nationals and files asylum applications on their behalf in immigration courts.
The Indian-origin attorney is now facing more than $250,000 in fines, and the DHS has alleged that it is a pattern of filing false asylum applications.
Doddamani allegedly filed the “identical or nearly identical in language and substance, containing the same or nearly the same factual narrative and supporting details regarding the alleged persecution,” the DHS stated.
Shifts in DHS enforcement strategy
The development against Doddamani comes after DHS’s top counsel directed ICE in May to investigate the attorneys who filed false asylum claims in immigration courts. Till now, DHS has never sought to fine or punish attorneys who have allegedly filed fraudulent cases, ABC News reported.
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Institutional consequences of systemic asylum fraud
The report further quoted a memo from DHS General Counsel James Percival, who said that filing a false immigration claim violates anti-fraud statutes and those who file them must be held accountable.
“Fraudulent asylum claims threaten the safety of Americans by overwhelming our burdened immigration system and delaying the removal of dangerous criminal aliens,” Percival said.
A direct warning to the legal profession
The DHS General Counsel added, “By holding [Doddamani] accountable, we are sending a message to other immigration attorneys who engage in fraud across the country: your days of abusing and defrauding our immigration system are over.”
View original source — Indian Express ↗

