President Trump meets… The deal is done

The new order tightens the Bank Secrecy Act’s reach, telling regulators to treat immigration status and

foreign IDs as warning signs in the hunt for money laundering, terrorism, and trafficking.

In practice, that means banks are pushed to view ITINs, consular IDs, and cash-heavy work patterns

as “red flags,” even when tied to people who file taxes, pay rent, and have never been charged with a crime.

For many immigrants, especially the undocumented, the message is stark:

participation in the formal economy now carries higher risk.

This shift doesn’t happen in isolation. It lands on top of harsh immigration enforcement, mass detentions,

and efforts to redefine basic tax credits as “public benefits” immigrants can be denied.

Supporters insist the measures protect “law-abiding Americans” from subsidizing risk.

But for mixed-status families and long-term residents, the effect is deeply personal—pushing them back into cash,

shadow employers, and unregulated lenders, and turning everyday banking into a

test of belonging in the only country many now call home.

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