Citizenship for Sale
How Foreign Money Buys American Residency
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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Albert Hadi
This title uses virtual voice narration
What if the most dangerous person in your neighborhood did not sneak across a border, but legally purchased the right to live next door?
Most of us assume threats arrive in the dark. We picture broken fences, chaos, and hidden routes. Citizenship for Sale begins with a far more unsettling reality. Some criminals do not hide. They apply. They invest. They are approved. They arrive with official visas, lawful investor status, and documents that open doors without suspicion.
They buy homes in quiet communities. Their children attend American schools. Their money moves through respected banks. On paper, they appear accomplished, even admirable. In certain cases, they are something else entirely.
This book is grounded in documented cases, government reports, court records, and years of investigation. It examines how investor visa programs, residency by investment schemes, and global passport markets have created legal pathways that can be exploited by corrupt officials, sanctions evaders, money launderers, and individuals tied to hostile interests.
They are not breaking the law to enter. They are using the law to gain access.
Programs designed to attract capital were never built to fully measure intent. When identity becomes a financial asset and mobility can be purchased, oversight weakens. Screening grows complicated. Small regulatory gaps become opportunities for those who understand how to move through systems quietly and legally.
Citizenship for Sale follows the money trails, the shell companies, the visa filings, and the warning signs that were overlooked. It explains how once legal status is granted, reversing it becomes difficult, even after troubling information surfaces. By then, individuals may already be deeply rooted in communities that trust the system without question.
This is not about panic. It is about perspective.
National security is not tested only at the border. It is tested in financial institutions, real estate markets, and visa approval offices. It is tested in the assumption that legality automatically means safety.
If you believe a passport or investor visa guarantees trustworthiness, this book will challenge that belief. If you have never considered that citizenship in parts of the world can be purchased like property, this investigation will change how you see mobility, identity, and risk.
Some threats climb fences. Others purchase the front gate.
The difference matters more than we think.