Lagos, Nigeria – A Nigerian entrepreneur’s viral video has exposed the hidden risks of social media vetting at U.S. borders, after she was deported despite holding a valid B1/B2 visa, with immigration officers citing “inconsistent” Instagram activity as evidence of visa violation.
What Happened?
The Trip: Traveled to Texas for a trade fair and client meetings
The Rejection:
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Detained for 24 hours at port of entry
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Officers scrutinized:
• Business conversations in her Instagram DMs
• Public posts about product pickups -
Ruled her activities exceeded “tourism/business meetings”
Why This Matters
Growing Trend: U.S. now routinely screens travelers’ social histories
B1/B2 Trap: Visa allows meetings but forbids “work” – a vague distinction
Global Pattern: Developing nation travelers face disproportionate scrutiny
Legal Expert Insight:
“A single post like ‘Can’t wait to serve my U.S. clients!’ may be misinterpreted as intent to work illegally.”
— Immigration Attorney Folake Coker
Protect Yourself
Pre-Travel Checklist:
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Audit social media – Delete/private posts with work-like language
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Separate accounts – Keep business/personal profiles distinct
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Print evidence – Bring trade fair invites, meeting schedules
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Avoid DMs about transactions – Use email for client logistics
The Bigger Fight
Advocacy Push: Nigerian business groups demanding:
• Clearer visa guidelines from U.S. Embassy
• Limits on DM access during screenings