West Virginia Woman Sentenced to 30 Months for Lying to Obtain U.S. Citizenship After Bosnian War Crimes

A West Virginia woman who was a naturalized U.S. citizen from Bosnia and Herzegovina was sentenced yesterday to 30 months in prison for naturalization fraud based on lies about her prior criminal conduct to obtain U.S. citizenship. According to statements made in court and court documents, Nada Radovan TomaniÄ, 53, of West Virginia, served with the Zulfikar Special Unit of the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the 1990s, during the armed conflict in the region. Along with other Zulfikar Special Unit soldiers, TomaniÄ participated in the severe physical and psychological abuse of Bosnian Serb civilian prisoners, including torture and inhuman treatment amounting to a war crime. When applying for U.S. naturalization in 2012, TomaniÄ falsely denied having served in a detention facility or in any other situation involving the detention of others. She also falsely denied having committed a crime for which she had not been arrested â specifically, the crime of inflicting serious bodily harm under the Criminal Law of the Socialist Republic of Yugoslavia. TomaniÄâs deception extended beyond her written naturalization application. Citizenship and Immigration Services officer, she was placed under oath and was legally obligated to answer questions truthfully. Despite that obligation, she again lied about her service in a detention facility and her past criminal conduct. âThe defendant tortured and abused prisoners in Bosnia and then lied to U.S. immigration authorities to live in the U.S. and become a citizen,â said Assistant Attorney General A. Tysen Duva for the Justice Departmentâs Criminal Division. âHuman rights violators are not welcome in the United States. Thanks to the courage of the victims, and the diligence and dedication of our prosecutors and law enforcement partners, the defendant has been held accountable for exploiting our immigration system and evading responsibility for her crimes.â âI sincerely appreciate the investigative work of our law enforcement partners both here in the U.S. and in Bosnia who have disregarded the passage of decades to ensure that justice is served,â said U.S. Sullivan for the District of Connecticut. âThere is no statute of limitations for human decency.â âThis case has always been about more than lying on naturalization documents,â said Special Agent in Charge P.J. OâBrien of the FBI New Haven Field Office. âOver the course of this investigation TomaniÄâs violent history of targeting people based on their ethnicity and religion came to light, and we hope that yesterdayâs sentencing gives some measure of justice to her victims. The FBI, along with our partners at the Department of Homeland Securityâs Human Rights Violators and War Crimes Center, and the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Office of Fraud Detection and National Security will continue to investigate crimes of this nature to ensure the sanctity of the immigration process for all who righteously apply for U.S. Citizenship.â TomaniÄ pleaded guilty on Nov. 10, 2025, to one count of procuring citizenship contrary to law. The FBI investigated the case, with coordination provided by the Department of Homeland Securityâs Human Rights Violators and War Crimes Center (HRVWCC) and U.S.