‘Look at posts you've liked': Scary US truth
A US immigration lawyer has warned Aussies heading to the US to be 'aware and prepared' following a former NSW police officer's 'terrifying' ordeal.
Andrea Szew, who has specialised in US immigration law for over 20 years, explained that tourists are now being subjected to heightened scrutiny from border officials at American airports following a crackdown under the Trump administration.
'They can look at who's posts you've liked, they can look at friends posts you have been tagged in – they can look at anything,' she told Nine News.
The California-based lawyer said for Aussies to 'come, be aware, be prepared but don't be scared not to arrive'.
There are claims some officers are emboldened by Trump's America-first policies, the publication reported, and if they suspect anything, immigration officials can search your phone or laptop.
Nikki Saroukos claims she was a victim of this after being subjected to invasive searches, 'humiliating' treatment and a night in federal prison.
The former NSW police officer was heading to Honolulu to visit her husband, a US Army lieutenant stationed in Hawaii, for three weeks with her mother.
However, the moment she landed she says she was 'treated like a criminal'.
She had her phone and luggage searched, was forced to spend a night behind bars despite having no criminal record and a valid ESTA visa, before being sent back to Australia.
She claimed an officer told her she had 'too many clothes in her suitcase for a three and a half week trip'.
Mrs Saroukos, from south-west Sydney, felt she was being racially profiled as officers allegedly questioned her tattoos.
'It sounds terrible that someone's subjective opinion can be that powerful to send you back on a flight all the way to Australia, but unfortunately it is a subjective decision,' Ms Szew told Nine News.
Former cop detained, deported from US
In an interview with news.com.au, Mrs Saroukos said she visited Hawaii three times in recent months under the ESTA visa waiver program to see her husband with no issues.
But this time, when she and her mother arrived to Daniel K Inouye International Airport in Honolulu on May 18, the duo were heavily questioned.
Her mother was eventually free to go but Mrs Saroukos was subjected to further interrogation.
'They questioned me about the demographic of my suburb and what crimes I was exposed to as a police officer,' she said.
'They were asking me about ice and meth and whether I knew how much was being imported from New Zealand.'
She said she had 'know idea how to answer the questions'.
'I was just dumbfounded,' Ms Saroukos said.
'They took a 45-minute sworn statement where they grilled me on my stream of income, my marriage, my phone history.
'They were clutching at straws. They even asked why I had deleted Instagram three days prior, I was completely honest.'
After hours of questioning, a DNA swab and a sworn statement, a supervisor informed her that her statement was deemed inadmissable and that she would not be entering the United States.
Mrs Saroukos said she was handcuffed, subjected to an in-depth cavity search before being taken to a federal detention facility.
Upon arriving at the prison she was fingerprinted again, ordered to strip naked, squat and cough, and handed prison issued briefs and green outerwear.
Mrs Saroukos says she was taken to a shared cell where her roommate was a Fijian woman who was being held over similar circumstances.
'There were prisoners everywhere. I learned that I was being housed with convicted murderers,' she said.
'(Other inmates) told me I looked like a fish out of water and even gave me soap and a towel.'
Mrs Saroukos was eventually freed and driven back to the airport where she was deported back to Australia. She and her family have now hired an immigration lawyer in the US to probe what can be done about her ordeal.
Travel advice for Aussies heading to the US
As of May 6, the Department of Foreign Affairs has toughened its travel advice for the USA in response to the Trump administration's increasingly harsh border controls.
While the overall rating of green to 'exercise normal safety precautions' has not changed, it has beefed up warnings about being detained at the border and requirements to carry identification while travelling within the country.
'Entry requirements are strict. US authorities have broad powers to decide if you're eligible to enter and may determine that you are inadmissable for any reason under US law,' the government's Smartraveller site states.
'Check US entry, registration, transit and exit requirements. Whether you're travelling on a visa or under the Visa Waiver Program, ensure you understand all relevant terms and conditions before attempting to enter the United States.'
It also warned that Aussies will now require a passport or United States-issued photo identification which meets the US Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) REAL ID requirements to board domestic flights in the United States.'
Travel to the US drops
Tourism Economics says foreign traveller arrivals in the US are expected to sharply decline this year.
The travel data company revised its outlook after Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs announcement on April 2 — forecasting a 9.4 per cent decline in international visitor arrivals.
Tourism Economics' report says decisions from the Trump Administration are creating a 'negative sentiment shift toward the US among travellers' — with Mr Trump's stance on border security and immigration one of the factors cited as discouraging visits.
– with Ella McIlveen
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
33 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Sexting criminals linked to suicide of Aussie teen nabbed in Nigeria in AFP sting
A sinister group of organised criminals who allegedly preyed on young Australian teens, including a 16-year-old boy who suicided, have been nabbed in an international sting targeting online sextortion. Two of the 22 suspects nabbed in Nigeria are linked to the death of the child in NSW in 2023. The AFP worked with the FBI, Royal Canadian Mounted Police, and Nigeria's Economic and Financial Crimes Commission to shut down the group allegedly responsible for a wave of sextortion targeting thousands of teenagers globally. The network's scheme, which coerced victims into sharing sexually explicit images before threatening to distribute those images unless payment was made, had devastating consequences. In the United States alone, more than 20 teenage suicides have been linked to sextortion-related cases since 2021. While many victims were based in North America, the ripple effects of the offending extended to Australia and other nations. During the operation, two AFP investigators deployed in Nigeria were able to trace online activity, link digital evidence to suspects, and assist in the identification of both perpetrators and victims. Investigators from the AFP-led Australian Centre to Counter Child Exploitation (ACCCE) also provided expert analysis on data seized by foreign law enforcement and supported processes to avoid overlap with local investigations. Their efforts created a measurable result locally – in the 2023–2024 financial year, the ACCCE received a total of 58,503 reports of online child exploitation, including 1554 sextortion-related reports. These figures reflect the growing sophistication and volume of online abuse attempts targeting Australian children. The targeting of Australian children by offenders online remains ongoing however, and the ACCCE continues to receive reports of sextortion from members of the community. AFP Acting Commander Ben Moses, who leads the ACCCE, described the outcome as a powerful example of what could be achieved through international co-operation. 'This global operation sends a clear message to those who exploit children online. Law enforcement is united and determined to find you — no matter where you hide,' Acting Commander Moses said. 'These crimes are calculated and devastating, often pushing vulnerable young people into extreme distress. 'Thanks to the co-ordinated action of our partners, we achieved meaningful results including an immediate and significant reduction in sextortion reports across Australia.' While a reduction in reports is encouraging, the AFP warns the risks to children and young people remain and the community should be vigilant about online safety. The AFP continues to work with state and territory police to support victims of sextortion and other malicious online activity. Victim support includes referrals to specialist mental health services, as well as collaboration with online platforms to have harmful content removed. The AFP and its partners are committed to stopping online child sexual exploitation, and the ACCCE is driving a collaborative national approach to combating child abuse. The ACCCE brings together specialist expertise and skills in a central hub, supporting investigations into online child sexual exploitation and developing prevention strategies focused on creating a safer online environment. The AFP-led ThinkUKnow program has developed the online blackmail and sexual extortion response kit aimed at young people, aged 13 to 17, and is available from the ThinkUKnow and ACCCE websites. The ACCCE has also created a dedicated sextortion help page with resources and information on how to report sextortion.

News.com.au
38 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Australian Defence Force needs ‘waste' cuts, not more cash: Jacqui Lambie
Australia should be looking to cut 'waste' in the Australian Defence Force before looking to pump more cash into it, independent senator Jacqui Lambie says. Senator Lambie on Monday reacted to the Trump administration calling on Canberra to boost the defence budget amid increased Chinese aggression the Indo-Pacific. A veteran and fierce advocate for the ADF, Senator Lambie quipped that the Albanese government should 'just ask Donald Trump to give us their money back for our submarines mate'. 'It'd be nice to lift our defence spending – there is no doubt about that,' she told Sky News. 'Things are pretty tough out there at the moment, but I think it's more the waste. 'We waste so much money in defence procurement, and that's where we should be looking.' Senator Lambie pointed to the drawn-out build timelines for the AUKUS submarines. Under the trilateral defence pact, Australia is set to build five of the nuclear-powered boats in South Australia. The first is expected to be finished by the early 2040s. 'You've only got to see those submarines,' Senator Lambie said. 'Four billion dollars so far – we haven't got one scrap of bloody steel sitting in a harbour yet ready to go. 'I mean, that is just disgusting waste at its best.' Washington's call for Australia to step up military spending came from a bilateral meeting between Defence Minister Richard Marles and his US defence counterpart Pete Hegseth. The two senior officials met over the weekend on the sidelines of the Shangri La Dialogue in Singapore over the weekend. My first bilateral meeting at the 2025 Shangri-La Dialogue was with @SecDef, our second catch up since he stepped into the role earlier this year. We discussed avenues for further economic and security cooperation, and our unwavering commitment to the Indo-Pacific. — Richard Marles (@RichardMarlesMP) May 30, 2025 In a read out, the US Embassy said the two senior officials 'discussed aligning investment to the security environment in the Indo-Pacific, accelerating US force posture initiatives in Australia, advancing defence industrial base co-operation, and creating supply chain resilience'. 'On defence spending, Secretary Hegseth conveyed that Australia should increase its defence spending to 3.5 per cent of its GDP as soon as possible,' the embassy said. Mr Hegseth used his address at the Shangri La Dialogue to warn of an 'imminent' threat from China, saying Beijing could invade Taiwan as early as 2027. Such a move would deal a major blow to global supply of semiconductors and likely massively disrupt vital trade routes. 'Let me be clear, any attempt by Communist China to conquer Taiwan by force would result in devastating consequences for the Indo-Pacific and the world,' Mr Hegseth told the conference. 'There's no reason to sugar-coat it. The threat China poses is real and it could be imminent. 'We hope not but certainly could be.' Asked what Australia could do in the event of a Chinese invasion of Taiwan, Senator Lambie replied: 'I don't know, have you seen the size of the Chinese army? 'That's the first thing, and the second thing is this – have you seen the condition that ours is in?' 'We have a personnel crisis in our military, and something needs to be done. 'The only way young people are going to go and join is when people in that uniform go out there and brag how great that job (is).' She said the recruitment crisis was 'the biggest problem you have with our national security right now'. 'People do not want to join defence, and people do not want to stay in,' Senator Lambie said. She also said Australian troops were 'not in the condition to being in a war zone'. Labor has pushed back against Mr Hegseth's call to lift the defence budget, with Anthony Albanese saying his government was already spending record amounts on the military. Assistant Foreign Affairs Minister Matt Thistlethwaite on Monday echoed the Prime Minister. 'We are increasing our defence spending over the course of the next three years,' Mr Thistlethwaite told Sky News. 'Defence spending increases by about 10½ billion dollars and about $50bn over the course of the next decade.' Mr Thistlethwaite added that the Albanese government was increasing defence spending to '2½ per cent of GDP', including through AUKUS. The Trump administration's demand came just days after a leading defence think tank said Australia must bolster its immediate readiness to go to war or risk having a 'paper ADF'. The Australian Strategic Policy Institute warned that while Labor was spending on longer-term projects it was not pumping nearly enough cash into keeping Australia combat-ready in the near term.

ABC News
43 minutes ago
- ABC News
Blak In-Justice exhibition at Heide Museum of Modern Art is 'a wake-up call'
When Prime Minister Anthony Albanese visited Pope Leo XIV at the Vatican in early May, he took with him, by way of gift for the new Catholic Church head, a painting by Ngarrindjeri artist Amanda Westley. "I wonder if the Pope knew that we're 36 per cent of the prison population when he received that painting," Barkindji artist Kent Morris says. I've driven though a miserable autumn day in Melbourne to Heide Gallery in the city's leafy eastern suburbs to meet Morris, the curator and director of the First Nations-led not-for-profit organisation, The Torch project. As we chat, he's walking me through his latest curation, the incredible exhibition Blak In-Justice: Incarceration and Resilience. "Our artwork and culture is somehow revered on the international stage and high enough for an exchange at that level, but yet, we're the most incarcerated people on the planet." Since the 1991 Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, Indigenous incarceration rates have more than doubled, and deaths in custody have continued to rise. "I think generally, as a nation, it's just seen as something that's, well, it is what it is," Morris says. "It's a huge stain on this nation." Morris is warm, smiles easily. But it's clear this exhibition is close to his heart. When I ask him what's inspired it, his response is: "Sheer frustration." Morris is incensed by the over-representation of Indigenous people in our legal system. But, he adds, Blak In-Justice has also provided an opportunity to bring together works by First Nations artists who have created political art engaging with the problem. "It's a call of concern ... but it's also a call for action," he says. That action is to turn around a brutal series of statistics. Morris highlights some: Indigenous people are 4 per cent of the population, yet 36 per cent of the national adult prison population. Indigenous men are 17 times more likely to go to prison than non-Indigenous men. Indigenous women are 27 times more likely to be incarcerated. As we walk down the corridor leading into the exhibition, my eyes fix on a quote plastered across the archway. It's from the 2017 Uluru Statement from the Heart. "We are not an innately criminal people," reads part of it. Blak In-Justice presents works by the who's who of Australian First Peoples artists — Richard Bell, Reko Rennie, Gordon Bennett, Jimmie Pike, Destiny Deacon — alongside works by participants in The Torch program, which brings art teaching and support to currently incarcerated or recently released First Peoples in Victoria. The first room of the Blak In-Justice exhibition presents the full force of the problem. The walls are painted a dusty blue — symbolic of both the blue stone of the earth, representing Country, and the bluestone walls of Loddon, of Pentridge, common to our prisons and former prisons in Victoria. "The exhibition's grounded in Country," Morris explains. "Even the bluestone walls — that's rock from the Country as well. And those prisons are built on our Country too." Set against the walls are visceral works from well-known Indigenous artists. The bright hues of Reko Rennie's Three Little Pigs (2024), depicting three white police officers against a red background holding down a faceless Indigenous figure in yellow, a police officer's knee in the restrained man's back. The red scars and hanging ropes of Gordon Bennett's Bloodlines (1993). A striking work, Blood Tears (2023) by Judy Watson is at one end of the room, made up of long red strips of plastic, punched out with the names of Aboriginal people who have died in custody, in Braille. The works are in-your-face, political, satirical, shocking, starkly depicting police brutality and the systemic problems of the justice system Indigenous people are up against. Some of it is hard to look at, but that — Morris says — is the point. "This is hard-hitting. But it's all truth-telling, you know? It's shared and lived experiences." He says this gravely, before his eyes fire up, his gears shift. "I mean, here," Morris says, steering me towards the next room, "Well, this is the solution that we've created for ourselves." The next part of the exhibition opens out in walls painted in soft ochre, the themes and colours presented in the works displayed against them offering a vastly different experience to that of the room before. Playfully painted emus appear in frames with candy-bright backgrounds, splendid blue wrens and pelicans against a black-and-white diamond pattern. In the centre, carved wooden pelicans gather in a circle. Morris tells me proudly that this work by Torch participant Daniel Church, Pelican Mudjin (Family), 2022, was acquired as part of the National Gallery of Victoria's permanent collection. Morris says the support The Torch provides to connect or reconnect artists with art practice, Country and culture gives them strength and purpose. And, importantly, the money the participants make from their art (100 per cent of the artwork price goes to the artist) enables them to support their families and imagine a life for themselves beyond prison. "[It means] you're not just on the outside of society. You're actually included, and you have a part to play, and you have a story to tell." As we walk through Blak In-Justice, Morris's stories send us zig-zagging across the room — stories of those in The Torch who have gone on to major art awards, like ceramicist Raymond Young, or who have come back to teach or otherwise work as part of the program, like Stacey Edwards. "It's not just based around being an artist," Morris says. "This really is about people removing the shackles and finding their pathway. People are going into employment, education, training and employment, a whole range of areas." Morris says every year artists come up to him to say, "This saved my life. This program saved my life." He wants to see that fact getting broader recognition and support. "Solutions [to Indigenous over-representation in prisons] won't come from the non-Indigenous community, but they really need the support of the non-Indigenous community. The Torch's success story is told not only in the stats (the recidivism rates of participants is more than half that of non-participants), but in these human stories, many of whose voices are part of the exhibition, through video documentary, panels accompanying their works and in large quotes on the walls. For Morris, it's not surprising the program has had such success because it's been developed for Indigenous people, by Indigenous people. Although The Torch began in 2011, it was built on the back of more than 40 years of activism and listening to community. "Solutions will only come from our community because we're the ones who have the most at stake," he says. "We care the most, and we believe and have hope. And this is one extraordinary example." Blak In-Justice: Incarceration and Resilience is at Heide Museum of Modern Art (Naarm/Melbourne) until July 20, 2025.