The boss of an infamous Trump Burger chain could soon be booted out of the US by the very president he idolises.
Homeland Security sources have revealed that restaurant boss Roland Beainy, 40, was arrested in May after immigration cops discovered he had overstayed his visa.
Beainy, who hails from Lebanon, arrived in 2019 on a tourist visa and never left, even after it expired in February this year. Officials claim he’s been living in America illegally ever since. The Trump fanatic launched his first burger joint in 2020, complete with MAGA-themed décor, and has since grown the chain to four outlets across the Houston area. It comes after Donald Trump was seen with a mystery mark in Scotland after his chronic health diagnosis.
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But his political loyalty isn’t earning him any special treatment in the White House’s sweeping crackdown on undocumented migrants, and he could soon see himself living in another country, the NY Post reports.
In a fiery statement, the Department for Homeland Security said: “This is true regardless of what restaurant you own or political beliefs you might have."
Officials also claim the Lebanon native’s bid for legal status was “revoked” after his own family allegedly admitted his marriage was a sham to dodge immigration rules.
Homeland Security didn’t hold back, accusing Beainy of having “no Green Card, a history of illegal marriages, and an assault charge”, and even branded it a “flagrant abuse” of US immigration law.
The burger boss denies all wrongdoing, insisting the claims are “not true” in a statement to the Houston Chronicle. He was released on bond in June while his deportation case drags on — but the fight is far from over.
The Trump Burger brand has courted controversy before. A recent Facebook video showed a Trump impersonator jokingly asking Latina diners for their green cards.
Adding to his troubles, Beainy is locked in a bitter legal row with the landlord of his Kemah branch. Archie Patterson claims he’s owed money, while Beainy’s side insists Patterson forced out staff and seized control of the site.
For now, it's not known whether Beainy will be serving customers in Texas or back in Beirut in the months to come. His future is now in the hands of the courts.
Earlier this year, a movement dubbed Operation Safeguard led to an increase in ICE and allied agencies to conduct mass raids across major cities, detaining tens of thousands including those with legal or pending status. At the same time, the administration dramatically expanded detention infrastructure and used military-style camps.
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