Viewing entries tagged
minors

Comment

Ninth Circuit Issues New Opinion on Service of NTA on Minors

The Ninth Circuit has granted a petition for panel rehearing in B.R. v. Garland, which dealt with proper service of a Notice to Appear on a minor, as well as the proper remedy when DHS obtains juvenile records in violation of state law.

B.R. was deemed an unaccompanied minor and remained in custody until he was eventually released to his mother in March 2011. Upon his release, DHS failed to serve a copy of the NTA on B.R.’s mother. In fact, DHS has never served B.R.’s mother with his NTA. No substantive proceedings took place between 2011 and 2018 (in part, because B.R. was incarcerated for some of that time). In January 2018, B.R. (now represented by an attorney) moved to terminate proceedings on the ground that DHS failed to effectuate proper service in 2011 by failing to serve a copy of his NTA on B.R.’s custodian (his mother) when he was released to her custody, which he argued was required for minor aliens pursuant to Flores-Chavez v. Ashcroft, 362 F.3d 1150 (9th Cir. 2004). The IJ acknowledged that DHS’s 2011 NTA service was improper under our Flores-Chavez rule, but denied the motion after concluding that DHS was permitted to perfect service by re-serving the NTA on then-adult B.R. The IJ noted DHS had done so by reserving the NTA by mail on B.R.’s counsel as an attachment to the agency’s response to B.R.’s motion.

In March 2018, B.R. filed a motion to suppress evidence and to terminate proceedings, in which he argued that the three I-213s that DHS had assembled and submitted as evidence of B.R.’s alienage improperly relied on B.R.’s confidential juvenile records—an act B.R. argued was a violation of his Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights and an egregious regulatory violation—and that these forms should be suppressed. B.R. argued that without the I-213s, DHS, which at that point had submitted no other evidence of his alienage, failed to meet its burden of establishing that B.R. was born in Mexico. In response to the motion, DHS submitted two additional pieces of evidence of alienage: (1) B.R.’s Mexican birth certificate, and (2) a district court presentence investigation report which stated that B.R. was born in Mexico.

The IJ denied the motion to suppress evidence and to terminate proceedings. The IJ refrained from deciding whether DHS had acted unlawfully with respect to B.R.’s juvenile records in the preparation of the I213s but assumed for purposes of analysis that DHS had indeed obtained information for the I-213s unlawfully. Sidestepping the merits, the IJ held that DHS’s supplemental evidence (the Mexican birth certificate and the district court presentence report) was obtained based on B.R.’s identity alone, which, regardless of any alleged constitutional or regulatory violation, cannot be suppressed. Thus, the IJ found the supplementary evidence not suppressible and determined that DHS had proved B.R.’s Mexican alienage by clear, unequivocal, and convincing evidence, even without the I-213s.

“Reviewing the matter de novo, we hold that improper service of an NTA on a minor alien released from DHS custody can be cured if DHS later perfects service before substantive removal proceedings begin. Therefore, regardless whether DHS’s improper service in 2010 failed to vest the immigration court with jurisdiction initially, the immigration court had jurisdiction throughout all of B.R.’s substantive removal proceedings subsequent to DHS’s perfection of service on B.R. in 2018.” “Nothing in the statute or regulations requires termination of removal proceedings solely because the initial service was found to be defective.” “Flores-Chavez requires DHS to serve the NTA on the custodian of a minor alien after he is released. It does not create a bizarre rule where, if service on the custodian is not made the instant the minor is released, DHS is barred from pursuing removal.” “To cure defective service, DHS re-served the NTA on then-adult B.R., but B.R. here complains that DHS again did not serve notice on B.R.’s mother. We hold that DHS need not have served B.R.’s mother after he turned eighteen and that DHS properly perfected service by mailing the NTA to B.R.’s attorney.”

“In holding that DHS may cure defective service to avoid violating § 1229 and related regulations, we do not suggest that there is no remedy when improper service amounts to an egregious regulatory violation which works to prejudice an alien’s interests. Our test from Sanchez v. Sessions provides adequate remedy of such instances: “[A] petitioner is entitled to termination of their [sic] proceedings without prejudice as long as the following requirements are satisfied: (1) the agency violated a regulation; (2) the regulation was promulgated for the benefit of petitioners; and (3) the violation was egregious, meaning that it involved conscience-shocking conduct, deprived the petitioner of fundamental rights, or prejudiced the petitioner.” 904 F.3d 643, 655 (9th Cir. 2018). B.R. argues that, even if DHS is permitted to cure defective service, its initial failure to serve B.R.’s mother in accordance with Flores-Chavez’s interpretation of 8 C.F.R. § 236.3 and the seven-year gap between its initial failure and its perfection in 2018 were egregious regulatory violations because they prejudiced his interests, requiring termination of his removal proceedings. The agency, however, did not address B.R.’s egregious regulatory violation argument below.” “Because the agency did not address B.R.’s egregious regulatory violation argument, we grant B.R.’s petition and remand to the agency for it to consider that particular argument. We leave the determination of whether DHS did in fact commit an egregious regulatory violation, including whether DHS prejudiced B.R., for the agency to determine in the first instance on remand.”

“According to B.R.’s evidence, DHS could not have obtained the birth certificate without using at least some of the information available to DHS only in B.R.’s confidential juvenile court record, to wit his date of birth, the Mexican state in which he was born, his parents’ names, etc. That is specific evidence of taint, yet nothing in the record indicates that the agency seriously considered this evidence. Instead, it appears the agency arbitrarily ignored it and found the government’s evidence free from taint. That is error and an abuse of discretion.” “If ICE located the birth certificate by using information gleaned from B.R.’s juvenile records or his I-213s, it would not be free from the taint of that alleged suppressible violation. If ICE used only his name, or used information obtained in its interview with B.R., then DHS has the burden on remand to so demonstrate, and to so demonstrate with sufficient detail to allow the IJ to verify that the evidence does not constitute fruit of unlawful government conduct.”

“We note, however, that B.R. never satisfied his burden to submit specific evidence that DHS’s presentence investigation report was tainted.” “B.R.’s conviction is a matter of public record and information contained within that official file is per se independent of any suppressible violation committed pursuant to unrelated immigration proceedings. B.R. has not provided any evidence that DHS uncovered his federal conviction by using information obtained from B.R.’s unrelated California state juvenile criminal record. Even so, we have serious misgivings as to the propriety of the admission of the presentence investigation report that should be addressed on remand, including how DHS obtained the presentence investigation report when it was placed under seal by the federal district court. Given these misgivings and the fact that the agency relied on both the birth certificate and the presentence investigation report in determining that DHS’s evidence was sufficient to establish alienage, we refrain from concluding in the first instance that the presentence investigation report alone is sufficient to establish B.R.’s alienage.”

The full text of the amended decision in BR v. Garland can be found here:

https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2022/02/23/19-70386.pdf

My blog post on the original panel decision can be found here:

https://www.sabrinadamast.com/journal/2021/8/1/ninth-circuit-addresses-service-on-a-minor-use-of-juvenile-court-records

Comment

Comment

Ninth Circuit Rejects Minor's Improper Service Argument

The Ninth Circuit has rejected the argument by a petitioner that her deportation proceedings should be reopened because she was a minor at the time of apprehension by the immigration officials and no responsible adult was served with a copy of her Order to Show Cause (OSC). The court noted that the petitioner was released on her own recognizance (because immigration officials believed her to be 20 years old) and not to an adult, and therefore, there was no responsible adult to service the OSC upon.

The full text of Jimenez-Sandoval v. Garland can be found here:

https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2022/01/13/19-73193.pdf

Comment

Comment

Ninth Circuit Addresses Service on a Minor, Use of Juvenile Court Records

The Ninth Circuit has determined that improper service of an NTA on a minor alien released from DHS custody can be cured if DHS later perfects service before substantive removal proceedings begin. The court also discussed when evidence of alienage may be tainted because it was found using information obtained in violation of a petitioner’s constitutional rights.

Flores-Chavez requires DHS to serve the NTA on the custodian of a minor alien after he is released. It does not create a bizarre rule where, if service on the custodian is not made the instant the minor is released, DHS is barred from pursuing removal.” “To cure defective service, DHS re-served the NTA on then-adult B.R., but B.R. here complains that DHS again did not serve notice on B.R.’s mother. We hold that DHS need not have served B.R.’s mother after he turned eighteen and that DHS properly perfected service by mailing the NTA to B.R.’s attorney.”

“Applied to the limited instances in which we recognize the availability of the exclusionary rule in immigration proceedings, if an alien establishes a prima facie case of an egregious regulatory or Fourth Amendment violation warranting suppression, the alien is then charged with providing specific evidence that each piece of allegedly suppressible government evidence is tainted by that unlawful act. Upon that showing, the burden then shifts to the government to contest the alien’s specific evidence of taint or otherwise show the government’s allegedly tainted evidence is immune from suppression, including a demonstration that the evidence was obtained independently of or is sufficiently attenuated from the underlying unlawful act or evidence obtained therefrom.”

The full text of BR v. Garland can be found here:
https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2021/07/12/19-70386.pdf

Comment

Comment

Sixth Circuit Finds that Exceptional Circumstances Prevented Minor from Attending Court

The Sixth Circuit has determined that exceptional circumstances prevented a 12-year-old minor whose mother had given birth 10 days before her hearing from attending her removal hearing. “E.A.’s case involves numerous impediments that prevented her from attending her immigration hearing, including her inability to change the location of the hearing, her inability to secure transportation from New York to Memphis, and her mother’s recent childbirth.” “In sum, we conclude that the BIA abused its discretion by denying E.A.’s motion to reopen. E.A.’s mother’s recent childbirth is a serious medical event, which coupled with E.A.’s minor age, her difficulty obtaining transportation, and her difficulty navigating the immigration system without assistance, constitute “exceptional circumstances” necessitating rescission of the in absentia removal order.” The court also noted that the E.A. was not required to show prima facie eligibility for relief in order to have her in absentia removal order rescinded.

The full text of EACA v. Rosen can be found here:

https://www.opn.ca6.uscourts.gov/opinions.pdf/21a0011p-06.pdf

Comment

Comment

Seventh Circuit Upholds Waiver of Rights by Minor who Entered on Visa Waiver

The Seventh Circuit has upheld the validity of a waiver to challenge a removal order for a petitioner who entered the United States as a minor on the visa waiver program, and whose parent signed the waiver on his behalf.

The full text of Ferreyra v. Barr can be found here:

http://media.ca7.uscourts.gov/cgi-bin/rssExec.pl?Submit=Display&Path=Y2020/D06-16/C:19-2055:J:Ripple:aut:T:fnOp:N:2531868:S:0

Comment

Comment

Ninth Circuit Limits Circumstances in which Minor's OSC must be Served on Adult

The Ninth Circuit has limited the circumstances in which an Order to Show Cause served on a minor must also be served on a responsible adult. Previously, the court had held in Flores-Chavez v. Ashcroft that when immigration authorities detain a juvenile, and subsequently release the juvenile to a responsible adult, the Order to Show Cause must also be served on that adult. However, the court determined that the same rule does not apply when the minor was never detained, files for asylum, and is subsequently served with an Order to Show Cause.

“Nonetheless, the calculation differs here, and not just because Petitioner is slightly older than Flores-Chavez was. Petitioner himself set in motion the procedures leading to his hearing by filing an affirmative asylum application and by appearing before an asylum officer. These facts suggest that the risk of error in Petitioner’s situation is less than the risk of error in Flores-Chavez’ situation. More importantly, no adult ever entered an agreement with the government to assume responsibility for Petitioner. It is unclear with whom Petitioner lived at the time of his deportation hearing, including whether anyone at his residence was over the age of 18. It is equally unclear that notice to an adult living at his residence (if there was one) would have added any safeguards to the process, because we cannot know whether that adult would have been willing to take the kind of responsibility that was statutorily assigned in Flores-Chavez. Without researching the details of every minor’s situation, it is impossible to know whether a particular minor over the age of 14 resides with an adult and if so, whether serving the OSC on that adult will be any more effective in ensuring the minor’s attendance at the hearing than serving notice on the minor.” “Requiring the government to provide notice to a responsible adult living with a never-detained juvenile over the age of 14 assumes that there is such a person and that the person can be identified.” “Balancing all the factors, the burden on the government outweighs the interest of never-detained minors over the age of 14, at least those who have filed an affirmative request for relief.”

The full text of Cruz Pleitez v. Barr can be found here: http://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2019/09/18/15-72876.pdf

Comment

Comment

Ninth Circuit finds that IJ Must Advise about SIJS Eligibility and Declines to Assess if Minors have a Right to Appointed Counsel

The Ninth Circuit has issued an en banc decision finding that an Immigration Judge has the obligation to advise an individual in removal proceedings about potential eligibility for Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS) if eligibility for that relief is apparent. The court found that statements in the record that the minor had not had contact with his father for many years raised the inference that reunification with his father is not viable due to abandonment, and the death threats he received from the gang members raised the inference that it was not in the minor’s best interest to return to Honduras.

The en banc court also strongly suggested that a judge should grant a continuance for a minor to pursue SIJS when the child is “actively pursuing” the state-court order.

The court declined to address whether a minor in removal proceedings has a constitutional right to counsel, as the minor in this case obtained counsel in future administrative proceedings.

This en banc decision differs significantly from the original panel decision in this case, which conclusively determined that no such right exists, and also held that the the judge was not required to advise the minor about SIJS because hd did not yet have a predicate order from the state court. The en banc court stated that to require a minor to have already obtained a predicate order before requiring a judge to judge to advise about the possibility of SIJS relief “would eviscerate the utility of advice by the IJ and substantially undermine the core purpose of the IJ’s duty to advise—to inform a minor of rights and avenues of relief of which he may not yet be aware.”

The full text of C.J.L.G. v. Barr can be found here: http://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2019/05/03/16-73801.pdf

The original panel decision can be found here:

https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2018/01/29/16-73801.pdf

Comment

Comment

Tenth Circuit Addresses the "Permanent Bar" for Minors

In an unpublished decision, the Tenth Circuit addressed the application of section 212(a)(9)(C) of the Immigration and Nationality (INA) - which defines the immigration consequences of re-entering the United States without admission having previously accrued at least one year of unlawful presence - to minors.  The court determined that even though the definition of unlawful presence in section 212(a)(9)(B) of the INA exempts minors from accruing unlawful presence, this exception does not apply to the inadmissibility provision in section 212(a)(9)(C) of the iNA.

The full text of Casillas-Casillas v. Lynch can be found here: 

https://www.ca10.uscourts.gov/opinions/14/14-9611.pdf

Comment