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New Case on Convention Against Torture

New Case on Convention Against Torture: Board of Immigration Appeals did not abuse its discretion in determining that petitioners failed to demonstrate prima facie eligibility for immigration relief because their proposed social group, “returning Mexicans from the United States,” was too broad to qualify as a cognizable social group; generalized evidence of violence and crime in Mexico was not particular to petitioners and was insufficient to establish a likelihood of torture.
Delgado-Ortiz v. Holder – filed April 6, 2010

BIA

Board of immigration appeals

Appeal to BIA

BIA deference given to particularly serious crime

 

 

 

BIA decision

A new case. Another aggravated felony. Alien’s conviction for grand theft under California Penal Code Sec. 487(a) qualified as an aggravated felony under the modified categorical approach. By referencing alien’s “conviction record,” Board of Immigration Appeals sufficiently referenced the record as a whole. Abstract of judgment could fairly be read as a summary of alien’s specific offense, not merely a recitation of the title of the statute, and read together with the felony complaint, those documents clearly and specifically demonstrated that alien pleaded guilty to a charge of grand theft of personal property. Alien may not collaterally attack his state court conviction on a petition for review of a BIA decision.
Ramirez-Villalpando v. Holder – filed April 9, 2010

Appeal to BIA

BIA meaning

Board of Immigration Appeals

Immigration judge

New Case on BIA being overruled

New Case on BIA being overruled: Because deferral of removal is available under the Convention Against Torture regardless of whether petitioner has been convicted of a crime, a denial of deferral of removal under CAT is always a decision on the merits. Where alien testified credibly that Nigerian citizens deported for crimes committed in foreign lands were immediately imprisoned upon returning to Nigeria and nothing in the record contradicted this testimony, Board of Immigration Appeals’ conclusion that alien was not likely to be detained upon return to Nigeria was not supported by substantial evidence. Both BIA and immigration judge erred in failing to consider potentially dispositive testimony and evidence that alien would be intentionally tortured in Nigerian prisons because he has AIDS and subject to having his medications withheld as a form of punishment, and such evidence was required to be given reasoned consideration on remand.
Eneh v. Holder – filed April 15, 2010

BIA

Appeal to BIA

Board of immigration appeals

BIA deference given to particularly serious crime

New case

New case where Appellate Court ruled the BIA and IJ were wrong in ruling that there was an adverse credibility finding: Alien’s submission of two news articles describing a rally in India where he said he was arrested did not support an adverse credibility finding based on fact that one article did not mention any violence or arrests at rally and alien did not provide a contemporaneous clarification this article was not entirely accurate. Alien’s failure to explain why a newspaper article stated Delhi police exempted Sikh women from the helmet law before date of rally did not support an adverse credibility finding since only the government could grant such an exemption and later events contradicted this report. Speculation as to what “grave and serious” offenses termination order from alien’s employer was referring to could not be used to support an adverse credibility finding. Where requested documentation was not easily available to alien because it was in India and under the control of a third party, alien’s failure to provide corroborating evidence did not support an adverse credibility finding. Alien’s claim that he had not been formally terminated at his first merits hearing was consistent with employer’s termination order where alien claimed he was unaware of the termination order at the first hearing and had arrived in the United States nearly 10 months before that order was issued. Even if termination order were “poorly drafted and formatted” as Board of Immigration Appeals held, such a conclusion does not bear a substantial and legitimate nexus to the adverse credibility finding. BIA’s disbelief of alien’s decision not to challenge his suspension from work based on speculation and conjecture about what someone in alien’s position would or would not do did not support the adverse credibility finding. Neighbor’s testimony that alien “quit” because he would have had to compromise his religion by cutting his hair and beard in order to keep his job was consistent with alien’s claim that he could have had his job back if he cut his hair and trimmed his beard, but that he was not willing to do so. Where alien repeatedly testified that no media or police reports of a bus explosion exist, or if they did, he was unable to locate them, alien’s failure to provide such reports did not support an adverse credibility finding. Alien was not required to provide “strong” or “conclusive” evidence of bus explosion and his subsequent arrest and mistreatment. Where immigration judge’s skepticism as to the plausibility of alien’s testimony was based on a mischaracterization of that testimony, such skepticism did not provide a proper basis for upholding an adverse credibility finding. IJ and BIA erred to the extent they based an adverse credibility finding on statistics contained in a 2003 Country Conditions Report because those statistics reveal nothing about the circumstances or persecution of Sikhs living in New Delhi in 1998, the year in which alien claimed he was persecuted.

BIA

BIA meaning

Board of immigration appeals

BIA remand case back to USCIS

BIA rules on Step-Child

The BIA found that a stepchild who meets the definition of a “child” under INA § 101(b)(1)(B), 8 U.S.C. § 1101(b)(1)(B) (2006), is a qualifying relative for purposes of establishing exceptional and extremely unusual hardship for cancellation of removal under the Act. Matter of Portillo-Gutierrez, 25 I&N Dec. 148 (BIA 2009).

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https://californiaimmigration.us/bia-remands-case-back-to-the-judge/

Title: The BIA. Just a stepping stone.

Question: I lost my case at the Immigration Court. I understand that I have many issues that I can appeal and that there is a very reasonable chance that I could win. Can you let me know where my appeal goes and what might happen?

Answer: There are many Immigration Courts in the U.S. All together there are about 55 Immigration Courts through all 50 States as well as in Puerto Rico. Whenever you lose at the Immigration Court level, you appeal to the Board of Immigration Appeals or the BIA. There is only one BIA in the entire United States. The BIA is located in Virginia and handles all of the appeals of every Immigration Court throughout the entire United States.

The Notice of Appeal must be in the hands of the BIA no later than 30 days after issuance of the decision from the Immigration Judge. Afterwards, it goes to a panel of three of the members of the Board of Immigration Appeals and in about one year the decision is issued.

Question: I have heard that there will be some changes at the BIA. Is that true and what are they?

Answer: Yes it is true. The changes are not for the better. In fact, the changes will make the appeal process to the BIA an exercise in futility and will deny numerous rights to immigrants and their rights to appeal. Attorney General Ashcroft has just issued regulations to go into effect later this month that will change some of the basic ways that the BIA decides cases. First, they will no longer make a three member panel to decide cases, but only one member will decide. Only on cases of novel importance or ones that are unusually complicated will it be referred to a three member panel. Who decides if a case is novel or unusual is unclear. In all other real appeals (other than the new BIA regulations) it goes to a three member panel. This gives the person appealing the knowledge and satisfaction that the appeal will be decided among three qualified persons who must come to a consensus. Now, the appeal at the BIA, for the most part, is in the hands of one person. This item by itself takes away much of the due process and fairness to the immigrant.

Next, there is now a timetable that is set for deciding the case. Thus, rather than taking the necessary time to properly decide the case, the Attorney General has mandated that the cases take around 6 months. Thus, again there is a violation of the Due Process rights of immigrants. An appeal should not have as its primary importance the number of days or months it must be decided. What this will do is make a single member rush through cases to make sure that the timetable is met, rather than the case being decided on its merits.

Question: What will happen if the BIA denies the case?

Answer: In reality, that is what will happen in most cases. Because of these new regulations, and because of the violation of Constitutional Due Process rights, people will simply use the BIA as a stepping stone to get to the real appeal. Once the BIA denies the case, it can be appealed directly to a Circuit Appellate Court of the United States. These courts are right below the U.S. Supreme Court. In these appeals, there will be a three judge panel and they will give a real chance to have the case heard on the merits. Do not give up with these new regulations. Just keep fighting until you get to the Circuit Courts, and hopefully, we can restore the immigrant rights that have been lost.

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Is my appeal useless?

Question: I lost at the Immigration Court level. I appealed the decision about six months ago to the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA). Now, I just received a decision of the BIA. The entirety of the decision essentially states that the case is denied without giving any reasoning whatsoever. There is nothing else written on the decision. There is no reasoning to the opinion and no discussion as to why it was affirmed without an opinion. I do not know what to do at this point. I do not know how I can appeal as I cannot tell why the BIA denied the case. Can you help?

Answer: Unfortunately, it is becoming more common for the BIA to issue decisions in this manner. It is very unfair as it does not discuss any merits to the appeal, nor does it discuss why they agree with the Immigration Judge. This is a practice that has become all but common.

Over the past several months, the courts of appeals have issued several decisions directly (and indirectly) addressing the BIA’s summary affirmance without opinion (AWO) procedure. The AWO procedure allows a single BIA member to affirm the underlying immigration judge’s decision, without giving any reasons and without adopting the reasoning of the immigration judge.

To date, all of the courts to address AWO’s have turned aside challenges to the validity of the regulations. Nonetheless, most of the published decisions do not foreclose all challenges to AWO’s. Many of the AWO-related court decisions address only limited aspects of the AWO procedure or are limited to the facts of the case.

Question: Does this mean that I should appeal to the Circuit Courts?

Answer: Yes, you should do what is known as a Petition for Review to the Circuit Courts of Appeal. While people have been trying for months to get the AWO overturned, there have not been any conclusive decisions on this matter. Therefore, it is necessary to read closely the controlling cases in your circuit and argue for a narrow interpretation of the AWO cases.

In particular, one argument that has not been foreclosed is that the BIA failed to comply with its own regulations because the case did not meet the criteria for an AWO decision.

Essentially, the BIA member must find that the case satisfies three regulatory criteria before he or she can issue an AWO decision. Specifically, the BIA member must find 1. That the result reached by the immigration judge was correct; 2. That any errors in the decision below were harmless or nonmaterial; and either 3. (a) That the issue on appeal is squarely controlled by existing Board or federal court precedent and does not involve the application of precedent to a novel fact situation; or (b) That the factual and legal questions raised on appeal are not so substantial that a written decision is warranted.

In order to show that the BIA is not complying with its own regulations, it is important to brief fully the merits of your case. Thus, although there necessarily will be additional reasons for remanding the case to the agency, urge the court to remand for the reason that the BIA member did not comply with the AWO regulations.

Therefore, while it will not be easy, you should not give up and keep fighting to try to get the summary decision without opinion overturned. Otherwise, the BIA will simply be a rubber-stamp for whatever the judge did and not a real appellate body.

New BIA Policies Admonished by ABA

Question: I appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA). The decision took only three months and there was no analysis. I read an article of yours last week on a similar subject. Is there anything being done about the way the BIA is making there decisions?

Answer: Actually, since last week, the American Bar Association (ABA) which is the organization that all attorneys in the United States must follow, issued a scathing report on how the new regulations of how the BIA makes it decisions violates the due process of the immigrants.

The American Bar Association today called on the Board of Immigration Appeals to discard procedures it adopted in 2002 or, failing that, to adopt a series of changes in order to unclog federal court dockets and achieve justice for immigrants and their families.

The findings of the study confirm concerns that the ABA has had from the time the changes were proposed, and about which the ABA has communicated with the Department of Justice.

“This study concludes that changes billed as simple procedural matters are having a serious and sweeping effect on the administration of justice,” said ABA President Dennis W. Archer. “After reviewing it, the ABA is recommending that the Department of Justice quickly discard the procedural changes and reinstate prior procedures.”

Question: What exactly does the study represent?

Answer: Its results demonstrate that: While 1 in 4 appeals were granted before the procedural changes, just 1 in 10 are now; The rate at which BIA decisions are being appealed to the federal courts tripled from 5 percent in 2001 to 15 percent in 2002. The 2nd, 9th, 5th and 3rd circuits have been particularly hard hit by higher rates of appeals; Reducing the number of BIA members who must review each case and imposing strict time periods for decision-making, measures purportedly aimed at eliminating the backlog, have backfired. Overworked board members have insufficient time to carefully consider the facts and legal arguments of each case;

Allowing affirmance without written decision creates a clear incentive for board members to meet case processing guidelines by affirming removal orders without regard to the merits of the appeal. Board members are not required to articulate the basis for their decisions. The lack of written decisions gives courts of appeal less guidance in reviewing decisions; and massive changes in immigration law, not lack of diligence or efficiency by individual board members, played a large part in the increased backlogs between 1996 and 2002.

Question: Are there any recommendations the ABA gives to the BIA.

Answer: Yes. The suggest the following: That each case have a written decision that addresses errors raised by the appellant, the basis for determining that the case was correctly decided below, specific legal precedents on which the decision is based, and the reason that the case was assigned to a single board member; Prohibit single-member review in cases where judicial review would be foreclosed; Prohibit single-member review for reversing an order of an immigration judge to terminate proceedings or grant relief to a non-citizen; Make available reconsideration of whether or not a case was appropriately decided whenever a removal order is affirmed by a single member; Ensure that time frames sufficiently accommodate the practical impediments many respondents face in preparing briefs or finding counsel; Expand board membership, rather than reduce it; Ensure decisional independence of board; and preserve access to judicial review of immigration decisions, as the federal courts provide important oversight.

As you can see, the way the BIA has been issuing decisions and the unfairness of those procedures has now reached much farther than the immigrant. If we keep fighting, eventually, we can get these matters overturned and make them fairer for the immigrant.