News From The Courts
Mengesha
v. Ashcroft
US
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
2003
US App. LEXIS 24923
Petitioners
Afework Mengesha and Abebech Sisay petitioned and were granted review of a Board
of Immigration Appeals order denying their motion to reconsider for abuse of
discretion.
The
Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that aliens in deportation hearings are
entitled to the Fifth Amendment right to due process.
The Fifth Amendment requires, among other rights, the right that notice
of deportation proceedings be reasonably calculated to reach the alien.
The government in this case, therefore, had the duty to provide notice to
the alien’s last known address. Once
the plaintiff in a case provides such notice, there is a rebuttable presumption
that the notice reached the alien. The
court held in Salta v. INS that the presumption may be rebutted “where a
petitioner actually initiates a proceeding to obtain a benefit, appears at an
earlier hearing, and has no motive to avoid the hearing,” then the
petitioner’s affidavit stating that he did not receive notice.
The
Ninth Circuit held that the petitioners had no motive to fail to appear or file
a brief. In fact, their failure to
do so resulted in their appeal being dismissed.
As a result, the petition for review was granted, and the court reversed
for an evidentiary hearing to resolve the issue of whether the petitioners
received notice.
*****
Arizona
v. Johnson
2003
US App. LEXIS 25298
No.
02-10285
9th
Circuit Court of Appeals
The
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit upheld the convictions of a
US Border Patrol Agent charged with kidnapping and sexual assault of an illegal
immigrant who was taken into custody after crossing the US-Mexico border.
After
picking up a group of individuals who crossed the US-Mexico border illegally,
the defendant instructed one female from El Salvador to get into his patrol car.
Johnson failed to announce that he was a male agent transporting a female
alien, as was the necessary procedure. The female remained the car, eventually
being driven to an isolated spot in the desert. Conflicting accounts are offered
of the next encounter. The female
claimed that the defendant forced her to perform oral sex.
The defendant claimed that the actions were consensual.
Following the encounter, instead of driving the female back to the
station where the defendant was assigned, he drove her close to the border
crossing and told her which way she should go to cross the border.
A Mexican border official contacted the US Border Patrol, who determined
from her statements and the testimony of other agents who were at the site when
she was initially picked up that the defendant had been in contact with her.
When questioned, the defendant changed his story many times, only
acknowledging “consensual” sexual relations when told that physical evidence
of the encounter existed.
The
defendant was charged with sexual assault and kidnapping.
He was convicted of both counts after a five-day jury trial and sentenced
to concurrent prison terms of seven years for sexual assault and five years for
kidnapping. The Court of Appeals
affirmed on all counts.
Among
the issues upheld on appeal were that the district court (1) did not abuse its
discretion in answering a question from the jury during its deliberations; (2)
did not abuse its discretion in admitting testimony of prior consistent
statements under Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(1)(B); (3) properly rejected a
Sixth Amendment claim that the government had acted in bad faith in deporting
aliens who might have been material witnesses; and (4) properly refused to
dismiss the kidnapping charge as unsupported by the evidence.
On
Issue 3, the defendant must present evidence to show (1) that the government
departed from its usual procedures, or (2) that it purposely deported the
witnesses to gain an unfair advantage at trial.
However, the Court held that this claim was not proven since the
female’s companions were returned to Mexico before anyone in the government
was aware of the sexual encounter between the defendant and the female.
On Issue 4, the Court determined that while the defendant had legal authority to detain the female when she was first apprehended, he had no legal authority to continue to confine her in the back of his patrol car, to drive her to a remote spot in the desert, to handcuff her while she performed oral sex, and then to take her to the Naco border crossing roughly twenty-five miles west of his ordinary duty station.
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