News From The Courts
Gonzalez
v. INS
US
Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit
Filed
December 31, 2003
The
Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals denied the petitioner’s petition for review of
the BIA’s order affirming the denial of her application for adjustment of
status.
The
Petitioner entered the United States in 1991 without inspection.
She later filed an application for asylum, withholding of removal and
voluntary departure. While her
application was pending, the Department of State selected her application for an
immigration visa through the Diversity Immigration Visa Lottery Program (DV
Lottery Program) for 1997 as eligible. As
a result, the Petitioner submitted an application to the INS for adjustment of
status and withdrew her application for asylum and withholding of removal.
The
DV Lottery Program expired on September 30, 1997.
At that time, the Petitioner did not receive a diversity visa, and
therefore did not have a visa in support of her application for adjustment of
status.
As
a result, the IJ denied the Petitioner’s adjustment application and found her
to be deportable. The Petitioner
argued on appeal that the doctrine of equitable tolling should be applied to
extend the one-year statutory requirement for the DV Lottery Program because she
was defrauded by a notary when applying for her adjustment of status.
The
doctrine of equitable tolling is an equitable remedy available to courts of
equity. When equity demands, a
court may apply the doctrine to toll, or pause, time when a statutory time
requirement exists.
In
this case, the statute required the Petitioner to provide a visa before the IJ
could grant an adjustment of status. Aliens
may only receive a diversity visa through the DV Lottery Program only in the
year in which they were selected as eligible.
Since the Petitioner did not receive a visa in 1997, therefore, she could
not produce a visa to the IJ, and therefore was ineligible for an adjustment of
status.
The court also held that the doctrine of equitable tolling could not be applied to “override Congress’s explicit public policy determinations,” including the one-year statutory deadline of the DV Lottery Program.
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