News From The Courts
The Legal
Intelligencer reported last week that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Third Circuit departed from the reasoning of six other federal appeals courts
and prohibited one retroactive effect of the Illegal Immigration Reform and
Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA). Before
IIRIRA took effect, deportable aliens who had lived in the U.S. for at least
seven years could request discretionary relief from deportation.
IIRIRA repealed this provision and replaced it with “cancellation of
removal,” which is unavailable to any alien convicted of an “aggravated
felony.”
In Ponnapula
v. Ashcroft, the Third Circuit held that IIRIRA could not apply to any alien
who relied on the possibility of the then available relief when foregoing a
misdemeanor plea agreement in favor of standing trial.
The Court justified its decision as a logical application of the U.S.
Supreme Court’s 2001 decision in INS v.
St. Cyr, which held IIRIRA inapplicable to aliens who entered guilty pleas
before the law’s enactment. Other
appellate courts have restricted the St.
Cyr holding to plea agreements, but the Third Circuit criticized their
interpretation that an alien had to show “actual reliance” on a repealed
statute for it to produce “an impermissible retroactive effect.”
It cited the Supreme Court’s 1994 decision in Landgraf
v. USI Film Products, which held that a statute was impermissibly
retroactive when its application “would impair rights a party possessed when
he acted, increase a party’s liability for past conduct, or impose new duties
with respect to transactions already completed.”
The Third Circuit found that
IIRIRA impermissibly retroactively applied in Ponnapula’s case because he
relied on his lawyer’s advice that, if convicted, he would most likely receive
a sentence where he would still be eligible for immigration relief.
Ponnapula, a native of India, was charged with grand larceny in the first
degree. He was offered a
misdemeanor plea with a probationary sentence but opted for trial because of his
small role in the offense and the scant evidence against him.
A trial judge overturned Ponnapula’s conviction because of his limited
role in the crime, but an appellate court reinstated it.
Because of his “aggravated felony” conviction and IIRIRA, Ponnapula
could not apply for the expected relief for which he otherwise qualified.
Indeed, he would have likely prevailed in showing the necessary hardship
to obtain the relief. His wife,
children, and other family members are naturalized U.S. citizens.
Ponnapula was also in the process of becoming a U.S. citizen before his
indictment for this offense. If
deported, his family would be obliged to return to India.
His children have no ties there and cannot speak their parents’ native
language.
*****
Zaidi v. Ashcroft
Docket No. 03-60288
(5th Cir. Filed June 21, 2004).
Raza Zaidi petitioned the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit for review of a Final Administrative
Removal Order, based on his conviction for sexual battery.
The Court confronted the issue of whether such a conviction qualifies as
an “aggravated felony,” a basis for deportation that precludes judicial
review.
Zaidi, a 27-year-old native and
citizen of Pakistan, was admitted into the U.S. as a non-immigrant student in
August of 2000. In June of 2002, he
pled no contest to two counts of sexual battery in Oklahoma.
The charges arose when an intoxicated Zaidi touched two women
inappropriately through their clothes while the women were either unconscious or
asleep in a college dorm room. He
received a suspended sentence of two years for each count, to run concurrently.
The Court first dismissed
Zaidi’s assertion that he could not be removed to Pakistan because the federal
government originally characterized his crime within an inapplicable
“aggravated felony” category. The
Court held that so long as an alien’s crime actually constitutes an
“aggravated felony,” it lacks jurisdiction to review the deportation order.
The government’s improper citation did not matter because Zaidi could
not show that it had prejudiced him.
Because Zaidi’s deportation
order did not specify which definition of “aggravated felony” applied, the
Court determined whether Zaidi’s conviction qualified.
Federal law defines an “aggravated felony” as “a crime of
violence” (not including a purely political offense) punishable by at least
one year imprisonment. A “crime
of violence” involves the use, attempt, or threat of physical force against
another’s person or property and also includes any felony that inherently
poses a substantial risk of physical force.
The Court concluded that even though Zaidi did not use violent force to
commit his crime, the nonconsensual nature of sexual battery presents a
substantial risk that physical force will be used.
In light of its finding that Zaidi committed an “aggravated felony,”
the Court dismissed his petition for lack of jurisdiction.
*****
Gerardo Rafael Velezmoro v.
Ashcroft
U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals
2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 6072
Gerardo Rafael Velezmoro (“Velezmoro”),
a citizen of Peru, petitioned for a review of the Board of Immigration
Appeals’ (“BIA”) decision denying his motion to reopen deportation
proceedings. The BIA denied the
motion because Velezmoro did not leave the U.S. within the 5-year voluntary
departure period imposed by the Immigration Judge (“IJ”).
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals granted the petition and remanded to
the BIA.
In 1994, the Immigration and
Naturalization Service (“INS”) had initiated deportation proceedings against
Velezmoro because he had entered the U.S. without inspection.
Velezmoro subsequently applied for asylum and a stay of deportation.
The IJ denied asylum, but granted voluntary departure.
The BIA affirmed the decision and extended the voluntary departure until
May 23, 1998. Velezmoro did not
leave the U.S. by that date and moved to reopen his deportation proceedings and
for adjustment of status after a recent marriage to a U.S. citizen.
The BIA rejected this motion by finding that he was ineligible for relief
because he did not depart as required by the BIA’s grant of voluntary
departure.
The BIA had denied the motion
for adjustment of status because the former section 242B of the Immigration and
Nationality Act provided that an individual is ineligible for adjustment of
status if he or she remains in the U.S. after a grant of voluntary departure.
The period of ineligibility lasts only for a period of 5 years after the
scheduled departure date. The
BIA’s decision to deny the motion came within that five-year period, however,
the case came before the Ninth Circuit after the 5 years had elapsed.
Under these circumstances, the Ninth Circuit remanded to the BIA to
decide whether Velezmoro continues to bar Velezmoro from applying for adjustment
of status.
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