Cabral de Faria v. INS ( 1994 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion






    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________


    No. 93-1707


    ALBERTO CABRAL DE FARIA,

    Petitioner,

    v.

    IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE,

    Respondent.


    ____________________

    ON PETITION FOR REVIEW OF AN ORDER

    OF THE BOARD OF IMMIGRATION APPEALS

    ____________________

    Before

    Breyer, Chief Judge,
    ___________
    Selya and Cyr, Circuit Judges.
    ______________

    ____________________

    Joseph S. Callahan on brief for petitioner.
    __________________
    Frank W. Hunger, Assistant Attorney General, Robert Kendall, Jr.,
    ________________ ___________________
    Assistant Director, and Philemina McNeill Jones, Attorney, Office of
    _______________________
    Immigration Litigation, Civil Division, Department of Justice, on
    brief for respondent.


    ____________________

    November 16, 1993
    ____________________



























    Per Curiam. Petitioner Alberto Cabral de Faria seeks
    ___________

    review of an order of the Board of Immigration Appeals

    requiring that he be deported to Canada. Finding that no

    substantial question is presented, we summarily affirm

    pursuant to Loc. R. 27.1.

    I.

    Petitioner, a Canadian native and citizen, has resided

    in this country for 27 of his 34 years. In 1991, the

    Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) charged him with

    being deportable under 8 U.S.C. 1251(a)(2)(A)(ii) as an

    alien who had been convicted of two crimes involving moral

    turpitude. The two crimes cited in the show cause order were

    a 1990 larceny conviction and a 1991 assault conviction. At

    a hearing in September 1992, petitioner conceded his

    deportability and requested a discretionary waiver under 8

    U.S.C. 1182(c). A hearing to address this request was held

    on October 13, 1992. The INS there introduced evidence of

    various other criminal offenses petitioner had committed--

    including a 1985 conviction for breaking and entering (b&e)

    and a 1990 conviction for possession with intent to

    distribute a controlled substance. Based on this and other

    evidence, the Immigration Judge (IJ) denied the request for

    212(c) relief at the close of the hearing. Petitioner filed

    no appeal to the Board from this decision.





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    Instead, on October 27, he filed an application for a

    stay of deportation with the District Director, representing

    that the state court had vacated the larceny conviction that

    very day.1 The INS responded six days later by moving to

    reopen the deportation proceedings pursuant to 8 C.F.R.

    242.22. Pointing to petitioner's contention regarding the

    larceny offense, it requested reopening (1) so that a

    separate conviction (the 1985 b&e offense) could be

    "substituted" for the larceny conviction in order to

    "reestablish deportability," and (2) so that the IJ could

    consider whether the vacation of the larceny conviction might

    affect the earlier denial of 212(c) relief. The IJ agreed

    to reopen the proceedings. The INS amended the show cause

    order to substitute the b&e conviction for the larceny

    conviction. A subsequent amendment set forth the 1990 drug

    conviction as a separate basis for deportability. At a de

    novo hearing held in March 1993, the IJ found petitioner to

    be deportable on both grounds: as one who had been convicted

    of two crimes of moral turpitude (based on the assault and

    b&e convictions), and as one who had been convicted of an


    ____________________

    1. While the stay application and the state court decision
    are not in the record before us, the INS does not dispute
    that the larceny conviction was vacated. Neither side has
    identified the basis for such action. We presume that
    petitioner gained relief pursuant to Mass. G.L. c. 278,
    29D, which requires a court to inform a defendant of the
    immigration consequences of a guilty plea. Petitioner has
    challenged at least one other of his convictions on this
    ground.

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    aggravated felony (based on the drug conviction). See 8
    ___

    U.S.C. 1251(a)(2)(A)(ii)-(iii). The request for 212(c)

    relief was again denied. The BIA on appeal affirmed the IJ's

    decision, and petitioner has now sought review in this court.

    II.

    Petitioner does not challenge the substance of the

    agency's findings concerning deportability and discretionary

    relief. Instead, he advances several procedural

    objections.2 His principal contention is that the decision

    to reopen the deportation proceedings was in contravention of

    the governing regulations. For example, 8 C.F.R. 242.22

    provides in relevant part: "A motion to reopen will not be

    granted unless the immigration judge is satisfied that

    evidence sought to be offered is material and was not

    available and could not have been discovered or presented at

    the hearing." Similarly, 8 C.F.R. 103.5(a)(2)(i) provides

    that a motion to reopen must "[s]tate the new facts to be

    proved at the reopened proceeding." See also id. 3.8(a)
    ________ ___

    (same). Petitioner argues that the allegedly "new" facts



    ____________________

    2. One of petitioner's central arguments to the BIA was that
    the IJ had neglected to consider his opposition to the motion
    to reopen. Indeed, the IJ stated that the motion was
    "unopposed," even though petitioner's opposition had been
    filed in timely fashion the previous day. The BIA on appeal
    addressed this complaint by considering the matter de novo.
    Any error that might have attended the IJ's action was thus
    harmless. See, e.g., Ravindran v. INS, 976 F.2d 754, 762 n.6
    ___ ____ _________ ___
    (1st Cir. 1992). Petitioner has not pursued the point in
    this court.

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    proffered by the INS--the evidence concerning his b&e and

    drug convictions--were not newly discovered at all and thus

    provided no basis for reopening.

    This argument misconstrues the INS' motion. What

    prompted the request to reopen was not the evidence of other

    crimes but rather the fact that, subsequent to the initial

    hearing, the larceny conviction was vacated. This occurrence

    was not only "new" but "material" as well, given that the

    validity of the original deportation order was dependent on

    that conviction. Numerous courts have observed that the

    overturning of a conviction upon which deportability was

    premised is an appropriate basis for reopening administrative

    proceedings. See, e.g., Escobar v. INS, 935 F.2d 650, 652
    ___ ____ _______ ___

    (4th Cir. 1991) (noting that INS had requested BIA to "reopen

    and terminate" deportation proceedings following expungement

    of conviction); Wiedersperg v. INS, 896 F.2d 1179, 1182-83
    ___________ ___

    (9th Cir. 1990) (abuse of discretion to deny reopening in

    such context); Becerra-Jimenez v. INS, 829 F.2d 996, 1000-02
    _______________ ___

    (10th Cir. 1987) (due to expunction of convictions, court

    remands for agency consideration of motion to reopen); Haghi
    _____

    v. Russell, 744 F. Supp. 249, 251-52 (D. Col. 1990) (vacation
    _______

    of conviction is "new and material evidence" within 8 C.F.R.

    3.2). We thus find no abuse of discretion in the Board's

    ruling that the procedural prerequisites to reopening had

    been satisfied. See, e.g., INS v. Doherty, 112 S. Ct. 719,
    ___ ____ ___ _______



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    724-25 (1992) (ruling on motion to reopen reviewed for abuse

    of discretion); INS v. Abudu, 485 U.S. 94, 99 n.3, 104-05
    ___ _____

    (1988) (same).3

    Petitioner's real complaint, of course, is not with the

    allowance of the motion to reopen per se,4 but rather with

    the purpose for which the INS sought reopening--i.e., to file

    substitute charges in order to "reestablish" his

    deportability. Before this court, petitioner has advanced a

    separate argument in this vein, contending that introduction

    of the drug offense was impermissible because the INS had

    made no reference thereto in its motion to reopen. This

    contention stumbles over an initial hurdle: petitioner

    neither objected to such evidence at the reopened hearing nor

    raised this issue in his appeal to the BIA. "Issues not

    raised before the Board may not be raised for the first time

    upon judicial review of the Board's decisions." Ravindran v.
    _________



    ____________________

    3. Petitioner also argues that the INS' motion was not
    "supported by affidavits or other documentary evidence," as
    required by 8 C.F.R. 3.8(a), 103.5(a)(2)(ii). See, e.g.,
    ___ ____
    INS v. Jong Ha Wang, 450 U.S. 139, 143 (1981) (per curiam).
    ___ ____________
    Even assuming this contention was adequately presented below,
    we are unpersuaded that the motion's format was deficient.
    An affidavit was unnecessary where the new evidence proffered
    by the INS consisted of an assertion advanced by petitioner
    himself in an earlier filing with the agency.

    4. For example, if the original larceny and assault
    convictions had been the only ones in petitioner's record,
    there is little doubt that he would have been the one seeking
    __
    reopening in October 1992 in order to set aside his
    deportation order. Indeed, in a number of the cases cited
    above, it is the alien who sought such relief.

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    INS, 976 F.2d 754, 761 (1st Cir. 1992); accord, e.g., Thomas
    ___ ______ ____ ______

    v. INS, 976 F.2d 786, 789 (1st Cir. 1992) (per curiam);
    ___

    Alvarez-Flores v. INS, 909 F.2d 1, 8 (1st Cir. 1990).
    ______________ ___

    We perceive no procedural impropriety in any event.

    Pursuant to 8 C.F.R. 242.16(d), the INS "may at any time

    during a hearing lodge additional charges of deportability,

    including factual allegations, against the respondent." We

    find no basis for petitioner's unsupported assertion that

    this provision is inapplicable to reopened hearings.5 Nor

    can we conclude that the INS was guilty of "piling on" or

    other heavy-handed tactics. To be sure, both of the

    "substitute" convictions here could have been charged at the

    outset. Yet there is no requirement that the INS advance

    every conceivable basis for deportability in the original

    show cause order. As the IJ explained, such a rule would

    needlessly complicate proceedings in the vast majority of

    cases. Moreover, each of the substitutions here was

    prompted, not by dereliction on the part of the agency, but

    by action on the part of petitioner. As noted, introduction

    of the b&e offense was occasioned by his success in vacating

    the larceny conviction. And the drug conviction was


    ____________________

    5. In Rosenberg v. Fleuti, 374 U.S. 449 (1963), a similar
    _________ ______
    series of events occurred. A summary order of deportation
    was issued. It was later discovered that such conviction was
    not one for which deportation could be ordered. "The
    deportation proceedings were thereupon reopened and a new
    charge [of deportability] was lodged against respondent."
    Id. at 450.
    ___

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    proffered as a separate basis for deportability only in

    response to petitioner's suggestion, during a pair of

    hearings in December 1992, that the b&e conviction, in turn,
    ___

    had been vacated (a suggestion that was never

    substantiated).6 Under these circumstances, we think the

    Board acted within its "broad discretion," Doherty, 112 S.
    _______

    Ct. at 722, in agreeing to reopen the deportation proceedings

    to consider the substitute charges.

    The petition for review is denied. The motion for stay
    ________________________________________________________

    of deportation pending review is denied as moot.
    ________________________________________________


















    ____________________

    6. By means of a motion dated December 1, 1992, petitioner
    asked the state court to vacate this conviction pursuant to
    G.L. c. 278, 29D. See note 1 supra. At the reopened
    ___ _____
    deportation hearing, he introduced a copy of this motion with
    the handwritten inscription "mot all" appearing in the
    margin, followed by a set of initials. The IJ, while
    inferring that the inscription meant "motion allowed,"
    rejected this evidence because of its improper format. He
    explained that an official docket entry was necessary to
    prove that the conviction had been vacated. Petitioner has
    not challenged this ruling, either before the BIA or this
    court, and has not otherwise pursued the contention that the
    b&e conviction has been overturned.

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