United States v. Smith ( 1994 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 94-1115

    UNITED STATES,

    Appellee,

    v.

    DEVON WAYNE SMITH,

    Defendant - Appellant.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Chief Judge,
    ___________

    Boudin, Circuit Judge,
    _____________

    and Keeton,* District Judge.
    ______________

    _____________________

    Peter Bruce Krupp, Federal Defender Office, by Appointment
    _________________
    of the Court, for appellant.
    James Francis Lang, Assistant United States Attorney, with
    __________________
    whom Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, was on brief for
    _______________
    appellee.



    ____________________

    September 7, 1994
    ____________________


    ____________________

    * Of the District of Massachusetts, sitting by designation.














    TORRUELLA, Chief Judge. Defendant-Appellant Devon
    ____________

    Wayne Smith entered a conditional plea of guilty to an indictment

    charging him with illegally reentering the United States

    following a deportation order subsequent to a conviction for an

    aggravated felony, in violation of 8 U.S.C. 1326(a) and

    (b)(2). On appeal, Smith asserts that the district court erred

    in denying his motion to dismiss (1) the entire indictment

    because the government unduly burdened his ability to appeal the

    deportation order underlying the offense, and (2) that part of

    the indictment based on his prior aggravated felony conviction

    because that conviction was vacated after the government indicted

    Smith in this case. We affirm.

    I. BACKGROUND
    I. BACKGROUND

    On January 5, 1983, Smith, a citizen of Jamaica,

    entered the United States at Miami, Florida, as a visitor for

    pleasure with authorization to stay until the end of the month.

    On October 1, 1984, Smith was charged with possession of

    marijuana with intent to distribute in Dorchester, Massachusetts.

    Smith was convicted of this offense in Boston Municipal Court

    ("BMC") on January 30, 1985.

    On August 28, 1985, the Immigration and Naturalization

    Service ("INS") initiated deportation proceedings against Smith

    on the grounds that Smith's conviction subjected him to

    deportation under Section 241(a)(11) of the Immigration and

    Nationality Act ("INA"), 8 U.S.C. 1251(a)(11). Several

    hearings were held on this matter beginning in July of 1987. At


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    one of these hearings, the INS brought an additional charge

    against Smith: remaining in the United States longer than the

    one-month period of time granted upon his original admission, an

    offense subjecting Smith to deportation under Section 241(a)(2)

    of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1251(a)(2). Smith admitted he was

    deportable on this additional ground, but he contested his

    deportability on the original 241(a)(11) charge because he was

    attempting to have the BMC conviction vacated. Smith chose to

    challenge the 241(a)(11) charge, despite the fact that he

    admitted to his deportability on other grounds, because certain

    forms of relief that are available under 241(a)(2) are not

    available once a defendant is found deportable under

    241(a)(11).

    Smith's initial efforts to vacate the BMC conviction

    were unsuccessful, and on June 30, 1988, an immigration judge

    found Smith was deportable under both 241(a)(2) and

    241(a)(11) and ordered Smith's deportation. Smith appealed this

    ruling on the ground that the judge improperly relied upon an

    uncertified copy of the BMC conviction.

    On September 25, 1989, while the appeal was pending,

    INS agents arrested Smith for an alleged gun offense. Agents

    found two 9 mm handguns in Smith's possession after responding to

    information provided by the Mirimar, Florida, Police Department

    that Smith had been interviewed and found to possess weapons.

    The INS knew that Smith had been convicted of carrying a

    concealed firearm in October of 1988 (Smith pleaded nolo
    ____


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    contendere to that charge and an adjudication of guilt was
    __________

    "stayed and withheld") and that Smith had been briefly detained

    by the INS in May of 1989 after being found in possession of a

    knife during an INS sweep.

    After the September 1989 arrest, the INS took Smith

    into custody and held him in lieu of posting a $25,000 bond.

    Smith was never officially charged for the gun offense underlying

    the arrest. Smith then moved for a bond determination. An INS

    hearing officer ruled on the motion and ordered that Smith be

    detained without bond. Smith then requested a redetermination of

    the ruling before an immigration judge. On October 18, 1989,

    following a hearing, an immigration judge denied Smith's request

    for a change in his custody status.

    Central to this appeal is Smith's allegation that the

    INS detained him without bail in order to unduly burden his

    ability to pursue his pending immigration appeal, and to coerce

    Smith into waving that appeal. Smith offered no direct evidence

    to support this allegation. He does point out, however, that the

    record does not indicate that Smith was ever notified of the gun

    charges against him -- charges which were never formally made in

    the first place -- or that Smith was ever given an opportunity to

    be heard on the alleged gun charges underlying his detention.

    Smith also points out that, at some point in November of 1989,

    Smith was transferred from an INS detention center in Florida,

    where his family, business, and lawyer were located, to El Paso,

    Texas. Smith's counsel affirmatively asserts in the brief and in


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    prior motions before the court that Smith never had an

    opportunity to rebut the gun charges, but this assertion is not

    supported by an affidavit from Smith himself, or from anyone else

    involved in the bond hearings.1

    In any event, faced with a lengthy period of

    incarceration during the pendency of his immigration appeal,

    Smith, in consultation with his attorney in El Paso, decided to

    withdraw his appeal and submit to deportation. A motion

    withdrawing the appeal, signed by Smith and his attorney, was

    filed on November 21, 1989, and Smith was deported to Jamaica.

    In March of 1992, Smith reentered the United States at

    Miami. He was subsequently arrested by INS agents in Dorchester,

    Massachusetts on March 22, 1993. A federal grand jury then

    returned the indictment for this case on May 13, 1993.

    Meanwhile, in October of 1993, Smith's current counsel

    successfully vacated the original 1985 BMC conviction upon which

    Smith's deportation was originally based.

    Smith moved to dismiss the indictment in the present

    case by collaterally attacking the deportation order and the

    aggravated felony underlying the charged offenses. A hearing was


    ____________________

    1 There is no evidence in the record concerning what was argued
    before the immigration judge or what basis underlay the judge's
    decision to uphold the revocation of Smith's bail. Thus, there
    is no evidence indicating whether or not Smith was actually heard
    on the gun charges. However, Smith's motion for a bond
    determination does acknowledge that Smith was detained by the INS
    on the basis of a gun charge. Although not critical to the
    resolution of this appeal, one could reasonably infer from his
    bond motion that Smith did have an opportunity to challenge the
    gun charges at the bond hearings.

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    scheduled, but Smith did not request an evidentiary hearing for
    ___________

    the motion. Following a hearing on December 9, 1993, the

    district court denied Smith's motion to dismiss the indictment.

    Smith's counsel subsequently requested approval of several

    subpoenas for the purpose of collecting evidence on the

    collateral attack issue with the intent of litigating the issue

    at trial. Then, on January 12, 1994, the court granted the

    government's motion to exclude all evidence of the circumstances

    surrounding the validity of the deportation proceedings. Later

    that same day, Smith entered a conditional plea of guilty

    pursuant to Fed. R. Crim. P. 11(a)(2), reserving for appeal the

    issues presented here.

    II. ANALYSIS
    II. ANALYSIS

    A. Collateral Attack on Deportation: Coerced Waiver of Appeal
    A. Collateral Attack on Deportation: Coerced Waiver of Appeal
    __________________________________________________________

    To establish an offense under 1326, the government

    must prove that the defendant has been previously deported. 8

    U.S.C. 1326(a)(1). A defendant accused of violating 1326 may

    collaterally attack the underlying deportation order if the

    defendant can show that he or she was deprived of the opportunity

    for meaningful judicial review of that deportation order. United
    __________________________ ______

    States v. Mendoza-L pez, 481 U.S. 828, 839 (1987) ("Depriving an
    ______ _____________

    alien of the right to have the disposition in a deportation

    hearing reviewed in a judicial forum requires, at a minimum, that

    review be made available in any subsequent proceeding in which

    the result of the deportation proceeding is used to establish an

    element of a criminal offense.").


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    Smith argues that his right to collaterally attack the

    underlying deportation under Mendoza-L pez was improperly
    _____________

    foreclosed by the district court. Smith originally contended in

    his motion to dismiss that the INS's detention of Smith for an

    uncharged gun offense effectively denied him the opportunity for

    meaningful judicial review of the deportation proceeding, and

    therefore, the proceeding cannot properly serve as the basis for

    his indictment under 8 U.S.C. 1326. After denying this motion,

    the court ruled that Smith could not present evidence on this

    issue at trial. We find no error in the district court's

    actions.

    We have recently held that a defendant who deliberately

    and voluntarily waived his right to appeal a prior deportation

    order under the advice of counsel, is not deprived of meaningful

    judicial review and thus may not collaterally attack the

    deportation order during the 1326 criminal proceedings. United
    ______

    States v. Smith, 14 F.3d 662, 665 (1st Cir. 1994); United States
    ______ _____ _____________

    v. Vieira-Candelario, 6 F.3d 12, 15 (1st Cir. 1993). In this
    _________________

    case, Smith withdrew his appeal of the deportation order under

    the advice of counsel. Smith argues, however, that the waiver of

    his appeal was not deliberate and voluntary, but rather was

    coerced, and thus his case is distinguishable from the situation

    in Smith and Vieira-Candelario. According to Smith, the INS's
    _____ _________________

    action of imprisoning him without allowing him to challenge the

    reason for his incarceration, unconstitutionally burdened his

    ability to appeal because it required him to suffer an unlawful


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    imprisonment in order to pursue his right to judicial review.

    The only way to gain his rightful freedom, Smith argues, was by

    waiving his appeal and accepting deportation.

    There are a couple of subsidiary issues surrounding

    Smith's appeal. The first one is whether any waiver, even if

    coerced under the most horrendous and fundamentally unfair of

    circumstances, would preclude a Mendoza-L pez-type challenge to a
    _____________

    subsequent criminal indictment under 1326. We must assume that

    there are some circumstances in which a coerced and involuntary

    waiver of an appeal constitutes a denial of the opportunity for

    meaningful judicial review and thus cannot serve as a bar, under

    Smith and Vieira-Candelario, to a collateral challenge of a
    _____ _________________

    deportation order. See Mendoza-L pez, 481 U.S. at 839 n.17
    ___ _____________

    (noting that abuses such as coerced confessions, biased judging,

    and knowing use of perjured testimony "could operate, under some

    circumstances, to deny effective judicial review of

    administrative determinations").

    The next question is whether Smith's specific

    allegations, if true, could constitute sufficiently coercive

    circumstances so as to effectively deny Smith of meaningful

    judicial review of his deportation order despite his waiver of an

    appeal. To the extent Smith alleges that the INS purposefully,

    as opposed to mistakenly or inadvertently, detained him without

    probable cause, and without formally charging him or allowing him

    to subsequently challenge the charges for which he was allegedly

    detained, for the deliberate purpose of pressuring him into


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    withdrawing his appeal and expediting his deportation, he

    presents allegations that conceivably might be sufficient to

    raise a Mendoza-L pez issue in a subsequent criminal case.
    _____________

    Although Smith could still pursue his appeal while in prison,

    even under such egregious circumstances as the ones he alleges, a

    court might not be precluded from finding that such circumstances

    violated the requirement that Smith be afforded meaningful

    judicial review.

    That leaves the issue of whether Smith adequately

    presented the matter to the district court in a way that would

    allow the court to make a finding that Smith's allegations are

    true. There is no evidence in the record to support any aspect

    of Smith's allegations that he was coerced into waiving his

    appeal of the deportation order. On the contrary, what evidence

    does exist indicates that Smith was lawfully detained for weapons

    violations, that he was given two opportunities to challenge his

    detention, including a hearing before an immigration judge, and

    that the INS reasonably believed it had cause to detain Smith

    because Smith had been picked up for previous weapons violations

    and because he was found with two 9 mm handguns. The fact that

    no formal gun charges were brought against Smith and the fact

    that Smith was transferred from Miami to El Paso do not rise to

    the level of evidence of deliberate coercion by the INS. In sum,

    there is no evidence to support a finding that Smith was denied

    meaningful judicial review of his deportation order.

    Smith nevertheless contends that (1) the district court


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    did not even consider the merits of his coercion claim, and (2)

    he tried to present evidence in support of his allegations but

    the district court prevented him from doing so. As an initial

    matter, the court made no factual findings or explicit legal

    findings when it denied Smith's motion to dismiss. At that

    point, however, Smith had presented no evidence -- not even an

    affidavit from Smith himself -- to support his claim of coercion

    by the INS. Smith also failed to request an evidentiary hearing

    in conjunction with his motion to dismiss. Having thus failed to

    establish any factual basis for his claim, the district court was

    warranted in rejecting Smith's motion for dismissal out of hand.

    See D. Mass. Loc. R. 7.1(A)(2); United States v. Levasseur, 704
    ___ _____________ _________

    F. Supp. 1158, 1168 (D.Mass. 1989).

    Smith argues that even if his motion was properly

    dismissed, he still had a right to present evidence of the INS's

    coercion of Smith at trial as an affirmative defense under the

    Mendoza-L pez doctrine. We find no support for this contention.
    _____________

    As with motions to suppress evidence, alleged constitutional

    infirmities in matters collateral to the elements of the charged

    offense involve complex questions of both law and fact that are

    appropriately determined by the court in a preliminary hearing.

    Cf. Mendoza-L pez, 481 U.S. at 832 (affirming circuit court
    __ _____________

    opinion that found due process required a "pretrial review" of

    the underlying deportation). Although the Ninth Circuit has held

    that the Mendoza-L pez issue must go to the jury if the issue has
    _____________

    not previously been addressed before trial, United States v.
    _____________


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    Ibarra, 3 F.3d 1333, 1334 (9th Cir. 1993) -- a ruling about which
    ______

    we express no opinion at this point -- even that opinion

    foreclosed a relitigation of the issue if already decided by the
    __

    court on a pretrial motion. Id. In this case, the district
    __

    court granted a preliminary hearing on the Mendoza-L pez issue at
    _____________

    which Smith had the opportunity to fully and fairly litigate the

    issue before the court. If Smith failed to request an

    evidentiary hearing or otherwise failed to take full advantage of

    the opportunity afforded to him by the district court, such

    failure was of his own doing and does not, by itself, warrant a

    second bite at the apple. Under such circumstances, Smith cannot

    assert a right to relitigate the Mendoza-L pez issue at trial.
    _____________

    Therefore, the court's dismissal of Smith's motion, and its

    subsequent exclusion of evidence pertaining to Smith's

    deportation proceedings are affirmed.

    B. Attack on Aggravated Felony Portion of the Indictment
    B. Attack on Aggravated Felony Portion of the Indictment
    _____________________________________________________

    In his motion to dismiss, Smith also argued that proof

    of a prior aggravated felony conviction is an element of an

    offense under 8 U.S.C. 1326(b)(2).2 Because Smith's only

    ____________________

    2 8 U.S.C. 1326 provides in relevant part:

    (a) Subject to subsection (b) of this
    section, any alien who --

    (1) has been arrested and deported or
    excluded and deported, and thereafter
    (2) enters, attempts to enter, or is at
    any time found in, the United States . .
    .

    shall be fined under Title 18, or
    imprisoned not more than 2 years, or

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    aggravated felony conviction had been vacated by the state court,

    Smith argued in the motion that the district court should dismiss

    that part of the indictment which referenced the aggravated

    felony provision, 1326(b)(2). The district court rejected this

    argument when it denied the motion.

    Subsequent to the proceedings in the district court, we

    decided United States v. Forbes, 16 F.3d 1294, 1297-1300 (1st
    _____________ ______

    Cir. 1994), in which we held that 1326(b) does not establish a

    separate offense, but rather simply provides a sentence

    enhancement for those convicted under 1326(a) (the offense for

    reentry into the United States after being deported), who had

    been convicted of an aggravated felony before their deportation.

    That case controls the present issue. Section 1326(b)(2) is not

    a separate element of an offense and therefore, the vacation of

    Smith's underlying felony conviction cannot provide grounds for

    dismissal of the indictment. The district court's ruling must

    therefore be upheld.

    Smith urges us to reconsider our holding in Forbes. We
    ______

    decline to upset that decision and, in any event, are not free to

    do so as a newly constituted panel. Broderick v. Roache, 996
    _________ ______

    ____________________

    both.

    (b) Notwithstanding subsection (a) of
    this section, in the case of any alien
    described in such subsection --

    (2) whose deportation was subsequent to a
    conviction for commission of an
    aggravated felony, such alien shall be
    fined under such Title, imprisoned not
    more than 15 years, or both.

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    F.2d 1294, 1298 (1st Cir. 1993). Furthermore, we note that the

    district court prudently sentenced Smith as if his aggravated

    felony did not exist, by implementing a downward departure that,

    according to the court, "in effect strips out the conviction that

    has been vacated." Thus, even if the district court had erred in

    refusing to dismiss the aggravated felony portion of the

    indictment, which it did not, that error would have been harmless

    because Smith was never sentenced on the allegedly erroneous

    count. United States v. Long, 894 F.2d 101, 108 (5th Cir. 1990).
    _____________ ____

    Affirmed.
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