Ramon Williams v. Attorney General United States ( 2018 )


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  •                                 PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    Nos. 16-3816 & 17-1705
    _____________
    RAMON ANDREW WILLIAMS
    a/k/a Andrew Denton Williamson
    a/k/a Ramon Williams,
    Petitioner
    v.
    ATTORNEY GENERAL UNITED STATES OF
    AMERICA,
    Respondent
    ____________________________________
    On Petitions for Review of Orders of the
    Board of Immigration Appeals
    Agency No: A018-687-061
    Immigration Judge: Leo A. Finston
    ____________________________________
    Argued November 8, 2017
    Before: SMITH, Chief Judge, HARDIMAN, Circuit Judge,
    and BRANN, District Judge*
    (Opinion Filed: January 19, 2018)
    Thomas H. Lee, II
    Argia J. DiMarco
    Ryan M. Moore
    Christopher J. Mauro                      [ARGUED]
    Dechert
    2929 Arch Street
    18th Floor, Cira Centre
    Philadelphia, PA 19104
    Seymour James, Jr.
    Adriene Holder
    Maria E. Navarro
    Hasan Shafiqullah
    Ward Oliver
    Sarah Gillman
    Whitney W. Elliott
    Legal Aid Society
    Immigration Law Unit
    199 Water Street
    3rd Floor
    New York, NY 10038
    *
    The Honorable Matthew W. Brann of the United States
    District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, sitting
    by designation.
    2
    Counsel for Petitioner
    Chad A. Readler
    Acting Assistant Attorney General
    Terri J. Scadron
    Assistant Director
    Shahrad Baghai
    Christina Greer                           [ARGUED]
    United States Department of Justice
    Office of Immigration Litigation
    P.O. Box 878
    Ben Franklin Station
    Washington, DC 20044
    Counsel for Respondent
    ________________
    OPINION
    ________________
    SMITH, Chief Judge.
    In this consolidated proceeding, Ramon Williams asks
    us to consider whether a prior conviction under Georgia’s
    forgery statute, Ga. Code Ann. § 16-9-1(a) (2006), constitutes
    an aggravated felony conviction for purposes of the
    Immigration and Naturalization Act (“INA”). See 8 U.S.C.
    § 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii). Because we conclude that the Georgia
    3
    conviction is an offense “relating to . . . forgery,” 8 U.S.C.
    § 1101(a)(43)(R), Williams is properly subject to removal as
    an aggravated felon, and we will therefore deny the petitions
    for review.
    I.
    Williams, a citizen of Guyana and a lawful permanent
    resident of the United States, immigrated to this country in
    1970, when he was thirteen months old. He has no family in
    Guyana; his parents, grandparents, siblings, and children are
    all United States citizens. In 2006, he pleaded guilty in
    Georgia state court to five counts of first degree forgery
    pursuant to section 16-9-1(a) of the Georgia Code. He initially
    received a sentence of two years in prison, which later was
    reduced to one year.
    In 2013, Williams received a notice to appear charging
    him as removable as a result of having been convicted of an
    aggravated felony.      See 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii).
    Appearing before an Immigration Judge (“IJ”) in New Jersey,
    he contested removability.1 The IJ determined that the Georgia
    forgery conviction rendered Williams deportable as an
    aggravated felon and otherwise denied relief. Williams
    appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”).
    1
    Williams also sought asylum, withholding of removal,
    and relief under the Convention Against Torture. The IJ
    denied these forms of relief and the Board of Immigration
    Appeals (“BIA”) affirmed. Williams does not challenge
    the denial of those claims in his petitions before this Court.
    4
    Before the BIA, he argued, inter alia, that the Georgia forgery
    statute is broader than generic forgery because it criminalizes
    the use of a fictitious name when signing a document and
    because the statute does not require a showing of prejudice.
    The BIA rejected these arguments, upheld the IJ’s decision,
    and dismissed the appeal.
    Williams timely filed a petition for review, and also
    sought reconsideration before the BIA in light of the Supreme
    Court’s decision in Mathis v. United States, 
    136 S. Ct. 2243
    (2016). In his motion for reconsideration, Williams argued that
    Georgia’s forgery statute is indivisible under Mathis and is
    overbroad because it criminalizes some conduct that does not
    relate to forgery, namely, false agency endorsements. The BIA
    denied the reconsideration motion, and Williams timely filed a
    second petition for review.
    The petitions have been consolidated. We have
    jurisdiction over them pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a).
    II.
    The issue of whether Williams’s conviction under the
    Georgia forgery statute qualifies as an aggravated felony is a
    question of law over which we have jurisdiction. 
    Id. § 1252(a)(2)(D).
    We conduct a de novo review of the BIA’s
    determination. Denis v. Atty. Gen., 
    633 F.3d 201
    , 209 (3d Cir.
    2011); Bobb v. Atty. Gen., 
    458 F.3d 213
    , 217 (3d Cir. 2006).
    III.
    The INA provides for the deportation of an alien “who
    is convicted of an aggravated felony.”          8 U.S.C.
    5
    § 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii). The INA’s definition of an “aggravated
    felony” encompasses an extensive list of various types of
    offenses, see 
    id. § 1101(a)(43)(A)–(U),
    but for current
    purposes, only one definition is pertinent: an “aggravated
    felony” is “an offense relating to . . . forgery . . . for which the
    term of imprisonment is at least one year.”                       
    Id. § 1101(a)(43)(R).
    In his petitions for review, Williams calls
    upon us to consider whether the BIA was correct when it
    determined that his 2006 conviction under Georgia’s forgery
    statute, for which he was imprisoned for a year, is an “offense
    relating to forgery.”
    A.
    At the time of Williams’s conviction, Georgia’s
    forgery statute provided:
    A person commits the offense of forgery in the
    first degree when with intent to defraud he
    knowingly makes, alters or possesses any writing
    in a fictitious name or in such manner that the
    writing as made or altered purports to have been
    made by another person, at another time, with
    different provisions, or by authority of one who
    did not give such authority and utters or delivers
    such writing.
    Ga. Code Ann. § 16-9-1(a) (2006). The Georgia legislature’s
    decision to denote this offense as “forgery” does not dictate
    whether it comes within the meaning of forgery as Congress
    intended it in the INA. Drakes v. Zimski, 
    240 F.3d 246
    , 248
    6
    (3d Cir. 2001) (“The language of a federal statute must be
    construed to have the meaning intended by Congress, not the
    [state] legislature.”). To make that assessment, we employ
    what is known as the “categorical approach.”2 See Moncrieffe
    v. Holder, 
    569 U.S. 184
    , 190 (2013).
    2
    While this is the general rule, certain disjunctively-
    worded statutes that set forth a number of separate crimes
    warrant a departure from the categorical approach known
    as the “modified categorical approach.” Mathis v. United
    States, 
    136 S. Ct. 2243
    , 2249 (2016); see Moncrieffe v.
    Holder, 
    569 U.S. 184
    , 191 (2013). When it applies, the
    modified categorical approach permits a court to consult a
    limited set of documents, such as an indictment, guilty
    plea, or jury instructions, to determine which specific
    offense is at issue in the case. 
    Moncrieffe, 569 U.S. at 191
    .
    In 
    Mathis, 136 S. Ct. at 2248
    –50, the Supreme Court
    provided guidance regarding how to determine whether a
    disjunctively-worded state statute sets forth an
    “indivisible” set of elements defining a single crime—but
    listing several different means of satisfying the elements
    of the crime—to which the strict categorical approach
    applies, or a “divisible” list of elements in the
    alternative—thereby defining multiple separate crimes—
    to which the modified categorical approach applies.
    Georgia’s forgery statute is undoubtedly disjunctive and,
    initially, the issue of its divisibility or indivisibility under
    Mathis was hotly contested. At oral argument, however,
    the Government conceded its agreement with Williams’s
    7
    Under the categorical approach, we look to the
    substance of the statute of conviction to determine whether it
    categorically fits within the “generic” federal definition of the
    corresponding aggravated felony, without considering the facts
    of the particular case. Id.; see also 
    Mathis, 136 S. Ct. at 2249
    (“The comparison of elements that the categorical approach
    requires is straightforward . . . . The court . . . lines up that
    crime’s elements alongside those of the generic offense and
    sees if they match.”). We thus compare the state and federal
    offenses “in the abstract,” consulting only their respective
    elements to determine whether the state conviction
    “necessarily involved facts equating to the generic federal
    offense.” 
    Moncrieffe, 569 U.S. at 190
    (internal quotation
    marks and alterations omitted) (quoting Shepard v. United
    States, 
    544 U.S. 13
    , 24 (2005)).
    Before we may conduct this comparison, we must
    consider what constitutes the “generic federal offense” of
    forgery. See 
    id. As we
    observed in Drakes v. Zimski, Congress
    has not articulated a specific definition for the 
    term. 240 F.3d at 249
    . “Where federal criminal statutes use words of
    established meaning without further elaboration, courts
    typically give those terms their common law definition.” 
    Id. As we
    have long held, the traditional common law definition
    of forgery has three elements: “(a) The false making or
    view that the statute defines a single crime and is therefore
    indivisible, warranting the application of the categorical
    approach. Accordingly, for our purposes, we assume
    without deciding that the parties are correct that the
    categorical approach applies.
    8
    material alteration (b) with intent to defraud (c) of a writing
    which, if genuine, might be of legal efficacy.” United States v.
    McGovern, 
    661 F.2d 27
    , 29 (3d Cir. 1981).        Moreover,
    because the INA applies not only to forgery, but also extends
    to offenses “relating to” forgery, we have concluded that
    Congress intended to define forgery “in its broadest sense.”
    
    Drakes, 240 F.3d at 249
    .
    Here, however, the definition of the term “forgery” is
    not enough, on its own, to answer the question of whether the
    crime defined in section 16-9-1 of the Georgia Code is “an
    offense relating to forgery” within the meaning of the INA.
    Accordingly, in comparing the generic federal offense to the
    Georgia statute, we employ a “looser categorical approach.”
    Flores v. Atty. Gen., 
    856 F.3d 280
    , 286 (3d Cir. 2017)
    (applying this approach in analyzing whether an alien had been
    convicted of offenses “relating to obstruction of justice”).
    Under this looser approach, we do not require a precise match
    between the elements of the generic federal crime and those of
    the Georgia offense. 
    Id. at 291.
    Instead, we “survey the[ir]
    interrelationship” and consider whether there is “a logical or
    causal connection” between them. 
    Id. (quoting Denis,
    633
    F.3d at 212). We may conclude that the crimes are logically
    connected if they both “target the same, core criminal conduct
    such that they are ‘directly analogous.’” 
    Id. And, we
    may
    conclude that the crimes are causally connected where there is
    a “link between the alien’s offense and a listed federal crime:
    without the listed federal offense, the alien’s offense could not
    have occurred.” 
    Id. Because the
    parties agree that there is no
    “causal connection” between the federal and state crimes under
    discussion here, our focus is the “logical connection” between
    them.
    9
    B.
    Williams’s primary claim is that the Georgia forgery
    statute is broader than the federal common law definition of
    forgery because it punishes the possession of certain “genuine”
    documents, namely, documents that “purport[ ] to have been
    made . . . by authority of one who did not give such authority.”
    Ga. Code Ann. § 16-9-1(b). Williams refers to this aspect of
    the Georgia statute as “false agency endorsement,” which, he
    argues, is conduct that does not fall within the traditional
    common law definition of forgery.
    As a threshold matter, the Government argues that,
    although false agency endorsement may technically fall within
    the Georgia statute’s language, Georgia does not actually
    prosecute false agency endorsement as forgery. Accordingly,
    the Government claims, Williams has established no more than
    a “theoretical possibility” that Georgia would apply its statute
    to conduct falling outside the federal definition of forgery. See
    
    Singh, 839 F.3d at 278
    .
    Williams responds that there is Georgia case law
    demonstrating that the State actually prosecutes false agency
    endorsement as forgery, citing Warren v. State, 
    711 S.E.2d 108
    (Ga. Ct. App. 2011). In Warren, a business manager of a
    medical practice used business checks to pay personal credit
    card debt without the authorization of her employer. The Court
    of Appeals of Georgia concluded that the evidence was
    sufficient to support her conviction of first degree forgery
    because it showed that, “with intent to defraud the doctor and
    his medical practice, she knowingly possessed fifty-two checks
    drawn on the practice’s bank account without authority, and
    10
    uttered the checks as payment on her personal credit card
    debt.” 
    Id. at 109.
    In a supplemental appendix, Williams provided a copy
    of the Warren indictment as further support for his position that
    the Georgia forgery statute is employed to prosecute false
    agency endorsement. See S.A. 1–18. The indictment indicates
    that the defendant was charged with first degree forgery for
    signing her own name to a check, “purportedly on behalf of
    [the medical practice] as an authorized signatory of [the
    medical practice], but having not been written and signed with
    the authority of [the medical practice and the doctor], and did
    utter said check.” S.A. 2, Count 5. In other words, the Warren
    defendant’s signature was her own but was made without
    authorization of the principal, and therefore was a false agency
    endorsement. Inasmuch as both the Warren indictment and the
    opinion of the Court of Appeals of Georgia support Williams’
    view, and the Government has not offered anything to rebut
    that evidence, we conclude that Williams has established a
    sufficiently “realistic probability” that Georgia would apply its
    forgery statute to false agency endorsement. See 
    Singh, 839 F.3d at 278
    (quoting 
    Moncrieffe, 569 U.S. at 191
    ).
    Next, Williams contends that, in contrast to the Georgia
    statute, the federal common law definition of forgery does not
    extend to false agency endorsement, making the Georgia
    statute broader than the federal version of the crime. But
    whatever the scope of forgery under federal law, Congress
    expressly extended its coverage to offenses “relating to”
    forgery. We must therefore resolve the question of whether the
    Georgia statute’s inclusion of false agency endorsement
    extends so far beyond the traditional common law definition
    11
    that it criminalizes conduct that is unrelated to forgery.
    Employing the looser categorical approach, we conclude it
    does not. See 
    Flores, 856 F.3d at 286
    .
    Williams argues that false agency endorsements do not
    relate to forgery because they do not involve a “false
    instrument,” and a false instrument, he contends, is at the core
    of the federal common law crime. See Pet. Br. at 29. Although
    a false instrument is an integral aspect of common law forgery,
    we cannot agree with Williams’s argument that the falsity of
    the instrument must appear on the face of the document in
    order for an offense to “relate to” forgery. Even if facial falsity
    is viewed as an essential element of common law forgery that
    is missing from the provision of Georgia’s statute prohibiting
    false agency endorsement, the omission of an essential element
    simply does not resolve whether the conduct is “related” for
    purposes of the INA. See 
    Bobb, 458 F.3d at 219
    .
    In conducting the necessary survey of the
    interrelationship between common law forgery and false
    agency endorsement, we are satisfied that, although their
    elements do not line up with precision, the crimes share a
    logical connection. See 
    Flores, 856 F.3d at 291
    . We offer a
    series of related examples to demonstrate the analogous nature
    of the two crimes, taken from the example in Warren, the
    Georgia case to which Williams refers.
    First, we consider the most straightforward scenario: if
    the defendant in Warren had signed her employer’s name
    rather than her own name on the business checks, then we may
    uncontroversially conclude that her act would fall within the
    quintessential common law definition of forgery. The forged
    12
    instrument would, on its face, reflect the sort of falsity in
    execution that Williams proposes is integral to the definition of
    the common law crime—the use of a false name. Next, we
    consider a slightly different but related scenario, in which the
    defendant signs her true name to the employer’s checks under
    the handwritten phrase “by authority of” her employer—
    authority that was never granted. Much like the signing of a
    false name, the falsity of the authorization would appear on the
    face of the document, and we therefore presume that Williams
    would agree that the defendant’s hypothetical act would be
    related to forgery.3 Finally, consider the conduct for which the
    Warren defendant actually was prosecuted: she signed her true
    name to a check, implicitly under the authority of her
    employer, but without writing the phrase “by authority of.” By
    Williams’s logic, this third example would not be a “false
    instrument” because there is no falsity on the document’s face,
    and the defendant’s act therefore would no longer relate to
    forgery. But, in our view, each of these incrementally different
    acts is logically related to the same underlying core conduct.
    See 
    Flores, 856 F.3d at 291
    . Each example gives rise to
    essentially the same concerns about the inauthenticity and
    unauthorized nature of the written instrument. Thus, we think
    Williams’s proposed approach of drawing a bright line at facial
    3
    We note that Williams has never contended that use of a false
    name is the only manner in which a document can qualify as a
    “false instrument” for purposes of common law forgery. At
    oral argument, Williams contended that, for instance,
    mimicking a company’s logo to create a false check would
    qualify as the false making of a document and therefore is a
    form of forgery.
    13
    falsity presents too fine a distinction given the broad “relating
    to” language that Congress chose to employ in the INA. In
    short, common law forgery and false agency endorsement
    share a logical connection because they “target the same, core
    criminal conduct such that they are ‘directly analogous.’” See
    
    id. The Government
    also points us to the Model Penal Code
    and a number of state statutes employing the Model Penal
    Code’s provisions as a source for a “broad minority definition”
    of forgery that extends to false agency endorsement. See
    Model Penal Code § 224.1(1)(b) (Am. Law Inst. 1985) (“A
    person is guilty of forgery if, with purpose to defraud or injure
    anyone, or with knowledge that he is facilitating a fraud or
    injury to be perpetrated by anyone, the actor . . . makes,
    completes, executes, authenticates, issues or transfers any
    writing so that it purports to be the act of another who did not
    authorize that act . . . .”); see also Iowa Code § 715A.2(1)(b)
    (1996); N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2C:21-1(a)(2) (West 2002); 18 Pa.
    Cons. Stat. § 4101(a)(2) (2003); Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 6-3-
    602(a)(ii) (2007). We have observed that conduct falling
    within a “broad minority definition” can be an appropriate
    source of information for discerning whether conduct “relates
    to” an offense for INA purposes. 
    Drakes, 240 F.3d at 250
    . We
    conclude that the Model Penal Code’s broad minority
    definition of forgery buttresses our conclusion that false
    agency endorsement shares a logical connection with common
    law forgery.
    To our knowledge, only one other Court of Appeals has
    published a decision interpreting § 1101(a)(43)(R) in the
    context of a state statute that, like the Georgia statute, defines
    14
    forgery in a manner that encompasses false agency
    endorsement. In Vizcarra-Ayala v. Mukasey, 
    514 F.3d 870
    (9th Cir. 2008), the Ninth Circuit noted, as we have, that the
    Supreme Court and other Circuits have concluded that forgery
    requires “falsification of a document or instrument,” making it
    “clear that an essential element of the generic offense of
    forgery is the false making or alteration of a document, such
    that the document is not what it purports to be.” 
    Id. at 875.
    The Ninth Circuit then cited several cases in which California
    had prosecuted individuals for “possession or use of a genuine
    instrument with intent to defraud but not to forge,” in other
    words, conduct falling outside the generic federal definition of
    forgery. 
    Id. at 876.
    And, it described one particular case in
    which California prosecuted false agency endorsement under
    its forgery statute: a defendant office manager took checks
    from her employer and, rather than use them for purchasing
    office supplies, made the checks out to “cash” and used the
    proceeds for herself. 
    Id. at 876–77.
    In that case, the checks
    were genuine and the defendant’s signatures on them were
    true. 
    Id. at 877.
    According to the Ninth Circuit, this “made
    her conduct fraud, but not forgery under the generic
    definition.” 
    Id. Up to
    this point, we concur with the Ninth Circuit’s
    analysis. But, we diverge from its ultimate conclusion: that the
    California statute’s application to “genuine instrument[s],”
    including false agency endorsements, means that it extends to
    conduct that does not “relate to” forgery. 
    Id. at 876–77.
    Relying on a facial falsity premise much like the one Williams
    proposes, the Ninth Circuit summarily concluded that
    “[e]xpanding the definition of offenses ‘relating to’ forgery to
    include conduct where documents are not altered or falsified
    15
    [would] stretch[] the scope too far.” 
    Id. at 877.
    Because we
    conclude that concerns about the inauthenticity or
    unauthorized nature of a written instrument establish a logical
    relationship between common law forgery and false agency
    endorsement, we respectfully disagree with the premise that
    the falsity of the instrument must be reflected on its face in
    order for conduct to “relate to” forgery.
    Another important distinction is the degree to which the
    “relating to” language of § 1101(a)(43)(R) affects the analysis.
    While in this Circuit it triggers the application of the “looser
    categorical approach” and its “logical or causal connection”
    test, 
    Flores, 856 F.3d at 286
    , 291, the Ninth Circuit in
    Vizcarra-Ayala acknowledged only that offenses with a causal
    connection can “relate to” forgery (e.g., possession of a forged
    document), but declined to afford logical connections like the
    one at issue there the same treatment, 
    see 514 F.3d at 877
    . The
    Ninth Circuit’s test for whether a state offense “relat[es] to . . .
    forgery” is more restrictive than this Court’s, and here, that
    difference was outcome-determinative.
    C.
    Williams presents a secondary argument as to the
    purported overbreadth of the Georgia forgery statute,
    contending that the Georgia statute is missing a necessary
    element of federal common law forgery: a requirement that the
    forged instrument be “capable of effecting a fraud” or have
    “legal efficacy.” Relatedly, Williams argues that the absence
    of the “legal efficacy” element extends Georgia’s statute
    beyond the commercial realm into merely “personal” acts and
    16
    such personal acts do not relate to forgery for purposes of the
    INA.4
    The Government retorts that Williams waived this
    argument because he did not present it to the BIA. Williams
    disagrees, pointing out that he argued before the BIA that the
    Georgia statute “lacked a prejudice requirement,” an argument
    that the BIA considered and rejected. See J.A. 43–44. While
    acknowledging that he used different terminology, Williams
    contends that his argument to the BIA—that the Georgia
    statute lacks an element of “prejudice [to] another”—is
    sufficiently similar to his argument to this Court—that the
    Georgia statute lacks an element of being “capable of
    prejudicing another’s rights.” Reply Br. at 19. He argues that
    precision is not required and that his prejudice argument below
    was sufficient to put the BIA on notice of the issue.
    We accept that the claim presented on appeal is
    sufficiently similar to the argument presented to the BIA to
    satisfy the exhaustion requirement. Nonetheless, we are not
    persuaded that it has merit. In Bobb, we observed that, “[a]t
    4
    Upon being questioned about the contours of this claim at oral
    argument, Williams all but abandoned it, candidly
    acknowledging that this was not his “primary argument” and
    that the false agency endorsement claim presented a “much
    closer question.” Oral Argument at 5:49–8:58, Williams v.
    Atty. Gen., Nos. 16-3816, 17-1705 (3d Cir. Nov. 8, 2017).
    Williams’s response was sufficiently equivocal to leave us
    with some doubt as to whether this argument has been waived,
    so we proceed to address its merits.
    17
    their core, all common law forgery offenses contain as an
    element an intent to 
    deceive.” 458 F.3d at 218
    . Analogously,
    the Georgia forgery statute expressly sets forth an “intent to
    defraud” as one element of the crime. Ga. Code Ann. § 16-9-
    1(a). These intent elements are “directly analogous” and target
    the “same core criminal conduct.” See 
    Flores, 856 F.3d at 291
    .
    To the extent Williams contends that the common law
    definition goes a step further by looking to the potential effect
    of the forged instrument on its victim rather than the intent of
    the forger alone, such a minute distinction does not carry the
    day. Even apart from our skepticism about this claim, in Bobb,
    we observed that a state criminal statute can relate to forgery
    even where it “encompasses conduct beyond the traditional
    definition of forgery, and includes criminal conduct that is
    causally connected to forgery, but may lack as an essential
    element an intent to defraud or 
    deceive.” 458 F.3d at 219
    .
    Thus, so long as the Georgia statute covers conduct that is
    logically or causally connected to forgery—which,
    undoubtedly, it does—it is of no moment that a supposed
    additional “essential element” of the generic federal definition,
    such as the ability of the forged instrument to cause harm to a
    victim, might theoretically be absent from the Georgia statute.
    See 
    id. Moreover, there
    is no basis for concluding that the
    Georgia statute lacks this element and therefore extends to
    conduct that is purely “personal” or “non-commercial” in
    nature. Notably, Williams offers no evidence to support his
    contention that there is a “personal” version of forgery that
    would be subject to prosecution in Georgia and yet be
    exempted from the federal common law conception of fraud.
    18
    We see no “realistic probability” that the State would apply its
    forgery statute in this manner. 
    Singh, 839 F.3d at 278
    (quoting
    
    Moncrieffe, 569 U.S. at 191
    ). Accordingly, Williams’s
    argument fails.
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons, these consolidated petitions
    for review will be denied.5
    5
    In his brief, Williams offers a final argument, contending that
    he should not be subject to removal because removal is a
    punishment disproportionate to his crime and should be set
    aside as unconstitutional under the Fifth or Eighth
    Amendments of the United States Constitution. He stated,
    however, that he offered the argument solely for the purpose of
    preserving the issue for future review, acknowledging that we
    are bound by our precedent holding that removal is not a
    punishment and is therefore not subject to challenge as a
    disproportionate punishment under the Fifth or Eighth
    Amendment. Sunday v. Atty. Gen., 
    832 F.3d 211
    , 218–19 (3d
    Cir. 2016). Relying upon Sunday, we will not further address
    the proportionality argument.
    19