United States v. Reyes-Romero
United States v. Reyes-Romero
Opinion of the Court
The Defendant Mario Nelson Reyes-Romero ("Defendant") was administratively removed from the United States in 2011, and he was discovered back in the United States in 2017 without permission from the necessary officials of the federal government, resulting in his indictment for one count of Reentry of Removed Alien,
First, the Defendant seeks dismissal of the Indictment, claiming that the Removal of the Defendant in 2011 was contrary to law. The Defendant's Motion to Dismiss Indictment, ECF No. 14, asserts that the Defendant fulfills all of the elements of the affirmative defense set out in § 1326(d) as a matter of law. The Court agrees, and for the reasons set forth at length in this Opinion, the Court grants the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss Indictment. In so ruling, the Court reaches no conclusion as to whether the Defendant can, should, or will now be removed from the United States in a manner consistent with federal law. But the Court does conclude that the process used to remove him in 2011 was contrary to law and that the Defendant has successfully challenged the 2011 Removal Order under § 1326(d), thus rendering it invalid.
Second, the Defendant's Motion for Bond, ECF No. 36, requests that the Defendant be released on bond subject to reasonable conditions. The Motion for Bond is moot in light of the Court's granting of the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss Indictment.
Third, the Government's Motion to Dismiss Indictment, ECF No. 46, requests that the Court dismiss this case with prejudice without reaching the merits of Defendant's Motion to Dismiss. For the reasons set out at length below, the Government's Motion to Dismiss Indictment, ECF No. 46, is denied.
I. Factual Background
According to the Government, the Defendant, a citizen of El Salvador, entered the United States unlawfully at some point prior to November 2008. (Gov't's Br. in Opp'n, ECF No. 17, at 3.) In 2009, he was convicted in New Jersey state court for the state law crime of second degree aggravated assault.
As part of that 2011 Removal Proceeding, the Defendant completed and signed two DHS forms: DHS Form I-826 and DHS Form I-851 (the "Forms"), which are described in detail below. A Final Administrative *867Removal Order was served on the Defendant on June 23, 2011. (App. to Br. in Supp. of Def.'s Mot. to Dismiss ("Def.'s App.") 21, ECF No. 16 ("2011 Removal Order").) The Defendant was deported and removed to El Salvador in August 2011. (Def.'s App. 11.) The Government alleges that the Defendant was discovered in the Western District of Pennsylvania on October 3, 2017, but he had allegedly not gone through any administrative or judicial channels to obtain lawful re-admittance to the United States. (ECF No. 17, at 5-6.)
On October 24, 2017, the Defendant was indicted in this District on one (1) count of Reentry of Removed Alien,
II. Defendant's Motion to Dismiss
The Defendant brings his Motion to Dismiss asserting the affirmative defense to the charge of reentry of removed alien, as set out in
A. Legal Framework
"The Fifth Amendment guarantees aliens due process in all phases of deportation proceedings." Bonilla v. Sessions ,
(1) the defendant exhausted any administrative remedies that may have been available;
(2) the deportation proceedings from which the underlying removal order was issued improperly deprived the alien of the opportunity to obtain judicial review; and
(3) the entry of the removal order was "fundamentally unfair."
If the collateral attack on the underlying removal order is premised on *868an alleged invalid waiver of rights associated with a deportation proceeding, the Government has the initial burden to produce the written waiver signed by the defendant. Richardson v. United States ,
Along the same lines, an invalid waiver of the opportunity for judicial review constitutes a deprivation of judicial review, and, in such a case, the Defendant will also be deemed to meet the second element. Mendoza-Lopez ,
In order to meet the third element, a showing that the underlying removal proceeding was "fundamentally unfair," the Defendant must establish both (a) that some fundamental error occurred and (b) that as a result of that fundamental error, the defendant suffered prejudice. A fundamental error may take the form of a proceeding that "deprives an alien of some substantive liberty or property right such that due process is violated," Charleswell ,
B. Discussion
Whether the purported waivers within the Forms are valid impacts this Court's analysis of the first two § 1326(d) elements. Thus, the Court begins its discussion with an analysis of the purported waivers, initially describing both what the Forms themselves show and what the DHS Officers who completed the Forms with the Defendant testified to about them. The Court finds and concludes that the purported waivers in the Forms are invalid both facially and as explained by the Government's witnesses. With this, the Court concludes that the first two elements of the § 1326(d) affirmative defense have been met. Then, the Court analyzes the third element, addressing both fundamental *869error and prejudice. The Court finds and concludes that the entry of the 2011 Removal Order was the result of "fundamental error" and caused actual prejudice to the Defendant. And beyond that, due to the egregious nature of the fundamental error, the Court also finds and concludes that the 2011 Removal Order was inherently and presumptively prejudicial to the Defendant.
Thus, the Court concludes that the Defendant has met his burden to show that all of the elements of his § 1326(d) affirmative defense are met, and the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss the Indictment is granted.
1. The Purported Waivers
Third Circuit law as stated in Richardson and Supreme Court precedent as discussed in Mendoza-Lopez say that an alien validly waives his rights associated with a removal proceeding only if he does so voluntarily and intelligently. The "waivers" at issue here are located within the two Forms that were presented to the Defendant during his 2011 Removal Proceeding, at the same time, 9:00 AM on June 23, 2011. "In cases where there is a written waiver, this issue frequently comes down to an issue of credibility." United States v. Meza-Magallon ,
i. Form I-826
The first Form at issue here, the I-826, is titled, "Notice of Rights and Request for Disposition." (Def.'s App. 106; Ex. H, ECF No. 63-1 (color copy).) The color copy is attached to this Opinion as Exhibit A.
You have been arrested because immigration officers believe that you are illegally in the United States. You have the right to a hearing before the Immigration Court to determine whether you may remain in the United States. If you request a hearing, you may be detained in custody or you may be eligible to be released on bond, until your hearing date. In the alternative, you may request to return to your country as soon as possible, without a hearing.
(Id. (emphasis added).) After the remainder of its "Notice of Rights" section, there is a section entitled, "Request for Disposition." There are three options from which the subject (here, the Defendant) may select and initial:
-• I request a hearing before the Immigration Court to determine whether or not I may remain in the United States.
-• I believe I face harm if I return to my country. My case will be referred to the Immigration Court for a hearing.
-• I admit that I am in the United States illegally, and I believe that *870I do not face harm if I return to my country. I give up my right to a hearing before the Immigration Court. I wish to return to my country as soon as arrangements can be made to effect my departure. I understand that I may be held in detention until my departure.
(Id. ) On the Defendant's completed I-826, two boxes are marked with an "X": the first box, indicating a request for a hearing, and the third box, waiving his right to a hearing. None of the boxes are initialed. What is more striking than those plainly contradictory choices is the manner in which these boxes were selected. The first selected option, requesting a hearing, is marked with a large bold X in black ink, appearing as if the X was reinforced with an additional black X over it. The other selected option, waiving the "right to a hearing," contains a small thin black X as well as a light blue slash (or what may better be described as half of an X). The Defendant's signature under the selections appears in black ink. The signature by DHS Deportation Officer Trushant Darji in the third and final section of the I-826, entitled "Certification of Service," appears in light blue ink identical in appearance to the marking on the selected option of "no hearing." Under "Date and Time of Service," markings indicating June 23, 2011, and 9:00 also appear in that same light blue ink. (Id. ) Notably, the I-826 reflects that the Defendant had the I-826 read to him in Spanish, but also that the Defendant read it himself in English, a language he does not speak. (ECF No. 16, at 106.)
ii. Form I-851
The second Form at issue here, the I-851, is a two-page document titled, "Notice of Intent to Issue a Final Administrative Removal Order." (Def.'s App. 22-23; Ex. J, ECF No. 63-3 (color copy).) It is attached to this Opinion as Exhibit B.
Below that is a section called "Your Rights and Responsibilities," and it indicates that the alien (here, the Defendant) may request withholding of removal under
The first section at the top of the second page of the I-851 is the "Certificate of Service." (Def.'s App. 23.) Below the signature of the serving officer indicating the Notice of Intent was served (Officer Jose Alicea) is a checked box that states "I explained and/or served this Notice of Intent to the alien in the Spanish language." The name of the interpreter, also Jose Alicea, is printed, followed by his signature. Immediately below that line is an acknowledgement of receipt with the Defendant's signature and a date and time notation of June 23, 2011, 9:20 (presumably, A.M.). (Id. ) Thus, the plain reading of this Form is that it was signed by the Issuing Officer and "issued" forty (40) minutes *871after receipt was purportedly acknowledged by the Defendant at 9:20 AM that day.
The middle section of the second page of the I-851 provides options for contesting removal or seeking withholding of removal, and it is left blank. (Id. )
The final section of the second page of the I-851 has three boxes also checked. The first corresponds with the selection, "I do not wish to contest and/or to request withholding of removal." The second checked box corresponds with the selection admitting the allegations and charges contained in the form, acknowledging ineligibility for any form of relief from removal, and expressing a wish to be removed to El Salvador. The third checked box corresponds with the selection "I understand that I have the right to remain in the United States for 14 calendar days in order to apply for judicial review. I do not wish this opportunity. I waive this right." (Id. ) The Defendant then signed the corresponding signature block, with a date and time of June 23, 2011, 9:00 written in that section. It is "witnessed" by the interpreter and DHS serving officer, Jose Alicea, with the very same date and time notation. (Id. )
Thus, based on the time notations on the face of the I-851 alone,
Importantly, a check mark was used by Officer Alicea when he signed the "Certificate of Service" section at the top of the I-851's second page, and check marks also appear in the "I do not wish to contest" portion at the bottom of that page, even though all of the markings on the boxes of the I-826, those next to Defendant's signature and those next to Officer Darji's signature, were "X" marks. Thus, while different notations were made in the selection boxes as between the I-826 and the I-851, the markings in each case attributed to the Defendant switched from Form to Form yet matched the markings attributed to the Officers on each such Form.
iii. The Government Witnesses' Testimony
In an effort to explain the Forms and place them into the context of the 2011 Removal Proceeding, the Government called two witnesses, both of whom were the DHS Officers whose names and signatures appear on the Forms: Officers Trushant Darji and Jose Alicea. Based on the Court's consideration of all the evidence before it, its own examination of the witnesses, and its personal observations relative to that testimony in open Court, the Court finds and concludes that this testimony was, at key points, internally inconsistent, contradictory in comparison with the content of the Forms, and simply nonsensical. The Court stated just that at several points during the various hearings in this case, and the Government has not *872contradicted those tentative conclusions. (See, e.g. , ECF No. 31, 51:9-54:20; ECF No. 57, 11:1-11 & 47:4-48:1; ECF No. 58, 14:17-17:1; ECF No. 77, 22:18-26:5.) The Court also made tentative findings during the hearings that certain material portions of the Officers' testimony were false.
Officer Trushant Darji testified that Form I-826 is served in every removal case to ensure that the presiding DHS officer has an understanding of the alien's intentions and to provide the alien with notice of certain rights. (Tr. of Proceedings, ECF No. 30, 25:20-30:23.) He testified that DHS officers would advise the alien what the Form was, read everything on the Form to the alien, and explain all of the options for the alien to select from. If the alien selects multiple options as to requesting a hearing or asking for no hearing, a DHS officer would "absolutely" attempt to clarify the alien's desires before other forms were filled out, including by having the alien initial his "real" choice. (Id. at 29:10-14.) It is plain that this "standard" process was not followed here, and that the Officers elected to go forward with the notation that the Defendant did not want a hearing, even though they offered no basis to exclude the equally chosen and marked choice that he did seek a hearing. (ECF No. 30, 61:11-62:14 & 72:14-18.) Officer Darji then testified that both Forms would be served together at the same time upon the detainee. (ECF No. 30, 32:12-15.) He later changed his testimony to say that he normally serves the "rights form" (the I-826) first. (ECF No. 30, 33:15-17.) When confronted with the time notations on the Defendant's I-826 and his I-851, Officer Darji acknowledged that it appeared as if all the waivers (and the alleged explanations that would have come along with providing those Forms) happened simultaneously, that is, literally at the same moment in time. (ECF No. 30, 62:2-11.)
Discerning the purpose of the first-page "issuing" signature on the I-851, or where and exactly when the I-851 indicates it was authorized to be served on the detainee, was obfuscated by Officer Darji's convoluted testimony. He first testified that in his general practice (because he had no specific recollection of this particular removal proceeding),
But later, perhaps recognizing that such "issuing" authorization was signed at least forty (40) minutes after presentation of the I-851 to the Defendant, Officer Darji changed his testimony again to say that the "issuing signature's" purpose was to show "that the document was served on the alien," even though the I-851 itself says no such thing on its first page and there is a separate section for certification of service on its second page. (ECF No. 30, 40:6-9.) After a short recess and on re-direct, Officer Darji reversed course again and said that it actually was standard practice to complete the "issuing signature" on the first page after the document had been served. (ECF No. 30, 64:6-16.) When the Court asked the Officer why he initially gave opposite answers, Officer Darji responded that "[t]hinking about it after I answered the first time, the second answer was more appropriate." (ECF No. 30, 73:12-15.) This response required the Court to follow-up with, "[w]hich answer was true?" To which the Officer responded that the Form would be "signed by the supervisor after we serve them." (Id. at 73:19-21.) In terms of this Officer's explanation of the I-851 in this case, the Court finds and concludes that his testimony was at odds with the text and facially stated purposes of the various provisions of the I-851.
Based on the Court's consideration of all of the testimony presented and its observations of his demeanor on the witness stand, his testimony in those regards was false, likely given in an effort to explain away the reality that the Defendant was confronted with and induced to sign the I-851 before it was even "issued" or, as demonstrated below, fully explained to him.
Officer Darji testified that an I-851 would be presented to the detainee and an Officer would go through the first page, top to bottom, and then the second page, top to bottom, explaining everything. (ECF No. 30, 33:23-35:5.) The certificate of service would be completed at the top of the second page, and then the alien would check off what option he wanted, e.g., to contest or not contest removal. (Id. ) Despite that standard operating procedure, Officer Darji immediately followed that explanation with testimony that it was not unusual for the detainee to waive his rights before the certificate of service was signed "[b]ecause basically the form was signed by the alien down below after he is explained everything, then the administrative order was actually served and acknowledged and explained to him by the native speaker ...." (ECF No. 30, 36:16-23 (emphasis added).) When asked what occurred in the time after the detainee actually waived his rights and before the certificate of service is completed, Officer Darji testified that "we would make sure the alien understood everything." (ECF No. 30, 37:3-5.) This, of course, would facially obviate any waiver, as it would have been "made" before the required explanation and confirmation of understanding.
The Government's next witness, Officer Jose Alicea, testified that when serving multiple forms, the Officer would serve one Form and then go on to the next Form upon completing the service of the first one. When the Court asked why an Officer would list the same time on the Forms for multiple serial events, Officer Alicea responded that the respective time notations are based on whatever the clock in the *874room read when it was time to sign. (ECF No. 30, 88:24-89:17.)
When Officer Alicea was asked why his signature on the I-851 was time-noted twenty (20) minutes after the Defendant signed the waiver, he testified that the time gap "would have been about the time my explanation was completed." (ECF No. 30, 91:5-8.) In response to a question from the prosecution, Officer Alicea confirmed that those twenty (20) minutes after the purported waiving of rights were used to "read the document in Spanish to the alien." (ECF No. 30, 91:9-12.) This of course means that the Defendant supposedly waived his rights by his signature before they were read to him in Spanish.
Officer Alicea also testified on direct examination that administrative removal proceedings in New Jersey were something that he was commonly involved in (ECF No. 30, 82:7-11), and he did not have a specific recollection of serving the specific Forms at issue in this case. (ECF No. 30, 85:17-19.) Then, in that same direct examination, Officer Alicea also testified that administrative Removal Proceedings were rare in New Jersey, and this specific Removal Proceeding with the Defendant was the only administrative removal proceeding that he could recall being involved with at the New Jersey office. (ECF No. 30, 91:20-92:17.) When the Court asked him about this contradiction, Officer Alicea testified the Defendant's I-851 was the only I-851 he could recall doing. (ECF No. 30, 92:18-24.)
Now that the Court has summarized the content of the Forms and the testimony of the DHS Officers who signed and served those Forms on the Defendant, the Court analyzes the effect of these Forms and that testimony on the issue of waiver.
iv. The Waivers Are Invalid
The Court concludes that the waivers in the Forms, both in the I-826 and I-851, are facially invalid. The Government has not met its initial burden to produce a facially valid written waiver signed by the Defendant. This I-826 is internally and inherently contradictory on its face. It is impossible to discern whether the Defendant actually waived his rights (including to a hearing), because the Defendant's signature corresponds to a selection both waiving and not waiving his rights to a hearing, a hearing the I-826 affirmatively said that he could request. Therefore, the Court cannot conclude that the I-826 presented by the Government is actually what the Government asserts it to be: a waiver.
At one point, the Government posited that the I-826 was actually irrelevant to the case and should be disregarded because the I-851 was the controlling document:
THE COURT: You are saying the agents of the United States Department of Homeland Security required this defendant and everyone else to go over and to sign a legally pointless document, the 826?
MR. HALLOWELL: That's my understanding of [the Officers'] testimony, Your Honor.
*875(Tr. of Proceedings, ECF No. 31, 17-22.) Even if that is the actual relationship between the I-851 and the I-826, the Court has to take the case as it is, and the Defendant was given both Forms at the same time, one of which told him he had a right to a hearing. This reason alone shows that any sense of what the Defendant's hearing rights and other rights actually were had become practically indecipherable, and waivers stemming from such transaction could not have been entered into intelligently. As our Court of Appeals acknowledged in Charleswell :
The presence of an affirmative statement concerning an avenue of relief [ ] immediately followed by a negative command concerning what the alien may not do, creates the impression that "these are the options.". Absent any affirmative notice to the contrary, and combined with the velocity of the [immigration] process, it is simply unrealistic to expect an alien to recognize, understand and pursue his statutory right [under applicable laws] to direct judicial review in the appropriate court of appeals.
Charleswell ,
The I-851 also suffers from facial defects preventing it from constituting an actual written waiver. The Defendant signed the "waiver" section before it was entirely explained to him in his native language, he signed the waiver section before it was served on him, and it was served on him before it was issued. In short, he supposedly signed away his rights before he was charged and before those rights were read to him in Spanish. The waivers are facially invalid.
But there is more. Even if the Government had met its burden by merely producing a piece of paper purporting to be a waiver and containing the Defendant's signature, the Defendant has met his burden to show by a preponderance of the evidence that the waivers are invalid, because it is plain that the waivers were not entered into voluntarily or intelligently. Viewed independently, both Forms facially show either an unintelligent or an involuntary waiver of rights, or in the case of the wholly contradictory statements on the I-826 as to requesting a hearing, no waiver at all. When the Forms themselves are considered in conjunction with the testimony of the DHS Officers, the Court finds and concludes that the option giving up the right to a hearing on the I-826, given that this "selection" was partially made with the same ink color that the DHS Officer used to sign the form, was not made voluntarily or likely even made by the Defendant.
These conclusions are further corroborated when the time notations on the Forms are read in conjunction with one another, showing the impossibility that the Forms were properly served, explained and translated, and then completed in accordance with all of the time notations. Finally, the very nature of the contradictory explanation of rights on the separate Forms supports the determination that the waivers were not entered into voluntarily and intelligently. Mendoza-Lopez ,
These two Forms are shams,
2. Exhaustion
The Defendant is excused from showing that he exhausted his administrative *877remedies in light of the invalid waivers. Richardson ,
3. No Opportunity for Judicial Review
By his establishing that the waivers for judicial review were invalid, the Defendant has shown that he has been deprived of judicial review. Mendoza-Lopez ,
4. Fundamental Unfairness
Even though Defendant has met the first two elements, to prevail on his Motion to Dismiss, the Defendant must also show that the underlying removal proceeding was "fundamentally unfair." This last element has two sub-parts. First, the Defendant must establish that some fundamental error occurred. Second, the Defendant must show that as a result of that fundamental error he suffered prejudice. To show prejudice, the Defendant must show based on a preponderance of the evidence that there is a "reasonable probability"
i. Fundamental Error Occurred
As set out above, the Forms that were intended to lay out the Defendant's rights and his elections regarding their exercise were completed in a manner that deprived the Defendant of any meaningful due process.
First, based on the I-826, at best, the Defendant simultaneously made two contradictory choices as to a request for a hearing and the DHS Officers failed to take any measure to properly address that contradiction, to clarify the Defendant's intentions by asking him to complete a new Form (or initial his selection on the existing Form), or to provide the Defendant with the hearing he had requested (and that the I-826 informed him that he had a right to). This despite the Officers' own testimony that when faced with such inherently contradictory choices, the standard and required procedure was to stop and definitely and definitively confirm the alien's true choice. (Tr. of Proceedings, ECF No. 30, 29:5-21.) At worst, a DHS Officer forged the Defendant's selection on the Defendant's I-826 in an effort to obstruct any rights to a hearing that the I-826 itself purported to offer.
Second, based on the I-851, the Defendant was handed an un-issued Notice of Intent where he was asked to waive further rights to contest removal or to request withholding of removal, twenty (20)
*878minutes before the I-851 says it was received by and/or explained to the Defendant.
Third, all the waivers on both Forms supposedly occurred at the exact same minute, and the Officers testified (and the documents support) that the supposed waivers in reality actually occurred before the Forms were explained to the Defendant.
In an effort to confirm (or not) that facial reading of the Forms, the Court asked DHS Officer Darji the following while Officer Darji testified under oath:
THE COURT: So within a few minutes somebody in your position would tell somebody that they have the right to a hearing. That person would have both requested a hearing and said they don't want a hearing. And then they would be told they don't get a hearing. Is that your testimony, sir?
DHS OFFICER DARJI: This is a generic form, yes.
THE COURT: Okay. But in the circumstance where it is a form 851 that is going to be used, in this specific circumstance, am I reading these forms inaccurately-or actually am I reading them accurately that within moments of 9 o'clock in the morning on June 23rd, 2011, several things had occurred pretty much all at once. This defendant was told he had a right to request a hearing. He requested a hearing. He said he didn't want a hearing. And he was told he couldn't have a hearing. Am I reading those forms correctly, sir?
DHS OFFICER DARJI: Yes.
THE COURT: Does that make any sense at all to you, sir?
DHS OFFICER DARJI: No, Your Honor.
(Tr. of Proceedings, ECF No. 30, 61:21-62:14 (emphasis added).)
The Court concludes that the Defendant has shown by a preponderance of the evidence that DHS violated required and material procedural protections and due process regarding the removal process such that the 2011 Removal Proceeding was rendered fundamentally unfair. See Charleswell ,
"No society is free where government makes one person's liberty depend upon the arbitrary will of another." Hahn v. Burke ,
ii. Fundamental Error Caused Prejudice to the Defendant
The second prong of the third element requires the Defendant to show prejudice. This Court must determine whether there is a reasonable likelihood that the Defendant would have obtained relief had he not suffered from the fundamental errors identified above. Charleswell ,
The Defendant argues that had the 2011 Removal Proceeding been conducted properly, *879and his request for a hearing so offered and so selected on the I-826 been honored, the Defendant could have then asserted a claim for asylum, withholding of removal, or Convention Against Torture (CAT) protection, and there is a reasonable likelihood that at least one of those claims would have been successful. The Government argues that the Defendant suffered no prejudice because he was not eligible for asylum or withholding of removal and he could not have asserted a successful CAT protection claim in 2011; therefore, the Defendant would have been deported regardless of any error with the Forms or the 2011 Removal Process.
"[R]esolution of the prejudice issue in the § 1326(d)(3) context is somewhat akin to a trial within a trial...." Charleswell ,
a. Asylum
First, the Government argues that even if the Forms had been executed properly, the Defendant would not have had the opportunity to seek asylum because he is an "aggravated felon"
1. The Defendant was eligible for asylum because he was not an aggravated felon.
The Government is correct that aggravated felons are ineligible for asylum,
In the immigration context, an "aggravated felony" includes any "crime of violence [defined in
(a) an offense that has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person or property of another, or
(b) any other offense that is a felony and that, by its nature, involves a substantial risk that physical force against the person or property of another may be used in the course of committing the offense.
i. Section 16(a)
Although courts typically employ the categorical approach to determine whether a state offense meets a federal definition,
Under this modified categorical approach, the Court must "consult a limited class of documents ... to determine which alternative formed the basis of the defendant's prior conviction" and then determine if that basis meets the definition of a crime of violence. Descamps v. United States ,
Here is what the Court knows from the Shepard materials in this case. First, the statute at issue reads: "A person is guilty of aggravated assault if he: (1) Attempts to cause serious bodily injury to another, or causes such injury purposely or knowingly or under circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to the value of human life recklessly causes such injury." N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2C:12-1(b)(1) (emphasis added). The New Jersey indictment charged that the Defendant "purposely did attempt to cause serious bodily injury." (Def.'s App. 114, "State Indictment.") The New Jersey Judgment of Conviction and Order for Commitment does not indicate which alternative scienter element served as the basis for conviction. (Def.'s App. 112.) The Defendant pled guilty, and a video and audio recording of his plea colloquy was submitted into the record along with a transcript of the recording. (Def.'s Ex. Q; 2d Suppl. App. to Def.'s Reply to Gov't's Suppl. Resp. ("Def.'s 2d Suppl. App.") 9-11, ECF No. 82.) With the aid of an interpreter, the Defendant answered the following questions during his state court plea colloquy:
DEFENSE ATTORNEY: It's an aggravated assault.
THE COURT: Yeah, but did he attempt-did he attempt to create serious bodily injury? Significant bodily injury, right?
PROSECUTOR # 2: Yeah, serious.
THE COURT: Serious bodily-
(There was a discussion among counsel and interpreter.)
INTERPRETER: I'm sorry, maybe I interpreted incorrectly the question. I apologize. I apologize. The intent-
THE COURT: Okay. Did you intend to commit serious bodily injury when you stabbed the individual?
INTERPRETER [on behalf of the Defendant]: No.
PROSECUTOR # 1: But you knew about using a knife to stab somebody in a fight, you could have caused serious bodily injury?
INTERPRETER [on behalf of the Defendant]: Yes.
(Def.'s Ex. Q; Def.'s 2d Suppl. App. 9-11.)
While it is clear from the State Indictment that New Jersey charged the Defendant with an attempt to cause serious bodily injury,
New Jersey defines "recklessly" as:
consciously disregard[ing] a substantial and unjustifiable risk that the material element exists or will result from his conduct. The risk must be of such a nature and degree that, considering the nature and purpose of the actor's conduct and the circumstances known to him, its disregard involves a gross deviation from the standard of conduct that a reasonable person would observe in the actor's situation.
N.J. Stat. § 2C:2-2(b)(3). The Defendant did not plead to the higher level of culpability, which is to act "knowingly," because "[a] person acts knowingly with respect to a result of his conduct if he is aware that it is practically certain that his conduct will cause such a result." N.J. Stat. § 2C:2-2(b)(2). The nature of the admitted statement, "you knew about using a knife to stab somebody in a fight you could have caused serious bodily injury," is insufficient to establish that the Defendant was aware that it was practically certain that his conduct would cause serious bodily injury. (Def.'s 2d Suppl. App. 11 (emphasis added).)
Neither the state trial judge nor the state prosecutor followed up with more specific questions in the colloquy to determine if the level of culpability rose to the level of "knowingly," and there is no evidence in the record that the trial judge made any factual findings as to which level of culpability the Defendant was guilty of. Without more, the Court is left with the admission in the colloquy, which only establishes a recklessness level of culpability.
The question now becomes whether reckless aggravated assault is the type of offense captured by § 16(a). If it is, then the Defendant committed a crime of violence, as defined by
Contrary to the Government's assertion,
The Defendant argues that our Court of Appeal's 2005 ruling in Popal v. Gonzales remains controlling law in the Third Circuit on this point.
Thus, the Defendant's underlying conviction cannot as a matter of law qualify as a crime of violence under
ii. Section 16(b)
Our Court of Appeals has held that § 16(b) is unconstitutionally vague in the immigration context and therefore invalid. Baptiste ,
Had the Defendant gotten the ball rolling by using the available mechanisms to challenge his removal at that time, he would have likely ultimately had a successful result. Given that the arguments that were being asserted around that time in these regards in other cases have actually proven successful, the Court concludes that that is enough for the Defendant to carry his burden here.
The argument that § 16(b) was unconstitutionally vague was indeed successful at our Court of Appeals in Baptiste . Baptiste's removal proceedings were instituted only nineteen months after the Defendant's, and the underlying "aggravated felony" involved there also arose under New Jersey's aggravated assault statute. Baptiste ,
But the constitutionality of § 16(b) was a hot topic in Circuits beyond, and indeed prior to, the Third Circuit's decision in Baptiste . For instance, the Tenth Circuit held § 16(b) unconstitutionally vague with *885respect to an immigration removal proceeding that began in 2012. Golicov v. Lynch ,
These Court of Appeals decisions were largely anchored in the Supreme Court's 2015 Johnson v. United States opinion, which declared the parallel ACCA residual clause unconstitutionally vague. See --- U.S. ----,
By the time that such an argument would have worked its way through the appellate structure of the immigration courts to our Court of Appeals, the matter likely would have already been resolved-in the Defendant's favor. After all, similarly situated defendant, James Garcia Dimaya, who was placed in removal proceedings in 2010 , prevailed on his § 16(b) argument at the Supreme Court (after prevailing in the Ninth Circuit) nearly eight years later. See Resp't's Br. at 5-6, Sessions v. Dimaya , --- U.S. ----,
*886After analyzing both prongs of § 16, the Court concludes it is reasonably likely that had the Defendant challenged his aggravated felon status when he was removed, he would have ultimately succeeded. Therefore, he would have been eligible to present an asylum claim.
2. It is reasonably likely that the Defendant's asylum claim in 2011 would have been successful
Multiple members of the Defendant's family have applied for, and in some cases been granted, asylum. Because the Defendant avers he would assert asylum on the basis of the same events from which his family has asserted asylum claims, the Court begins with a summary of those other asylum applications.
First, the Defendant's sister ("Sister"), who purportedly came to the United States in March 2012, sought asylum, and her application remains active. (App. to Def.'s Suppl. Br. Regarding Prejudice ("Def.'s Suppl. App.") 337, ECF No. 69-1; Tr. of Proceedings, ECF No. 31, 94:11-20.) DHS made a finding that there was a "significant possibility" that her claim would be found credible in a full asylum hearing and that she had established a credible fear of persecution. (Def.'s Suppl. App. 349, ECF No. 69-1.) Her hearing has not yet occurred. (ECF No. 31, 94:11-20.) According to Sister's testimony in this case, her application for asylum is based on her history of suffering abuse and rape in El Salvador, which led to Sister testifying against her rapist and the rapist being convicted and sentenced for that crime. (Def.'s Suppl. App. 356.) As a result, her rapist and his comrades made threats that *887they "wanted to murder me and my family. " (Id. (emphasis added).) In fact, Sister was involved in subsequent court proceedings against the rapist in 2008. (ECF No. 31, 58:20-23, 60:3-10, 109:10-23.)
The Defendant's mother ("Mother") also had an asylum application with the United States. (ECF No. 31, 106:21-23.) The basis for her application is the situation with Sister (her daughter) because "they were threatening us that they were going to kill us and that they were going to burn down our house." (ECF No. 31, 107:18-108:7.) The threats began in 2008 and continued through 2011, after Mother testified in the trial of Sister's rapist "sometime after September 2010." (ECF No. 31, 108:20-109:23; Def.'s Suppl. App. 356.) According to a 2015 letter from the Department of Justice, the case had not been designated as pending by DHS, so the asylum application was rejected. (Def.'s 2d Suppl. App. 3-4.)
The Defendant's brother ("Brother") was granted asylum on September 9, 2015. (Def.'s Suppl. App. 67-75.) Brother testified that his application was based on his fear of gangs in El Salvador because the gangs threated him and his family after he refused to join them. According to the Department of Justice's summary of Brother's testimony, the threats began in November 2011 and increased until his departure from El Salvador in June 2013. (Id. )
According to DHS paperwork, the Defendant's cousin ("Cousin") applied for asylum and withholding of removal in November 2012 after entering the United States in March 2012. According to Cousin's application, he testified in a rape trial in Honduras and the alleged rapist's father threatened Cousin and his family. That father sent two hit men to kill Cousin and Cousin's brother, and the hit men successfully killed Cousin's brother on February 11, 2011. (Def.'s Suppl. App. 5.) Then, on April 27, 2011, the father sent four hit men to bomb the home of Cousin and his family, but Cousin and Cousin's mother ("Aunt") managed to escape. (Id. at 5-6.) Cousin's application also states that Cousin and his family tried to hide with their family in El Salvador in 2011, but they were discovered (by people associated with the rapist's father), and they decided to come to the United States. (Id. at 7.) This matched the Defendant's testimony that when he was removed to El Salvador at the end of 2011 as a result of the Removal Order, he was reunited with his Aunt and returned to the United States with her because "the man was paying good money to have her found." (Tr. of Proceedings, ECF No. 31, 127:7-12.) The current status of Cousin's asylum claim is unknown to the Court.
The Defendant's aunt ("Aunt") also has a pending asylum application because her son was murdered. (ECF No. 31, 111:9-11.) DHS issued "credible fear" findings that Aunt had established a credible fear of persecution. (Def.'s Suppl. App. 57.) The current status of Aunt's asylum claim is unknown to the Court.
Our Court of Appeals summarized the elements of an asylum claim in Garcia v. Attorney Gen. of U.S. :
[A]n application for asylum must establish only that the applicant is unable or unwilling to return to, and is unable or unwilling to avail himself or herself of the protection of, that country because of past persecution or a well-founded fear of future persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion,8 U.S.C. §§ 1101 (a)(42)(A), 1158(b)(1)(B)(i) ;8 C.F.R. § 1208.13 (b)(1). An applicant has a well-founded fear of persecution if there is a reasonable possibility that she will suffer it,8 C.F.R. § 1208.13 (b)(2)(i), and a showing of past persecution creates a rebuttable presumption of such a well-founded *888fear,8 C.F.R. § 1208.13 (b)(1). The persecution must be committed by the government or forces the government is either unable or unwilling to control.
To prove a well-founded fear of persecution, an applicant must meet a two-pronged test. First, the applicant must demonstrate a subjective fear of persecution "through credible testimony that [his] fear is genuine." Second, the applicant must show that "a reasonable person in the alien's circumstances would fear persecution if returned to the country in question."
Pavlov v. Attorney Gen. of U.S. ,
The Court concludes that the Defendant meets that burden. First, the Court concludes that he would have demonstrated a sufficiently genuine subjective fear of persecution. The Defendant's testimony in this case is credible and was corroborated by both other testifying (family member) witnesses and the documents produced by the Government. (See Tr. of Proceedings, ECF No. 31, 56:4-127:13.) Second, the Defendant satisfies his burden to show that "a reasonable person in the alien's circumstances would fear persecution if returned to the country in question." Pavlov ,
*889"[A]n applicant for asylum or withholding of removal seeking relief based on 'membership in a particular social group' must establish that the group is (1) composed of members who share a common immutable characteristic, (2) defined with particularity, and (3) socially distinct within the society in question." Matter of M-E-V-G- ,
Despite that concise language, the definition of a "particular social group" is a term that has resulted in varied holdings and applications, including around the time the Defendant was in Removal Proceedings.
One case in particular, from the Fourth Circuit in 2011, is notably on point. Crespin-Valladares v. Holder ,
This Court concludes that the reasoning of Crespin-Valladares persuasively demonstrates the reasonable likelihood that had the Defendant been in a position to move apace with an asylum effort beginning in 2011, he would have been able to establish membership in such a particular social group, as the analysis and outcome in Crespin-Valladares demonstrates.
The Defendant has also met his burden to show such persecution would be either committed by the Salvadoran government or by forces the Salvadoran government is either unable or unwilling to control. See Garcia ,
Furthermore, although it is true that the Salvadoran authorities were helpful and effective in prosecuting Sister's rapist, that assistance occurred before the threats began and is not enough to overcome this evidence of the very real possibility (one recognized by DHS as credible) that the Salvadoran police would acquiesce to revenge killing in this case. See De La Rosa v. Holder ,
*891The Defendant's own cousin was murdered because the perpetrators were unable to kill the brother, a clear example of revenge upon family members (especially a sibling in retaliation for testifying in rape trials). This reality combined with the fact that threats made to Sister also directly referenced her family leads the Court to conclude that it is more than reasonably likely that the credible findings made in Sister's asylum application would have also been made in the Defendant's asylum application in 2011. Combined with all the factors discussed above, the Defendant would have had a reasonable likelihood of success on an asylum claim.
b. CAT protection
Article 3 of the Convention Against Torture (CAT) provides, without exception, that "[n]o State Party shall expel, return ('refouler') or extradite a person to another State where there are substantial grounds for believing that he would be in danger of being subjected to torture." Sen. Treaty Doc. No. 100-20 (1988), 1465 U.N.T.S. 85; Khouzam v. Attorney Gen. of U.S. ,
The Defendant argues that he likely would have made a successful claim for CAT protection based on the violence inflicted on his family by gangs, by Cousin's attackers in Honduras, and by Sister's rapist in El Salvador. The Government argues that the evidence in the record of the circumstances that the Defendant faced in El Salvador at the time of his 2011 Removal Proceedings does not meet the definition of torture because the circumstances do not meet the "public official" requirement.
First, the Government is correct that the evidence in the record related to gang violence (and their failed attempt at recruiting Brother) occurred after the 2011 Removal Proceeding since Brother testified that the threats began in November 2011 and continued into 2013. (Def.'s Suppl. App. 259.) But it is unclear that the events related to Brother categorically would not have factored into the Defendant's CAT claim because the events are only a few months after the date of the Removal Proceeding on June 23, 2011, and even a cursory review of immigration cases demonstrates the slow pace at which they unfold. While it is also unclear how quickly the threats escalated against Brother and Brother's family (i.e., the Defendant), it is also noteworthy that Brother was granted asylum.
Second, the Government argues that any violence that Cousin and other family members faced in Honduras should also be disregarded as the Defendant must show risk of torture in the proposed country of removal, El Salvador. In response to that geographic distinction argument, the Defendant argues that the violence his family faced in Honduras supports his claim for CAT protection from removal to El Salvador because those family members, who initially sought refuge in El Salvador, also *892had to flee El Salvador out of fear that their assailants from Honduras would come to El Salvador to attack them. (Def.'s Suppl. App. 5-7.) The Defendant himself testified that the dangerous men who hunted Cousin and his family had found the family while they were in hiding in El Salvador. (Tr. of Proceedings, ECF No. 31, 127:7-12.)
Although the attacks on Cousin and the murder of Cousin's brother occurred in Honduras, the record shows the threats the family faced from dangerous and determined people did not stop at the border and evidenced serious danger. (Tr. of Proceedings, ECF No. 31, 127:7-12.) To be clear, the Defendant's family straddles both sides of the El Salvador-Honduras border. Mother lived thirty minutes from that border, and the family would visit one another across the border for holidays and birthdays. (ECF No. 31, 84:17-85:11; 122:23-123:1.) If the El Salvadoran authorities are "willfully blind" to this violence spilling over into El Salvador, then the events that began in Honduras matter.
For a CAT claim, the Defendant would have to show that he more likely than not faced torture if he was returned home in 2011-a higher standard than an asylum claim-and the evidence with respect to the threats against Cousin, the threats against Cousin's family, and the murder of the Defendant's other cousin is insufficient, alone, to show a reasonable likelihood of success on this claim. While anyone in the Defendant's shoes might well be in fear of possible persecution (indeed likely sufficient fear to warrant asylum protection), there is insufficient evidence to show that those threats alone spilled over to create a "more likely than not" threat of torture against the Defendant. However, the events occurred pre-2011 Removal Order, and the Defendant could have included them in any application or claim.
But there is more in the record. The death threats directed specifically at Sister and Sister's family, combined with the series of events surrounding Cousin and the Defendant's other family members, constitute sufficient evidence to show a reasonable likelihood of success on a claim that the Defendant more likely than not would have faced torture had he returned to El Salvador around the time of the 2011 Removal Proceeding.
With respect to events surrounding Sister and Sister's rapist, the Government claims there is insufficient evidence in the record of Salvadoran government acquiescence. Again, according to family members' testimony, death threats stemming from Sister's rapist began in 2008 and those threats continued through 2011. (ECF No. 31, 108:2-109:23, 116:22-23.) The Government argues that the Salvadoran authorities successfully prosecuted Sister's rapist and there was insufficient evidence that the threats facing Sister in El Salvador would also apply to the Defendant. But, DHS's credible fear findings report in Sister's asylum application, as discussed above, sufficiently rebut the Government's argument that the Defendant would not have been able to meet the "public official" requirement.
This leaves the Government's argument that the threats against Sister do not translate to a substantial risk of torture against the Defendant sufficient for a successful CAT claim. The testimony in the record demonstrates that the threats were *893often expressed against the family. (ECF No. 31, 94:11-20, 107:18-108:7.) This is where the events with Cousin and Cousin's deceased brother are quite relevant to the Defendant's CAT claim because the Defendant's own family had suffered the death of an individual because that individual's sibling testified in a rape trial. Members of the Defendant's own family were being gunned down because their sibling testified against someone, specifically for rape. When this evidence is combined with DHS's own findings in its credible fear report for Sister's asylum application that rape and power are often intertwined
c. Withholding of removal
The second form of relief from removal at issue in this case is "withholding of removal." The withholding statute,
The Court again confronts the term, "particularly serious crime." In the withholding context, an alien convicted of an aggravated felony and sentenced to an aggregate term of imprisonment of at least five (5) years is deemed to have committed a particularly serious crime.
In an effort to circumvent this Circuit's rule in Alaka ,
In order to qualify for withholding of removal, the Defendant must establish that it is more likely than not that his "life or freedom would be threatened in th[e] country [of removal] because of the alien's race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion." Churilov v. Attorney Gen. of U.S. ,
Our Court of Appeals has stated that it is "hardly likely" that one could meet the standard for CAT removal yet fail to meet the standard for withholding if the evidence is the same under both analyses.
*895d. Presumption of prejudice
Even though the Defendant meets the prejudice prong based on the reasonable likelihood of success on the asylum, CAT, or a withholding claim, the Court also concludes this is the very case contemplated in Charleswell where the procedural defects were so central to the 2011 Removal Proceeding's legitimacy that prejudice must be presumed.
The District of Massachusetts confronted one such case in 2017. In United States v. Walkes , the defendant received a Notice of Intent to Issue a Final Administrative Removal Order (presumably the I-851). No. 15-cr-10396,
In light of the facts here, the Court reaches the same conclusion as the Walkes court that prejudice must be presumed based on the "sufficiently flagrant" deprivation of rights. Id. The record here goes beyond the facts of Walkes . Id. As explained above, any actual understanding and exercise of his rights by the Defendant was stopped dead in its tracks by the DHS Officers who steered the Defendant to waive away his rights (or did it for him) before providing an explanation of such rights to the Defendant.
As in Walkes , there are additional factors that support the conclusion that prejudice should be presumed. First, the dissembling and convoluted testimony of the DHS Officers clouded any opportunity for *896this Court to get an accurate idea of what actually happened in the 2011 Removal Proceeding. While the Court applied the law to the facts in the record with respect to claims for asylum, CAT, and withholding of removal and concluded that the Defendant met his burden with respect to prejudice in such regards, the lapse in time and the changes in the law since 2011 forced the Court to engage in a degree of prediction as to what an IJ at a different time would or would not have concluded on discretionary matters. That is all a result of the conduct of the DHS Officers here. Beyond that is the reality that the Defendant's New Jersey conviction was insufficient to warrant expedited Removal Proceedings in the first place, as that conviction is insufficient to make the Defendant an "aggravated felon" under federal law. All of this is compounded by the "sufficiently flagrant" deprivation of rights which occurred here, which alone is sufficient to presume prejudice in this case. Walkes ,
"An error is fundamental if it undermines confidence in the integrity of the criminal proceeding." Young v. United States ,
C. Disposition of Defendant's Motion to Dismiss
The Defendant has satisfied the three elements of § 1326(d) to collaterally attack the 2011 Removal Order. Therefore, the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss Indictment is granted on the merits.
III. Defendant's Motion for Release on Bond
The Defendant's Motion for Release on Bond, ECF No. 36, is denied as moot in light of the Court's dismissal of the Indictment.
IV. Government's Motion to Dismiss
Three months after the Defendant filed his Motion to Dismiss, the Government filed its own Motion to Dismiss Indictment, ECF No. 46. The Government was willing to dismiss its own Indictment with prejudice, but it would not consent to the Court's granting of the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss. (Tr. of Proceedings, ECF No. 57, 6:18-24, 30:5-7.) The difference between the "cross" Motions to Dismiss Indictment is that the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss, now granted, attacks the validity of the underlying 2011 Removal Proceeding. The ultimate effect of granting the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss on its merits on any future removal proceedings against the Defendant is uncertain, as that issue in the first instance is for an immigration court (and perhaps ultimately the Court of Appeals). But without an adjudication of the Defendant's Motion (or the Government's concession to it), the conduct and result of the 2011 Removal Proceeding would be shielded from public examination, *897notwithstanding that the Government relied on that very Removal Proceeding in seeking the Defendant's Indictment. This is important since, as the Government conceded at the hearings in this case, the United States could (and may well) simply now seek to rely on the 2011 Removal Process, the fatally flawed Forms, and the resulting 2011 Removal Order in this case in future removal proceedings. (ECF No. 77, 37:23-38:12.)
In light of the Court's granting of the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss because the Defendant has successfully collaterally attacked the 2011 Removal, and in light of the facts brought before the Court by the Government itself, the Government's Motion to Dismiss is denied. Recognizing that it is unusual for a court to deny the Government's motion to dismiss an indictment that the Government sought in the first place, the Court further explains its reasoning.
A. Fed. R. Crim. P. 48(a)
The Government seeks dismissal of its own Indictment because "the United States has determined that dismissal ... is in the interests of justice."
The Third Circuit's standard for when a court may refuse to dismiss an indictment under Rule 48(a) is that a court is to grant a government Rule 48(a) motion to dismiss unless such dismissal is "clearly contrary to manifest public interest."
But our Court of Appeals has also stated that a district judge "has independent responsibilities" to protect certain rights, interests, and duties. In re Richards ,
B. Application of Rule 48(a)
This is not a case where the Court is refusing to dismiss the case. The case will be dismissed. But it will be dismissed on the merits, as explained above, pursuant to the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss. Such a result balances the principles of In re Richards as it serves to limit this Defendant's exposure to future prosecutorial efforts reliant on the invalid 2011 Removal without offending the role of the Executive Branch's exercise of prosecutorial discretion and does not constitute a refusal to dismiss. In reaching this result, the Court concludes as follows.
With respect to risk of prosecutorial harassment as that term is used in this context,
The Department of Justice has also made it crystal clear that it will take no action to ensure a lawful future Removal Proceeding against the Defendant to the extent it involves another Executive Department. The Department of Justice, here, downplays its role in immigration matters or its relationship to future applications of the 2011 Removal Proceeding by invoking what it says is in effect a bureaucratic wall within the Executive Branch. While the Department of Justice has decided that it will seemingly not pursue the Defendant further on this criminal charge in this Court, its lawyers, lawyers for the United States , have declined to affirmatively disclaim that the federal Executive Branch won't continue to fully rely on the Forms or the 2011 Removal in any upcoming Removal (or other) proceedings as to the Defendant-Forms and a process which the Court has described as "wholly unlawful." (Tr. of Proceedings, ECF No. 77, 53:4.)
For the Department of Justice to seek to treat our Nation's immigration legal system as somehow distinct and detached from that Department's critical role in it bypasses well-established law. First, as a general matter, the Attorney General takes the reins in all litigation to which the United States or an agency is a party-his is the voice of the United States in a case before this Court. See
The Attorney General and the Department of Justice of course play leading roles in the determination of immigration matters.
The Attorney General also has far-reaching powers to himself decide specific immigration cases with his powerful referral authority under
Given these realities, it is simply incorrect for the Government's lawyers to advise this Court that they are in no position to speak on behalf of the United States as to the future conduct of this immigration case. As explained above, the 2011 Removal Proceedings as they were carried out against the Defendant were a hollow facsimile of the due process bedrock of our Nation's legal system. This is reason enough to convince the Court that resolving the case on the Government's Motion to Dismiss alone risks very real prejudice to the Defendant stemming from further legal action against the Defendant based on the Forms and the 2011 Removal. Thus, it is necessary for this Court to use its "inherent authority to ensure that its processes are not being abused" by actually adjudicating the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss, which collaterally attacks the validity of his 2011 Removal Order, as opposed to dismissing the case without such an adjudication. In re Richards ,
With respect to prosecutorial discretion, concerns about the judiciary's intrusion into such discretion are not an issue here. The effect of denying a prosecutor's motion to dismiss an indictment typically results in a conundrum in which the Judicial Branch is forcing the Executive Branch's hand in matters that are nearly exclusively within the Executive's power. See In re United States ,
*901The Court is also unconvinced that granting the Government's bald Motion to Dismiss would serve "either the public interest in the fair administration of criminal justice or [act] to preserve the integrity of the courts." United States v. Omni Consortium ,
Beyond that is the reality that although the Government has formally advised the Court that it does not adopt nor rely on its own witnesses' testimony in this Court, the Government nevertheless has not affirmatively disavowed it. The factual findings and resulting conclusions in this Opinion should not be surprising. The Court went to great lengths to lay out what it viewed as the apparent fallacies, inconsistencies, and inaccuracies of the Officers' testimony during the course of the hearings in this case. After learning that the Government would not rely on that testimony, the Court asked the Government (at the final hearing in this case) if the Court should believe the Officers' testimony. The Government's lawyer responded, "Your Honor, you should give it as much weight as you see fit." (Tr. of Proceedings, ECF No. 77, 27:21-22.) Thus, the Government neither vouches for the testimony of the federal agents it called as witnesses nor does it acknowledge the facial flaws in it.
Of course, our Court of Appeals has rejected the principle of the Government taking such a noncommittal position as to the credibility of its own witnesses:
We do not believe, however, that the prosecution's duty to disclose false testimony by one of its witnesses is to be narrowly and technically limited to those situations where the prosecutor knows that the witness is guilty of the crime of perjury. Regardless of the lack of intent to lie on the part of the witness, Giglio and Napue require that the prosecutor apprise the court when he knows that his witness is giving testimony that is substantially misleading. This is not to say that the prosecutor must play the *902role of defense counsel, and ferret out ambiguities in his witness' responses on cross-examination. However, when it should be obvious to the Government that the witness' answer, although made in good faith, is untrue, the Government's obligation to correct that statement is as compelling as it is in a situation where the Government knows that the witness is intentionally committing perjury.
United States v. Harris ,
As a final note, the timing of the cross Motions to Dismiss is also not the issue here. While it is true that the Government's Motion to Dismiss became fully briefed a few weeks before the Defendant's previously filed Motion to Dismiss was fully briefed, the delay in the briefing schedule for the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss was a direct result of the timing of the Government's production of documents to the Defendant. It also bears noting that the most telling physical evidence that the Forms were invalid stems from the color copies of the Forms, which were not produced to the Defendants until March 12, 2018, two months after the Defendant filed its Motion to Dismiss and over four months after the Government filed its Indictment. (Receipt for Local Rule 16.1 Material Suppl., ECF No. 61.) Asylum-related documents key to the Defendant's case regarding prejudice were also not provided until March 12, 2018. (Receipts for Local Rule 16.1 Material Suppl., ECF Nos. 59, 60, 61, 62.) In fact, this Court modified the briefing schedule on Defendant's Motion to Dismiss five (5) times to allow sufficient time for the Government to produce necessary and previously requested documents to the Defendant. (Orders, ECF Nos. 30, 33, 35, 39, 51.) Further adding to this delay, after the fourth extension, the Government instructed DHS to cease document production and redaction when it filed its own Motion to Dismiss. (See Tr. of Proceedings, ECF No. 58, 79:14-79:20.)
It struck the Court as appropriate to wait until the briefing of the previously filed Defendant's Motion had been completed before ruling on the cross Motions to Dismiss. Indeed, the Government reported to this Court after it filed its own Motion to Dismiss that it still was "interested in providing supplemental briefing" on the issue of prejudice as it pertained to the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss. (Tr. of Proceedings, ECF No. 57, 30:20-31:1.) Allowing the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss to complete its briefing schedule and for the Court to rule on the Motions at the same time was both necessary and appropriate to the Court's obligations to fully consider the Government's stated reasons for its dismissal motion, in light of the testimony of the DHS Officers during these proceedings.
C. The Government's Motion to Dismiss Indictment is Denied
The Government's Motion to Dismiss is denied. "Procedural fairness and regularity are of the indispensable essence of liberty." Mounts v. Boles ,
V. Conclusion
For these reasons, the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss Indictment, ECF No. 14, is granted. The Defendant's Motion for Bond, ECF No. 36, is denied without prejudice as moot. The Government's Motion to Dismiss Indictment, ECF No. 46, is denied.
An appropriate Order will issue.
Exhibit A *904Exhibit B *905*906Exhibit C
In violation of N.J. Stat. Ann. 2C:12-1b(1) (2009).
This is a higher standard than the "plausible ground for relief from deportation" standard used in the Ninth Circuit. Charleswell ,
The Court has partially redacted the DHS Officers' signatures from the copies of the Forms appended to this Opinion because the publication of complete signatures could pose an identity theft issue to those involved. The appearance of those signatures is not germane to the issues here. The Court has also redacted other non-germane identifying information on the copies of the Forms, including addresses and DHS internal identification numbers. The Defendant's signature is partially redacted as to his surname, but otherwise provided because its appearance is germane to the issues before the Court, as set out below.
See supra note 3.
Officer Alicea testified that all times on both Forms were taken from the very same clock in the DHS office. (ECF No. 30, 89:13-17.)
Officer Darji testified that the Defendant "held the pen" when the Forms were completed. (ECF No. 30, 22:1-8.) Based on its examination of the color copies of the Forms, the ink colors of the various signatures, the switching between check marks and "X" marks, and the fluid nature of the Officers' testimony, the Court harbors substantial doubt that the Defendant personally made the critical notations.
See, e.g. , ECF No. 77, 22:21-25 ("[T]he Court is more convinced than ever that the testimony that was offered at the first hearing by the two ICE agents under oath were a combination of nonsense ... and material portions of the balance of it were lies."); id. at 25:5-10.
As detailed below, the Government has informed this Court that is does not rely on or adopt the testimony of the Officers that it called to the stand at the first hearing as to these matters. (Gov't's Resp. Br. in Supp. of Gov't's Mot. to Dismiss, ECF No. 66, at 7.)
The Government nonetheless proffered both Officers to testify as to their interpretation of the Forms based on their experience generally with such Forms and/or as lay opinion witnesses. (Tr. of Proceedings, ECF No. 30, 42:3-17.)
Both Forms are printed only in English.
The record also includes a two sets of documents, each titled "Record of Sworn Statement in Affidavit Form," supposedly made and signed by the Defendant. With these documents, the Government attempts to show inconsistencies as to the Defendant's asserted fear of persecution. (Gov't's Resp. in Opp'n, ECF No. 17, at 13 n.7.) The first page is left blank with respect to the Defendant acknowledging receipt or being informed of the nature of the document. (Def.'s App. 116.) It is left blank as to what language was used with the Defendant or whether there was an interpreter. (Id. ) The "Initials of the Subject" change throughout the document, yet none match the name of the Defendant. (Id. at 116, 117, 119.) The signature of the "alien" on the last page does not match the Defendant's name or signature on other Forms. (Id. ) The initials at the bottom of the first page corresponding to the agent of U.S. Immigration & Customs Enforcement do not appear to match the initials used on the top of that page designating the agent or the signature of the agent on the last page. (Id. at 116, 119.) The witness signature on the last page is left blank. (Id. at 119.) The second "Record of Sworn Statement" is of the same ilk. (Def.'s App. 124-28.) The name of the person giving the "sworn statement" is left blank. (Id. at 124.) Despite the document indicating it was made before a specified Agent in the Spanish language, the name of the interpreter is blank. (Id. ) The line for the Defendant to write in his own name indicating acknowledgement of receipt is left blank. (Id. ) While the initials at the bottom of each page bear the letters "MR," the handwriting that appears on these documents bears no resemblance to the handwriting attributed to the Defendant on the Forms. (Id. ) The "signature of alien" on the last page says "Mario Reyes" but also carries starkly different penmanship from the signatures attributed to the Defendant on the Forms. (Id. at 128.) See United States v. Clifford ,
The Government has not conceded that the Forms were completed and executed improperly, nor that the Forms facially demonstrate that the Defendant never actually and knowingly waived his right to a hearing. Rather, it takes the position that it will cease offering evidence or argument on that matter and put all of its chips on the prejudice marker. As the Court previously noted on the record in open court, the Court does not believe or conclude that the Government knowingly presented false testimony from the Officers when those Officers testified, and it in fact attempted (unsuccessfully) to rehabilitate their testimony while they were on the stand. But, as the Court explains below, the Government also does not have the luxury of taking a position of ambivalence as to the testimony it presents from federal agents. See infra pp. 901-02 (discussing United States v. Harris ,
The Government has not offered any explanation of the Officers' testimony and/or the Forms that would generate a benign interpretation of their contents or the Officers' testimony. The Government has stated that both the witnesses and the U.S. Attorney's Office had not inspected the originals (or color copies) of the Forms prior to the January 3, 2018, hearing. (Gov't's Resp. Br. in Supp. of Gov't's Mot. to Dismiss, ECF No. 66, at 3.) Indeed, the Court was unaware of the existence of the color copies until they were filed on the docket on March 14, 2018. (ECF No. 63.) Regardless, the blue versus black ink differences as seen on the color copies are only one slice of the pie, and serve to affirm the inconsistencies and contradictions already evident in the prior hearings.
The Court in Charleswell uses "reasonable likelihood" and "reasonable probability" interchangeably.
The Government elected not to present any evidence on this prong. (Gov't's Suppl. Resp. in Opp'n, ECF No. 79, at 3 n.1).
Of course, the necessity of this Court's considering these issues now by looking in the rearview mirror is solely and completely the result of the actions of the DHS Officers in 2011. If they had followed the law, and what they themselves said they should have done when presented with conflicting elections by the Defendant, there likely would be no need to delve into these issues now, as they would have been addressed one way or the other back then.
As that term is defined at § 101(a)(43)(F) of the Immigration Act,
Pursuant to
"But the noncitizen who is not an aggravated felon may seek discretionary relief from removal, such as asylum, provided he satisfies the other eligibility criteria." Johnson v. Attorney Gen. of U.S. ,
The Government also argues that the Defendant could have been charged by DHS as having been convicted of a crime of moral turpitude pursuant to
"Under this approach, [courts] look 'not to the facts of the particular prior case,' but instead to whether 'the state statute defining the crime of conviction' categorically fits within the 'generic' federal definition of a corresponding aggravated felony. Moncrieffe v. Holder ,
The Defendant was convicted of aggravated assault on December 11, 2009, under N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2C:12-1(b)(1). (J. of Conviction and Order for Commitment, Def.'s App. 112.) This statute has been updated since the Defendant's conviction, but for the purposes of this Opinion, the Court relies on the statute as it read on the date of conviction.
Gov't's Suppl. Resp., ECF No. 79, at 6; Def.'s Reply, ECF No. 82, at 7.
"[W]here a subsection of the Code defines an offense as an attempt to cause and also as causing serious bodily injury or bodily injury, the attempt is a separate offense." New Jersey v.McAllister ,
It is well established that attempt cannot be proven without a mental state of specific intent. Singh v. Gonzales ,
ECF No. 79 at 7, n.6.
"Since we conclude Baptiste's 2009 Conviction falls within our more-circumscribed interpretation of § 16(b), we need not examine to what extent the reasoning of Voisine applies in the § 16(b) context to broaden our existing interpretation of the provision. We leave that question for another day." Baptiste ,
Board of Immigration Appeals
The Court of Appeals narrowed the Popal holding in Victor Jair Aguilar v. Attorney Gen. of U.S. to only apply to § 16(a) and not § 16(b).
Section 4B1.2(a) of the Sentencing Guidelines is virtually identical to the language of
In Haines , any Shepard documents related to the defendant's aggravated assault conviction were lost, so neither party could establish which mens rea element served as the basis of conviction since the statute in question gave alternative levels of culpability: intentionally, knowingly, or recklessness with extreme indifference, and simple recklessness.
Armed Career Criminal Act,
As this Court noted in Dates , "[t]he Supreme Court has generated a 'demand for certainty' when determining whether a defendant was convicted of a qualifying offense. Shepard ,
See United States v. Gonzalez Segundo , No. 4:10-cr-0397,
That also makes this case fundamentally different than the situation in United States v. Torres ,
The Supreme Court's respective analyses of the ACCA's residual clause and § 16(b) have "perfectly mirrored" one another. Jimenez-Gonzalez v. Mukasey ,
Thus, contrary to the Government's assertion (ECF No. 79, at 14), there is a reasonable likelihood that the Defendant "would have been" Johnson or Baptiste or Dimaya.
The Government also contends that regardless of the aggravated felony issue, the Defendant would have been ineligible for asylum on the basis that his conviction still qualified as a "particularly serious crime" as that term is used in the asylum statute,
Alaka addressed a claim for withholding of removal. Nonetheless, this Court sees no persuasive reason why Alaka 's statutory construction of a "particularly serious crime" would not equally apply to that same term as it is used in the asylum provision within the same Act. See Johnson v. Attorney Gen. of U.S. ,
This is also why the Government's argument that a one-year time limit for raising asylum claims necessarily bars any claim by the Defendant fails. A major exception to that one-year period is available when changed circumstances exist that materially affect eligibility for asylum.
On June 11, 2018, the Attorney General issued his Opinion in Matter of A-B- ,
Matter of A-B- ,
While it is certainly theoretically possible that the outcome in Crespin-Valladares may have been different had it been decided today in light of the recent Matter of A-B- Opinion, the Court concludes that it is substantially more likely that it would not have been different at all, as the analysis in Crespin-Valladares does not vary from the framework clarified in Matter of A-B- ,
These findings stem from a "credible fear interview" in the course of an asylum application. A credible fear interview has a different purpose than the actual asylum hearing, but the Court finds DHS's (albeit, preliminary) assessment of these events in El Salvador persuasive when it is being asked to make predictions about the outcome of these very processes. (See Joint Stip., ECF No. 87.) The Court also concludes that these findings are corroborated by the testimony of the Defendant's family members.
In De La Rosa , the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit remanded a BIA final decision and order that had denied the petitioner's CAT claim. The B1A concluded that the petitioner failed to meet the public official requirement because there was evidence that some persons within the Dominican government had taken steps to prevent his torture by investigating the petitioner's complaints and making arrests. The court disclaimed the BIA's assumption that the activity of these officials overcame the other public officials' complicity, the governmental corruption, and the general ineffectiveness of the government to prevent unlawful killings. De La Rosa ,
The credible testimony of the Defendant's witnesses and the documents in the Defendant's Supplemental Appendix establish that the Defendant's deceased cousin was killed in early 2011 and Cousin had an attempt on his life and his family members' lives who were in his house with him just prior to that time. (Def.'s Suppl. App. 47, 57, 61; see also supra Part II.B.4.ii.a.2.)
Id. ("[T]he rapist's motivation is usually not sex, but power....").
See supra note 38 (declining to adopt the Government's argument that this Court should disregard Alaka ).
See supra Part II.B.4.ii.a.2.
Torture is one such example of persecution. Long Hao Li v. Attorney Gen. of U.S. ,
That footnote reads:
Here, it makes sense to require such a burden because Charleswell remains able to show, on the record, how, if at all, the result could have been different. However, as some courts have recognized, this standard is not necessarily fixed. Almost all courts that have established a prejudice standard have done so with scenarios that involved the erroneous denial, by an IJ, of some opportunity to apply for discretionary relief, such as a waiver under section 212(c). But some procedural defects may be so central or core to a proceeding's legitimacy, that to require an alien to establish even a "reasonable likelihood" that he would have obtained a different result establishes too high a burden. See United States v. Luna ,436 F.3d 312 , 321 (1st Cir. 2006) ("There may be some cases where the agency's violations of a petitioner's rights were so flagrant, and the difficulty of proving prejudice so great that prejudice may be presumed....") (internal citations and quotations omitted).
456 F.3d at 362 n.17 (emphasis added).
Walkes's guilty pleas from prior state court convictions were vacated pursuant to Padilla v. Kentucky ,
Of course, the Attorney General's 2018 decision in Matter of A-B- has no impact on this portion of the Court's Opinion in this case.
But despite some substantial digging by the Court on the record, the Government never came out and said what those "interests" were, other than asserting that there was a "litigation risk" without articulating what the risk was (see ECF No. 57, 32:8-36:21), along with the avoidance of the expenditure of additional Government time and resources on this prosecution. (Gov't's Resp. Br. in Supp. of Gov't's Mot. to Dismiss, ECF No. 66, at 9.) The risk that the Government may not prevail, or that it would have to expend further litigation resources, are not in the Court's estimation "interests of justice," but are instead the interests of the Department of Justice were it considered to be in the position of an ordinary litigant. But, of course, it is not. Berger v. United States ,
In this Court's judgment, this does not require a showing of a malicious prosecutorial motive, but is instead focused on the repeated use of prosecutorial authority in a manner that offends, for instance, core due process interests.
The Office of the Chief Immigration Judge and the appellate body, the Board of Immigration Appeals, are organized within the Office for Immigration Review, an agency of the Department of Justice, and the Attorney General is responsible for appointing the Chief Immigration Judge and the members of the Board of Immigration Appeals.
"Reinstatement orders do not exist independent and separate from their prior orders of removal but are instead explicitly premised on the prior order." Charleswell , 456 F.3d at 352. Pursuant to
Simply by way of example, according to the Department of Justice, its Executive Office for Immigration Review "administers the Nation's immigration court system" and "decides whether [a charged] individual is removable from the country." U.S. Dep't of Justice, Executive Office for Immigration Review: An Agency Guide (2017), https://www.justice.gov/eoir/page/file/eoir_an_agency_guide/download.
The "Attorney General enjoys broad powers with respect to 'the administration and enforcement of [the INA itself] and all other laws relating to the immigration and naturalization of aliens.' " Matter of A-B- ,
Hon. Alberto R. Gonzales & Patrick Glen, Advancing Executive Branch Immigration Policy Through the Attorney General's Review Authority ,
See supra note 40.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- United States v. Mario Nelson REYES-ROMERO
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- 2 cases
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- Published