U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, 1970

Virginia Silva-Palacios by Her Next Friend, Elvira Palacios De Silva v. Attorney General of the United States

Virginia Silva-Palacios by Her Next Friend, Elvira Palacios De Silva v. Attorney General of the United States
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit · Decided March 13, 1970 · Wisdom, Goldberg, Ingraham
423 F.2d 725; 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 10307 (Federal Reporter, Second Series)

Virginia Silva-Palacios by Her Next Friend, Elvira Palacios De Silva v. Attorney General of the United States

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Virginia Silva-Palacious applied for admission to the United States claiming she was born in Texas. After a hearing, a Special Inquiry Officer of the Immigration Service denied the application and ordered her excluded. The Board of Immigration Appeals affirmed. Miss Silva-Palacios then asked the district court for a declaratory judgment that she was a citizen and requested a writ of habeas corpus against the exclusion order. After hearing new evidence not adduced in the earlier administrative hearing, the district court concluded that habeas corpus was the proper method to review the exclusion order. He found that substantial evidence supported the decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals and, additionally, that on the basis of the new evidence presented in the district court, together with the administrative record, Miss Silva-Palacios was not an American citizen.

We affirm the judgment of the district court.

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