Thе issue presented by this case is whether the failure to give Miranda 1 warnings to an alien renders his statements inadmissible in deportation proceedings.
The petitioners, Ampara Chavez-Raya and Gloria Quintanar de Chavez, arе husband and wife and are natives and citizens of Mexico. According to the petitioners’ offer of proof, which was presented at the deportation hearing, the facts surrounding their interrogations are as follоws: 2
On April 25, 1973, investigators from the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) came to the hotel where Mr. Chavez was working and had the manager point out Chavez to them. The agents then approached Chavez, identified themselves, and asked Chavez for some identification. When Chavez tendered “a green card,” presumably an alien registration card, the agents responded that the card was not Chavez’s. They then informed Chavez that he wаs under arrest. The agents escorted Chavez to their car and Chavez subsequently, under further questioning, made certain admissions.
The agents then drove Chavez to his wife’s place of employment where they asked Mrs. Chavez to produce her papers. When Mrs. Chavez indicated that her papers were at home, the agents drove her there and the documents were produced. Both petitioners were then driven to the INS officе where they were given Miranda warnings and subsequently signed sworn statements.
An order to show cause was subsequently issued against both petitioners. At their joint deportation hearing, the petitioners, who were represented by counsel, refused to testify with respect to the charges of deportability, claiming privilege under the Fifth Amendment. Over petitioners’ objections, the immigration judge admitted into evidence the petitioners’ sworn signed statements. The Service also presented into еvidence Mrs. Chavez’s passport.
The immigration judge found that the petitioners were deportable as charged. 3 The Board of Immigration Appeals, upon finding that their deportability was established by clear, convincing and unequivocal evidence, dismissed the petitioners’ appeal. The petitioners, pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a), seek review in this court of the final order of deportation. In this appeal the petitioners chаllenge only the admissibility of the statements and Mrs. Chavez’s documents and concede that, if the statements and documents were admissible, the evidence was sufficient to establish deportability.
Mr. Chavez
Mr. Chavez contends that his written sworn stаtement should not have been admitted into evidence at the deportation hearing since he was not given Miranda warnings before being questioned at the agents’ car.
In those situations in which
Miranda
warnings are required, the warnings must be given when the individual is subjected to a “custodial interrogation.”
Miranda,
As this court recently noted, “the application of
Miranda
does not turn on such a simple axis as whether or not the suspect is in custody when he is being questioned.”
United States v. Oliver,
In the present case, the agents specifically asked at the hotel for Mr. Chаvez. The agents allegedly told Chavez that the card which he had tendered to them was not his and that he was under arrest. Chavez was then escorted by the two agents to the agents’ car and, at that point, under questioning by the agents, Chavez made the admissions. The agents did not give Chavez Miranda warnings prior to this questioning at the car. We conclude that, under these circumstances, Chavez’s freedom of movement was significantly restrained during the interrogatiоn at the car and that the petitioner was, therefore, subjected to a “custodial interrogation” without the benefit of Miranda warnings.
Moreover, the fact that Chavez was given
Miranda
warnings before he signed the sworn statement is immaterial. The written statement was executed shortly after Chavez had made oral admissions to the same agents without being given the warnings. As the Court noted in
Miranda,
such belated warnings, from the suspect’s point of view, “came at the end of the interrogation process.” In this situation, the Court concluded, “an intelligent waiver of constitutional rights cannot be assumed.”
We are, thus, squarely faced with the question of whether the failure to give
Miranda
warnings renders an alien’s statement inadmissible in a deportation proсeeding. It is important to note, however, two matters which are not before us in this appeal. First, we are not here faced with the admissibility in a deportation hearing of a confession which was “coerced” in thе sense that it resulted from physical or psychological threats or pressure. See
Bong Youn Choy v. Barber,
Although the consequences of deportation may be severe,
Costello v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
Due to its fundamentally civil nature, a deportation hearing differs from a criminal trial in a number of significant respects. There is, for instance, no “presumption of innocence” in the deportation proceeding. Rather, under 8 U.S.C. § 1361, the aliеn in a deportation hearing has the burden of showing the time, place, and manner of his entry into the United States, and “[i]f such burden of proof is not sustained, such person shall be presumed to be in the United States in violation of law.” See
United States ex rel. Bilokumsky v. Tod,
The alien can, of' course, because of the possibility of criminal prosecution for violation of the immigration laws, decline to testify at the deportation hearing on the basis of the Fifth Amendment.
Valeros v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
“Silence is often evidence of the most persuasive character. [T]here is no rule of law which prohibits officers charged with the administration of the immigration lаw from drawing an inference from the silence of one who is called upon to speak. . A person arrested in the preliminary warrant is not protected by a presumption of citizenship comparable tо the presumption of innocence in a criminal case. There is no provision which forbids drawing an adverse inference from the fact of standing mute.”263 U.S. at 153-54 ,44 S.Ct. at 56 .
But see
Gastelum-Quinones v. Kennedy,
Furthermore, we note that a number of courts have concluded that an alien’s statement, made during a preliminary interrogation, is admissible in a deportation proceeding even though the alien did not have counsel at the preliminary interrogation. See
Lavoie v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
A principal purpose of the Miranda warnings is to рermit the suspect to make an intelligent decision as to whether to answer the government agent’s questions. Dickerson, supra at 1114; Oliver, supra at 306. In deportation proceedings, however — in light of the alien’s burden of proof, the requirement that the аlien answer nonincriminating questions, the potential adverse consequences to the alien of remaining silent, and the fact that an alien’s statement is admissible in the deportation hearing despite his lack of cоunsel at the preliminary interrogation — Miranda warnings would be not only inappropriate but could also serve to mislead the alien.
We also find guidance for our decision in
United States v. Dickerson, supra,
involving the necessity of
Miranda
warnings prior to interrogation in tax cases. There as here an investigation may be basically сivil or it could be or become criminal in nature. The underlying rationale of
Dickerson
appears to be that once the case has been transferred to the Intelligence Division it has sufficient criminal aspects to activate the
Miranda
warning requirement. It is significant to note that the
Dickerson
approach of this circuit has been rejected elsewhere. See
United States v. Dawson,
Given the differences between a deportation hearing and a criminal trial and the fact that
Miranda
warnings “are not mandated by the Constitution itself.”
Oliver, supra
at 304, we conclude that, although the lack of
Miranda
warnings would render an alien’s statement, madе during a custodial interrogation, inadmissible in a criminal prosecution for violation of the immigration laws,
United States v. Campos-Serrano, supra,
the failure to give the
Miranda
warnings does not render the statement inadmissible in deportation proceedings. See
Strantzalis v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
Mrs. Chavez
According to the offer оf proof, Gloria Chavez did not make any oral statements to the immigration officers before being given Miranda warnings. She did, however, tender her papers to the agents before the warnings were given. In view of our decision that the failure to give Miranda warnings does not render evidence inadmissible in deportation proceedings, we need not decide whether Mrs. Chavez was in a “custodial interrogation” at the time she tendered her documents.
Thе petition for review is denied and the order of deportation is affirmed.
Notes
.
Miranda v. Arizona,
. The Service has not, at any time in the proceedings, disputed this statement of the facts.
. The immigration judge granted Mrs. Chavez, but not Mr. Chavez, the privilegе of voluntary departure.
. Because of this aspect of Miranda, we have attached no significance to the lack of clarity in the record as to just what admissions were made by Mr. Chavez at the time of the automobile interrogation. These were nоt directly the subject of any testimony at the deportation hearing. In any event, it is not argued by the Government that the sworn statement of Mr. Chavez did other than substantially incorporate his oral statements.
. See United States v. Oliver, supra at 304 n. 6.
. “We find nothing unfair or violative of due process about requiring an alien to communicate with immigration officials, concerning nonincriminatory aspects of his immigration status.” Laqui, supra at 809. However, if the alien asserts his Fifth Amendment privilege in the deportation hearing and is erroneously ordered to testify about matters protected by the Fifth Amendment, this testimony cannot be used as a basis for deportation. Valeros, supra at 922.
. With regard to an alien’s right to appointed counsel at the dеportation hearing, 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(2) provides: “[T]he alien shall have the privilege of being represented (at
no expense to the Government)
by such counsel . as he shall choose.” (Emphasis added.) See
Henriques v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
