Case Information
*1 Before MURPHY, MELLOY, and SHEPHERD, Circuit Judges.
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SHEPHERD, Circuit Judge.
Armando Lopez-Fernandez and Nury Felix-Jimenez (collectively, Petitioners) are husband and wife as well as natives and citizens of Mexico. They petition for *2 review of a decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) dismissing their appeal from an Immigration Judge (IJ) order denying their motion to suppress evidence and terminate deportation proceedings. The Petitioners assert that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers obtained evidence of their alienage, specifically their statements and passports, in violation of their rights under the Fourth Amendment. They also assert that the denial of an evidentiary hearing regarding suppression of that evidence violated their Fifth Amendment rights to due process of law. Because the Petitioners failed to present a prima facie case that the evidence could be suppressed, we deny the petition.
I. Background
On December 9, 2008, six officers, including ICE agents and police officers, entered and conducted a search of the Petitioners’ home in St. Louis, Missouri. Some of the agents were armed. While the officers were in their home, the Petitioners provided statements concerning their alienage and produced Mexican passports when asked for identification. With this information, the agents concluded that both of the Petitioners were illegal aliens and prepared a Record of Deportable/Inadmissible Alien Form (Form I-213) relating to each Petitioner. The Forms I-213 contained a narrative of events and findings as a result of the search. The Department of Homeland Security commenced removal proceedings and offered the Petitioners’ respective Forms I-213 at those proceedings.
The Petitioners moved for an evidentiary hearing regarding the admissibility of the Forms I-213. They also moved to suppress the Forms I-213 and to terminate the proceedings. The Petitioners alleged Fourth Amendment violations with respect to the search, Fifth Amendment violations as to statements obtained during an unlawful custodial interrogation, and violations of internal agency regulations.
In support of their motions, the Petitioners each submitted affidavits detailing their versions of the officers’ entry into and search of their home. Felix-Jimenez stated that, on the day in question, she was in the shower at approximately 7:00 a.m. when she heard banging on her front door. Approaching the door, she saw someone shining a flashlight in the window. She cracked open the door to see who was there, and “the door was forced open hard and six people charged in. . . . They did not identify themselves or ask for permission to enter; they just barged in.” Pet’r’s App. at 181. The six officers searched the home and questioned Felix-Jimenez. Later, when Lopez-Fernandez returned home, the Petitioners were both put in handcuffs and taken to the Detention and Removal office in St. Louis, Missouri. According to Felix-Jimenez, the officers were very intimidating, and she would not have answered their questions had she known that she did not have to do so.
Lopez-Fernandez stated via separate affidavit that when he returned home at approximately 8:00 a.m., six officers were inside his home. Lopez-Fernandez also asserted that it was “clear that [he] was not free to leave” and that the officers did not show him a warrant. Pet’r’s App. at 188. Like Felix-Jimenez, Lopez-Fernandez stated he would not have answered the officers’ questions if he had known that he did not have to do so.
The Forms I-213 contain a different version of the events. They reflect that a named informant contacted the State Highway Patrol, provided information regarding the use of false social security numbers by persons residing at the Petitioners’ address, and requested an investigation into the immigration status of those persons. Acting on that information, the agents went to the Petitioners’ home at 7:30 a.m., and Felix-Jimenez invited them in. Lopez-Fernandez soon returned home, and, after the Petitioners provided documentation, the officers determined that they were both illegal aliens and took them to the Detention and Removal Office.
The IJ declined to grant an evidentiary hearing and denied the Petitioners’ motions to suppress the evidence and terminate the proceedings. First, the IJ held that the Fourth Amendment claim failed because the Petitioners’ affidavits did not overcome the presumption of reliability typically afforded the Form I-213 for the following reasons: (1) the Forms I-213 were prepared the same day of the events, while the Petitioners’ affidavits were prepared two years later, (2) the Petitioners’ affidavits contained inconsistent details, (3) Felix-Jimenez’s affidavit referred to subjective feelings rather than objective facts showing coercion or mistreatment, and (4) the parties did not dispute that the officers knocked on the door and waited for an occupant to answer. Second, the IJ rejected the Petitioners’ claim that their statements were made during an unlawful custodial interrogation in violation of the Fifth Amendment. Specifically, the IJ found that the statements were given voluntarily, the failure to give Miranda-like warnings does not render statements inadmissible in a deportation hearing, and the Petitioners failed to show any improper action by the immigration officers warranting suppression of their statements. Finally, the IJ rejected Petitioners’ claims that the agents violated agency regulations. The IJ then issued a final decision finding the Petitioners removable as charged and ordering them removed from the United States.
The Petitioners appealed to the BIA, which affirmed the IJ’s decision and dismissed the appeal. The BIA found that the Petitioners failed to establish a prima facie case that the Government’s evidence was unlawfully obtained. Therefore, the Petitioners could not transfer the burden to the Government to justify the manner in which they obtained the evidence. The BIA focused on the “significant discrepancies” between the Petitioners’ affidavits and affirmed the IJ’s conclusion.
II. Analysis
In this appeal, the Petitioners have abandoned their claims that there were Fifth Amendment custodial interrogation or regulatory violations. Instead, the Petitioners *5 claim that they alleged sufficient facts before the IJ to demonstrate that the entry and search of their home was an egregious Fourth Amendment violation such that the statements and passports they provided during the search, which resulted in the officers’ conclusions in the Forms I-213, should be suppressed. Moreover, they argue that failing to grant a suppression hearing violated their Fifth Amendment due process rights.
The BIA’s legal determinations are reviewed de novo. Guardado-Garcia v.
Holder,
The IJ and BIA concluded that the Petitioners did not allege a prima facie case of any Constitutional violation. However, we hold that, even if the Petitioners have alleged a Fourth Amendment violation, they do not allege a prima facie case of egregiousness to warrant exclusion of evidence in the deportation context. Because the BIA did not rest its decision on, nor discuss, the egregiousness of any alleged violations, we must do so.
A.
The Petitioners argue that the information contained within the Forms I-213 must be suppressed because the officers’ conduct constituted an egregious Fourth *6 Amendment violation, and without the Forms I-213, the Petitioners contend, the Government cannot meet its burden of proving their alienage and removability.
The exclusionary rule generally does not apply in civil deportation proceedings when there is a Fourth Amendment violation standing alone. INS v. Lopez-Mendoza, 468 U.S. 1032, 1050 (1984). However, the Supreme Court has warned that “egregious violations of Fourth Amendment or other liberties that might transgress notions of fundamental fairness and undermine the probative value of the evidence obtained” may invoke use of the exclusionary rule. Id. at 1050-51. In expressing reluctance to apply the exclusionary rule in the deportation context, the Supreme Court balanced the likely social benefits of excluding unlawfully seized evidence against the likely costs. Id. at 1050. In particular, the deterrent value of the exclusionary rule is low due to the availability of alternative deportation procedures, while the social cost is high because courts would be compelled to suppress reliable evidence and then “release from custody persons who would then immediately resume their commission of a crime through their continuing, unlawful presence in this country.” Id. “Even the objective of deterring Fourth Amendment violations should not require such a result.” Id. at 1047.
We need not decide today whether to join other circuits in holding that an
egregious Fourth Amendment violation affirmatively compels exclusion in a removal
proceeding because the Petitioners have not alleged an egregious violation. See
Martinez Carcamo v. Holder,
*7
to assume the burden of justifying the manner in which it obtained evidence, the
Petitioners must present a prima facie case that the evidence can be excluded. Matter
of Barcenas, 19 I. & N. Dec. 609, 611 (BIA 1988). Only after presenting this prima
facie case is an evidentiary suppression hearing warranted. Id.; see also
Lopez-Gabriel,
The Petitioners make two arguments that the agents’ conduct was egregious. First, they argue that the officers had “no articulable suspicion whatsoever” to enter into and search their home. Second, read broadly, the Petitioners argue that the warrantless invasion into the private property of their home without consent was egregious. Both arguments fall short.
The first argument is contradicted by the record. “‘Reasonable suspicion may
be based on an informant’s tip as long as it is sufficiently reliable.’” United States
v. Quarles,
The second ground also falls short. An egregious violation requires more than
a “mere garden-variety” violation. Garcia-Torres v. Holder, 660 F.3d at 336.
“[N]othing in our previous cases indicates that an unreasonable search becomes an
egregious search merely because it invades the privacy of a home.” Martinez
Carcamo,
In Puc-Ruiz, the petitioner alleged that police officers arrested him without
probable cause.
*9
The agents in this case received a tip from a named informant. The parties do
not dispute that the officers first knocked on the door and Felix-Jimenez opened it.
There is no evidence of egregious force in the manner of entry. Moreover, the entry
occurred in the morning when the Petitioners were already awake, not in the middle
of the night. Cf. Cotzojay v. Holder,
B.
Petitioners also argue that they were denied due process under the Fifth
Amendment because they did not have the ability to testify and cross-examine
witnesses in a hearing. To afford an alien due process under the Fifth Amendment,
the removal hearings must be “fundamentally fair.” Al Khouri v. Ashcroft, 362 F.3d
461, 464 (8th Cir. 2004). The Petitioners’ argument fails because it is a reiteration
of their Fourth Amendment claim. The outcome of their Fourth Amendment claim,
which requires an egregious violation, necessarily determines whether the Petitioners
have presented a prima facie case and, thus, whether a hearing is required. See
Garcia-Torres,
III. Conclusion
We perceive no egregious Fourth Amendment violation in the Petitioners’ affidavits describing the events that transpired in their home. Because a hearing is warranted only if the Petitioners present a prima facie case that the evidence should be excluded, and they have not demonstrated anything more than a possible Fourth Amendment violation, there is no prima facie showing to warrant an evidentiary *10 hearing. Moreover, the Fifth Amendment is not violated for the failure to conduct a hearing.
The petition for review is denied.
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Notes
[1] Although the case caption lists Petitioner’s name as “Feliz-Jimenez,” we note that the record and briefing indicate that the Petitioner’s name is spelled “Felix- Jimenez.” We have retained the spelling used by the Petitioner.
[2] We note that, to the extent that state or local officers were engaged in the
conduct in question, we doubt that their conduct could ever establish an egregious
violation justifying suppressing the evidence. See Lopez-Gabriel,
