Nelson Arriaga (“Arriaga”) petitions for review of a final order of removal of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”). The BIA dismissed Arriaga’s appeal from the decision of the Immigration Judge (“IJ”) Paul M. Gagnon, which sustained Arriaga’s removability under the subsection of the Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”) that renders deportable any alien convicted of stalking. See INA § 237(a)(2)(E)®, 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(E)® (“the INA stalking provision”). In re Arriaga, A74 913 575 (B.I.A. Feb. 28, 2007), affg No. A74 913 575 (Immig. Ct. Hartford Nov. 29, 2006). Arriaga concedes that he was convicted of stalking under Connecticut’s penal code, but he argues that the INA stalking provision, which does not define “stalking,” is unconstitutionally vague, on its face and as applied. This challenge presents a question of first impression in the courts of appeals.
BACKGROUND
Arriaga, a native and citizen of Honduras, was admitted to the United States as a lawful permanent resident in 2000. In October 2004, Arriaga pled guilty in Connecticut Superior Court to stalking in the second degree under Connecticut General Statutes § 53al81d(a):
A person is guilty of stalking in the second degree when, with intent to cause another person to fear for his physical safety, he wilfully and repeatedly follows or lies in wait for such other person and causes such other person to reasonably fear for his physical safety.
In March 2006, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) commenced *222 removal proceedings against Arriaga pursuant to INA § 237(a)(2)(E)®, which provides: “Any alien who at any time after admission is convicted of a crime of domestic violence, a crime of stalking, or a crime of child abuse, child neglect, or child abandonment is deportable.” 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(E)® (emphasis added). The INS added a second charge of deportability pursuant to INA § 237(a)(2)(A)®, which provides for the removal of an alien convicted of a crime involving moral turpitude committed within five years after the date of admission. See 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)®.
At his hearing in July 2006, Arriaga conceded the conviction, but argued that the offense was insufficiently violent or depraved to justify removal under the applicable statutes. The IJ ruled Arriaga removable because his crime was one of moral turpitude. But in October 2006, the BIA, citing the IJ’s failure “to provide reasons and bases for his conclusion,” remanded for the IJ to prepare a full decision.
The IJ’s November 2006 post-remand decision found that Arriaga is removable under both grounds charged by the INS. As to stalking, undefined in the INA, the IJ looked to the law dictionary and decided that the common law and the Connecticut statute “criminalize the same type of behavior: that of following another individual with the intent of causing him or her harm or to fear harm.” The IJ accordingly found that Arriaga’s Connecticut conviction qualified as a conviction for a crime of stalking under the INA. The IJ also ruled that stalking involves moral turpitude because it entails predatory and inherently threatening conduct.
In February 2007, the BIA affirmed the removal order and dismissed the appeal, stating: “[IJnasmuch as [Arriaga’s] conviction is clearly a crime of stalking, we find no error in the Immigration Judge’s conclusion that he is deportable pursuant to section 237(a)(2)(E)®.” The BIA declined to consider whether Arriaga is also deport-able for having been convicted of an offense involving moral turpitude. The BIA recognized that the agency lacks jurisdiction to consider Arriaga’s argument that the INA stalking provision is unconstitutionally vague.
See Matter of Fuentes-Campos,
21 I. & N. Dec. 905, 912 (BIA 1997);
Matter of C-,
20 I. & N. Dec. 529, 532 (BIA 1992);
see also Zerrei v. Gonzales,
DISCUSSION
On this appeal, Arriaga challenges only the constitutionality of the INA stalking provision, arguing that the provision is void for vagueness on its face, and as applied in his case, because it does not define the word “stalking.” We review
de novo
constitutional challenges to a statutory provision.
See McNary v. Haitian Refugee Ctr., Inc.,
“It is a basic principle of due process that an enactment is void for vagueness if its prohibitions are not clearly defined.”
Grayned v. City of Rockford,
The “void for vagueness” doctrine is chiefly applied to criminal legislation.
*223
Laws with civil consequences receive less exacting vagueness scrutiny.
See Vill. of Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc.,
I
Claims of facial invalidity are generally limited to statutes that threaten First Amendment interests.
See Chapman v. United States,
Although we have suggested that some facial vagueness challenges may be brought where fundamental rights are implicated outside the First Amendment context, we need not pursue that issue because Arriaga has not identified a fundamental right compromised by the INA stalking provision.
See Farrell v. Burke,
Opportunities to challenge the underlying offense of stalking as a violation of Arriaga’s right to travel were presented at his criminal trial, or on appeal or collateral review of that conviction. However, collateral attack on a state criminal conviction is not available on a petition to review the BIA’s removal decision.
See Abimbola v. Ashcroft,
II
In deciding the vagueness challenge “as applied” to Arriaga’s case, we employ the two-part
Kolender
inquiry: Does the INA stalking provision provide (A) sufficient notice and (B) limits on the discretion of law enforcement authorities?
Kolender,
A.
The first
Kolender
inquiry asks whether the statute, as written, provides notice sufficient to alert “ordinary people [as to] what conduct is prohibited.”
Kolender,
Jordan
involved facts analogous to the present case. An alien twice convicted of fraud and tax evasion was subject to deportation pursuant to the predecessor version of the INA provision authorizing removal for “crimes involving moral turpitude,” a capacious phrase undefined in the statute.
Jordan,
[Djifficulty in determining whether certain marginal offenses are within the meaning of the language under attack does not automatically render a statute unconstitutional for indefiniteness. Impossible standards of specificity are not required.
Id.
at 231,
Because the INA does not define stalking, we accordingly measure the term by “common understanding and practices” to determine whether it gives sufficiently definite warning of the conduct subject to deportation.
Id.; see Lopez v. Gonzales,
The crime of stalking (along with crimes of domestic violence, violations of protection orders, and crimes against children) was added as a ground for deportation in the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (“IIRIRA”). Pub.L. No. 104-208, Div. C., Title III-C § 350(a), 110 Stat. 3009-546, 3009-639 (1996). 3 When IIRIRA was adopted, laws against stalking were fairly recent. The first state to criminalize stalking by statute was California, in 1990. See Cal.Penal Code § 646.9 (2007) (current version). By 1992, over half the states had enacted similar statutes. Today, stalking is a crime in every state, and interstate travel for stalking is a federal offense. See 18 U.S.C. § 2261A; see generally 2 Wayne R. LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law § 16.4 (2d ed. 2004 & 2007 Supp.).
Though stalking is an offense unknown to the common law, consensus as to its meaning was aided by a model law commissioned by the Justice Department’s Na *226 tional Institute of Justice (set out in the margin). 4 A working definition of stalking might be: persistent and intrusive conduct directed at a specific person that conveys menace and that would cause a reasonable person to fear. This working definition comports with the definition found in treatises, see LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law § 16.4; 86 C.J.S. Threats § 22 (2008), and in law dictionaries, see Black’s Law Dictionary 1441 (8th ed.2004) (defining stalking as “following, or loitering near another, often surreptitiously, with the purpose of annoying or harassing that person or committing a further crime such as assault or battery”); Barron’s Law Dictionary 489 (5th ed.2003) (defining stalking as “persistent, distressing, or threatening behavior consisting of at least two elements: the actor must repeatedly follow the victim and must engage in conduct that annoys or alarms the victim and serves no legitimate purpose”).
In virtually every state, stalking entails: (1) conduct beyond a single occasion, (2) intentionally or purposefully directed at a specific person, with (3) the consequence of instilling fear in that person. State penal codes vary considerably in such particulars as the types of conduct (e.g., following, pursuing, surveilling, cyberstalking), the level of intent (general or specific), and the standard of fear (objective or subjective).
See
National Center for Victims of Crime, Stalking Resource Center,
Analyzing Stalking Laws,
http://www.ncvc.org/src/ AGP.Net/Components/DocumentViewer/ Download.aspxnz?DocumentID=41531 (last visited March 26, 2008). The widely-accepted core meaning of stalking is demonstrated by the failure of almost every void-for-vagueness challenge brought against state stalking laws.
See People v. Stuart,
Arriaga argues that variations among state penal codes as to the necessary elements of a stalking crime invalidate the INA’s use of the term. This
*227
argument is defeated by the rule that, absent contrary Congressional intent, federal statutes are not to be construed so that their application is dependent on state law.
See Taylor v. United States,
Uniformity among state law definitions of stalking is therefore unnecessary to give meaning to the term as used in the federal statute. We read the INA stalking provision to incorporate the generally accepted contemporary meaning of stalking as discussed above, regardless of the “exact definition or label” used in the various penal statutes.
Taylor,
As applied to Arriaga, the INA stalking provision adequately warned him that a conviction under Connecticut’s stalking law would subject him to deportation. Arriaga pleaded guilty to stalking in the second degree under Connecticut law, which constitutes his admission that: “with intent to cause another person to fear for his physical safety, he wilfully and repeatedly follow[ed] or l[ay] in wait for such other person and cause[d] such other person to reasonably fear for his physical safety.” Conn. GemStat. § 53a-181d(a). Arriaga raised no constitutional objection to his conviction or to the Connecticut law, which in any event has already withstood challenges for vagueness.
See State v. Marsala,
The Connecticut law in no way deviates from the consensus understanding of stalking. If anything, Connecticut’s version of stalking imposes a heavier prosecutorial burden because it employs two levels of scienter.
See Marsala,
B.
The second vagueness inquiry (and “the more important” of the two) is whether the “[statutory language [is] of such a standardless sweep [that it] allows policemen, prosecutors, and juries to pursue their personal predilections.”
Smith v. Goguen,
We must therefore determine either that: (1) “[the] statute as a general matter provides sufficiently clear standards to eliminate the risk of arbitrary enforcement,” or (2) “even in the absence of such standards, the conduct at issue falls within the core of the statute’s prohibition, so that the enforcement before the court was not the result of the unfettered latitude that law enforcement officers and factfinders might have in other, hypothetical applications of the statute.”
Farrell,
The statutory terms do not reach any “innocent conduct”: a criminal conviction is a predicate for invoking the removal provision, and the statute affords no discretion in commencing removal proceedings. When an alien has been convicted of a stalking crime, removal proceedings must follow. 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a) (“Any alien ... in and admitted to the United States
shall
... be removed if the alien is within one or more of the following classes of deportable aliens .... ” (emphasis added)). The immigration service exercises some discretion in determining whether a particular stalking conviction falls within the generally accepted definition of stalking. However, that discretion is constrained by settled precedent that requires a “categorical” approach, looking only to the statutory definition of the offense (and in rare cases the record of conviction), but not the particular facts underlying the conviction.
See Taylor,
*229
Even if the statute did not provide sufficiently clear standards for enforcement, Arriaga’s stalking conviction squarely fits within the set of crimes intended as a predicate for deportation. Arriaga was convicted under a penal provision that defines stalking in a way that falls well within the “core meaning” of the term.
See
Thibodeau
v. Portuondo,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the petition is Denied.
Notes
. The Supreme Court has suggested that a statute that does not reach constitutionally protected conduct, "may nevertheless be challenged on its face as unduly vague, in violation of due process.”
Vill. of Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc.,
. The legislative history suggests that Congress added these deportation grounds to close potential loopholes for aliens who commit crimes against women and children that did not clearly fall within other categories of deportable crimes such as crimes involving moral turpitude and aggravated felonies. See 142 Cong. Rec. S4058-02 (1996). The legislative history does not otherwise define stalking.
. The model law reads as follows:
Section 1. For purposes of this code:
(a) "Course of conduct” means repeatedly maintaining a visual or physical proximity to a person or repeatedly conveying verbal or written threats or threats implied by conduct or a combination thereof directed at or toward a person;
(b) “Repeatedly” means on two or more occasions; and
(c) "Immediate family” means a spouse, parent, child, sibling, or any other person who regularly resides in the household or who within the prior six months regularly resided in the household.
Section 2. Any person who:
(a)purposely engages in a course of conduct directed at a specific person that would cause a reasonable person to fear bodily injury to himself or herself or a member of his or her immediate family or to fear the death of himself or herself or a member of his or her immediate family;
(b) has knowledge or should have knowledge that the specific person will be placed in reasonable fear of bodily injury to himself or herself or a member of his or her immediate family or will be placed in reasonable fear of the death of himself or herself or a member of his or her immediate family; and
(c) whose acts induce fear in the specific person of bodily injury to himself or herself or a member of his or her immediate family or induce fear in the specific person of the death of himself or herself or a member of his or her immediate family; is guilty of stalking.
National Institute of Justice, U.S. Dep't of Justice, Project to Develop a Model Anti-Stalking Code for States 43-48 (1993).
