Petitioner seeks review of a final order of deportation by the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA). His sole argument on appeal is that the BIA erred in finding him deportable under the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1251 (a)(2)(A)(ii), because he had been convicted of two crimes of moral turpitude “not arising out of a single scheme of criminal misconduct.” Petitioner argues that his convictions should be construed as arising from a “single scheme” because they were part of a continuing criminal enterprise. He asserts that his crimes thus “morally constitute only a single wrong.”
Petitioner pled guilty in a United States district court to one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud, and three counts of mail fraud. The indictment charged that from about April 1, 1989 to October 16, 1991, he conspired with others to use the mails to submit false accident reports and claims to various insurance companies. The specific acts of fraud to which petitioner pled guilty occurred on three separate dates: October 16,1990, October 21,1991 and November 15, 1991. The crimes involved three different insurance companies, separate locations, and the use by petitioner of three different aliases.
1
Petitioner’s 33-month sentence was affirmed on appeal.
United States v. Balogun,
In
Pacheco v. I.N.S.,
To us this suggests that a scheme, to be a “single scheme,” must take place at one time; there must be no substantial interruption that would allow the participant to disassociate himself from his enterprise and reflect on what he has done.
*9 Our present thinking is that both the purpose of the statute and the use of the adjective “single” point to a temporally integrated episode of continuous activity. When the immediate activity has ended, even though a “scheme” calls for future activity a participant has his second chance to make a decision. He need not further pursue a multistage scheme.
Id. at 451-52.
Petitioner implicitly recognizes that under
Pacheco
his crimes cannot be characterized as a “single scheme.” He argues, however, that this court should apply the more “expansive definition” adopted by the Ninth Circuit. In
Gonzalez-Sandoval v. I.N.S.,
In
Pacheco,
however, we rejected the approach upon which petitioner relies. Moreover, in
Matter of Adetiba,
Interim Dec. 3177,
[T]he statutory exception refers to acts, which although separate crimes in and of themselves, were performed in furtherance of a single criminal episode, such as where one crime constitutes a lesser offense of another or where two crimes flow from and are the natural consequence of a single act of criminal misconduct.
Id.
at *5. Since then, the Fifth and Tenth Circuits have upheld the BIA’s definition as a reasonable interpretation of the law.
See Thanh Huu Nguyen v. I.N.S.,
In this case petitioner’s separate crimes involved separate acts, different victims, and occurred on widely separated dates. Petitioner had ample opportunity between crimes to change direction. Accordingly, his convictions do not arise from a “single scheme” as defined in Pacheco and Adetiba. We need not decide how a more expansive definition might affect this case, because petitioner offers no persuasive reason for deviating from our own longstanding interpretation and the majority of recent decisions.
The order of the Board of Immigration Appeals is affirmed.
Notes
. Petitioner does not deny the accuracy of the facts recited in the indictment. At the deportation hearing he admitted participating in the tiling of 124 false accident reports, and receiving $217,000 therefrom.
