Petitioner seeks review of an order of the Board of Immigration Appeals dismissing his appeal from the deportation order of an Immigration Judge. Petitioner in a single state trial had been convicted under two separate indictments of breaking and entering in the nighttime with intent to commit larceny. One indictment charged an August 4, 1974 entry into a restaurant; the second charged an August 6, 1974 entry *449 into a church. Because of these two convictions for crimes of moral turpitude, the Immigration and Naturalization Service sought petitioner’s deportation under 8 U.S.C. § 1251(a)(4). 1
Petitioner asserts that both break-ins— and two additional ones on August 6 — were the result of a prolonged period of drunkenness spanning both dates; that the shortness of the time period, the fact that his companions in all the enterprises were the same, the homogeneity of the technique (opening an unlocked door), and the continuity of his drunkenness render this a “single scheme” under the statute or at least demonstrate, on this record, that there was no substantial evidence to support a finding of a single scheme and that the prosecution failed to sustain its burden of proof.
Petitioner is 26 years of age, and a citizen of Portugal. His parents and all siblings live in this country except a married sister who lives in Portugal. Apart from the escapades in issue here, for which he served five months in prison, his criminal record is barren. The Immigration Judge, acknowledging that the “result is drastic”, nevertheless felt compelled to order deportation.
We are aware of the canon which requires doubts in the construction of a statute to be resolved in favor of the alien.
Barber v. Gonzales,
It comes as no surprise to learn that the courts have run with this ball in various directions. Ours was the first to speak in
Fitzgerald ex rel. Miceli v. Landon,
“When the Congress provided for the deportation of aliens who at any time after entry had been convicted of two crimes involving moral turpitude ‘not arising out of a single scheme of criminal misconduct,’ the Congress evidently had in mind that a criminal, while engaged in a single criminal enterprise, might be guilty of two or more distinct offenses. . Thus one engaged in a single scheme of robbing a bank may be guilty of the offense of robbery, and also of the *450 offense of inflicting a criminal battery upon a bank official. Though he might be convicted of both of these offenses, it was not the intention of Congress that he should be deported on this ground alone.”238 F.2d at 865-66 .
We rejected the opinion of a state trial judge and the Chief of Police that the acts arose out of a single scheme, saying, “For all we know, the state judge and the Chief of Police might have thought that, if Miceli was guilty of repeated acts of indecent assault against young girls, in which he employed the same technique and pattern of conduct, the several separate offenses would arise ‘out of a single scheme of criminal misconduct’ . . .. This of course would not be so.” Id. at 867.
Subsequent cases have obviously not deemed,
Miceli
controlling. It is small wonder that the courts have been tempted to soften the harshness of the requirement by treating “single scheme” as an elastic concept. In the process “justice” was often done, although attempts to articulate on all-purpose definition were less successful. In the early case of
Jeronimo v. Murff,
A second case, lacking a blanketing “common scheme” indictment but presenting a sympathetic case, was
Zito v. Moutal,
From consecutive tax violations it is a small step to more robust crimes. An early case is
Wood v. Hoy,
Finally,
Nason v. Immigration and Naturalization Service,
Undoubtedly the stimulus for a broad interpretation of “single scheme” has been the institution of deportation proceedings against aliens whose crimes are at the lightest end of the “moral turpitude” spectrum. A combination of the breadth of that phrase and occasionally harsh enforcement decisions has forced the case law we have. The statute is desperately in need of a more tailored approach by the Congress. In the meantime, however, we must find our own way. We are reluctant to adopt a definition of “single scheme” that depends on a multitude of factors, for the result is bound to be selective law enforcement and disparities in judicial treatment. This is particularly so to the extent that the subjective factor of forethought is critical. We would also deem it a paradox if the definition excluded this petitioner, whose crimes were committed during periods of intoxication, but saved from deportation one who coolly mapped out several robberies in advance.
We cannot overlook, in addition to the generally heightened severity of the Act, its abandonment of a requirement for more than one sentence.
See
note 3
supra.
Before the 1952 Act, closely parallel crimes might have been tried together, resulting in only one sentence; and such a sentence would not have been a sufficient basis for deportation. The 1952 amendments, absent a single scheme, do not save a defendant in this situation from deportation. Nevertheless, we accept the conclusion that the intent of Congress in 1952 was to give “a one-time alien offender ... a second chance before he could be deported.”
Na-son, supra,
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. The government wishes us to adopt the formulation of a “single transaction”. We think that to equate “single scheme” with “act” or “transaction” may give insufficient scope to the statutory phrase, particularly if these words are narrowly construed. As other courts have noted, the Congress could have chosen more precise words. And, while “transaction” might cover the generality of cases, such as a bank robbery which encompasses an assault on bank employees, we can conceive .of more than one separate criminal transaction occurring within a short time period and emanating from the same enterprise. For example, a bank robbery might involve not only an expectable assault against bank employees but also other crimes which could occur in the course of escape — theft of a car, assault on a pursuer, reckless driving, and the like. Such, we think, might well be deemed part of a single scheme, even though they might also be called separate transactions.
*452 In Fitzgerald, supra, we used the word “enterprise”. While this may be too broad, it is nearer the mark than the narrowest reading of “transaction”. 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. In this case, the two crimes were separated in time by a two-day interval. Petitioner testified at his hearing that he was drunk on the occasion of the first break-in, that he was drinking on the next day, and that he remembered getting drunk again on the third day, when the second break-in took place. The conclusion of the Immigration Judge that the crimes did not involve a single scheme of criminal misconduct is supported by the evidence. Indeed, if this sequence of events were to qualify as a single scheme, the concept would be so open-ended as to embrace any series of crimes so long as each was associated with a drinking bout.
Deportation is, as the Immigration Judge acknowledged, a drastic sanction. Petitioner is relatively young and his prior record was good. But the elasticity of the “single scheme” statute is limited. We note also that Congress has provided in 8 U.S.C. § 1251(b) that a judge at the time of sentencing, or within thirty days thereafter, may make a binding recommendation against deportation.
Velez-Lozano v. Immigration and Naturalization Service,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Section 1251(a)(4) [Section 241(a)(4) of the Immigration and Nationality Act] provides in part:
“(a) Any alien in the United States . shall, upon the order of the Attorney General, be deported who—
(4) . . . at any time after entry is convicted of two crimes involving moral turpitude, not arising out of a single scheme of criminal misconduct, regardless of whether confined therefor and regardless of whether the convictions were in a single trial.”
. Webster’s Dictionary gives us little help. A scheme is “a plan or program of something to be done: a planned undertaking”. Subsets of the concept range from “a crafty or unethical project”, a “visionary project”, and “a combination of elements . . . that are connected, adjusted, and integrated by design”, to “a planned and often mildly mischievous diversion”, as a lark or escapade. Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1966). While petitioner’s spree fits most closely the last definition this would not seem to be what Congress had in mind.
. The section itself replaced a gentler one under which the alien, to be deported, must have been “sentenced more than once to [a term of one year or more]”. Section 19(a) of the Immigration Act of 1917, 39 Stat. 874, 889. In debate preceding the overriding of the President’s veto, Senator McCarran, one of the bill’s sponsors, referred to “those provisions of the bill which are designed to strengthen the exclusion and deportation procedures so that we can prevent the entry and cause the deportation of subversives, criminals and undesirables.” 98 Cong.Rec. 8254. See also 98 Cong.Rec. 5090.
