JIMMY CHERY, AKA KEVIN JUNIOR CHERY, KIMANIE TAVOY GRAHAM, Pеtitioners, v. MERRICK B. GARLAND, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY GENERAL, Respondent.
Nos. 18-1036, 18-1835(L), 19-223(Con)
United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
OCTOBER 15, 2021
AUGUST TERM 2020; ARGUED: JUNE 21, 2021
Before: NEWMAN, CABRANES, and PARKER, Circuit Judges.
Petitioners Jimmy Chery and Kimanie Tavoy Graham seek review of decisions of the Board of Immigration Appeals affirming decisions of Immigration Judges ordering their removal from the United States, denying relief from removal, and denying Graham‘s motion to reopen. These cases present two questions: First, whether Petitioners’ narcotics convictions under Connecticut General Statute
ELYSSA N. WILLIAMS, The Bronx Defenders, Bronx, NY, for Petitioners.
DAVID J. SCHOR, Office of Immigration Litigation, Civil Division (Jeffery Bossert Clark, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Kohsei Ugumori, Senior Litigation Counsel, on the brief), U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, DC, for Respondent in 18-1036.
TIM RAMNITZ, Office of Immigration Litigation, Civil Division (Joseph H. Hunt, Assistant Attorney General, Shelley R. Goad, Assistant Director, on the brief), U.S. Department of Justice, Washington,
These petitions for review present two questions: first, whether convictions under Connecticut General Statute (“CGS“)
I. BACKGROUND
Although the petitions raise a common question, they arise in different factual and procedural contexts that we detail briefly here.
A. Jimmy Chery
In 1998, Chery, a native and citizen of Haiti, entered the United States without authorization at the age of 17. The following year, after he timely applied for asylum, the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS“) placed him in removal proceedings based on his unlawful presence. In 2000, he failed to appear at a hearing and was ordered removed in absentia.
More than a decade later, in 2014, Chery was convicted, on an Alford plea,1 of sale or possession with intent to sell narcotics under
government had persecuted him and members of his family on account of his family‘s political activities in the late 1990s.
An immigration judge (“IJ“) found Chery removable for having entered the United Stаtes without authorization, and concluded, further, that Chery was ineligible for asylum and withholding of removal under
The Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA“) dismissed Chery‘s appeal, agreeing with the IJ that Chery‘s conviction under
B. Kimanie Tavoy Graham
Graham, a native and citizen of Jamaica, was admitted to the United States as a visitor in 2002; he overstayed his visа but later adjusted to lawful permanent resident
An IJ found Graham removable as charged, noted that his aggravated felony conviction barred adjustment of status, denied his CAT claim as speculative, and ordered him removed. The BIA dismissed Graham‘s appeal, agreeing with the IJ that Graham was removable because his conviction under
Graham timely moved the BIA to reopen and terminate removal proceedings, arguing that the IJ lacked jurisdiction. The BIA denied his motion.
Graham timely petitioned for review of both BIA decisions, and those petitions were consolidated and heard in tandem with Chery‘s petition.
II. DISCUSSION
The questions presented in these petitions are (1) whether a 2014 narcotics conviction under
offense and an aggravated felony drug trafficking crime under the INA,
A. Application of the Categorical Approach to CGS § 21a-277(a)
We employ a “categorical approach . . . to assess whether a state drug conviction triggers removal under the immigration statute.”4 Under this approach, “[a] state offense categorically matches with a generic federal definition of a corresponding aggravated felony ‘only if a conviction of the state offense necessarily involved facts equating
to the generic federal offense.‘”5 “Accordingly, only the minimum criminal conduct necessary to sustain a conviction under a given statute is relevant, and the factual aspects of a defendant‘s situation are immaterial.”6 “If the
However, if a noncitizen‘s statute of conviction is divisible by “list[ing] elements in the alternative, and . . . creat[ing] a separate crime associated with each alternative element,”8 we apply a “modified categorical approach” to determine from the record “which part of the statute” formed the basis for the conviction.9 “The court can then do
what the categorical approach demands: compare the elements of the crime of conviction . . . with the elements of the generic crime.”10
For drug crimes, a controlled substance offеnse is one involving a substance listed on the controlled substance schedules of the Controlled Substances Act (“CSA“),
Petitioners were convicted under
indictment, jury instructions, or plea agreement and colloquy) to determine what crime, with what elements, a defendant was convicted of.“).
prescribes, dispenses, compounds, transpоrts with the intent to sell or dispense, possesses with the intent to sell or dispense, offers, gives or administers to another person any controlled substance which is a hallucinogenic substance other than marijuana, or a narcotic substance.”12 We must determine whether both the acts proscribed and the substances involved in
1. Proscribed Acts
In United States v. Savage, we held that
possession,” including a fraudulent offer to sell.14
The BIA found, and the Government argues, that Webster supersedes Savage to the extent that the latter concluded that
sale in Connecticut is akin to the definition of that same word in
2. Substances Involved
We determine whether
elements of a crime as what “the jury must find beyond a reasonable doubt to convict the defendant,” and means as the “various factual ways of committing some component of the offense” that “a jury need not find (or a defendant admit).”20
Section
conviction under
Petitioners’ plea colloquies make clear that they were charged and pleaded guilty under the narcotic substance element. Further, Connecticut did not criminalize narcotics that were not included in the
federal schedules at the time of petitioners’ convictions.25 Thus, the state statute under which Petitioners were convicted covers substances that were on the federal drug schedule, and can be used as a basis for finding an alien removable.26 That Petitioners entered Alford pleas does not change the outcome because “the charge was narrowed to include only [narcotics],” meaning that Petitioners’ ”Alford plea[s] entered pursuant to such a charge . . . constitute[d] a [narcotic substance] offense.”27
In sum, Petitioners’ convictions under
B. Pereira Jurisdictional Argument
Graham argues, relying on Pereira v. Sessions, 138 S. Ct. 2105 (2018), that the IJ lacked jurisdiction and the BIA should have reopened and terminated his removal proceedings. The Supreme Court in Pereira held that the INA requires that an NTA include a hearing time and place to trigger the “stop-time rule,”30 which cuts off a noncitizen‘s accrual of physical
presence for the purposes of qualifying for cancellation of removal.31 In Banegas Gomez, we held that Pereira applies narrowly to the stop-time rule and does not “void jurisdiction in cases in which an NTA omits a hearing
Banegas Gomez remains good law even after the Supreme Court‘s opinion in Niz-Chavez. The Supreme Court in Niz-Chavez held that a subsequent notice that provides the time and place of a hearing does not cure an NTA that is defective under Pereira because the cancellation of removal statute requires “a notice to appear,” and thus does not permit the required information to be provided in multiple
documents.33 As with Pereira, Niz-Chavez focused only on the stop-time rule in
whether jurisdiction had attached, even though the petitioner had not received a single notice containing the hearing time and place.37
In sum, the jurisdictional holding of Banegas Gomez remains good law.38
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the petitions for review are DENIED.39
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A few years ago the Administrative Office of the United States Cоurts (AO) recommended that federal courts of appeals bring to the attention of Congress statutes that might benefit from congressional elimination of ambiguities.a The opinion in
The ambiguity has precipitated hundreds of lengthy appellate opinions, several from the Supreme Court, which can be avoided in the future if Congress gives the ambiguous statutory phrase a simple bright-line definition: an offense for which the sentence imposed exceeds a specified length. For example, an “aggravated felony” could be any offense for which the defendant was sentenced to serve more than one year in prison. The appropriate sentence length specified would be for Congress to determine.c
The ambiguity begins with the definition Congress has used and has been exacerbated by courts’ usе of what is called the “categorical approach.” A bright-line definition based on sentence length would eliminate the need to apply the complicated “categorical approach” because sentence length can be easily identified from a readily available record of a defendant‘s conviction.
Eliminating the ambiguity we have identified has nothing to do with making the removal of aliens less or more likely. The policy issues relevant to grounds for removal are entirely for Congress to decide. We suggest only that the needless ambiguity now existing in the INA‘s phrase “аggravated felony” be eliminated by a readily available bright-line definition using the length of sentences.
Appendixd
I. The Problem
The
When a person‘s prior conviction for an “aggravated felony” requires adverse immigration consequences, courts use the so-called “categorical approach” to determine whether the conviction was an “aggravated felony.”n To use the categorical approach, a court “compare[s] the statutory elements of the statute forming the basis of the defendant‘s conviction with the elements of the ‘generic’ crime‒i.e., the offense as commonly understood”o and “does not consider the facts of an individual‘s crime as he actually committed it.”p This prohibition is imposed because of the difficulty courts would encounter in retrieving trial transcripts of old cases and the even more difficult task of locating people with knowledge of the crime.
The Supreme Court has acknowledged that “the categorical method is not always easy to apply.”q The Ninth Circuit has lamented, “[O]ver the past decade, perhaps no other area of the law has demanded more of our resources.”r Unless the INA is amended, this trend appears likely to endure. Last year alone our Circuit issued at least five precedential opinions applying the categorical approach to different possible “aggravated felon[ies]” under the INA.s As state and federal criminal
II. A Proposed Solution
To simplify administration of the INA by creating a bright-line test more straightforward than the categorical approach and to more reliably link adverse immigration consequences to serious crimes, we suggest that Congress modify subsection (a)(43) of Section 101 of the
“The term ‘aggrаvated felony’ means a felony for which the defendant is sentenced to serve more than [a fixed amount of time, such as one year] in prison. The term applies to an offense described in this paragraph whether in violation of Federal or State law and applies to such an offense in violation of the law of a foreign country for which the term of imprisonment was completed within the previous 15 years. Notwithstanding any other provision of law (including any effective date), the term applies regardless of whether the conviction was entered before, on, or after Sеptember 30, 1996.”
Congress has at least three times used a precise aspect of sentencing law as one component of definitions of prior offenses that enhance punishments. The definition of “violent felony,” for purposes of enhancing punishment for firearms offenses, includes a requirement that the previous convictions are for offenses “punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year.”t The definition of “serious violent felony,” for purposes of enhancing punishment for various narcotics offenses, includes a requirement that the defendant “served a term оf imprisonment of more than 12 months.”u Finally, “aggravated felony” under the INA includes a “crime of violence” (defined elsewherev) “for which the term of imprisonment [is] at least one year.”w
These components of definitions of “violent felony” and “serious violent felony” help to remove some of the ambiguity from these phrases, but for two reasons they are not nearly as clear or useful as a definition that relates only to the length of the sentence imposed. First, while these definitions refer to sentence length, they also refer to particular crimes and statutory offenses, which require the complicated “categorical approach” for crimes that meet the durational threshold.x Second, use of some of the selected metrics—maximum sentence and time actually served—might not accomplish what Congress intended. Maximum sentence is an imperfect proxy for the seriousness of an offense. For example, a sentence of 30 days suggests that the sentencing judge did not think that the defendant‘s misconduct was very serious, even where a crime is “punishable by imprisonment”y for up to ten years. The “term of imprisonment” that the defendant “served”z (presumably prior to statе parole) might be a good indicator of the seriousness of the offense, but it is difficult for a court to use years later because the term of imprisonment served
Using the length of the sentence imposed would provide a readily available bright-line test, avoid use of the complicated categorical approach, and align adverse immigration consequences with crimes found by sentencing judges to be more serious.
Notes
“(A) murder, rape, or sexual abuse of a minor;
“(B) illicit trafficking in a controlled substance (as defined in section 802 of Title 21), including a drug trafficking crime (as defined in section 924(c) of Title 18);
“(C) illicit trafficking in firearms or destructive devices (as defined in section 921 of Title 18) or in explosive materials (as defined in section 841(c) of that title);
“(D) an offense described in section 1956 of Title 18 (relating to laundering of monetary instruments) or section 1957 of that title (relating to engaging in monetary transactions in property derived from specific unlawful activity) if the amount of the funds exceeded $10,000;
“(E) an offense described in--
“(i) section 842(h) or (i) of Title 18, or section 844(d), (e), (f), (g), (h), or (i) of that title (relating to explosive materials offenses);
“(ii) section 922(g)(1), (2), (3), (4), or (5), (j), (n), (o), (p), or (r) or 924(b) or (h) of Title 18 (relating to firearms offenses); or
“(iii) section 5861 of Title 26 (relating to firearms offenses);
“(F) a crime of violence (as defined in section 16 of Title 18, but not including a purely political offense) for which the term of imprisonment at least one year;
“(G) a theft offense (including receipt of stolen property) or burglary offense for which the term of imprisonment at least one year;
“(H) an offense described in section 875, 876, 877, or 1202 of Title 18 (relating to the demand for or receipt of ransom);
“(I) an offense described in section 2251, 2251A, or 2252 of Title 18 (relating to child pornography);
“(J) an offense described in section 1962 of Title 18 (relating to racketeer influenced corrupt organizations), or an offense described in section 1084 (if it is a second or subsequent offensе) or 1955 of that title (relating to gambling offenses), for which a sentence of one year imprisonment or more may be imposed;
“(K) an offense that--
“(i) relates to the owning, controlling, managing, or supervising of a prostitution business;
“(ii) is described in section 2421, 2422, or 2423 of Title 18 (relating to transportation for the purpose of prostitution) if committed for commercial advantage; or
“(iii) is described in any of sections 1581-1585 or 1588-1591 of Title 18 (relating to peonage, slavery, involuntary servitude, and trafficking in persons);
“(L) an offense described in--
“(i) section 793 (relating to gathering or transmitting national defense information), 798 (relating to disclosure of classified information), 2153 (relating tо sabotage) or 2381 or 2382 (relating to treason) of Title 18;
“(ii) section 3121 of Title 50 (relating to protecting the identity of undercover intelligence agents); or
“(iii) section 3121 of Title 50 (relating to protecting the identity of undercover agents);
“(M) an offense that--
“(i) involves fraud or deceit in which the loss to the victim or victims exceeds $10,000; or
“(ii) is described in section 7201 of Title 26 (relating to tax evasion) in which the revenue loss to the Government exceeds $10,000;
“(N) an offense described in paragraph (1)(A) or (2) of section 1324(a) of this title (relating to alien smuggling), except in the case of a first offense for which the alien has affirmatively shown that the alien committed the offense for the purpose of assisting, abetting, or aiding only the alien‘s spouse, child, or parent (and no other individual) to violate a provision of this chapter[;]
“(O) an offense described in section 1325(a) or 1326 of this title committed by an alien who was previously deported on the basis of a conviction for an offense described in another subparagraph of this paragraph;
“(P) an offense (i) which either is falsely making, forging, counterfeiting, mutilating, or altering a passport or instrument in violation of section 1543 of Title 18 or is described in section 1546(a) of such title (relating to document fraud) and (ii) for which the term of imprisonment is at least 12 months, except in the case of a first offense for which the alien has affirmatively shown that the alien committed the offense for the purpose of assisting, abetting, or aiding only the alien‘s spouse, child, or parent (and no other individual) to violate a provision of this chapter;
“(Q) an offense relating to a failure to appear by a defendant for service of sentence if the underlying offense is punishable by imprisonment for a term of 5 years or more;
“(R) an offense relating to commercial bribery, counterfeiting, forgery, оr trafficking in vehicles the identification numbers of which have been altered for which the term of imprisonment is at least one year;
“(S) an offense relating to obstruction of justice, perjury or subornation of perjury, or bribery of a witness, for which the term of imprisonment is at least one year;
“(T) an offense relating to a failure to appear before a court pursuant to a court order to answer to or dispose of a charge of a felony for which a sentence of 2 years’ imprisonment or more may be imposed; and
“(U) an attempt or conspiracy to commit an offense described in this paragraph.”
