Elizabeth Dag Um KEATHLEY, Petitioner, v. Eric H. HOLDER, Jr., Attorney General of the United States, Respondent.
No. 11-1594.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued Oct. 18, 2011. Decided Aug. 22, 2012.
691 F.3d 644
For these reasons, we reverse the district judge‘s decision and remand with instructions to reduce Brown‘s sentence to 10 years’ imprisonment. This will require his release, though the district judge may want to consider releasing him on bail in order to protect the government‘s right to seek review of our decision by the Supreme Court.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Richard Hanus (argued), Attorney, Law Office of Richard Hanus, Chicago, IL, for Petitioner.
Margaret A. O‘Donnell (argued), OIL, Attorneys, Department of Justice, Civil Division, Immigration Litigation, Washington, DC, for Respondent.
Before EASTERBROOK, Chief Judge, and RIPPLE and KANNE, Circuit Judges.
EASTERBROOK, Chief Judge.
Elizabeth Keathley, a citizen of the Philippines, married John Keathley, a citizen of the United States, in 2003. The marriage was performed in the Philippines. In 2004 the State Department issued a nonimmigrant K-3 visa so that Elizabeth could live in the United States while awaiting action on John‘s request for her permanent residence as the immediate relative of a U.S. citizen. After arriving in the United States, Elizabeth applied for and received a driver‘s license. The State of Illinois also sent her a voter registration
Voting has come back to haunt her. Immigration officials working on John‘s request that his spouse receive permanent-residence status discovered that Elizabeth had voted. She has been ordered removed from the United States—and the administrative finding that she violated
Several of Keathley‘s arguments track those considered and rejected in Kimani v. Holder, 695 F.3d 666 (7th Cir. 2012), which is being released contemporaneously. But there are two potentially important differences between the two cases. First, while Kimani falsely represented himself to be a U.S. citizen when registering to drive and vote, Keathley contends that she represented herself to be a citizen of the Philippines, presenting both her Philippine passport and her K-3 visa. Neither the IJ nor the BIA determined whether Keathley is telling the truth about this. (Kimani, by contrast, was in the United States unlawfully, having overstayed a visitor‘s visa, and did not want public officials to learn about his status as an alien.) Second, while Kimani checked a box on the driver‘s-license form claiming U.S. citizenship, Keathley contends that she left that box unchecked until the state official who superintended the process—an official knowing that she is not a citizen—asked her if she would like to vote. Keathley says that she answered “yes“. The box asserting U.S. citizenship ended up checked; Keathley says that she does not remember whether she checked the box or the state employee did so. The IJ and BIA did not decide how
Keathley contends that, because the state official knew that she is an alien, the question about voting and the state‘s decision to send her a voter registration card led her to believe that voting would be lawful. She did not know about
The immigration judge did not decide whether Keathley showed her passport and visa to the state official; whether that official raised the subject of voting knowing that Keathley is an alien; and whether that official checked the box claiming citizenship after Keathley signed the form. Although the IJ found her generally credible, he did not make findings on these specific issues because he believed that entrapment by estoppel, as a doctrine of criminal law, is irrelevant in immigration proceedings. The BIA agreed with that conclusion. Both the IJ and the BIA erred.
It‘s true enough that “entrapment by estoppel” is the name of a defense to a criminal prosecution. But it does not follow that the defense is irrelevant in civil proceedings. Section
Whether she has a good defense depends in part on facts that remain to be ascertained. Whether she has violated
Our opinion in Kimani observes that state motor-vehicle registrars lack authority to put aliens on the voting rolls. We did not mean, however, that motor-vehicle registrars lack all authority concerning voting. The motor-voter legislation authorizes officials in a department of motor vehicles to register people for federal elections.
The litigants have not explored the extent to which officials administering the motor-voter registration procedure are authorized to interpret the terms of that legislation and the requirements of valid registration, and to give binding advice to applicants. It may well be unnecessary to address that subject (which is relevant only if, on remand, the agency credits Keathley‘s statements about what occurred), and it would be imprudent to address potentially complex issues without briefs that explore them fully.
If the IJ does credit Keathley‘s statements about what occurred, the Department of Homeland Security should give serious consideration to withdrawing its proposal that she be declared inadmissible and be removed from the United States. A person who behaves with scrupulous honesty only to be misled by a state official should be as welcome in this country in 2012 as she was when she entered in 2004.
The petition for review is granted, and the matter is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
