Edwin Emile, a native and citizen of Haiti, immigrated to the United States in 1971. In 1988, Emile was convicted in a Massachusetts state court of possession of a controlled substance. In 1990, he was again convicted, this time of indecent assault and battery on a child under fourteen, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 265, § 13B (1998); the sentence was 350 days, of which 55 were served. In 1996, he was convicted once again of assault and battery and sentenced to a year in prison. Out of these convictions grew three efforts by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) to deport Emile.
The INS first acted against Emile in June 1990 based on the 1988 drug conviction, but the proceedings were terminated after the conviction was vacated by the state court. In August 1997, the INS began a second proceeding to remove Emile, this time for the 1996 assault and battery conviction, see 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii) (Supp. II 1996). However, after the immigration judge had ordered Emile deported, Emile’s sentence was reduced to eleven months — a month shy of the minimum sentence for a deport-able “crime of violence,” id. § 1101(a)(43)(F), and thus the Board of Immigration Appeals (the “Board”) remanded the matter to the immigration judge for reconsideration.
On remand, the INS abandoned its request for removal based on the 1996 conviction and substituted a new basis: the 1990 conviction for indecent assault and battery on a child under fourteen. Although this conviction had earlier been known to the INS, it became more useful for removal purposes when Congress amended the Immigration and Nationality *185 Act (“INA”) in 1996 by adding “rape, or sexual abuse of a minor” to murder in the first item on the list of deportable “aggravated felony” offenses. See Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1966, Pub.L. No. 104-208, § 321(a)(1), 110 Stat. 3009-546,-627 (codified at 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(43)(A) (Supp. II 1996)). These new offenses, which Congress did not further define, make the alien subject to automatic deportation regardless of the length of sentence imposed.
After a succession of hearings in 1999, the immigration judge found that the 1990 conviction qualified as “sexual abuse of a minor” warranting deportation. The immigration judge relied in part on a police incident report, admitted over Emile’s objection, that purported to describe the offense conduct based on the statement of Emile’s then stepdaughter, who was thirteen at the time of the incident. She said that one night when her mother was out, Emile, while inebriated, had made sexual remarks, touched her chest under her nightgown, and touched her groin area although not the skin (for she was wearing underwear). This was, she said, Emile’s second effort to fondle her.
On review, the Board upheld the deportation order, using somewhat different reasoning than the immigration judge. It agreed that Emile’s violation comprised “sexual abuse of a minor,” relying in part on a definition borrowed from federal criminal laws, see 18 U.S.C. §§ 2241-44 (1994 & Supp. II 1996). It rejected Emile’s claim that the police report should not be considered, bub — unlike the immigration judge — it found the report unnecessary to the outcome. The Board also said that Emile was not eligible for discretionary relief from deportation. On this appeal, Emile contests both the deportation and the refusal of his application for waiver; and we begin with the deportation order.
The Board held Emile deportable on the ground that he had been convicted of “sexual abuse of a minor” within the meaning of the 1996 amendment to the INA. Two different, albeit related, questions thus arise: one is what is meant by the quoted phrase, and the other is whether Emile’s conviction falls within the rubric. The former is a routine although difficult question of statutory interpretation; the latter takes us into the murky world of
Taylor v. United States,
The Definition.
The 1996 amendment, adding “sexual abuse of a minor” to the list of crimes warranting automatic deportation, does not define the crime or otherwise explicitly cross-reference a specific federal criminal statute.
Compare
8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(43)(A) (Supp. II 1996),
with, e.g., id.
§ 1101(a)(43)(B) (1994) (“a drug trafficking crime (as defined in section 924(c) of title 18)”). The Board says that it may therefore construe the phrase itself under delegated authority from the Attorney General, 8 C.F.R. § 3.1(d)(1) (2000). The INS has regularly taken this position.
See In re Bahta,
Interim Dec. 3437,
Although enforcement agencies are not normally given deference in construing criminal statutes,
see Sutherland v. Reno,
*186 The federal criminal code contains a chapter titled “sexual abuse,” 18 U.S.C. §§ 2241-48, comprising four different sets of crimes: aggravated sexual abuse (section 2241), sexual abuse (section 2242), sexual abuse of a minor or ward (section 2243), and abusive sexual contact (section 2244). The Board here focused on “abusive sexual contact,” which makes criminal certain deliberate “sexual contact” under defined circumstances. “Sexual contact” is itself defined in another section as intentional touching, “either directly or through the clothing,” of another person’s genitals or other specified body parts “with an intent to abuse, humiliate, harass, degrade, or arouse or gratify the sexual desire of any person.” Id. § 2246(3).
It seems to us reasonable, and well within the Board’s discretion, to regard such conduct, by an adult against a minor, as presumptively within the 1996 amendment. Emile argues that such conduct should not, by itself, be classed as sexual abuse of a minor because it does not fit the only crime so named (section 2243) or — for that matter — either of the other two crimes in the chapter whose section headings include the phrase “sexual abuse” (sections 2241 and 2242). The three crimes so denominated are all quite serious: even the least (sexual abuse of a minor) may result in up to fifteen years’ imprisonment. By contrast, the crime of abusive sexual contact, in Emile’s circumstances, would have carried a maximum penalty of two years, see 18 U.S.C. § 2244(a)(3). 1
But the arguments the other way are also weighty. Neither the conduct described in section 2244(a)(3) nor the two-year maximum sentence suggests a trivial crime. The federal chapter captions
all
of the four crimes, including section 2244, under the heading “sexual abuse.”
2
And, given the interpretive latitude afforded to the agency, it is hard to exclude from the 1996 amendment adult conduct that is directed against a minor and would unquestionably violate section 2244(a)(3) if it occurred on federal property.
See Lara-Ruiz v. INS,
No. 99-2868,
Thus far we have ignored legislative history because there is very little directly in point. The conference report on the 1996 amendment does little to explain the critical phrase.
See
H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 104-828, subtit. B, § 321,
available at
But the House bill itself listed “abusive sexual contact” after rape, aggravated sodomy, aggravated sexual abuse, and sexual abuse, in its proposed new category of “crimes of sexual violence.” H.R. 2202, § 218(a)(F). The provision draws no distinction as to minors, but otherwise adopts word-for-word and in order the headings of sections 2241, 2242, and 2244, suggesting that Congress intended this new eate-
*187
gory to encompass conduct that would be criminal under those provisions. Indeed, even the dissenters in
In re Rodriguez
recognized that “sexual abuse of a minor,” as proposed in the 1996 amendment, encompassed “sexual contact” offenses.
The Taylor Issue. This brings us to the second and equally difficult question in this case. Emile was not prosecuted under federal law; he was convicted under a Massachusetts statute, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 265 § 13B. Even if we assume that “abusive sexual contact” by an adult directed to a minor constitutes “sexual abuse of a minor” under the 1996 amendment to the INA, the question remains whether Emile was “convicted” of such an offense. After all, section 13B says nothing directly about “abusive sexual contact” or “sexual abuse of a minor”; the state crime is indecent assault and battery on a child under fourteen, and it is not further defined in the statute, although state case law provides a considerable gloss.
At first blush, it might seem easy to bypass the state statute since we “know” what Emile did. But there are two problems: first, we “know” the nature of his actual conduct only by relying on the police report, whose admissibility is disputed, and second, a complex body of federal law developed under the
Taylor
decision limits the extent to which courts are allowed, at least in criminal sentencing, to look at actual conduct — as opposed to looking at the statute of conviction as construed by the state courts,
e.g., United States v. Preston,
Taylor,
in its classic form, limits consideration to the coverage of the state statute rather than the actual conduct of the offender (but, as we will see, exceptions exist).
Taylor
construed a federal criminal statute — the career offender provisions of the criminal code,
We need not pursue the issue because the Board has itself cited Taylor in the past, without quibble, in applying the INA provisions that define deportable offenses. 4 And while the Board did not mention Taylor by name in this case, it effectively followed Taylor by relying upon the Massachusetts statute rather than on Emile’s conduct as described in the police report. In substance, the Board concluded that section 13B focused upon conduct that would constitute sexual abuse of a minor under the 1996 amendment.
By its terms, section 13B condemns only “an indecent assault and battery on a child under the age of fourteen.” Emile points out that in the abstract, section IBB has been described as including indecent touching directed against a minor regardless of the actor’s “specific intent,” and not necessarily “for the purpose of sexual arousal, gratification, or offense,”
see Commonwealth v. Conefrey,
The Supreme Judicial Court has expressly referred to a conviction under section 13B as a “sex offense.”
Doe v. Sex Offender Registry Bd.,
Emile’s claim that “intent” is not required stems from
Conefrey,
which held that it was not error under section 13B to refuse an instruction that the defendant’s purpose must be sexual arousal or the like and that it was sufficient that the indecent touching was “intentional and deliberate.”
Similarly, if there is daylight between the conduct component of section 13B and the federal statute, we think it is relatively slight. There is no indication that, as Emile suggests, an arm around the waist would sustain a section 13B conviction,
cf. Commonwealth v. Mosby,
Thus, we think that unlawful sexual contact with a minor approximating the federal definition is presumptively within the amended INA’s scope, and that in neither intent nor conduct does section 13B go much beyond the federal definition or beyond a lay understanding of sexual abuse of a minor.
Cf. United States v. Baron-Medina,
However section 13B is read,
Taylor’s
requirements would still be satisfied, at least in this circuit.
Taylor
could have been taken as a rigid prohibition on looking at actual conduct; but the Supreme Court itself carved exceptions,
This brings us to Emile’s claim that it violates due process to rely on the police report.
8
Since deportation is civil, the Confrontation Clause does not apply.
See Austin v. United States,
Discretionary Relief.
Lastly, Emile argues that the Board erred in refusing to consider his application for discretionary relief from deportation. Because Emile was convicted of an aggravated felony, we have no authority to consider on direct review any other claim once we conclude that he was legitimately so classified.
See
INA § 242(a)(2)(C) (codified at 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(C) (Supp. II 1996));
Sousa v. INS,
The petition for review is denied as to the Board’s determination that Emile is removable as an aggravated felon; and it is dismissed without prejudice to a habeas application insofar as it contests the Board’s refusal to consider discretionary relief.
^ íg gQ or(¡ere¿
Notes
. Because Emile's stepdaughter was under the age of 16 and he was more than 4 years older, section 2244(a) made his offense punishable by up to 2 years in prison. 18 U.S.C. § 2244(a)(3). Absent such an aggravating age differential, the maximum penalty would have been 6 months. Id. § 2244(b). We do not want to be understood as endorsing the view that every possible violation of the federal sexual abuse chapter would automatically translate into a deportable offense.
. Elsewhere in the federal criminal code,
see
18 U.S.C. § 3509(a)(8) (1994), the term "sexual abuse” is used broadly enough that it indubitably covers Emile’s conduct, but it is debatable how relevant this provision may be.
See In re Rodriguez-Rodriguez,
.
See Drakes v. Zimski,
.
See, e.g., In re Bahta,
. That serious conduct is involved might also be inferred from the penalties provided: up to ten years’ imprisonment for a first offense and up to life in prison for a second. Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 265, § 13B.
. While
Conefrey
called a violation of section 13B a “strict liability” crime,
see also Knap,
.See, e.g., United States v. Palmer,
. Under Board rules, hearsay is not automatically banned in deportation proceedings, so the report was admissible as an administrative matter whether or not it fit within a recognized hearsay exception. See 8 C.F.R. § 240.7(a).
