Jenny Lisette FLORES, a minor, by next friend Mario Hugh
GALVEZ-MALDONADO; Dominga Hernandez-Hernandez, a minor, by
next friend Jose Saul Mira; Alma Yanira Cruz-Aldama, a
minоr, by next friend Herman Perililo Tanchez, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Edwin MEESE, III; Immigration & Naturalization Service;
Harold Ezell, Defendants-Appellants.
No. 88-6249.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued En Banc and Submitted April 18, 1991.
Decided Aug. 9, 1991.
Ian Fan and Stan Blumenfeld, Asst. U.S. Atty., Los Angeles, Cal., for defendants-appellants.
Carlos Holguin, National Center for Immigrants' Rights, Inc., Los Angeles, Cal., for plaintiffs-appellees.
William F. Abrams, Jeffer, Mangels, Butler & Marmaro, San Francisco, Cal., James H. Lovell, Heller, Ehrman, White & McAuliffe, Seattle, Wash., Vilma S. Martinez, Munger, Tolles & Olson, Laini Millar-Melnick, Los Angeles, Cal., Susan L. Burrell and Mark I. Soler, Youth Law Center, San Francisco, Cal., E. Richard Larson, Mexican-American Legal Defense and Education Fund, Los Angeles, Cal., John R. Heisse, II, Pettit & Martin, San Francisco, Cal., for the amici curiae.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of California.
Before WALLACE, Chief Judge, and TANG, SCHROEDER, D.W. NELSON, CANBY, NORRIS, WIGGINS, BRUNETTI, THOMPSON, LEAVY, and RYMER, Circuit Judges.
SCHROEDER, Circuit Judge:
I. INTRODUCTION
This is a class action challenging an INS policy that requires governmental detention of children during the pendency of deportation proceedings. That policy is now codified at 8 C.F.R. § 242.24 (1988). Detention is required unless there is an adult relative or legal guardian available to assume custody, even where there is another responsible adult willing and able to care for the child and able to ensure the child's attendance at a deportation hearing. The INS acknowledges that the regulation is not necessary to ensure such attendance. It does not contend that the release of children so detained would create a threat of harm to the children or to anyone else.
The district court held that a blanket detention policy in such circumstances is unlawful. It entered an order that required, where feasible, release to a responsible party of children who would otherwise have been released if a parent or other relative had come forward. The order further required an administrative hearing for each child to determine whether, and under what conditions, the child should be released.
The INS and Attorney General appealed and a divided panel reversed the district court's holding that the detention policy was unlawful. The panel remanded for the district court to determine what procedural protections would be appropriate under Mathews v. Eldridge,
II. BACKGROUND
This case conсerns the treatment of children who are arrested on suspicion of being illegal aliens but who have not yet been determined to be deportable. Because the children are persons present in the United States they must be afforded procedural protections in conjunction with any deprivation of liberty. Mathews v. Diaz,
Plenary authority to determine what categories of aliens may lawfully reside in the United States and what categories must be deported resides in the Congress. Fiallo v. Bell,
Only one relevant statutory provision addresses the release or detention of aliens between the time of their arrest and the determination of deportability or non-deportability. That statute is 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(1), which in all material respects has remained the same for the last four decades. It presently provides:
Pending a determination of deportability ... [an] alien may, upon warrant of the Attorney General, be arrested and taken into custody.... [A]ny such alien ... may, in the discretion of the Attorney General and pending such final determination of deportability, (A) be continued in custody; or (B) be released under bond ... containing such conditions as the Attorney General may prescribe; or (C) be released on conditional parole.
To implement this statute, the Attorney General promulgated regulations in 1963, which are still in effect, providing that aliens arrested on the suspicion of deportability could be released until further proceedings upon a determination that such release was appropriate, and under conditions determined by the INS. 8 C.F.R. § 242.2(c)(2). Upon request, an alien is entitled to a hearing before a disinterested officer, an immigration judge, to determine eligibility for release. 8 C.F.R. § 242.2(d).
In 1984, the Western Region of the INS adopted a separate policy for minors. That policy provided that minors would be released only to a parent or lawful guardian. In his memorandum implementing this policy, former Western Region Commissioner Harold Ezell stated that the limits on release were "necessary to assure that the minor's welfare and safety is maintained and that the agency is protected against possible legal liability." The policy alsо provided for release to another responsible adult "in unusual and extraordinary cases, at the discretion of a District Director or Chief Patrol Agent." The Regional Commissioner did not refer to any problems that had arisen under existing regulations. He did not cite any instances of harm which had befallen children released to unrelated adults, nor did he make any reference to suits that had been filed against the INS arising out of allegedly improper releases. It has remained undisputed throughout this proceeding that the blanket detention policy is not necessary to ensure the attendance of children at deportation hearings.
Implementation of this policy sparked concern in a number of quarters because the policy resulted in the governmental detention of a large number of children who posed no apparent risk to the community and whose presence at their respective hearings could be ensured by responsible individuals. Various individuals and groups, including many appearing as amici in this rehearing en banc, were among those who reacted adversely to the new policy. These included church groups, Amnesty International, Lawyers' Committee for Human Rights, International Human Rights Law Group and Defense for Children International.
During the course of this litigation, the INS codified the regional policy into the nationally applicable regulation now at issue. In promulgating that regulation, the INS did not refer to any particular problem that had arisen in the course of administering the immigration laws as they affected children. Rather, it simply cited the "dramatic increase in the number of juvenile aliens" found unaccompanied by a parent, guardian or a adult relative. 53 Fed.Reg. 17,449 (May 17, 1988). The regulation allows release to a somewhat broader class of people than did the Western Region policy, i.e., a variety of adult relatives as opposed to just parents and legal guardians, but it prohibits release in cases where other responsible adults are available to take custody of the minor. It permits release to unrelated adults only in "unusual and compelling circumstances." 8 C.F.R. § 242.24.1
In promulgating the regulation, the INS recognized that the principal factor bearing on release or detention is the likelihood of appearance at future proceedings. It also recognized that the policy of preventing release to responsible adults was not related to the issue of flight risk or the administration of any provision of the immigration laws. Its principal justification for the detention rule was the theory that unless the INS were able to do a comprehensive "home study" of the proposed custodian, the child's own interests would be better served by detention. The INS stated:
As with adults, the decision of whether to detain or release a juvenile depends on the likelihood that the alien will appear for all future proceedings. However, with respect to juveniles a determination must also be made as to whose custody the juvenile should be released. On the one hand, the concern for the welfare of the juvenile will not permit release to just any adult. On the other hand, the Service has neither the expertise nor the resources to conduct home studies for placement of each juvenile released.
53 Fed.Reg. at 17,449.
In response to comments suggesting that release to responsible adults should be permitted on a regular basis, the INS stated that it did not have the resources or expertise necessary to make a determination, in each case, whether release to the adult in question would be in the child's best interests. 53 Fed.Reg. at 17,449. The INS did not state any basis for its assumption that home studies would have to be conducted. Nor did the INS indicate that it had conducted such studies before releasing children to unrelated adults prior to the promulgation of this policy. Commenters also complained that the regulation's provision that release to unrelated adults could occur in "unusual and compelling circumstances" was too vague to provide meaningful guidance. The INS responded that such vagueness was deliberate, designed to provide "the broadest possible discretion" to INS officials. Id. Finally, commenters suggested that the INS should permit individuals or organizations to act as intermediaries between the INS and the parent or guardian of an alien child, to allow for release where that parent or guardian is afraid to come forward personally because of his or her own illegal alien status. After pointing out that "[t]his proposal raises some of the same concerns that release to any reliable adult raises, for example, the inability of the Service to perform home studies," the INS concluded that it would "continue to consider the proposal," but would promulgate the regulation without such a provision at this time. Id. at 17,450. The final regulation was approved on May 17, 1988.
Thе named plaintiffs, including named plaintiff Jenny Flores, filed the action on July 11, 1985, challenging the Western Region's policy then in effect. These named plaintiffs represented a class of minors who do not pose a risk of flight or harm to the community, and have responsible third parties available to receive them, and are thus being detained only because no adult relative or legal guardian is available to take custody of them. Their complaint contained a number of claims. In the panel majority opinion, Judge Wallace described them as follows:
The first claim alleged that the Western Region's bond release condition violated the Immigration & Nationality Act (INA), 8 U.S.C. § 1101 et seq., the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. § 552 et seq., the fifth amendment's due process clause and equal protection guarantee, and international law. Flores's second claim challenged the INS's failure to provide (1) "prompt written notice" to the detainee that the bond release condition had been imposed, and (2) "prompt, mandatory, neutral and detached" review following arrest of (a) whether probable cause to arrest existed, (b) whether imposition of the bond condition was necessary to ensure future appearance, and (c) whether any available adult was suitable to ensure the detained juvenile's well-being and appearance at future proceedings. The second claim alleged that these failures violated due process and international law. Plaintiffs' last five claims, which challenged various conditions of the minors' confinement, ... were resolved by settlement or motion....
Flores v. Meese,
Between the time that the complaint was filed and the promulgation of the national regulation implementing the Western Region policy, the district court disposed of several motions. With respect to the limitation on release to parents or legal guardians, the court ruled the provision violated equal protection. It agreed with Flores that the INS' practice of permitting alien minors in exclusion proceedings to be released to a broader class of adults than those in deportation proceedings was not supported by a rational justification. See 8 C.F.R. § 212.5(a)(2)(ii) (1987) (alien minors in exclusion proceedings could be released to adult relatives or to nоn-relatives). When the INS promulgated the regulation here at issue, it amended the regulation regarding release of children in exclusion proceedings to incorporate by reference the same restrictions as those operative in the deportation context, thus mooting the district court's ruling on this issue. See 8 C.F.R. § 212.5(a)(2)(ii) (1988). The court still had under advisement various motions relating to the procedural implementation of the INS' policy when the INS promulgated the official regulation.
Upon promulgation of the regulation, the district court asked for supplemental briefs and then entered an order granting summary judgment to the plaintiff class. The order invalidated the blanket detention of minors where a responsible adult could ensure attendance at the deportation hearing, and it required a hearing before a neutral and detached official in each case to determine whether release was appropriate and the conditions of release. The order provided:
1. Defendants ... shall release any minor otherwise eligible for release on bond or recognizance to his parents, guardian, custodian, conservator, or other responsible adult party. Prior to any such release, the defendants may require from such persons a written promise to bring such minor before the appropriate officer or court when requested by the INS.
2. Whenever a minor is released as aforesaid, the minor shall be promptly advised in writing in a language he understands of any restrictions imposed upon his release.
3. Any minor taken into custody shall be forthwith afforded an administrative hearing to determine probable cause for his arrest and the need for any restrictions placed upon his release. Such hearing shall be held with or without a request by or on behalf of the minor.
The Attorney General and INS appealed. The majority of the panel for our court vacated the first paragraph of the district court's order, holding that the detention policy did not implicate any of the plaintiffs' fundamental rights, and that due deference to the INS' choices in implementing congressional immigration policy required approval of the INS detention policy restricting release. The majority characterized the right claimed by the class as a substantive due process right "to be released to an unrelated adult." Slip op. at 10788. Finding that the Constitution does not guarantee such a right, the majority appliеd a highly deferential standard of review to what it saw as an exercise of the INS' unique expertise and authority.
In considering the procedural aspects of the district court's order as embodied in paragraph three, the panel majority remanded. It rejected the appellees' contention that the fourth amendment requirement of review by a neutral and detached magistrate of probable cause for arrest, as the Supreme Court has enunciated in Gerstein v. Pugh,
Judge Fletcher, in dissent, described the case as "among the most disturbing I have confronted in my years on the court."
In their petition for rehearing en banc, plaintiffs contend, inter alia, that the panel majority erred in failing to recognize their fundamental interest in liberty. It also erred, they argue, in holding that, under either Gerstein v. Pugh or Mathews v. Eldridge, any procedure other than an individual hearing before an independent officer could provide adequate protections for the right at stake.
Before us for decision are three principal sets of issues. The first involves the detention policy itself and whether it affects any constitutionally protected liberty interests of the plaintiffs. The second involves the nature of the federal governmental interest furthered by such a policy, the justifications set forth by the agency for such a policy and the extent to which we must defer to the agency in the promulgation of such policies. The third is whether, after examination of these issues, the appropriate procedural model for the determinations at issue is the criminal model of Gerstein v. Pugh or the civil model of Mathews v. Eldridge, or indeed whether, in the context of this case, it makes any difference whether a criminal or civil model is chоsen. Our discussion focuses on each of these areas in turn.
III. DISCUSSION
Defendants maintain that the plaintiffs' liberty interests are limited because of their status as aliens and children. We therefore examine in some detail the manner in which courts and Congress deal with the questions of rights of aliens and children.
A. Plaintiffs' Interests as Aliens
The Constitution protects the rights of aliens to due process and equal protection. Yick Wo v. Hopkins,
A crucial component of the right to personal liberty is the ability to test the legality of any direct restraint that the government seeks to place on that liberty. This ability is guaranteed through the availability of the writ of habeas corpus to challenge the lawfulness of one's imprisonment. The right to seek such a writ has its roots in English law that predates the formation of this nation. See Habeas Corpus Act of 1679, 31 Car. II Ch. 2. It was incorporated among the first rights guaranteed by the United States Constitution. U.S. Const. art. I, § 9. There thus can be no question that this right is a key part of the American legal system.
In any discussion of the constitutional guarantee of liberty, the importance of habeas corpus must not be understated. As one commentator has described it:
Over the centuries habeas corpus has been the common-law world's "freedom writ" by whose process the courts may require the production of all prisoners and inquire into the legality of their incarceration, failing which they have been set free. Of the writ of habeas corpus, the United States Supreme Court has appropriately noted: "There is no higher duty than to maintain it unimpaired."
1 Modern Constitutional Law § 5:148 at 436 (quoting Bowen v. Johnston,
It has long been accepted that alienage does not prevent a person from testing the legality of confinement through habeas corpus. See Wong Wing v. United States,
That the detention at issue here is a civil detention imposed in the course of administering the immigration laws does not alter the relevance of the principles of habeas corpus. Still the leading case involving a test of the legality of detention under immigration laws is Carlson v. Landon,
The petitioners in Carlson challenged their pre-deportation detention on the ground that there had been no sufficient showing that they presented an actual risk of flight or harm to the community if released pending further proceedings. Rather, they were denied release on a finding that each was an active member of the Communist party. This finding, they argued, was not sufficient to support detention. See
The Court rejected this argument on the ground that the decision to detain them based on their active membership in the Communist party was made through an exercise of the discretion delegated to the Attorney General under the immigration laws. The delegated discretion was to determine which aliens pose a threat of harm to the community. The Court held that detention based on Communist party membership and activity was not an abuse of that discretion. The Court noted that the evidence went "beyond unexplained membership and show[ed] a degree ... of participation in Communist activities."
The Court was careful to observe, however, that the discretion of the Attorney General was not without bounds. The INS policy in Carlson did not amount to blanket detention. The Court pointed out that there was "no evidence or contention that all persons arrested as deportable ... for Communist membership are denied bail." Id. at 541-42,
The most recent comprehensive Supreme Court discussion of an individual's interest in liberty is set in the context of adults held in pretrial detention without regard to citizenship. United States v. Salerno,
History may have passed Carlson by in some respects, particularly in its assessment of the danger attending political activity, but the case, in significant respects relevant to this case, provides guidance. Carlson holds that under our Constitution and an Immigration Act materially the same as the current one, the INS cannot detain individuals without a particularized exercise of discretion through which it determines that detention of an individual would prevent harm to the community or further some other important governmental interest Congress has delegated to the INS. See also C. Gordon and S. Mailman, 1 Immigration Law and Procedure § 1.03[d] (1988) ("the alien in deportation proceedings may be detained or required to post bond only upon a finding that he is a threat to the national security or likely to abscond.").
Thus, we must hold that aliens have a fundamental right to be free from governmental detention unless there is a determination that such detention furthers a significant governmental interest. That right is secured by the Constitution in its enumerated guarantee of habeas corpus to all individuals, including aliens, to test the validity of their detention through judicial scrutiny of the basis for confinement at the hands of the government. See Salerno,
B. Plaintiffs' Interests as Children
The plaintiffs are not only aliens; they are also minors. The INS contends that this factor materially changes the nature of their liberty interest, thereby rendering the detention policy reasonable and appropriate. We therefore turn to the question of what effect the juvenile status of these plaintiffs may have on the analysis of their liberty interests and the protections that must be given to those interests.
The Constitution protects the rights of children to due process of law in conjunction with any deprivation of liberty. In re Gault,
Policies constructed to deal with the confinement of children at both the state and federal levels have recognized the practical need to avoid institutional detention where less restrictive means are available. It is the states, rather than the federal government, which are primarily responsible for child welfare issues. State courts have artiсulated the view that institutional confinement should be used only when another type of placement such as foster care is not possible. See, e.g., R.P. v. State,
Congressional policy, where relevant, also favors avoidance of the institutionalization of juveniles. The federal government does have the occasion to process juvenile offenders when, for example, they violate federal laws or commit crimes on Indian reservations. In such situations, the Federal Juvenile Delinquency Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 5031 et seq., governs the treatment of the offenders. That Act's provisions regarding detention specify that it should occur in "a foster home or community based facility" instead of an institution, if possible. 18 U.S.C. § 5035 (regarding pre-disposition detention); 18 U.S.C. § 5039 (regarding detention after disposition). These provisions evidence an understanding that the juvenile's liberty should be curtailed only by the least restrictive means necessary to achieve the purpose at hand, and that the interests of juveniles and of society are best served by keeping such offenders in homes rather than in institutions whenever practicable.
The foregoing analysis compels the conclusion that, just as the plaintiffs' entitlement to liberty absent a valid, particularized basis for confinement does not diminish due to their alienage, their minority does not materially change the nature of that entitlement. The INS is therefore incorrect when it asserts that plaintiffs have no fundamental liberty interest at stake. The INS is also incorrect in asserting that to prevail, the plaintiffs must be able to find in the Constitution itself, or law interpreting the Constitution, an express recognition of a "substantive due process right to be released to an unrelated adult." Such release is not the constitutional interest being secured. It is the remedy the district court imposed after ruling that the defendant's policy unconstitutionally interfered with plaintiffs' interest in freedom from unjustified governmental detention.
Whether the imposition of such a remedy was apprоpriate depends upon whether the detention serves a significant federal governmental purpose. It is to that issue that we now turn.
C. Government Purposes Involved
This case is unprecedented in that it involves post-arrest detention of persons who have not been convicted of any crime, do not pose a risk of flight, and who have not been determined to present any threat of harm to themselves or to the community. Whatever purposes detention serves, they do not relate to punishment, to the need for attendance at further proceedings, or to avoidance of an identifiable risk of harm. Contrast Salerno,
The INS articulates two reasons for the detention. First, the INS suggests that the child's interests would be better served by detention than by release to a responsible adult whose living environment the INS does not have the means to investigate. Second, it asserts that the policy is necessary to protect it from potential liability in the event some harm should befall the child after release.
The INS does not articulate any legal basis for its position that these are valid INS concerns. The first flies in the face of the Supreme Court's ruling in Gault that children should be treated in a manner least restrictive of liberty. It also expresses a view contrary to the Supreme Court's decision in Schall, which required a foreseeable risk of harm to justify detention. While the Supreme Court in Schall recognized that a child, because of a lack of maturity, should have some adult custody and care,
The INS in essence maintains, however, that we should not look behind their articulation of concerns because we must defer to any such articulation. Agencies are, of course, entitled to some deference when they make determinations that relate to an area of their special expertise. See United States v. Shimer,
The justifications asserted here, however, relate to child welfare and the potential liability of child welfare agencies. Child welfare is not an area of INS expertise and its decisions in this area are not entitled to any deference. See Hampton v. Mow Sun Wong,
Our conclusion that the INS cannot maintain a blanket policy of detention thus does not absolve the INS from the responsibility of making individualized decisions concerning the fate of children it has arrested. Due process requires a particularized exercise of discretion in conjunction with the decision to grant or deny release to any alien. See Carlson,
The INS' secondary justification for its detention policy is that if it released a child to an unrelated adult based on a determination short of a detailed "home study," it could be subject to liability in the event that some harm befell the child. The INS does not specify the source of such liability.
We find little indication that the INS would be subject to liability for releasing a minor to an unrelated adult without a "home study." Such a "study" is concededly beyond the expertise of the Service. The Supreme Cоurt's holding in Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of the Fed. Bureau of Narcotics,
Decisions before and since DeShaney, as well as DeShaney itself, compel the conclusion that governmental agencies face far greater exposure to liability by maintaining a special custodial relationship than by releasing children from the constraints of governmental custody. See DeShaney,
We therefore conclude that the first paragraph of the district court's order is an appropriate means to prevent incarceration of juveniles where such incarceration serves no legitimate purpose of the INS. It provides that release to a responsible adult shall occur only if the child would have otherwise been eligible for release to a relative under the challenged policy. It takes into account the need to secure attendance at immigration proceedings, and does not foreclose the ability of the INS to order detention if there are other, valid reasons for detention. In addition, by specifying that where there is no relative or legal guardian available release may be made to a "responsible" party, it allows room for the INS to make the necessary determination of whether a party who is willing to assume custody of the child is fit to do so.
D. Procedural Due Process and Part Three of the District
Court's Order
From the beginning of this litigation the parties have disputed whether the determination of what process is due in conjunction with the decision to detain members of the plaintiff class should be made pursuant to Gerstein,
Because we have held that the plaintiffs' interest in freedom from detention requires that the decision to detain be made only in conjunction with a neutral and detached determination of necessity, we must affirm Part Three of the district court's order regardless of whether we apply Mathews or Gerstein. In so doing, we note that under current regulations, the INS is already required to maintain the mechanisms for providing review by an Immigration Judge of any decision to detain an alien or of conditions imposed on the release of such alien, if the alien requests such a hearing. See 8 C.F.R. § 242.2(d). The only new requirements that Part Three of the district court's order places on the INS are that, if the alien is a child, such a hearing must be held regardless of whether the alien requests it, and the determination at the hearing must include an inquiry into whether any non-relative who offers to take custody represents a danger to thе child's well being. The first of these additional requirements is reasonable because the members of the plaintiff class, as children, are less capable than others of understanding what they are waiving by failing to request a hearing. The second is reasonable in light of the private interest at stake. We therefore conclude that Part Three of the district court's order provides the appropriate procedural safeguards for the deprivation here at issue, and accordingly uphold it.
IV. CONCLUSION
The district court correctly held that the blanket detention policy is unlawful. The district court's order appropriately requires children to be released to a responsible adult where no relative or legal guardian is available, and mandates a hearing before an immigration judge for the determination of the terms and conditions of release.
The majority panel opinion is VACATED and the order of Judge Kelleher is AFFIRMED in all respects.
TANG, Circuit Judge, concurring:
I concur wholeheartedly in the majority's judgment and I concur in the majority opinion insofar as it goes. I write separately to emphasize my belief that the liberty interest at issue--freedom from governmental detention and restraint--is a fundamental right expressly protected by the fifth amendment to the Constitution. Indeed, freedom from governmental restraint is the core, the very crux of any governmental system dedicated to preserving the integrity and inviolability of the individual. I write separately also to highlight the two distinct deprivations of liberty occasioned by the INS's policy.
A. The Right at Issue
The original panel opinion in this case and the current dissent denominate the right at issue as the "right to be released to unrelated adults." This characterization of the children's liberty interest stands the Constitution on its head. It presumes the government's right to detain and requires children, who have committed no offense greater than being suspected of being deportable, to prove their entitlement to release. Even assuming that non-textual rights need to be carefully articulated, there is no reason to afford "liberty"--language right out of the Constitution's text--such a cramped interpretation.
I agree with the majority's conclusion that one textual source of the right to freedom from governmental restraint is the Constitution's habeas corpus guarantee. U.S. Const. art. I, § 9. The majority's analysis of the constitutional basis for the right at issue is not complete, however.
Physical freedom from governmental detention and restraint--liberty in its most elemental form--is a fundаmental constitutional right guaranteed by the due process clause of the fifth amendment. This freedom from governmental restraint is both a substantive right and an entitlement to certain procedural protections when the government acts to deprive a person of physical liberty.
A recent acknowledgment of the substantive due process right to freedom from governmental restraint can be found in DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dep't of Social Servs.,
In the substantive due process analysis, it is the State's affirmative act of restraining the individual's freedom to act on his own behalf--through incarceration, institutionalization, or other similar restraint of personal liberty--which is the "deprivation of liberty" triggering the protections of the Due Process Clause.
Id. at 200,
The DeShaney court's observation was not novel. Numerous precedents already recognized the individual's fundamental right to freedom from restraint. See, e.g., United States v. Salerno,
These cases recognize explicitly what our constitutional jurisprudence historically has acknowledged implicitly through presumptions and assumptions about the relationship between government and the governed in this country. Liberty is the norm; arrest, detention, or restraint by the state is the exception. To operate otherwise makes a mockery of "government of the people, by the people." Some of our most cherished rights--freedom of speech and of religion, the right to vote, travel, and to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures--would mean nothing if we had to live under the heavy hand of government.
The strict burdens that the Constitution imposes on government's efforts to deprive individuals of their liberty reveal that freedom from governmental restraint is a fundamental right and the cornerstone of democratic government. Government may not incarcerate a person unless it proves that person's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. In re Winship,
To reduce liberty, as the original panel and the dissent suggest, to nothing more than an entitlement to certain procedural protections and thereby to burden the children with showing a "right to release" ignores the very substance of the Bill of Rights. The Bill of Rights, including the fifth amendment, is our country's blueprint for individual freedom. It maps out limits beyond which the government may not step. Our conception of liberty should thus be drawn in terms of what government may not do (restrain) rather than in terms of what children must do (show entitlement to release).
To see the right in strictly procedural terms fails to recognize that the genesis of these procedures and presumptions is our Constitution's fundamental belief in the sovereignty of the individual. It is this principle that defines the substantive right to liberty, to freedom from governmental restraint. The rules and presumptions mandated by procedural due process are not themselves "liberty." Rather, they are the indispensable guarantees and requirements of the substantive right to freedom from governmental restraint. Liberty under the due process clause is thus both a process and a condition, and it is a right with which the children who brought this action are endowed.2B. Procedural Due Process
Defining the right at issue only begins our constitutional inquiry. That a right is fundamental does not mean that it is inviolable. See, e.g., Youngberg,
Much of the unease occasioned by the INS's policy and the original panel's opinion derives from the fact that the INS imposes conditions on a child's release before there is even a neutral and independent review of its authority to detain a child (and, concomitantly, to limit her release). This puts the cart before the horse. We cannot fairly discuss the INS's ability to condition the children's release or its interest in ensuring the children's return and safety until the INS has established its authority to detain the children in the first instance. Unlike the majority, I turn therefore to the procedural due process issue before addressing the constitutionality of the release conditions.
Much of the parties' debate focuses on whether Gerstein v. Pugh,
In applying Mathews, we must balance (1) the private interest that will be affected by the official action; (2) the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards; and (3) the government's interest, including the function involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the additional or substantive procedural requirement would entail. Mathews,
The private interest at issue is, of course, the children's liberty from governmental detention and restraint. This interest is substantial and compelling. "[C]ivil commitment for any purpose constitutes a significant deprivation оf liberty that requires due process protection." Addington,
Moreover, the adverse consequences of detention are legion, consequences exacerbated by the youth of the detainees. Detention by the government stigmatizes children, regardless of the ultimate resolution of their respective cases. Children in INS detention centers enjoy, at best, very limited educational and recreational opportunities. They are away from family and friends; every aspect of their daily life is regulated by strangers. See Plasencia,
Furthermore, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of liberty by the INS is substantial. As Judge Fletcher pointed out in her dissent from the original panel's decision in this case, many persons arrested by the INS will ultimately prove not to be deportable. Some of these children will be found to be citizens, legal aliens, or entitled to political asylum.
Currently, an officer's determination of deportability is subject only to review by a second immigration officer, who determines whether prima facie evidence of a violation of the immigration laws exists. 8 C.F.R. § 287.3. If no second officer is available, the prima facie determination may be made by the original arresting officer. Id. At no point does an official detached from the enforcement function test the sufficiency of the evidence to arrest and detain. See id.3
Our Constitution has long recognized that combining the roles of prosecutor and adjudicator in a single entity is a recipe for fundamentally unfair and erroneous decision making. See, e.g., Schweiker v. McClure,
These cases recognize the importance of neutral and detached review аs a protection against the overzealous prosecutor or law enforcement official.
A democratic society, in which respect for the dignity of all [persons] is central, naturally guards against the misuse of the law enforcement process. Zeal in tracking down crime is not in itself an assurance of soberness of judgment. Disinterestedness in law enforcement does not alone prevent disregard of cherished liberties. Experience has therefore counseled that safeguards must be provided against the dangers of the overzealous as well as the despotic.
McNabb v. United States,
The INS's procedure does nothing to protect against the risk of error and unfairness. The field officer's determination is, at best, reviewed by another law enforcement officer. At worst, the arresting officer reviews his own decision. The INS cites no case, nor have any been found, where the Supreme Court has tolerated a deprivation of physical liberty unaccompanied by any provision for independent and neutral review of the decision to incarcerate. To the contrary, statutory schemes for detention (civil or criminal) previously reviewed by the courts have involved some measure of independent review of the initial decision to detain. See, e.g., Salerno,
With respect to the third Mathews factor, the INS asserts in vague and conclusory terms that it will be burdened by a mandate to provide prompt impartial review of its officers' findings of probable cause to arrest and detain children. The INS provides no specifics, however. Both the record and common sense, on the other hand, reveal that the requirement need not be unduly burdensome. A quasi-judicial scheme of administrative judges (immigration judges) already exists within the INS that could provide the necessary detached review. The institution of such a practice, moreover, will relieve INS law enforcement officers of the duty to review their fellow officers' arrests to determine whether a prima facie case for deportability exists.
Given the substantial liberty interest involved, the proven record and constant risk of error, and the failure of the INS to articulate anything more than vague and unsubstantiated objections to neutral review, I conclude that the due process clause requires the INS promptly to afford detained children an impartial and detached review of their detention. At such a hearing, the burden must be on the INS to demonstrate the propriety of detention. Gallinot,
C. Conditions on Release
Once the INS has demonstrated before a neutral and detached decisionmaker a prima facie case of deportability, the INS's legitimate interests in ensuring that child's return for future hearings and, to some extent, that child's safety entitle it to impose conditions on the child's release. Those conditions, however, may not restrict the child's liberty any more than is necessary to achieve the INS's stated goals of ensuring return and safety.
I wholeheartedly agree with the majority's holding that the regulation's prohibition on release to responsible third parties cannot survive scrutiny under the due process clause. Where, as here, the children detained have not individually been shown to be a flight risk, a threat to the community or to themselves, or guilty of any crime, governmental restrictions on liberty must be narrowly tailored to promote the government's articulated interests.
As the majority aptly demonstrates, the INS has not shown that precluding release to child welfare agencies, church groups, immigration rights' groups, and other responsible third parties increases the risks of flight or injury to the child. Unsubstantiated speculation that flies in the face of the historic record of successful releases to third parties cannot outweigh the children's compelling liberty interest. On the other hand, the tragic consequences of prolonged detention are readily discernible. Nor are the INS's liability concerns sufficient to justify confined detention. As the majority notes, the legal liability accompanying prolonged detention greatly exceeds the INS's unproven and overblown apprehensions about legal exposure after release to a responsible third party.
CONCLUSION
While the majority and I differ to some extent in our analyses of the constitutional issues presented, our points of agreement are much more numerous. I believe that the children's fundamental right to freedom from government detention has its roots, not only in the Constitution's guarantee of habeas corpus, but also in the fifth amendment's protection against deprivations of liberty without due process. I also agree with the majority's reasoning and conclusions concerning the conditions on release and procedural due process. I write separately on these issues only to emphasize that we are dealing with the constitutionality of two distinct deprivations of liberty--the initial decision to detain and secondly the conditions imposed upon release after detention. Only when the initial and most drastic deprivation of liberty has been accomplished in a manner that comports with the Constitution can we then address the legality of the INS's release conditions.
WILLIAM A. NORRIS, Circuit Judge, concurring:
I join Judge Schroeder's opinion for the en banc court, but write separately to say that the INS' policy of incarcerating children pending deportation hearings rather than releasing them to the temporary custody of responsible non-relative adults, not only violates due process, but does so flagrantly.
This case does not involve the fashioning of some "new" substantive due process right to "be released to unrelated adults," see dissenting op. at 1379 (Wallace, C.J.). It has nothing to do with the controversy over constitutional protection of privacy interests. The dissent's concern about limiting the reach of "substantive due process" and its reliance on such cases as Bowers v. Hardwick,
The governmental interests asserted by the INS to justify its policy are trivial. The INS admits that its policy does not even serve the government's legitimate interest in assuring the children's appearance at deportation hearings. What the INS' justification for its policy boils down to is money. It claims that it does not have the "competence" or "resources" to "conduct meaningful screening ... of the environment in which the children will live". Appellants' Response to Order Dated August 20, 1990 at 6-7. It characterizes home studies as a "delicate undertaking" that is "ordinarily carried out by skilled social workers." Id. Translated, this means that our government chooses to hold children in detention facilities, despite the INS' lack of competence to care for them, rather than pay for the services of qualified social workers to conduct home studies of the kind that county social service agencies perform routinely. The INS makes no effort to price such services, nor does it make any effort to show that the cost of such services would be greater than the cost of holding the children in the INS' own detention facilities. It merely throws up its bureaucratic hands and shrugs that it has no money to pay for home studies.
The INS' justification for its policy pales in comparison with the governmental interests that have been held to justify prehearing detention. These children are not dangerous, as in Salerno,
In an effort to salvage the INS policy, the dissent goes so far as to assert that the Due Process Clause provides less protection for the liberty of children than for the liberty of adults. Liberty interests are not "weighed differently for minors in comparison with adults, as the dissent suggests." See dissenting op. (Wallace, C.J.) at 1380 (citing Schall ). Schall stands for the quite different proposition that a juvenile's liberty interest can "in appropriate circumstances be subordinated to the State's parens patriae interest in preserving and promoting the welfare of the child." Schall,
Finally, the mere incantation of Congress' plenary power over immigration policy should not be the siren song that leads us astray from applying settled due process principles to the facts of this case. Congress' broad power to fashion immigration policy no more authorizes the INS to hold people without due process than a state's sovereign power to pass criminal laws authorizes the imprisonment of people without due process. By invoking Congress' power to set standards of deportability as an excuse for the detention of children pending hearings on their deportability under those standards, the dissent blurs the distinction between the enactment of immigration laws and the enforcement of those laws. I know of no authority for the dissent's boundless description of the "judiciary's limited judicial role" in reviewing all "immigration decisions" or any action it can relegate to "the immigration context." See dissenting op. (Wallace, C.J.) at 1380-1381. In applying due process principles, we balance "interests," not "contexts."
The very cases that the dissent cites for limiting judicial review of all "immigration decisions" recognize the crucial distinction that the dissent ignores. "In the enforcement of ... [immigration policies], the Executive Branch of the Government must respect the procedural safeguards of due process.... [even if] the formulation of these policies is entrusted exclusively to Congress." Fiallo v. Bell,
In sum, the deprivation of the children's liberty is so plain, and the government's interest in detaining them so trivial, that the due process violation could not be more clear-cut.
RYMER, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment in part and dissenting in part:
I agree with the majority that this case is particularly troubling. The thought of prolonged detention of children who have done nothing more than to be in this country illegally, and to be without a parent or relative willing to come to their rescue, touches a raw nerve in us all. Even so would we be sickened were one of these children to be precipitously released to abuse, neglect or worse.1 A constitutionally appropriate balance must therefore be struck between the alien minors' interest in freedom from institutional restraint and the government's responsibility for their safety.
I write separately even though I agree with much of the majority's bottom line, because I believe the case can be decided more narrowly and in a way that will safeguard valuable rights more effectively than the district court's order. I part company with both the district court and the majority to the extent they hold that the Constitution substantively requires release to any responsible adult who will promise to bring the minor to future hearings, and I disagree that a probable cause hearing is constitutionally required for juveniles held in deportation proceedings. Instead, I conclude that current INS procedures are constitutionally insufficient to afford an alien juvenile the process she is due when it has been determined that she may be released from INS custody, but that she has no parent, guardian, adult relative, or person designated by a parent or guardian to assume custody. Without assurance of an early determination by a neutral hearing officer of whether to release the juvenile under these circumstances, and absent an outside limit on the length of time the juvenile may continue to be held even though it has been determined that she is eligible for release, the risk that the child will be unduly detained outweighs the government's remaining interests in maintaining custody and assuring well-being.
The Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment assures that "No person shall ... be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law...." The Supreme Court has held that
the Due Process Clause protects individuals against two types of government action. So-called 'substantive due process' prevents the government from engaging in conduct that 'shocks the conscience,' Rochin v California,
United States v. Salerno,
The district court's judgment does not indicate which component was violated. To the extent its order requires a substantive change in the regulation--directing release to a "custodian, conservator, or other responsible adult party" who promises to bring the minor to future hearings, I infer that the court believed § 242.24(b)(4) runs afoul of due process on substantive grounds; I assume it also found the regulation wanting on procedural due process grounds since it ordered an administrative hearing to determine probable cause for the minor's arrest and need for restrictions on her release.
While Flores does contend that the minors' interest in personal liberty is a fundamental constitutional right that substantively overrides the INS restriction on release of children, in her brief to this court and at oral argument she concedes that the district court's order may be seen as wholly procedural and could be affirmed on procedural grounds. Because I agree that the INS's regulation falters for lack of minimum procedures comporting with due process, I see no need to reach more broadly at this time.2
The fifth amendment protects physical freedom by requiring that the government satisfy rigorous procedural safeguards before taking it away. Procedural fairness has traditionally been tested under Mathews v. Eldridge,
The constitutional sufficiency of procedures provided in any situation, of course, varies with the circumstances. In evaluating the procedures in any case, the courts must consider the intеrest at stake for the individual, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of the interest through the procedures used as well as the probable value of additional or different procedural safeguards, and the interest of the government in using the current procedures rather than additional or different procedures.
Id. at 34,
The alien juveniles' interest has considerable weight: they stand to continue losing freedom from INS restraint even though the INS will not have determined that they need to be detained for reasons of flight or safety.3 On the other hand, the government's interests in the well-being of minors in its custody and in assuring that these children not be entrusted to the care of an unqualified person are likewise strong. In addition,
[t]he Government's interest in efficient administration of the immigration laws at the border also is weighty. Further, it must weigh heavily in the balance that control over matters of immigration is a sovereign prerogative, largely within the control of the executive and the legislature. The role of the judiciary is limited to determining whether the procedures meet the essential standard of fairness under the Due Process Clause and does not extend to imposing procedures that merely displace congressional choices of policy.
Id. at 34-35,
Flores challenges the regulation on four scores: (1) lack of a probable cause hearing on deportability; (2) lack of a prompt custody hearing; (3) failure to impose a burden of proof on the government; and (4) absence of independent review. She urges that the district court's order, imposing limited procedural safeguards, be affirmed. While the INS agrees that the record permits Flores's procedural due process claim to be resolved by this court without remand for further proceedings, it argues that the claim lacks merit because there is minimal risk of erroneous deprivation of the minors' interest. It relies on 8 U.S.C. § 1357(a)(2), which provides that an alien must be taken for examination before an officer other than the one who arrested her "without unnecessary delay," and on a regulation that requires the examining officer to be satisfied that there is prima facie evidence to believe the alien is deportable. 8 C.F.R. § 287.3 (1990). It therefore argues that even if Gerstein v. Pugh,
Turning first to whether a probable cause hearing is required, I agree with the INS that importing Gerstein to a civil immigration proceeding is problematic, see INS v. Lopez-Mendoza,
The INS's argument, however, fails to come to grips with the absence of other, well-recognized ingredients of procedural fairness. Unlike the statutes at issue in Schall v. Martin,
Current procedurеs tend to deprive the minors of their interest in release in at least two major respects. First, there is no process there. While procedures provided by the executive in immigration matters are rarely held inadequate, Landon,
With these protections in place, I see no problem with the regulation's failure to put the burden of proof on the government. I do not construe § 242.24(b)(4)'s mention of "unusual and compelling circumstances" as requiring the child to show anything unusual about herself or about the adult ready to care for her. I interpret the phrase to be simply a shorthand reference to the admittedly unusual and compelling circumstances of a juvenile who has no parent, guardian, or adult relative to take custody upon release, as contrasted with juveniles who have such parties to be released to under subsection (b)(1). The INS itself characterizes mandatory release under (b)(1) as "routine."7 By contrast, release to an unrelated adult under subsection (b)(4) is neither mandatory nor routine, but rather it is an "unusual and compelling" circumstance in which discretion must be exercised so as to assure the child's well-being as well as appearance. So construed, the "unusual and compelling" language does not infringe due process because it imposes no impediment to release that is unrelated to the juvenile's status and the government's interest.
Because immigration is involved, the government has a greater interest in using the procedures now in place than it might have in other civil matters, such as commitment proceedings, or in criminal cases. There is little question that the INS is not in the business of social work,8 and its disinclination to play probation officer as well as prosecutor is quite understandable. Yet the obvious value that the Court has seen in the array of safeguards built into the Bail Reform Act, and the New York Family Court Act authorizing pretrial detention of accused juvenile delinquents, which it considered in Salerno and Schall, must have great weight against the modest imposition that a reasonable time limit, hearing before a neutral officer and a level playing field would entail. An examining officer who is obliged to be impartial is obviously available because conduct of the prima facie evidence hearing is entrusted to such a person.
Moreover, apart from inconvenience and perhaps some expense, there is no readily apparent reason why the INS cannot discharge its parens patriae obligations by seeking appointment of a guardian ad litem for minors in its custody. See, e.g., Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act, § 504, codified at 18 U.S.C. § 5034 (providing that magistrate may appoint guardian ad litem if parent or guardian of juvenile is not present, will not cooperate, or has adverse interests to the juvenile); Schall,
Considering current procedures and alternatives in light of the juveniles' interest in freedom from continued restraint and the government's in their well-being and appearance leads me to conclude that the balance tips against constitutional sufficiency of the process used by the INS in determining whether to release a child under § 242.24(b)(4). At a minimum, the juvenile who is presumptively eligible for release but has no parent or relative should be afforded an early hearing before a neutral officer. Unlike the majority or the district court, I would not remove the hearing officer's discretion, but that discretion should be informed by the government's interests in appearance and well-being and the juvenile's in release to a fully responsible adult.
Accordingly, I would affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment for Flores because the INS regulations fail to meet minimum requirements of procedural due process. I would strike those parts of the district court's judgment that rewrite § 242.24(b)(4) to require release to a "responsible adult party" who promises to bring the minor to future hearings and that mandate a probable cause hearing in place of the prima facie evidence hearing. I believe subsection (b)(4) as written affords greater flexibility and protection to minors in this respect than the order, because it permits release to any adult so long as that adult agrees to care for the child's well-being and to assure her presence. I would also strike the requirement of an administrative hearing to determine need for detention, and I would modify the order to require a prompt hearing before a neutral hearing officer to determine whether the minor should be released under § 242.24(b)(4) construed consistently with the constraints of due process.
WALLACE, Chief Judge, with whom Circuit Judges WIGGINS, BRUNETTI, and LEAVY join, dissenting:
The facts were adequately summarized in the majority panel opinion. See Flores v. Meese,
* My first disagreement with the majority is over the liberty right at issue. At oral argument, the alien children argued that the regulation impinged on their right to be free from physical restraint--a right to liberty which they allege is fundamental. The Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), on the other hand, contended that the right at issue is a nonfundamental right to be released to unrelated adults. Without discussion, the majority adopts the former characterization, a characterization with which I disagree.
Perhaps the insistence on viewing the right at issue as a general "right to liberty" comes from the majority's mistaken characterization of the regulation as a "blanket detention policy." Maj. op. at 1354. As the facts demonstrate, however, the regulation results in no such blanket denial. The regulation does not bar the release of all alien juveniles, but merely those who do not have an identifiable parent, legal guardian or adult relative who can accept custody or designate an appropriate custodian. See 8 C.F.R. § 242.24 (1991). Even children whose release is not mandated under the regulation can, in the discretion of the INS, be released to other responsible adults. See id. § 242.24(b)(4). Thus, alien children awaiting deportation proceedings are eligible for release to a number of caregivers; the only liberty right denied them is the right to be released to unrelated adults without INS approval.
Given the limited scope of the regulation, I believe the majority errs by concluding that this case involves a "fundamental right to be free from government detention." Maj. op. at 1360. This broad characterization of the right involved conflicts with the Supreme Court's warning that rights and interests should be defined narrowly for the purposes of substantive due process balancing. See Bowers v. Hardwick,
The need to define the right narrowly is further supported by policy and precedent. No case has been cited to us (and I have found none) in which a court has ever recognized a fundamental substantive due process right to physical liberty. Instead, procedural due process analysis has traditionally provided adequate protection against any unwarranted deprivations of physical liberty. As Justice Scalia recently stated, "[t]he text of the Due Process Clause does not protect individuals against dеprivations of liberty simpliciter. It protects them against deprivations of liberty 'without due process of law.' " Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Health, --- U.S. ----,
None of the cases cited by the majority support its novel holding that this case involves a "fundamental right to be free from government detention." Maj. op. at 1360. For example, the majority cites a number of habeas corpus cases to establish the unremarkable proposition that aliens may challenge a detention through habeas corpus proceedings. See, e.g., Wing Wong v. United States,
The majority also relies heavily on Carlson v. Landon,
In Carlson, the Supreme Court held that INS detention based on Communist party membership did not violate due process. To reach this conclusion, the Court first held that Congress had authorized the Attorney General to make discretionary decisions concerning detention pending deportation.
The majority argues that Carlson holds that "the INS cannot detain individuals without a particularized exercise of discretion through which it determines that detention of an individual would prevent harm to the community or further some other important governmental interest." Maj. op. at 1360. But such an inference is unsupported by either the reasoning, or the result in the case. As stated earlier, Carlson did not strike down the regulation, it found it well within the INS's discretion. In discussing the factors that supported the INS's exercise of discretion, the Court explicitly stated that such discretion "[could] only be overriden where it is clearly shown that it 'was without a reasonable foundation.' " Carlson,
The majority also cites Salerno in support of its holding that the INS must come forward with "significant" reasons to justify its limited detention policy. But Salerno, which upheld pretrial detention under the Bail Reform Act of 1984, 18 U.S.C. § 3141 et seq., is not on point. First, Salerno involved a blanket detention of certain dangerous felons--the regulation at issue in this case is much narrower as it only prohibits release of alien minors to unrelated adults without INS approval. Compare 18 U.S.C. § 3142 with 8 C.F.R. § 242.24 (1991). Second, the Court's due process analysis in Salerno was geared primarily toward the rights of adult citizens facing detention in the criminal context. See Salerno,
The majority finally justifies its rejection of the INS's characterization of the right at issue by arguing that "the right to be released to unrelated adults" is merely the remedy the district court imposed in striking down the regulation. Maj. op. at 1361-1362. But the majority misses the point of its remedy analysis. The district court impоsed the remedy of release to unrelated adults only because it concluded that a right was being denied, the right to be released to such adults. I believe it makes more sense to view the right and consequent remedy as coexistent; if the right at issue was broader, the remedy imposed by the district court to correct for its denial would necessarily have been broader.
In light of these considerations, I analyze the regulation as resulting in a denial of the nonfundamental right to be released to unrelated adults unless the INS grants permission. See Bowers,
II
Aside from its characterization of the right at issue as the fundamental right to liberty, I am further troubled by the majority's failure to recognize the special circumstances of this case. Two factors should influence our analysis of the constitutionality of the challenged regulation. First, the court's analysis should focus on the immigration context of this case, where judicial review is extremely limited. Second, the court must deal with the accepted principle that liberty interest is weighed differently for minors in comparison with adults.
A.
Flores's constitutional claims arise in the unique context of our immigration laws. The power over immigration is political in nature and therefore vested in the political branches. Mathews v. Diaz,
The Supreme Court has long recognized Congress's paramount power to control matters of immigration. Fiallo v. Bell,
The plenary power of Congress and the narrowness of judicial review in the immigration context is reflected in the Supreme Court's teaching that any substantive due process rights aliens might have are extremely limited. For example, in Harisiades, the Court upheld the deportation, under the Alien Registration Act of 1940, of legally resident aliens who had been members of the Communist Party before passage of the Act. While acknowledging that the Act "stands out as an extreme application of the expulsion power," the Court rejected the aliens' argument that the Congress's power to deport was "so unreasonably and harshly exercised" that the Act violated the due process clause.
As a result of the judiciary's limited role in the immigration context, we have held that even if the right at issue is fundamental in character, the court should not apply strict scrutiny review to an immigration regulation. In Adams v. Howerton,
The majority's failure to defer to the INS is also demonstrated by its ready conclusion that neither of the INS's articulated reasons are "significant" enough to support the regulation. The majority first rejects the INS's belief that the regulation serves to protect the safety of the detained children. It assumes that release of the children to unrelated adults will be far preferable to detainment by the INS. Maj. op. at 1362-1363. But the majority fails to cite any evidence in the record to support its factual assumption. Indeed, there is none. More important, the INS thinks otherwise, and in keeping with prior precedent I would defer to its estimation of the risks involved. No one on this court can be sure there is no evil awaiting an unsuspecting alien minor in the custody of an unrelated adult. A concern about that possibility is not unreasonable. Simply put, the majority contends that it owes no deference to the INS's views on child safety because "[c]hild welfare is not an area of INS expertise." Maj. op. at 1362. This is a far too limited view of the deference owed to the INS, one that conflicts with the Supreme Court's statement that "[a]ny policy toward aliens is vitally and intricately interwoven" with matters that have "been committed to the political branches of the Federal Government." Diaz,
The majority ignores the fact that any judicial branch intrusion, even if explained by a belief that the INS has no special expertise, severely undermines congressional power over immigration. The majority's citation to Hampton, fails to support this intrusion, because that case dealt with the federal Civil Service Commission, not the INS. See
The majority also casually dismisses the INS's claim that releasing children to unrelated adults could result in tort liability. While acknowledging that the minors would have a cause of action against the INS for a violation of their rights, the majority finds the chance of tort liability "remote at best." Maj. op. at 1364, quoting International Union, UAW v. Johnson Controls, Inc., --- U.S. ----,
A careful reading of DeShaney reveals that the case has no bearing on the possibility that the INS will be held liable for releasing alien minors to unrelated adults. In holding that DeShaney could not recover against the state welfare agency for its failure to remove him from an abusive home environment, the Court repeatedly emphasized that "the State played no part in creating [the danger]" and was not liable merely for its failure to confer aid. Id. at 196-97, 201,
The majority's assertion that the INS is unlikely to suffer any liability also seems odd in light of its holding that the INS must release minors to unrelated adults only after "mak[ing] the necessary determination of whether a party who is willing to assume custody is fit to do so." Maj. op. at 1363-1364. In light of the majority's apparent acceptance of the INS's claim that it lacks the resources or expertise to conduct these studies, maj. op. at 1363, its imposition of a duty to do so seems likely to result in liability. At any rate, given our deferential review, I would defеr to the INS's rationale for the policy rather than seeking out reasons to discredit it.
B.
In addition to failing to give required deference to the INS regulation, the majority accords no significance to the fact that this case involves detention of children, rather than adults. Because the INS's reasons for the policy relate directly to their responsibility to protect minors, I believe that the Supreme Court's teachings regarding the constitutional rights of minors are relevant to our analysis.
As the majority correctly points out, there is no doubt that children are " 'persons' under our Constitution" who possess "fundamental rights which the State must respect." Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District,
The Court has specifically recognized the narrower scope of juveniles' liberty interest. In Schall, the Court held that the state may restrict a child's liberty interest in order to secure that child's welfare. In upholding the constitutionality of a New York statute authorizing the pretrial detention of certain juveniles, the Court stated:
The juvenile's ... interest in freedom from institutional restraints, even for the brief time involved here, is undoubtedly substantial.... But that interest must be qualified by the recognition that juveniles, unlike adults, are always in some form of custody. Children, by definition, are not assumed to have the capacity to take care of themselves. They are assumed to be subject to the control of their parents, and if parental control falters, the State must play its part as parens patriae. In this respect, the juvenile's liberty interest may, in appropriate circumstances, be subordinated to the State's "parens patriae interest in preserving and promoting the welfare of the child."
In my view, the teachings of Schall and Bellotti are particularly relevant to the facts of this case. The INS's regulation governing the detention of minors is based at least in part upon a concern for the "peculiar vulnerability" of alien minors. See Bellotti,
The majority ignores these cases, and instead relies on In re Gault, for the proposition that "children should be treated in a manner least restrictive of liberty." Maj. op. at 1362. In re Gault dealt with a procedural, rather than substantive, due process challenge, and I am at a loss to find any categorical statement concerning the liberty rights of children in the text of the opinion. Compare In re Gault,
The majority also relies heavily on federal and state policies which, it claims, "favor[ ] avoidance of institutionalization of juveniles." Maj. op. at 1361. However, even assuming the existence of such policies, they are irrelevant to our analysis. The question presented here is what the Constitution requires, not what federal and state governments favor. See DeShaney,
Thus, I believe that the Supreme Court's rulings regarding the diminished liberty interests of minors should be factored into our constitutional analysis. The majority therefore errs in asserting that there is "no legal basis" for the INS's professed concern for the best interests of alien minors. Maj. op. at 1362. Because the INS's statement of reasons for the limited detention policy are concerns that the Supreme Court has already found legitimate, this is additional evidence that the challenged regulation is reasonable.
III
In the final section of the opinion, the majority upholds the district judge's ruling that a minor taken into custody must be given "an administrative hearing to determine probable cause for his arrest and the need for any restrictions placed upon his release." Although the district judge's ruling apparently rested on the procedural due process test embodied in Gerstein v. Pugh,
The majority states that requiring detention hearings does not materially alter existing INS regulations. Maj. op. at 1364. In reaching this conclusion, the majority holds that the district judge's order only imposes two additional requirements on the INS. First, the order makes detention hearings mandatory, when the hearings were previously only available at the request of the minor. Id.; see 8 C.F.R. § 242.2(c) & (d) (1991). Second, the order requires that the hearing include an inquiry into whether a nonrelative may be appropriate to take custody of the child. Maj. op. at 1364.
As stated earlier, I do not agree that the INS regulation at issue here violates substantive due process. I therefore cannot join in the majority's imposition of these new procedural requirements. However, the majority's analysis is problematic for a second reason--it fails to acknowledge, much less analyze, the possible broader implications of the judge's order. This issue needs to be clarified.
The district judge held that "[a]ny minor taken into custody" shall be given "an administrative hearing to determine probable cause for his arrest." Under current INS procedures, minors arrested without a warrant are entitled to have probable cause reviewed by an immigration official "without unnecessary delay." See 8 U.S.C. § 1357(a)(2). Because this procedure existed prior to the Flores litigation, the panel speculated that the district judge intended to impose an additional requirement that the probable cause hearing take place before an immigration judge. Otherwise, the majority pointed out that "the injunction [would be] deprive[d] of much practical effect." Flores,
By holding that the judge's order will not materially affect INS procedures, the majority implicitly rejects the panel's original assumption and holds instead that the current arrest and probable cause requirements satisfy the judge's order. Any other interpretation of the order is inconsistent with the majority's refusal to engage in any due process analysis. Therefore, despite the broad language of the judge's order, the majority's affirmance of that order should not be read to require any change in these procedures.
I also do not read the majority's opinion as imposing any additional requirements on the INS in terms of timing and execution of the detention hearings. The majority references the current hearing procedures as adequate to safeguard the interests of the minors. See maj. op. at 1364. Therefore, with the exception of the new requirement that such hearings be held automatically, the majority opinion does not entail any alteration in current INS procedure.
The procedural component of the district judge's order is potentially quite sweeping. For this reason, I adhere to my original position, as stated in the panel majority opinion, that we should remand the case for a determination of what procedures are constitutionally required under Mathews v. Eldridge,
Notes
The regulation provides in full as follows:
Detention and release of juveniles.
(a) Juveniles. A juvenile is defined as an alien under the age of eighteen (18) years.
(b) Release. Juveniles for whom bond has been posted, for whom parole has been authorized, or who have been ordered released on recognizance, shall be released pursuant to the following guidelines:
(1) Juveniles shall be released, in order of preference, to: (i) A parent; (ii) legal guardian; or (iii) adult relative (brother, sister, aunt, uncle, grandparent) who are not presently in INS detention, unless a determination is made that the detention of such juvenile is required to secure his timely appearance before the Service or the immigration court or to ensure the juvenile's safety or that of others.
In cases where the parent, legal guardian or adult relative resides at a location distant from where the juvenile is detained, he or she may secure release at an INS office located near the parent, legal guardian, or adult relative.
(2) If an individual specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this section cannot be located to accept custody of a juvenile, and the juvenile has identified a parent, legal guardian, or adult relative in INS detention, simultaneous release of the juvenile and the parent, legal guardian, or adult relative shall be evaluated on a discretionary case-by-case basis.
(3) In cases where the parent or legal guardian is in INS detention or outside the United States, the juvenile may be released to such person as designated by the parent or legal guardian in a sworn affidavit, executed before an immigration officer or consular officer, as capable and willing to care for the juvenile's well-being. Such person must еxecute an agreement to care for the juvenile and to ensure the juvenile's presence at all future proceedings before the Service or an immigration judge.
(4) In unusual and compelling circumstances and in the discretion of the district director or chief patrol agent, a juvenile may be released to an adult, other than those identified in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, who executes an agreement to care for the juvenile's well-being and to ensure the juvenile's presence at all future proceedings before the INS or an immigration judge.
A state would of course face a somewhat greater threat of liability after releasing a child to the custody of a responsible third party as opposed to the custody of a parent as in DeShaney. This is because the state would have acted affirmatively to place the child in a home from which the child had not originally come, as opposed to returning the child to the same home and assuring placement in "no worse position than that in which he would have been had [the state] not acted at all." Id. at 201,
Indeed, the Supreme Court's recent opinion in Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Dep't of Health implicitly acknowledges this substantive right when it affirms the individual's right, under the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment, to refuse unwanted medical treatment. --- U.S. ----,
The dissent and the original panel attach significant weight to Justice Scalia's statement in Cruzan, --- U.S. at ----,
This regulation covers arrests of persons without a warrant. The issuance of a warrant is covered by 8 C.F.R. § 242.2(c). These arrest warrants are issued by INS officers, not neutral third parties. Thus even the presence of an arrest warrant does not indicate that the decision to detain has been reviewed by an official independent of the law enforcement function
The majority correctly notes that a child may have the propriety of her detention or of conditions on her release reviewed by an immigration judge if she specifically requests such a hearing. 8 C.F.R. § 242.2(d). INS officers, however, are not required to inform arrested children of this right. See 8 C.F.R. § 242.2(c)(2). This provision thus does nothing to curе the constitutional defect in the INS's procedures. Freedom from governmental restraint is not a right reserved exclusively for those schooled in the intricacies of INS regulations. "No matter how elaborate and accurate the ... proceedings available under the [regulation] may be once undertaken, their protection is illusory when a large segment of the protected class cannot realistically be expected to set the proceedings into motion in the first place." Doe v. Gallinot,
Bowers held that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment does not prohibit states from criminalizing homosexual sodomy
Obviously amici present no such risk. Neither the district court's order nor the majority's opinion, however, would limit release to organizations of their caliber. "Responsible adult party" is left undefined; a financially responsible adult may not be morally responsible, and vice versa. Nor does the order restrict release to a legally responsible adult, by contrast with 8 C.F.R. § 242.24(b)(4), which requires an unrelated adult to whom a juvenile may be released to execute an agreement to care for the juvenile's well-being. See also § 242.24(b)(3) (imposing a similar requirement on a person designated by the parent or legal guardian to take custody of a detained juvenile in their absence). So the district court's order also leaves open the possibility of release to an adult who appears to be morally and financially responsible, but whose legal responsibility for care and presence lacks teeth and is unenforceable
Section 242.24(b)(4) appears to assume that the INS has made no determination that detention is required to ensure timely appearance or safety. While release to an unrelated adult is not mandatory, as it is to a parent, guardian or adult relative under § 242.24(b)(1), the regulation itself creates a liberty interest in freedom from continued restraint. The dispositive question for us, therefore, is whether the procedures by which the INS decides if it should release a juvenile to the custody of an unrelated adult survive facial challenge
Assuming that alien juveniles have a protected liberty interest in freedom from institutional restraint such that their failure to be released to a "responsible adult" who promises future appearances triggers substantive due process scrutiny, see Salerno,
Flores also complains of the Catch-22 the regulation creates on account of the fact that parents or adult relatives of alien juveniles may be deterred from coming forward to the INS because they, too, may be here illegally. While there is nothing much for it, the conundrum does to some extent affect the juveniles' opportunity to rejoin their family. See Landon,
In Salerno,
Subsection 242.24(b)(4) provides for a decision on release to an adult other than a parent, guardian or relative to be made by the district director or chief patrol agent. The INS suggests no reason why this determination could not be made in conjunction with the prima facie evidence hearing
See supra note 4
Supplemental Brief at 1 n. 2
Cf., e.g., Youngberg v. Romeo,
The additional cases cited by the two separate concurrences also do not support the majority's application of heightened scrutiny to invalidate the INS regulation. For example, DeShaney v. Winnebago County Social Services Department,
One case cited by the concurrences does address an issue similar to the one before this court. In Youngberg, the Court articulated a standard for evaluating deprivations of liberty that occur during the course of an involuntary commitment. After holding that the liberty interest asserted by the inmate was protected by the due process clause, the Court stated that the challenged physical restraints would be upheld as long as the actions of the mental health therapists were reasonable.
