In
Guerrero-Perez v. INS,
Discussion
Our task is to determine whether we should accept the BIA’s approach as outlined in
Crammond
or affirm the position that we articulated in
Guerrero-Perez.
We begin by recognizing that a majority of the Board Members (11 out of the 20) concur that for a person to be considered an aggravated felon under 8 U.S.C.
*547
§ 1101(a)(43)(A), which encompasses murder, rape, or sexual abuse of a minor, an individual must commit a felony offense. To determine whether someone has committed a felony, the majority said that one should look to the federal definition of a felony. This was about all that the majority was able to agree upon, as there exists no consensus among them regarding how to reach the aforementioned outcome. Board Member Guendelsberger, writing for seven other Board Members, found no clear congressional intent in the plain language of the aggravated felony statute. Having determined the statute was ambiguous, Board Member Guendelsberger then proceeded to employ traditional tools of statutory construction to discern the meaning of the statute. In the end, this exercise proved futile. As a consequence, he invoked the principle that when a statute is ambiguous it should be construed in favor of the alien. Board Member Filppu, authoring his own separate concurrence, took issue with Board Member Guendels-berger’s invocation of what he labeled the “rule of lenity.”
Crammond,
We cannot adopt the approach that a splintered majority of the Board in Cram-mond supports. None of the positions articulated by the various Board Members who make up the majority present statutory interpretations that we have not considered previously. Thus, we respectfully conclude that this case does not warrant vacating our decision in Guerrero-Perez. 2
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we DENY Guerrero’s petition for rehearing.
Notes
. The petitioner identified himself as Jose Guerrero at his immigration hearing. We therefore will refer to him as Guerrero rather than Guerrero-Perez. The details of Guerrero's case can be found in
Guerrero-Perez,
. It is worth to note that we are not the sole Circuit to disagree with the BIA's position on this matter. The Eleventh Circuit has interpreted 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(43)(A) in the criminal context to encompass misdemeanor state convictions.
United States
v.
Marin-Navarette,
