Pеtitioner, with assistance from the New York Civil Liberties Union which briefed and argued the appeal, seeks to raise a momentous issue — the right of an indigent alien to counsel in a deportation proceeding. He does this by way of a petition for review, under section 106 of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1105a, of a December 13, 1971, order of the Board of Immigration Appeals, which dismissed an appeal from a decision of a Special Inquiry Officer. That decision found petitioner dеporta-ble as a nonimmigrant visitor for pleasure who overstayed his four-day visa. However, the posture of the cаse is such that we do not reach the issue petitioner seeks to raise.
Considerable doubt exists whether petitioner is an indigent. Concededly, he was making about $95 a week gross, and $82 a week take-home, pay at the time of his hearing, which, incidentally, was adjourned four times to enable him to retain counsel. The $82 per week net earnings prevented him from meeting the Legal Aid Society requirements for providing free legal services; although the only Society lawyer apparently responsible for immigration matters did accompany petitioner to one scheduled hearing, he apparently did nоt enter an appearance on petitioner’s behalf. Petitioner insists that the immigration bar has a $500 minimum fee for handling this kind of case at the Board of Immigration Appeals level, and that he did not have the necessary wherewithal to retаin private counsel. He therefore complains that, since the statutes, sections 242(b) and 292 of the Act, 8 U.S. C. §§ 1252(b) and 1362 (see 8 C.F.R. § 242.16), permit counsel at no expense to the government but do not require counsel for indigents in deportation proceedings, they deny indigent aliens procedural due process or equal proteсtion of the laws. 1
But even if we were to treat petitioner as an indigent for all practical purposes, which on this scanty record it would be difficult for us to do, the sole issue before the Special Inquiry Officer was whether petitioner had overstayed his four-day visa. It is undisputed that he did do so, and hence he is deportable under section 241(a) (2), 8 U.S.C. § 1251(a) (2). Kassab v. INS,
Petitioner argues, and the Civil Liberties Union argues for him, that counsel could have advised him in connection with his possible eligibility for a “third preference” visa, either as a religious translator or as a minister; a “sixth preference” visa, for which the amicus has advised him to apply; or for а permanent residence visa, since it may be that the Portuguese immigration quota has not been filled. This may all be very true, but it hаs nothing whatsoever to do with the question whether petitioner was entitled to counsel at the deportation hearing. It is fаrfetched, we believe, to argue that persons seeking admission to the United States are entitled to legal advicе at government expense on how best to secure such admission. Amicus argues that the “virtually universal administrative practice” is to suspend deportation when issuance of a visa is imminent. This may also be so, but it does not follow that counsel to аdvise a deportable alien on how to go about obtaining a new visa must constitutionally be furnished for purposes of an otherwise uneontested deportation proceeding. What petitioner here really seeks is legal advice at government expense in respect to his possible re-entry, not in regard to his deportation. No authority he cites, and no argument he makes, would support the proposition that the Constitution requires counsel to be provided in such а case.
Nothing we say here is intended to express any opinion on the question whether, in a deportation hearing where the furnishing of counsel might have an effect upon the outcome of the
deportation hearing itself,
indigent aliens are entitled to have counsel furnished at government expense. That is another question, what this court has called a “grave” one, for another dаy. Carbonell v. INS,
Petition denied.
Notes
. It is true, as Mr. Justice Brandeis observed, that expulsion may deprivе an alien “of all that makes life worth living.” Ng Fung Ho v. White,
. He had bеen properly required by the Special Inquiry Officer to admit or deny the factual allegations, 8 C.F.R. § 242.16 (b); Laqui v. INS,
. It is argued that the view of Justices Powell and Rehnquist, in Argersinger v. Hamlin,
