Lead Opinion
Harpal Singh Cheema and his wife Rajwinder Kaur appeal from the Board of Immigration Appeals’ (“BIA”) decision denying Cheema asylum and withholding of deportation
Kaur found herself in a fundamentally unfair posture on her second trip to the BIA. The Board relied on classified evidence without giving her the barest summary notice required by the regulations, and the Board overrode the Immigration Judge’s (“IJ”) affirmative credibility finding by sanctioning the IJ’s passing, unspecified reference to “lack of candor.” These errors go to the heart of the asylum ruling and require a remand to the Board.
Background
The petitioners were before this court in Cheema v. Ashcroft,
On remand, the BIA took into account evidence classified as “secret” that was presented to the IJ in the original hearings — evidence that the BIA had set aside in its first decision. The BIA held Chee-ma to be a danger to the security of the United States and Kaur to be unworthy of a discretionary grant of asylum.
Both Cheema and Kaur petitioned for review. Cheema also filed a petition of habeas corpus in the Northern District of California, challenging his detention by the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) in various county jails for the
In India, Cheema was promptly prosecuted before a Designated Court under the Terrorist and Disruptive Activities Act (“TADA”), the Explosive Substances Act of 1884, and the Explosive Substances Act of 1908 for offenses committed in 1992. He was acquitted of offenses under TADA and the Explosive Substances Act of 1884, but was convicted in 2007 under the Explosive Substances Act of 1908. On appeal, the Supreme Court of India noted that a prosecution in a Designated Court (a species of special tribunal set up under TADA) required the authorization of the Inspector General of Police or the Commissioner of Police. Because the required authorization had not been given, the Designated Court had tried Cheema without jurisdiction. Cheema’s conviction was set aside in December 2007. Harpal Singh v. State of Punjab, 1 M.L.J. 875 (India 2008). No further proceedings affecting him in India are known to this court.
Analysis
Cheema. Now that Cheema has been determined to be a danger to the security of the United States and has been deported, the question is whether his claim for withholding of deportation is moot. We agree with the government that we cannot give Cheema any relief with respect to withholding because he has already been deported and he suffers no collateral consequence from the withholding decision. There is simply no live controversy. See Abdala v. INS,
Cheema urges us that he falls under the collateral consequences exception to mootness. See Spencer v. Kemna,
Kaur. Following our remand in 2004, the BIA found that Kaur had not been “completely candid” in her testimony and that she had engaged in conspiracy to commit “immigration fraud.” The BIA
Kaur’s petition comes to us in an unusual posture. When the IJ issued her decision in 1999, she granted relief to Kaur on all of her applications — asylum, withholding of deportation, and withholding of removal under the CAT. The government’s appeal to the BIA focused primarily on the allegations regarding terrorist activity, although it mentioned immigration fraud in passing. Specifically, the government’s brief to the BIA claimed that since Kaur “admits attempting to smuggle her daughter, Roopi, into the United States, and also admits paying a friend $3,000 to get her nephew into the United States,” she should be denied relief even though the IJ found that “the hardships she has already endured and her well-founded fear of future persecution outweigh these negative factors.”
In its first decision, dated May 8, 2002, the BIA relied solely on unclassified information and focused exclusively on Kaur’s engagement “in terrorist activity since entering the United States” and the fact that she was “a danger to the security of the United States.” The BIA made no reference to immigration fraud, and it accepted the IJ’s determination that Kaur “was a credible witness.”
On appeal to this court, we determined that Kaur had not engaged in terrorist activity, granted her petitions for withholding of deportation and relief under CAT, and remanded for the BIA to exercise its discretion in determining whether to grant asylum to Kaur. Cheema,
After remand, the BIA issued an unclassified decision and a classified attachment to that decision.
In this second appeal to our court, in addition to challenging the DHS’s weighing of hardship factors, Kaur challenges the proceeding as unfair because of the use of secret evidence and argues that the BIA abused its discretion in finding that she had not been completely candid.
1. Secret Evidence
The regulations governing immigration proceedings permit the use of classified information. See 8 C.F.R. § 1240.33(c)(4) (“The Service counsel for
A. Regulatory Limitations on the Use of Secret Evidence
The regulations state that a summary of the classified evidence “may” be provided if it is possible to “safeguard[] both the classified nature of the information and its source.” 8 C.F.R. § 1240.33(c)(4). Such a summary “should be as detailed as possible, in order that the applicant may have an opportunity to offer opposing evidence.” 8 C.F.R. § 1240.33(c)(4). Here, the DHS neither provided a meaningful summary nor claimed that a more detailed summary could not be provided because of the necessity to “safeguard[ ] both the classified nature of the information and its source.”
Under Clark v. Martinez,
The combination of permissive and mandatory language in the regulation creates just this sort of ambiguity. Read literally, the regulation appears to say that that a summary is not necessarily provided, yet if one is provided, it is required to be “as detailed as possible.” To be constitutional as to admitted aliens, who are entitled to due process, see Plyler v. Doe,
The summary provided by DHS is, at best, conclusory and opaque. It consists of a single sentence: “[Rjeliable confidential sources have reported that RAJWIN-DER KAUR has conspired to engage in alien smuggling; has attempted to obtain fraudulent documents; and has engaged in immigration fraud by conspiring to supply false documents for others.” This summary is simply insufficient to meet the standard in § 1240.33(c)(4) requiring that it be “as detailed as possible” to allow Kaur “an opportunity to offer opposing evidence.” Kaur cannot rebut what has not been alleged.
The DHS provided no further illumination beyond the summary. The government variously argued to the BIA that record references relate to purported conduct by Kaur with respect to her daughter, a nephew, and possibly others. These references are a moving target. They do not illuminate the conduct that was the basis of the alleged immigration fraud. If Kaur did indeed commit immigration fraud, then she personally would be knowledgeable of the details of what occurred, so there is little justification for failing to provide enough detail in the summary to allow her
By way of comparison, the summary of classified evidence provided here contrasts sharply with the summary provided in Kiareldeen v. Ashcroft, where the Third Circuit held that “[ijnformation contained in the unclassified summaries was ultimately sufficient to assist Kiareldeen in mounting a defense to the allegations.”
B. Due Process Limitations on the Use of Secret Evidence
In addition to the regulatory limitations, the use of secret evidence is cabined by constitutional due process limitations. Although the Federal Rules of Evidence do not apply in administrative proceedings, we have long held that there are limits on the admissibility of evidence and that the test for admissibility includes “fundamental fairness.” Martin-Mendoza v. INS,
When Kaur attempted entry into the United States, she was immediately detained at the border before being paroled into the country pending resolution of her asylum petition. Whatever the legal effect of her status at that time, once she was granted CAT relief in 2004, she surely had “entered” the United States for purposes of due process. See Zadvydas v. Davis,
2. Lack of Candor
The BIA also abused its discretion by bootstrapping a statement about Kaur’s “lack of candor” to justify its decision. The IJ made an affirmative credibility finding, noting that “Ms. Kaur was also a convincing witness. Her testimony was detailed, consistent and plausible. Nothing in her demeanor nor the content of her testimony detracted from her credible demeanor.”
Although the IJ noted that “there are certain instances where this Court does not find the Applicants’ testimony to be credible,” this sort of passing statement does not constitute an adverse credibility
Because the BIA did not disturb the credibility finding, it cannot now latch onto an isolated, unsupported reference as a basis for its discretionary denial of asylum. In the absence of an adverse credibility finding, “testimony must be accepted as true.” Kalubi
PETITION GRANTED and REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Because deportation proceedings began before April 1, 1997, the withholding claim is for withholding of deportation under former 8 U.S.C. § 1253(h) rather than withholding of removal under 8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3).
. The Litigation Security Section of the Department of Justice coordinated with security designees at the Ninth Circuit to make classified information available for viewing by members of the court. See Al-Haramain Islamic Found. v. Bush,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I concur in the opinion and judgment of the court with this reservation: The use of secret “evidence” is itself a denial of a hearing. Jay v. Boyd,
Neither Jay nor Mezei control in this case. Jay focused on the interpretation of a statute not at issue here. Mezei dealt with an unadmitted alien. Nonetheless, the constitutional insight of the dissenters is worth recalling. Audi alteram par-tem — Hear the other side. The Latin maxim has sometimes been taken by English authors as expressing the core of natural justice. The four dissenters in Jay and the four dissenters in Mezei reflect
As the opinion of the court observes, we do not need to resolve the question here; but I would not like to leave the impression that a summary of secret evidence would have provided due process.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I concur in the conclusion that Petitioner Harpal Singh Cheema’s petition for review has been mooted by his deportation. I agree with Judge McKeown that we should refrain from opining about Cheema’s fate in India or the positions taken by the United States government.
Although I also concur that Petitioner Rajwinder Kaur’s petition for review must be granted and this matter remanded, I do so reluctantly. As I detailed in my dissent to the majority opinion in our earlier decision, the unclassified evidence in this case provided adequate support for the denial of relief to Kaur. See Cheema v. Ashcroft,
