Petition denied by published opinion. Senior Judge HAMILTON wrote the opinion in which Judge KING and Judge FLOYD joined.
Maria Yanez-Marquez (Yanez), a native and citizen of El Salvador, petitions for review of a Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) decision dismissing her appeal from the order of an Immigration Judge (IJ) ordering her removal from the United States to El Salvador. Prior to ordering Yanez’s removal, the IJ denied her motion to suppress certain evidence and to terminate the removal proceeding. At the center of Yanez’s petition for review is her challenge to the denial of this motion, which was premised on, inter alia, alleged egregious violations of her Fourth Amendment rights. For the reasons stated below, we deny the petition for review.
I
A
Because the IJ denied Yanez’s motion to suppress and to terminate without an evi-dentiary hearing, we review the evidence in the light most favorable to Yanez.
Cotzojay v. Holder,
In June 2008, agents from the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) were investigating Robert Bontempo, Jr. and Rebecca Bontempo, the owners of Annapolis Painting Services (APS). The agents suspected that the Bontempos employed and harbored illegal aliens. The Bontempos owned a property, 402 Harbor Drive, Annapolis, Maryland (the Premises), which ICE surveillance revealed was occupied by Jose Umana Ruiz (Umana), an illegal alien and El Salvadorian citizen. Unbeknownst to the agents, Yanez, an illegal alien and Umana’s long-time partner, *439 also lived at the Premises. In June 2008, Yanez was five months pregnant.
In an affidavit in support of a search warrant for the Premises and numerous other houses owned by the Bontempos that were tied to the housing of illegal aliens, ICE Special Agent Francis Coker (Agent Coker) outlined the extensive background evidence concerning how employers employ and house illegal aliens, and the extensive evidence concerning how APS and the Bontempos engaged in such practices. 1 The affidavit also included a picture of the Premises and described it as a “single-family home[,] a single story building with a shingled roof.” (J.A. 524). 2 A mailbox, with the number “402,” is located in front of the Premises. (J.A. 524). The affidavit noted that Anne Arundel County land records reflected a sale of the Premises from Jennifer Scott to the Bon-tempos in October 2000 for the sum of $156,000.00.
The search warrant that accompanied Agent Coker’s affidavit had two boxes on its front side, where the issuing judge was required to designate the time of day when the search was authorized to occur. The “daytime” box read “in the daytime — 6:00 A.M. to 10:00 P.M.” (J.A. 455). Meanwhile, the alternative “any time” box read “at any time in the day or night as I find reasonable cause has been established.” (J.A. 455). In issuing the warrant for the Premises, a United States Magistrate Judge in the District of Maryland checked only the daytime box and struck the language next to the any time box that would have authorized a nighttime search as follows: “at any-time in the day or night-as I find- reasonable — cause has-been established;” (J.A. 455) (strikeout in original). Thus, the warrant for the Premises authorized a daytime search only, to be conducted between 6:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. The warrant also specified that the search was to be completed on or before July 4, 2008. The scope of the items to be seized under the warrant was broad and included illegal aliens, travel documents, financial records, and photographs of harbored aliens.
The magistrate judge issued the search warrant on June 24, 2008. The search of the Premises took place six days later, on the morning of Monday, June 30, 2008. Prior to the search, several ICE agents, along with officers of the Anne Arundel County Police Department, assembled in an Annapolis parking lot for a briefing. ICE Agent Sean Currie (Agent Currie), the ICE search team leader, assigned responsibilities for the search. After the briefing, the search team proceeded to the Premises, which was ten to fifteen minutes away by car, to execute the warrant.
According to Yanez, the search warrant was executed at the Premises at 5:00 a.m. 3 *440 Agent Currie knocked on the front door which was answered by another occupant of the Premises, Jose Mendoza-Gomez (Mendoza), who immediately was handcuffed ' and seated on the couch in the living room for officer safety. After detaining Mendoza, two agents proceeded upstairs. Umana and Yanez were awakened by the yelling of “police” and a loud banging on their bedroom door. (J.A. 141). Umana and Yanez had been planning to sleep later than normal that morning because Yanez had the day off from work. She felt groggy and confused because “it seemed like it was the middle of the night.” (J.A. 141). She had no idea what was going on. Umana clothed himself, but before he could reach the locked door, the ICE agents broke it down, causing the door to hit Umana’s hand. Two agents “burst” into the room and screamed “police.” (J.A. 142). One agent grabbed Umana’s neck and threw him to the ground. The other held a gun to Umana’s head while, pinning his body and face to the floor. The agents screamed “don’t move.” (J.A. 142). Once Umana was held down, an agent pointed a gun at Yanez’s head and yelled “don’t move.” (J.A. 142). Yanez, who was wearing a “nightshirt,” cried and pleaded for permission to cover herself “with more clothes.” (J.A. 142). The agent again screamed “don’t move” and pointed his gun at her head. (J.A. 142). Umana told the agents that Yanez was pregnant and begged them to allow her to get dressed. A female agent was called for assistance and came to Yanez, telling her that “it will be okay.” (J.A. 142). Yanez was scared that she or Uma-na would be harmed, and she was not allowed to use the restroom. Although an agent was speaking in Spanish, loud noise obstructed Yanez from hearing. The agents handcuffed Umana and escorted him downstairs. Yanez grabbed a “T-shirt to put over [her] nightshirt” as she was led downstairs at gunpoint. (J.A. 143).
Downstairs, Yanez saw four ICE agents in the living room. She was told to join Umana on the couch. Although the occupants denied that anyone else was in the house, the agents knocked down doors and found no one. For five to ten minutes, the agents questioned the occupants about their identities, asking repeatedly about Annapolis Painting Services. The occupants denied knowing anything about the company. The agents were “extremely hostile,” and Yanez thought that someone would be harmed if they did not answer the questions. (J.A. 143). The agents then took the occupants’ fingerprints and escorted Umana and Mendoza away. Ya-nez was “never shown a warrant, [never] told that [she] had a right to an attorney, [and never told] that [she] could refuse to answer any questions.” (J.A. 143).
The ICE agents searched the entire house, “ripp[ing] apart each room that they went through,” kicking down doors, scattering documents, and turning over furniture. (J.A. 144). During the search, Yanez again was questioned. The agents asked her if she had a car and keys for it, which Yanez conceded. Yanez felt she had no choice but to surrender the keys. Her car was searched. The agents told Yanez that she “had” to sign “several pieces of paper,” although she did not want to sign them, asked why she had to sign, and did not understand what they said. (J.A. 144). Despite no one reading or explaining the documents to her, she signed them.
Before leaving, an ICE agent told Yanez that she would get a letter from “the Immigration Court” and warned her not to move to a different location. (J.A. 145). When the agents left at 9:15 a.m., they took many of Yanez’s belongings, including her pay stubs, tax returns, and photo albums. These items were never returned.
*441 After the search, Yanez left the Premises and spent the night at her sister-in-law’s house. She returned to the Premises the following day to find the landlord’s employees “hauling” off her and Umana’s “belongings ... to the trash dump.” (J.A. 145). Later that day, Yanez experienced stress and severe abdominal pain that she believes were caused by the search, seizure, and questioning. At 5:30 p.m., she was taken to the hospital where she was treated and released after a few hours. Upon her release from the hospital, Yanez was told her unborn child would be “alright.” (J.A. 145).
Yanez’s statements to the ICE agents were memorialized on two “Form I-218s” (Record of Deportable/Inadmissible Alien). 4 The forms state that Yanez is a native and citizen of El Salvador and that she “last entered the United States on or about April 2007 without inspection.” (J.A. 453). The forms further reveal that Yanez has been illegally present in the United States since her April 2007 entry.
B
On July 10, 2008, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) issued a notice to appear to Yanez. The notice alleged that Yanez was “an alien present in the United States who had not been admitted or paroled.” (J.A. 547); see also 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(6)(A)© (rendering inadmissible an alien who has not been properly admitted or paroled). In support of this allegation, the notice alleged that Yanez: (1) was not a United States citizen; (2) was a native and citizen of El Salvador; (3) entered the United States at an unknown location on an unknown date; and (4) was not “admitted or paroled after inspection by an Immigration Officer.” (J.A. 547).
On February 10, 2010, the DHS filed its “Submission of Intended Evidence,” which designated the evidence the DHS intended to introduce in the removal proceeding as follows: (1) the two Form I-213s; (2) the search warrant executed for the Premises; and (3) the affidavit in support of the warrant. In response, on April 21, 2010, Yanez filed a “motion to suppress and to terminate removal proceedings.” (J.A. 106). Yanez claimed that, during the June 30, 2008 search, seizure, and questioning, the ICE agents egregiously violated her Fourth Amendment rights, violated her Fifth Amendment due process rights, and failed to follow five applicable federal regulations. In her motion, Yanez stressed that the Supreme Court’s decision in
INS v. Lopez-Mendoza,
More specifically, Yanez first claimed that the ICE agents egregiously violated her Fourth Amendment rights when they executed the search warrant at 5:00 a.m. instead of between 6:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. Second, Yanez claimed that the warrant’s lack of particularity egregiously violated her Fourth Amendment rights in that (1) she was not specified as an “item” to be seizéd in the warrant and (2) the agents should have known the Premises was a “two-floor, multi-family dwelling.” (J.A. 118). Third, Yanez claimed that her Fourth Amendment rights were egregious *442 ly violated when the agents used excessive force during the search and seizure. Fourth, she claimed that the Fourth Amendment violations committed by the agents were part of a widespread pattern of ICE misconduct. Fifth, Yanez claimed that the agents violated her Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause rights when they coerced her into making incriminating statements. Finally, she claimed that the agents violated five different federal regulations, in particular, 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(b)(2) (permitting an immigration officer to detain a person for questioning if he has reasonable suspicion “that the person being questioned is, or is attempting to be, engaged in an offense against the United States or is an alien illegally in the United States”), 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)© (“An arrest shall be made only when the designated immigration officer has reason to believe that the person to be arrested has committed an offense against the United States or is an alien illegally in the United States”), 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)(ii) (“A warrant of arrest shall be obtained except when the designated immigration officer has reason to believe that the person is likely to escape before a warrant can be obtained.”), 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(a)(l)(iii) (“A designated immigration officer shall always use the minimum non-deadly force necessary to accomplish the officer’s mission and shall escalate to a higher level of non-deadly force only when such higher level of force is warranted by the actions, apparent intentions, and apparent capabilities of the suspect, prisoner or assailant”), and 8 C.F.R. § 287.3(c) (which requires that an alien who is arrested without a warrant and placed in formal removal proceedings be informed that she has a right to an attorney and provided with a list of attorneys that provide free legal services).
In its response, the DHS first argued that the exclusionary rule does not apply to civil removal proceedings, also relying on the Supreme Court’s decision in Lopez-Mendoza. The DHS stressed that the Court in Lopez-Mendoza “did not affirmatively state that egregious Fourth Amendment violations are an exception to the Court’s holding that the Fourth Amendment’s exclusionary rule is inapplicable in civil deportation proceedings.” (J.A. 47). Alternatively, the DHS argued that, even if the exclusionary rule applied, Yanez failed to set forth facts establishing a pri-ma facie case of an egregious violation of her Fourth Amendment rights or a violation of her Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause rights. See Matter of Barcenas, 19 I. & N. Dec. 609, 611 (BIA 1988) (noting that petitioner challenging the admissibility of evidence in removal proceeding is required to establish a prima facie case for exclusion). Finally, the DHS argued that the ICE agents did not violate any applicable regulations, and, even if they did, it did not justify suppressing the challenged evidence. Along with its motion, the DHS submitted the declarations of Agent Currie and Agent Federico. These declarations take issue with not only Ya-nez’s timing assertions, but also her assertions concerning the manner in which the search, seizure, and questioning were carried out.
In her decision denying the motion to suppress and to terminate, the IJ first rejected the DHS’s contention that the exclusionary rule did not apply in civil removal proceedings, relying on Lopez-Mendoza and BIA precedent. The IJ then set forth the prima facie case framework, noting that Yanez bore the initial burden of alleging facts constituting an egregious Fourth Amendment violation. The IJ then turned to Yanez’s substantive claims and rejected each one of them.
In rejecting Yanez’s claim that the ICE agents committed egregious Fourth Amendment violations, the IJ stated:
*443 With respect to the timing of entry, even if ICE agents entered “at 5 a.m.” as the Respondent asserts, the Court cannot find that such a violation of the terms of the warrant — by a single hour — would be egregious. That simply does not amount to conduct that “shocks the conscience.” With respect to the entry into the bedroom, even if an officer ... had simply come upon the locked door, banged on it, announced his presence, and forced it open with another officer, the Court cannot conclude that such action would be egregious. The agents were executing a search warrant.... The alleged .timing of entry into the residence and method of entry into the bedroom were not egregious violations.
(J.A. 543). Turning next to Yanez’s challenge to the amount of force used by the agents, the IJ rejected this challenge, noting:
With respect to the force used by the officers in the home, the Court cannot conclude that excessive force was used, even considering solely the Respondent’s account. The Respondent’s affidavit claims that an officer held a gun to her head. The Respondent acknowledges that both officers were screaming, “don’t move!” in English and Spanish.... The Respondent indicates, that her partner told the officers that the Respondent was pregnant and asked that she be allowed to put on more clothes. She also indicates that when the officers heard this, they asked for a female officer to come up to the bedroom. These actions, while no doubt extremely frightening for the Respondent, are consistent with ensuring officer safety and enabling the officers to control a potentially dangerous situation. There is no showing that greater than necessary force was used or that weapons were drawn any longer than necessary. The Respondent acknowledges that the officers identified themselves as police and repeatedly shouted at them not to move. She acknowledges that a female officer was called as soon as her partner told them that she was pregnant. She also acknowledges that she was not put in handcuffs, that she was not taken out of the house for further processing, and that she was not placed in immigration detention. The actions of the agents and the other officers were reasonable under the circumstances and reflect that ICE officials took appropriate account of the Respondent’s pregnancy throughout the operation. As such, those actions cannot be found to be egregious.
(J.A. 544).
With regard to Yanez’s claim that the ICE agents violated her Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause rights, the IJ rejected this claim, concluding that the circumstances as a whole did not “reflect an atmosphere of coercion and intimidation that would render [Yanez’s] statements involuntary.” (J.A. 544).
Next, the IJ rejected two of the five regulatory claims pressed by Yanez. First, the IJ rejected Yanez’s § 287.8(a)(l)(iii) claim on the basis that she had “not made a sufficient showing that excessive force was used.” (J.A. 545). Second, the IJ rejected the § 287.3(c) claim because the DHS’s notice to appear had sufficiently advised Yanez of her right to counsel. As for the three remaining regulatory claims, for some inexplicable reason, the IJ quoted the regulations (§ 287.8(b)(2), § 287.8(c)(2)(i), § 287.8(c)(2)(h)), but did not explain her reasoning for rejecting the claims.
The IJ then addressed Yanez’s widespread ICE misconduct argument. The IJ rejected this argument, finding “no basis to suppress evidence in this case on the *444 basis of what may or may not have occurred in other cases or during other enforcement operations.” (J.A. 546).
The IJ concluded her opinion by noting that Yanez had “not met her burden of establishing a prima facie case for suppression of evidence obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment, the Fifth Amendment, ICE regulations, or on any other theory.” (J.A. 546). Accordingly, the IJ denied the motion to suppress and to terminate.
On December 13, 2010, the IJ found that the DHS had satisfied its burden of proving removability by clear and convincing evidence.
See Karimi v. Holder,
On January 11, 2011, Yanez filed a notice of appeal with the BIA. In her brief filed with the BIA on April 1, 2011, Yanez reiterated all of the arguments that she raised before the IJ, save one. She did not claim, as she did before the IJ, that the Fourth Amendment violations committed by the ICE agents were part of a larger, widespread pattern of misconduct by ICE officials. To be sure, Part III D of Yanez’s motion to suppress and to terminate filed with the IJ raises the widespread pattern claim in a section following Part III C iv of the motion, which raised the § 287.3 claim. In her brief filed with the BIA, the conclusion section of the brief follows the § 287.3 claim, and the brief contains no argument concerning widespread constitutional violations committed by ICE officials.
On April 7, 2011, the DHS filed its brief with the BIA. In urging the BIA to affirm the IJ’s decision, the DHS “incorporate^ by reference the entirety” of the brief it filed with the IJ. (J.A. 8).
On April 15, 2013, the BIA dismissed Yanez’s appeal. In its decision, the BIA first noted that the exclusionary rule does not apply in civil removal proceedings unless the alleged Fourth Amendment violation is egregious. Next, the BIA rejected Yanez’s claim that the ICE agents egregiously violated her Fourth Amendment rights, relying on the reasoning of the IJ. The BIA also adopted the reasoning of the IJ in rejecting Yanez’s Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause claim and her regulatory claims under § 287.8(a)(l)(iii) and § 287.3(c). With regard to the three regulations the IJ quoted but did not address, § 287.8(b)(2), § 287.8(c)(2)®, and § 287.8(c)(2)(h), the BIA determined that no remand was necessary because the. IJ adequately addressed the nature of Ya-nez’s “detention and interrogation, as well as the warrant used by the ICE officers.” (J.A. 5). As a result, the BIA affirmed the IJ’s decision and dismissed Yanez’s appeal.
Yanez filed a timely petition for review under 8 U.S.C. § 1252.
II
A
When the BIA affirms and adopts an IJ’s decision and includes its own reasons for affirming, we review both decisions as the final agency action.
Ai Hua Chen v. Holder,
A petitioner challenging the admissibility of evidence in a civil removal proceeding “must come forward with proof establishing a
prima facie
case before the [government] will be called on to assume the burden of justifying the manner in which it obtained the evidence.”
Matter of Barcenas,
19 I.
&
N. Dec. at 611 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Under this burden-shifting framework, “if the petitioner offers an affidavit that could support a basis for excluding the evidence ..., it must then be supported by testimony.”
Maldonado v. Holder,
In the case before us, both the IJ and the BIA applied this framework and concluded that Yanez did not establish a pri-ma facie case on any of her claims to warrant a suppression hearing. It is this conclusion that Yanez principally challenges in this court.
B
In her petition for review, Yanez presses claims under the Fourth and Fifth Amendments, as well as certain regulatory claims. The heart of her case is that the Fourth Amendment’s exclusionary rule requires the suppression of all statements and documentation regarding her national origin and citizenship obtained by the ICE agents, including the two Form I-213s. Yanez contends that, without the two Form I-213s and her statements, the government cannot meet its burden of proving her alienage and removability, and, therefore, her removal proceeding should be terminated. At a minimum, Yanez claims that her affidavit and other record evidence provide a basis in which to exclude the challenged evidence, such that an evi-dentiary hearing is required. To resolve Yanez’s contentions, we must first decide whether the Fourth Amendment’s exclusionary rule applies in the civil removal proceeding before us.
C
The Fourth Amendment protects the “right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. Although the Fourth Amendment “contains no provision expressly precluding the use of evidence obtained in violation of its commands,”
Arizona v. Evans,
Given the “substantial social costs” of the application of the exclusionary rule,
United States v. Leon,
While the applicability of the exclusionary rule in a criminal proceeding is settled, the applicability of the rule in a civil removal proceeding is not. The Supreme Court has never applied the rule in a removal proceeding. In fact, in
Lopez-Mendoza,
the Supreme Court held that the exclusionary rule generally does not apply in removal proceedings.
In
Lopez-Mendoza,
Adan Lopez-Mendoza (Lopez) and Elias Sandoval-Sanchez (Sandoval), two citizens of Mexico, were summoned to separate removal proceedings, and both were ordered deported after such proceedings.
At his removal hearing, Lopez moved to terminate the removal proceeding on the basis that he was arrested illegally.
Id.
The IJ held that the legality of Lopez’s arrest was not germane to the removal proceeding, and, therefore, declined to rule on the legality of the arrest.
Id.
On the basis of the Form 1-213 and an affidavit executed by Lopez, the IJ ordered that Lopez be removed from the United States to Mexico.
Id.
at 1035-36,
On appeal to the BIA, the BIA dismissed Lopez’s appeal. Id. at 1036, 104 S,Ct. 3479. The BIA noted that the “mere fact of an illegal arrest has no bearing on a subsequent deportation proceeding.” Id. (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). On Lopez’s petition for review, the Ninth Circuit vacated Lopez’s removal order and remanded the case to the BIA for a determination of whether Lopez’s Fourth Amendment rights were violated when he was arrested. Id.
The second petitioner in
Lopez-Mendoza,
Sandoval, was arrested at his place of employment, a potato processing plant in Pasco, Washington.
Id.
INS agents went
*447
to the plant, with the permission of its personnel manager, to check for illegal aliens.
Id.
During a shift change, plant workers were asked innocuous questions in English by INS agents as they entered the plant to work.
Id.
at 1037,
At his removal hearing, Sandoval contended that the evidence offered by the INS should be suppressed as the fruit of an unlawful arrest.
Id.
The IJ considered and rejected Sandoval’s claim that he had been illegally arrested, but ruled in the alternative that the legality of the arrest was not relevant to the removal hearing.
Id.
Based on the written record of Sandoval’s admissions, the IJ found him removable.
Id.
at 1038,
On appeal to the BIA, the BIA dismissed Sandoval’s appeal. Id. The BIA declined to invoke the exclusionary rule, concluding that the circumstances of the arrest had not affected the voluntariness of Sandoval’s written statement. Id. On Sandoval’s petition for review, the Ninth Circuit reversed the removal order. Id. The Ninth Circuit opined that Sandoval’s detention by the INS agents violated the Fourth Amendment, that the statements he made were a product of that detention, and that the exclusionary rule barred their use in a removal hearing. Id.
In resolving the cases before it, the Supreme Court quickly disposed of Lopez’s challenge to his removal order because the “mere fact of an illegal arrest has no bearing on a subsequent deportation proceeding.”
Id.
at 1040,
Sandoval’s case meaningfully differed from that of Lopez’s case in that Sandoval challenged the admissibility of evidence at his removal hearing, while Lopez only raised a personal jurisdiction challenge.
Cf. Oscar-Torres,
In determining whether to apply the exclusionary rule in a removal proceeding, the Supreme Court in
Lopez-Mendoza
noted that removal proceedings are “purely civil,”
id.
at 1038,
Viewing a removal proceeding through the proper lens, the Court employed a cost-benefit analysis to determine whether to apply the exclusionary rule to removal proceedings,
id.
at 1041-50,
The
Lopez-Mendoza
Court then turned to the cost of exclusion. First, the Court observed that the effect of applying the exclusionary rule required courts “to close their eyes to ongoing violations of the law.”
Id.
at 1046,
Weighing the benefits of exclusion against the likely costs, the Court in
Lopez-Mendoza
was persuaded that the scales tipped against applying the exclusionary rule in removal proceedings.
Id.
at 1050,
After concluding that the exclusionary rule was inapplicable to removal proceedings because the costs outweighed the ben
*449
efits, a plurality of the Court in
Lopez-Mendoza
appeared to limit the scope of its holding by apparently reserving judgment for cases that presented a “good reason to believe that Fourth Amendment violations by INS officers were widespread.”
Id.
at 1050,
Four Justices dissented in
Lopez-Mendoza.
Each of these four Justices opined that the exclusionary rule should apply in removal proceedings.
See id.
at 1052,
Since
Lopez-Mendoza
was decided, circuit courts have applied the exclusionary rule in removal proceedings in a variety of circumstances.
See, e.g., Cotzojay,
In our case, the IJ, the BIA, and the Attorney General all agree that the exclusionary rule applies, in removal proceedings to egregious violations of the Fourth Amendment.
6
Although we have not had occasion to consider the application of the exclusionary rule in removal proceedings in a published opinion,
7
we are in agreement with those courts that have concluded that the rule applies to egregious violations of the Fourth Amendment.
8
To hold otherwise would give no effect to the language used by the Supreme Court in
Lopez-Mendoza
expressing concern over fundamentally unfair methods of obtaining evidence and would ignore the fact that eight justices in
Lopez-Mendoza
seem to have agreed that the exclusionary rule applies, in removal proceedings in some form. Moreover, even assuming the Court’s limitation in
Lopez-Mendoza
could be construed as dicta, we simply cannot ignore the import of the language used by the Supreme Court in that case.
See United States v. Fareed,
Under this holding, an alien seeking the application of the exclusionary rule to a Fourth Amendment claim in a removal hearing faces two hurdles at the
prima facie
case stage. First, she must allege facts that state a violation of her rights under the Fourth Amendment.
Oli-var-Ramos,
A court reviewing the alien’s claim may, but is not required to, address both the constitutional and egregiousness prongs. Like a § 1983 qualified immunity inquiry, the court can choose to decline to address whether a Fourth Amendment violation has occurred and first address whether the egregiousness prong has been satisfied.
See, e.g., Martinez Carcamo v. Holder,
D
As noted above, an alien seeking to invoke the exclusionary rule in a removal proceeding must demonstrate: (1) a violation of her Fourth Amendment rights; and (2) that the violation was egregious. While the standard for establishing the constitutional violation prong is straightforward— alleging facts establishing a violation of the Fourth Amendment,
Chalmers,
1
Part V of
Lopez-Mendoza
sanctions the application of the exclusionary rule in cases where the evidence was obtained as a result of “egregious violations of Fourth Amendment or other liberties that might transgress notions of fundamental fairness and undermine the probative value of the evidence obtained.”
The plain meaning of this statement suggests that the Fourth Amendment violation must “transgress notions of fundamental fairness”
and
“undermine the probative value of the evidence obtained.”
Id.
However, closer inspection of the context of this statement reveals that the Supreme Court meant to use the disjunctive “or” instead of the conjunctive “and” to create two avenues of relief instead of one such avenue. In other words, an
egregious
violation of the Fourth Amendment is: (1) a violation of the Fourth Amendment that transgresses notions of fundamental fairness;
or
(2) a violation of the Fourth Amendment that, regardless of the violation’s unfairness, undermines the probative value of the challenged evidence.
See Oli-var-Ramos,
To be sure, the
Lopez-Mendoza
Court justified its exception for egregious constitutional violations by citing four cases in which the evidence was reliable (and therefore its probative value was not undermined), but nevertheless suppressible because its admission was fundamentally unfair. The first case cited was
Rochin v. California,
The three remaining cases concerning egregiousness cited by the Lopez-Mendoza Court were BIA decisions, Matter of Toro, 17 I. & N. Dec. 340 (BIA 1980); Matter of Garcia, 17 I. & N. Dec. 319 (BIA 1980); and Matter of Ramira-Cordova, No. A21 095 659 (BIA Feb. 21, 1980) (unpublished). In each of these cases, the BIA decision did not focus on the reliability of the evidence. Rather, the decision focused on whether the admission of the contested evidence would be fundamentally fair. See Matter of Toro, 17 I. & N. Dec. at 343-44 (suggesting that a stop based on Hispanic appearance alone would constitute an egregious Fourth Amendment violation if the Border Patrol officers acted in bad faith, regardless of the probative value of the evidence obtained); Matter of Garcia, 17 I. & N. Dec. at 320-21 (excluding statements obtained after agents repeatedly ignored detainee’s request for counsel); Matter of Ramira-Cordova, No. A21 095 *453 659, slip op. at 3-4 (suppressing evidence obtained as a result of a nighttime war-rantless entry into the aliens’ residence).
The
Lopez-Mendoza
Court’s use of the cited authority only makes sense if fundamental unfairness is not tethered to the probative value of the evidence obtained. As noted by the court in
Orhorhaghe v. INS,
“[w]ere the rule to the contrary, the egregiousness exception would have little meaning, for the fruits of an illegal search or seizure ordinarily consist of physical evidence, the reliability of which is in no way affected by the manner in which the evidence is obtained.”
In our case, Yanez does not challenge the probative value of the evidence obtained as a result of the alleged wrongful search, seizure, and questioning. Consequently, the challenged evidence cannot be excluded on the basis that its probative value is undermined by the activities of the ICE agents. Rather, the challenged evidence can only be excluded if the actions of the agents amounted to a violation of the Fourth Amendment that transgresses notions of fundamental fairness. This begs the question: When does a violation of the Fourth Amendment transgress notions of fundamental fairness? We turn to this question next.
2
A review of the case law demonstrates that there is no consensus on when a violation of the Fourth Amendment is egregious such that it transgresses notions of fundamental fairness. However, two different approaches to assessing egregiousness have emerged in the fact-specific case law. The first is the qualified immunity approach, which is applied in the Ninth Circuit. The second is the totality of the circumstances approach, which is applied in the Second, Third, and Eighth Circuits. 9
a
The Ninth Circuit’s qualified immunity approach is the most alien-friendly test for egregiousness, linking the inquiry to a qualified immunity analysis. In
Gonzalez-Rivera,
the Ninth Circuit held that all “bad faith” violations of the Fourth Amendment are egregious, warranting the application of the exclusionary rule.
In another case, the Ninth Circuit found an egregious violation where officers entered a home without trying to procure a warrant, without exigent circumstances, and without consent, because “reasonable officers should have known that they were violating the Fourth Amendment.”
Lopez-Rodriguez v. Mukasey,
Building on
Lopez-Rodriguez,
the Ninth Circuit in
Martinez-Medina
noted that whether “a reasonable officer should have known his conduct violated the Constitution depends in part on whether the constitutional right was clearly established in the particular context at issue.”
b
On the other end of the spectrum is the totality of the circumstances approach. In
Olivar-Ramos,
the Third Circuit criticized the Ninth Circuit’s linking of the exclusionary rule in removal cases to the qualified immunity standard.
Oliva-Ramos,
In Oliva-Ramos, the alien alleged several Fourth Amendment violations, including that the officers lacked proper consent before entering his apartment at 4:30 a.m., arrested him without probable cause or a warrant, and seized him without reasonable suspicion. Id. at 261-62. The BIA denied the alien’s request to supplement the record with new, previously unavailable evidence of widespread Fourth Amendment violations and egregious conduct, concluding that Part V of Lopez-Mendoza was only dicta. Id. at 262-70. On the ensuing petition for review, the *455 Third Circuit vacated the BIA’s decision and required it to reopen the proceedings so that the alien could present evidence of widespread and egregious conduct. Id. at 274-82.
The court in
Oliva-Ramos
opined that “evidence will be the result of an egregious violation within the meaning of
Lopez-Mendoza,
if the record evidence establishes” that a Fourth Amendment violation that was fundamentally unfair had occurred.
Id.
at 278. In setting the contours of this standard, the
Olivar-Ramos
court discerned “guiding principles” from the Second Circuit’s decision in Almeida-Amaral.
Id.
First, “courts and agencies must adopt a flexible case-by-case approach for evaluating egregiousness, based on a general .set of background principles which fulfill the two-part
Lopez-Mendoza
test.”
Id.
at 278-79. Second, fact-finders who “evaluate] the egregiousness of the violation should pay close attention to the ‘characteristics and severity of the offending conduct.’ ”
Id.
at 279 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Quoting the First Circuit’s decision in
Kandamar
and the Eight Circuit’s decision in
Puc-Ruiz,
the
Oliva-Ramos
court explained that “ ‘evidence of any government misconduct by threats, coercion or physical abuse’ might be important considerations in evaluating egregiousness,”
id.
(quoting
Kanda-mar,
[W]hether Oliva-Ramos can establish intentional violations of the Fourth Amendment, whether the seizure itself was so gross or unreasonable in addition to being without a plausible legal ground, {e.g., when the initial illegal stop is particularly lengthy, there is an unnecessary and menacing show or use of force, etc.), whether improper seizures, illegal entry of homes, or arrests occurred under threats, coercion or physical abuse, the extent to which the agents re[s]orted to unreasonable shows of force, and finally, whether any seizures or arrests were based on race or perceived ethnicity.
Id. The court further explained that its list of factors was merely “illustrative ... and not intended as an exhaustive list of factors that should always be considered, nor is any one factor necessarily determinative of the outcome in every case. Rather, the familiar totality of the circumstances must guide the inquiry and determine its outcome.” Id.
Because the court in Oliva-Ramos took “no position ... on the underlying question of whether the circumstances here are so egregious ... as to justify a suppression order,” id. at 282, it did not apply the totality of the circumstances test. Instead, the court remanded the case to allow the alien to marshal’ evidence concerning widespread and egregious Fourth Amendment violations. Id.
The Second Circuit’s case law is in line with that of the Third Circuit. In
Almei-da-Amaral,
a border patrol agent stopped a Brazilian national.
The Second Circuit followed Oliva-Ra-mos in its decision in
Cotzojay.
In that case, an alien from Guatemala, who was seized by ICE agents at his home in River-head, New York at approximately 4:00 a.m., asserted that his Fourth Amendment rights,- among others, had been violated and thus endeavored to exclude the evidence obtained by ICE as a result of the seizure, including a Form 1-213, his passport, and his statements to the agents.
On appeal, the Second Circuit vacated and remanded the case to the BIA. Id. at 184. The court first observed that it had never found a violation sufficiently severe to meet the egregious standard in a removal case. Id. at 180. The court then moved to the uncontroversial proposition that the Fourth Amendment applies to aliens and citizens alike. Id. at 181. The court noted that, in the absence of consent or exigent circumstances, the Supreme Court has consistently held that an entry into a home to conduct a search or make an arrest is unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment unless done pursuant to a warrant. Id. In the court’s view, “if a Fourth Amendment violation is measured by what is reasonable, then an egregious violation must surely be something more than unreasonable.” Id. at 182. In fact, the court observed that the test for egregiousness is more demanding than the test for overcoming qualified immunity. Id. at 183 n. 10. 10 The court agreed that the Third Circuit’s list of factors may be useful for determining whether a Fourth Amendment violation is sufficiently egregious to require application of the exclusionary rule, adding that no “single aspect of a constitutional violation elevates its status from merely unreasonable to egregious.” Id. at 183. The court observed that,
although an unlawful search does not become an egregious search merely because it invades the privacy of the home, ... that government agents intrude into one’s home (versus a workplace or vehicle, for example) is an important factor in assessing the egregiousness of a Fourth Amendment violation because the home is where its protections should be at their peak.
Id. (alteration, citation, and internal quotation marks omitted).
Applying the totality of the circumstances standard, the Cotzojay court held that “the deliberate, nighttime, warrant-less entry into an individual’s home, with *457 out consent and in the absence of exigent circumstances, may constitute an egregious Fourth Amendment violation regardless of whether government agents physically threaten or harm residents.” Id. According to the court, its egregious Fourth Amendment violation holding was further supported by other objective evidence, namely, that the ICE agents “pounded” on the alien’s bedroom door following the home entry, “corralled” the alien and “other handcuffed residents in the living room,” searched the alien’s “room for desirable identification documents, informed arrestees that they could relieve themselves in a restaurant parking lot while [the agents] ate breakfast, and, in total, detained [the alien] for approximately eighteen hours.” Id. at 183-84 n. 12. As a result, the court remanded the case for further proceedings to give the government a meaningful opportunity to show that its officers obtained consent to enter the home. Id. at 183-84.
In Maldonado, the Second Circuit stressed the difficulty of establishing a
pri-ma facie
case of egregiousness. In that case, aliens from Ecuador were among persons gathered in a park in Danbury, Connecticut, to seek work.
In denying the petition for review, the Maldonado court emphasized that a removal hearing was designed to provide a quick method of determining an alien’s eligibility to remain in the country. Id. at 159. As for the contours of the egregiousness standard, the court observed that “‘egregious’ by definition is very bad indeed.” Id. Thus, according to the court, the egregiousness standard is “stringent” and “entails a shock to the conscience.” Id.; see also id. at 165 (“Something egregious is by nature extreme, rare, and obvious.”). Applying the totality of the circumstances standard, the court found no egregious Fourth Amendment violations. Id. at 160-63. In so holding, the court noted that the affidavit in Cotzojay was deemed to satisfy the egregiousness standard “because it averred facts that were appalling under any standard: a deliberate, nighttime, warrantless entry into an individual’s home without consent and in the absence of exigent circumstances.” Id. at 160 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Contrasting the facts in Cotzojay to the facts before it, the court pointed out that the aliens did not allege that they were treated in a particularly severe manner and found nothing in their account suggesting that they were “gathered by the authorities, let alone that they were selected by the authorities on the basis of race.” .Id. at 161. Rather, the court declared that the aliens “self-selected on the basis of their willingness to seek and accept day labor.” Id.
The Eighth Circuit’s case law is in line with that of the Second and Third Circuits. In
Puc-Ruiz,
the Eighth Circuit affirmed a removal order issued by the BIA, which upheld a decision by the IJ, who refused to suppress evidence obtained following the alien’s apprehension by a local police offi
*458
cer.
On review in the Eighth Circuit, the Puc-Ruiz court held that the police conduct at issue did not rise to the level of an egregious Fourth Amendment violation. Id. at 778-79. The court acknowledged that egregious violations are not limited to those of physical brutality and cited to the principle that the lack of any valid basis whatsoever for a seizure sets the stage for egregiousness, but more than that single factor would be needed. Id. The court indicated that there was no evidence in the record that the local police employed an unreasonable show of force. Id. at 779. It emphasized that the alien did not advance any argument that the decision to arrest him was based on race or appearance, such as to trigger an egregious violation, as has been recognized in other circuit court decisions. Id. The court considered that this was not a case in which police officers invaded private property and detained individuals with no articulable suspicion whatsoever. Id. 11
In
Martinez Carcamo,
the Eighth Circuit rejected the aliens’ challenge to the IJ’s denial, and the BIA’s affirmance, of their motion to suppress.
*459
In
Lopez-Fernandez v. Holder,
the Eighth Circuit denied a petition for review of a removal order issued by the BIA, which upheld a decision by the IJ, who refused to suppress evidence obtained following the aliens’ apprehension by ICE agents who went to the aliens’ home following relevant information the agents received from a named informant.
c
Our survey of the case law from the Ninth Circuit on the one hand and the Second, Third, and Eighth Circuits on the other, informs us that we should align ourselves with the Second, Third, and Eighth Circuits and apply a totality of the circumstances test.
Any analysis into the appropriate egregiousness standard should begin with the recognition that a removal hearing is intended to “provide a streamlined determination of eligibility to remain in this country, nothing more.”
Lopez-Mendoza,
The Ninth Circuit’s approach requires a suppression hearing any time an alien alleges that the law enforcement officers acted in bad faith. This sets the evidentia-ry proffer bar too low. Bad faith allegations often are difficult to resolve without an evidentiary hearing because the outcome turns on the subjective motivations
*460
of the law enforcement officers. It is easy to see how the bad faith standard can be manipulated by clever lawyers and encourages aliens to file frivolous improper motivation claims. Thus, we see the Ninth Circuit’s standard as stymieing, rather than promoting, the streamlined nature of the removal hearing process as recognized by the Court in
Lopez-Mendoza.
Relatedly, the Ninth Circuit’s standard runs the risk of routinely requiring the arresting law enforcement officer to appear at a suppression hearing to testify concerning motivation, which the Court noted in
Lopez-Mendoza
would unacceptably burden the administration of the immigration laws.
The Ninth Circuit’s standard is inconsistent with
Lopez-Mendoza
on another front. The cases cited by the
Lopez-Mendoza
Court in support of the egregiousness exception, in particular
Rochin,
turned on the
conduct
of the law enforcement officers not on the
knowledge
or
intent
of the law enforcement officers. The Court in
Rochin
did not resolve the case on the basis of what the law enforcement officers knew or intended, but rather what they did — they forcibly arrested the defendant and obtained inculpatory evidence without his consent by forcing a tube down his throat to pump his stomach.
The Ninth Circuit’s approach faces another obstacle as well. As noted by the court in
Olivar-Ramos,
the Ninth Circuit’s approach allows law enforcement officers a free pass any time they unconstitutionally act pursuant, to an agency regulation.
In our view, the sounder egregiousness approach is the totality of the circumstances standard as applied in the Second, Third, and Eighth Circuits. This standard is a flexible case-by-case standard, taking into account a variety of factors.
Id.
It allows the court to examine all of the facts it deems relevant to the egregiousness inquiry and focuses on the unreasonableness of the conduct of the law enforcement officers.
Id.
at 276, 278. Factors a court may consider include: (1) whether the Fourth Amendment violation was intentional; (2) whether, the violation was unreasonable in addition to being illegal; (3) whether there were threats, coercion, physical abuse, promises, or an unreasonable show of force by the law enforcement officers; (4) whether there was no articula-ble suspicion for the search or seizure whatsoever; (5) where, when, and how the search, seizure or questioning took place; (6) whether the search, seizure, or questioning was particularly lengthy; (7) whether the law enforcement officers
*461
procured an arrest or search warrant; (8) any unique characteristics of the alien involved; and (9) whether the violation was based on racial considerations.
Maldonado,
763 F,3d at 159-60;
Oliva-Ra-mos,
E
With the appropriate standard set forth, we can proceed to address the substance of Yanez’s Fourth Amendment claims. 13
1
Yanez raises three Fourth Amendment particularity claims. First, she claims that the search warrant was invalid because it identified the Premises as a single-family home when it was, in fact, a multi-unit dwelling. Alternatively, she claims that, once the agents entered the Premises, they should have realized that the Premises was a multi-unit dwelling, and, at that point, they should have stopped the search immediately because the warrant was overbroad. Finally, she claims the ICE agents were required to list her as an item to be seized in the warrant. We reject these claims for the simple reason that they do not make out a constitutional violation, let alone an egregious one. 14
*462
The Fourth Amendment provides that “no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. The requirement for particularity “ensures that the search will be carefully tailored to its justifications, and will not take on the character of the wide-ranging exploratory searches the Framers intended to prohibit.”
Maryland v. Garrison,
We conclude that, under the circumstances, the ICE agents conducted a reasonable investigation of the Premises in preparation for obtaining the search warrant, and further conclude that the description of the Premises in the warrant did not invalidate it. The agents placed the Premises under surveillance, and such surveillance revealed that the Premises was occupied by Umana, an illegal alien and El Salvadorian citizen. Based on their surveillance of the Premises, the agents reasonably believed that it was a single-family home, as the picture of the Premises in the record depicts a small, single-story home. The Premises has just one mailbox, with the numbers “402” on it, (J.A. 524), and the land records search did not reflect that the Premises was a multi-unit dwelling. The investigation of the Premises and its description in the warrant unquestionably complied with the dictates of
Garrison
and
Owens. Cf. United States v. Clark,
Yanez also claims that, once the ICE agents entered the Premises and approached the bedroom occupied by her and Umana, the agents should have known it was a multi-unit dwelling because the bedroom door was locked. Upon this realization, Yanez claims, the agents immediately should have terminated the search in order to secure a search warrant for Yanez’s “separate dwelling.” Petitioner’s Br. at 32.
The Supreme Court indicated in
Garrison
that “the validity of the search of respondent’s apartment pursuant to a warrant ... depends on whether the officers’ failure to realize the overbreadth of the warrant was objectively understandable and reasonable.”
Yanez’s claim founders for the simple reason that the ICE agents reasonably believed that the Premises was a single-family home when they arrived at the locked bedroom door. A locked bedroom door in a home does not necessarily mean or imply that the home is a multi-unit dwelling.
See United States v. Kyles,
In any event, even if the ICE agents were somehow mistaken, and we do not suggest or imply they were, we must make allowances for “honest mistakes that are made by officers in the dangerous and difficult process of making arrests and executing search warrants.”
Garrison,
Yanez’s final claim concerning particularity is that the search warrant is invalid because the affidavit did not list her as an item to be seized. This claim is premised on her claim that the warrant is invalid because the affidavit did not identify the Premises as a multi-unit dwelling and, more particularly, did not identify her separate dwelling unit as a place to be searched. Since we have rejected the premises on which this final claim rests, we reject this claim as well.
*464 2
Yanez also argues that the timing of the execution of the search warrant — 5:00 a.m. instead of between 6:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. — violated her Fourth Amendment rights. Basically, Yanez contends that the nighttime execution of a daytime warrant violates the Fourth Amendment, absent consent or exigent circumstances, which are not presented here. 15
a
The Fourth Amendment protects individuals from “unreasonable searches and seizures,” guaranteeing their right “to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. That Amendment was specifically crafted to thwart the unbridled discretion of law enforcement officers. Our Founding Fathers intended to impede “the abuses of the general warrants that had occurred in England and of the writs of assistance used in the Colonies.”
Steagald v. United States,
Though the Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable searches of persons, houses, papers, and effects, dwelling houses and residences are protected with special jealousy.
See Florida v. Jardines,
— U.S. -,
Our nation’s historic aversion to the warrantless searches of dwelling houses and residences reaches its zenith when such searches are conducted at night. Nighttime searches have long been recognized as more intrusive than searches conducted during the day.
See Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
Rule 41 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure implements the Fourth Amendment’s protections against warrantless searches.
Jones,
b
That a nighttime search would be unconstitutional absent consent or exigent circumstances if it was conducted under color of a daytime warrant is not a novel concept. The Third and Tenth Circuits have reached that very conclusion.
See O’Rourke,
In reaching their determinations that the nighttime searches violated the Fourth Amendment, the Third and Tenth Circuits focused on the scope of authority conveyed by the explicit terms of the search warrants.
See, e.g., id.
at 744 (determining that search warrant’s specific limitation “in the daytime” was conclusive). Because each warrant authorized a daytime search only, the warrant only could be executed during daytime hours. As the courts of appeals emphasized, to determine otherwise would “completely eviscerate the issu
*467
ing magistrate’s determination of reasonableness,”
O’Rourke,
c
Beyond the Third and Tenth Circuits, it is notable that the Attorney General has taken the position that a daytime warrant does not convey authority to conduct a nighttime search.
Jones,
d
Following the persuasive decisions of the Third and Tenth Circuits, as well as the Supreme Court’s decision in Jones where the Court accepted that the government’s concession that a nighttime search conducted pursuant to a daytime warrant violated the Fourth Amendment, we hold that the nighttime execution of a daytime warrant violates the Fourth Amendment, absent consent or exigent circumstances. 20
In so holding, we note that our court, in an unpublished opinion, has treated a nighttime search conducted under the aegis of a daytime warrant as a mere Rule 41 violation, rather than as an unconstitutional search.
See United States v. Davis,
e
Applying the foregoing principles to Yanez’s Fourth Amendment timing claim reveals that the 5:00 a.m. search of the Premises violated the Fourth Amendment. Not only did the magistrate judge specify that the search warrant was to be executed in the daytime, he crossed out and explicitly rejected the alternative option that would have allowed the search to occur in the nighttime.
Cf. Youngbey v. March,
Rather, the facts are that the ICE agents secured a daytime warrant and decided to execute it during the nighttime, exceeding the authority granted by the magistrate judge.
See United States v. Vigo,
At bottom, Yanez’s suppression motion implicates a simple rule: a daytime warrant does not authorize a nighttime search. The government implies that 5:00 a.m. essentially is “close enough” to 6:00 a.m. in the eyes of the Fourth Amendment. Notably, however, as John Adams observed in successfully defending British soldiers charged in the Boston Massacre, “[flacts are stubborn things.” David McCullough, John Adams 52 (2001). And the stubbornest fact here is that 5:00 a.m. is not 6:00 a.m. At 6:00 a.m., the warrant sanctioned the ICE agents to enter into the Premises. At 5:00 a.m., the warrant did not permit such an entry. Because the nighttime execution of the daytime warrant violated Yanez’s Fourth Amendment rights, as it was executed without consent or exigent circumstances, we must turn to the question of whether the agents egregiously violated Yanez’s Fourth Amendment rights.
f
As noted above, the question of egregiousness turns on an evaluation of the totality of the circumstances. There are two circumstances that support Ya-nez’s egregiousness claim. The first is that the Fourth Amendment violation occurred in her home, where her privacy interests are strong.
Jardines,
On the other side of the ledger, several factors weigh in the government’s favor. There is no evidence that the ICE agents threatened, coerced, or physically abused Yanez,.or promised her anything for her cooperation. Unlike Umana and Mendoza, she was never handcuffed and was allowed to remain at the Premises following the search. There is no evidence of diminished capacity on the part of Yanez, or that the questioning of her was particularly lengthy. Also, there is nothing in the record to suggest that the agents were motivated by racial considerations, and there is no evidence of improper intent on the part of the agents. 22
*470
While the totality scales at this point tilt in the government’s favor, two additional facts seal Yanez’s fate: (1) the ICE agents prepared a valid search warrant; and (2) the magistrate judge found the existence of probable cause to search the Premises in the daytime. As to the validity of the warrant, Agent Coker prepared a detailed and thorough affidavit laying out the facts in support of probable cause to believe that illegal aliens (and evidence of the harboring of illegal aliens) would be found in the Premises during a search. Yanez makes no challenge to the accuracy of the facts set forth in Agent Coker’s affidavit, other than the description of the Premises as a single-story, single-family home. Under such circumstances, there simply is no doubt that the warrant was facially valid.
Cf. Franks v. Delaware,
The presence of a
valid
search warrant supported by a magistrate judge’s probable cause finding diminishes the degree of the intrusion on a resident’s Fourth Amendment interests.
Cf. Michigan v. Summers,
In
Cotzojay,
the alien’s privacy interests continued to remain at their zenith — the search took place at night in the alien’s home and the ICE agents did not attempt to procure a warrant. Because the agents never attempted to procure a warrant, it is not surprising that the court there concluded that a nighttime warrantless search was egregious where the alien’s privacy interests were so compelling and the conduct of the agents deplorable.
But cf. Martinez Carcamo,
*471 Put another way, if law enforcement officers do not attempt to secure a valid warrant supported by a magistrate judge’s probable cause finding (as in Cotzojay), their conduct is more egregious than law enforcement officers who take the time to prepare a valid warrant and present it to a magistrate judge for a probable cause finding. In the latter case, the law enforcement officers’ conduct is less offensive— they have sought and received authorization for a privacy interest invasion — while in the former case, the law enforcement officers’ conduct borders on abhorrent, which renders the intrusion more severe and, hence, egregious. 23
Sensing that she suffered a “mere garden-variety” violation of her Fourth Amendment rights,
Garcia-Torres,
The Supreme Court has repeatedly made clear that law enforcement officers, when executing a search, “may take reasonable action to secure the premises and to ensure their own safety and the efficacy of the search.”
Los Angeles Cnty., Cal. v. Rettele,
Claims of excessive force are analyzed under the Fourth Amendment’s objective reasonableness standard, judging the “reasonableness of a particular use of force ... from the perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene.”
Graham v. Connor,
The force here at issue consisted of the ICE agents breaking down Yanez’s bedroom door, shouting “police” and “don’t move,” pointing a gun at her, and leading her downstairs at gunpoint to the living room couch. (J.A. 142).
Summers
stress
*472
es that the risk of harm to officers and occupants is minimized if the officers routinely exercise “unquestioned command of the situation.”
Our discussion of the totality of the circumstances leads us to conclude that the Fourth Amendment violation here lacks the severity necessary to support a finding of egregiousness.
Almeida-Amaral,
3
Yanez also argues that her statements to the ICE agents were involuntary and, thus, were used against her in violation of her rights under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
See Bustos-Torres v. INS,
The allegations presented to the IJ failed to establish a
prima facie
case of involuntariness. Yanez did not submit evidence of promises, prolonged questioning, interference with her right to counsel, or other indicia of coercion or duress that might suggest that her statements were involuntary, and she was never handcuffed during the entire episode.
See Lopez-Gabriel,
In so rejecting, we note that Yanez’s heavy .reliance on the Second Circuit’s decision in
Singh v. Mukasey,
Although the court in Singh discussed the egregious violation exception in Lopez-Mendoza, id. at 215-16, the court did not explicitly state whether the signed statement was suppressed because there was an egregious Fourth Amendment violation or because there was an egregious Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause violation. In excluding the statements, the court stated only that, “[e]ven assuming that the conduct here was not ‘egregious,’ it nonetheless undermined the reliability of the evidence in dispute.” Id. at 215 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, the court excluded the evidence on the basis that the unspecified constitution *474 al violation undermined the probative value of the challenged evidence. Id.
The Second Circuit’s decision in Singh hurts rather than helps Yanez’s cause. As noted earlier, Yanez does not challenge the reliability of the evidence obtained as a result of the alleged wrongful interrogation, which was the basis on which the court in Singh suppressed the challenged statements. Moreover, the circumstances surrounding the questioning of the alien in Singh were decidedly more coercive than the questioning of Yanez in this case. Unlike Singh, Yanez was questioned at home for a brief period of time, and she was not repeatedly told she would be taken to jail. Moreover, unlike the nuanced statements in Singh, the questioning of Yanez was designed to obtain simple and objective factual statements, which it did. Finally, unlike the atmosphere in Singh, where the investigating officer repeatedly asked the same question until he got the answer he wanted, such was not the case here.
4
Finally, we turn to Yanez’s argument that the ICE agents failed to follow five regulations, in particular, 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(a)(l)(iii) (regulating use of non-deadly force by agents), 8 C.F.R. § 287.3(c) (mandating advice concerning right to counsel), 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(b)(2) (regarding authority to briefly detain aliens for questioning), ' 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)(i) (concerning power to arrest aliens), and 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)(h) (explaining requirement for obtaining warrant prior to arresting alien). We have recognized that “an agency’s failure to afford an individual procedural safeguards required under its own regulations may result in the invalidation of the ultimate administrative determination.”
United States v. Morgan,
We reject Yanez’s reliance on the five regulations at issue. First off, 8 C.F.R. § 287.12 prohibits any construction of Part 287 of the Code of Federal Regulations “to create any rights, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law by any party in any matter, civil or criminal.” 8 C.F.R. § 287.12. As such, Yanez arguably suffered no prejudice.
Cf. Navarro-Cha-lan,
*475 III
For the reasons stated herein, we deny Yanez’s petition for review.
PETITION DENIED
Notes
.The search warrant itself incorporated by reference Agent Coker’s affidavit, thus avoiding any difficulty with the Supreme Court’s decision in
Groh v. Ramirez,
. The picture of the Premises included in Agent Coker's affidavit shows a single story home with a gable roof. It shows two windows in the roof facing the street and one window on the right gable end.
. Agent Currie and ICE agent Richard Federico, Sr. (Agent Federico) executed declarations that were presented to the IJ. In their respective declarations, they assert that the search began at 6:02 a.m. The return on the search warrant states that the search was completed at 8:56 a.m., but it fails to indicate when the search began.
. "A Form 1-213 is an official record routinely prepared by an [immigration officer] as a summary of information obtained at the time of the initial processing of an individual suspected of being an alien unlawfully present in the United States.”
Bauge v. INS,
. While Chief Justice Burger joined the parts of the opinion (Parts I to IV) holding that the exclusionary rule did not apply in removal proceedings, he did not join in the part of the opinion (Part V) recognizing that egregious or widespread Fourth Amendment violations might warrant application of the exclusionary rule.
. Before the IJ and the BIA in this case, the DHS took the position that the exclusionary rule does not apply in removal proceedings under any circumstances. However, the Attorney General, who represents the government in this court, takes a position contrary to that of the DHS, and his position concerning the exclusionary rule is binding on the DHS. See 8 U.S.C. § 1103(a)(1) (providing that the Secretary of Homeland Security “shall be charged with the administration and enforcement of ... all ... laws relating to the immigration and naturalization of aliens ... [pjrovided, however, [t]hat determination and ruling by the Attorney General with respect to all questions of law shall be controlling”).
. In unpublished decisions, we have recognized the application of the exclusionary rule in removal proceedings.
See, e.g., Samuels v. INS,
.All of Yanez’s egregiousness claims pertain to alleged Fourth Amendment violations. Consequently, we do not decide what "other liberties” fall within the egregiousness exception.
Lopez-Mendoza,
. Other circuits have raised and disposed of claims of egregiousness without setting out a detailed standard.
See, e.g., Kandamar,
. The
Cotzojay
court rejected the Ninth Circuit's qualified immunity approach because the court found that approach too broad in that it places "too much emphasis on the good or bad faith of government agents.”
. The
Puc-Ruiz
court also rejected the alien’s due process claim on the basis that the statements were voluntarily made.
. The
Martinez Carcamo
court noted that it previously had rejected the Ninth Circuit’s qualified immunity approach in
Garcia-Torres v. Holder,
. Because Yanez abandoned before the BIA her claim that the alleged constitutional violations she experienced were part of a larger, widespread pattern of unconstitutional misconduct by ICE agents, we decline to address the merits of her Fourth Amendment widespread pattern claim.
See Kporlor v. Holder,
. We note that neither the U nor the BIA specifically addressed Yanez’s particularity claims. Ordinarily, such an error would require a remand to the BIA for further proceedings pursuant to
SEC v. Chenery Corp.,
. Understandably, because the record must be viewed in a light most favorable to Yanez, the government does not suggest that exigent circumstances or consent excused the alleged failure to timely execute the warrant.
. A general warrant, utilized extensively in England before the American Revolution, "specified only an offense ... and left to the discretion of the executing officials the decision as to which persons should be arrested and which places should be searched.”
Steagald,
.The Fourth Amendment’s guarantee against unreasonable searches of "houses” extends to owners, boarders, and tenants of homes, apartments, and other dwelling places.
United States v. Gray,
. Exigent circumstances justifying a war-rantless search of a home may include, by way of example: fighting a fire and investigating its cause; preventing the imminent destruction of evidence; engaging in “hot pursuit” of a fleeing felon; rendering emergency assistance to an injured occupant; or preventing an occupant from imminent injury.
Stuart,
. The relevant inquiry in determining when a search warrant was executed is the time at which the search began, not when it ended.
See, e.g., United States v. Keene,
. Although the nighttime execution of a daytime warrant is a Fourth Amendment violation, absent justification, some courts have excused the execution of a search warrant past its expiration date. These courts have inquired into whether the probable cause that supported the warrant's issuance continued to exist at the time of the search.
See, e.g., United States v. Burgess,
. In
United States v. Rizzi,
. Indeed, considering the circuit split on whether the nighttime execution of a daytime warrant, without consent or exigent circum *470 stances, is a Fourth Amendment violation, it cannot credibly be argued that the ICE agents in this case intentionally violated the Fourth Amendment rights of Yanez by entering the Premises an hour before the warrant permitted.
. Interestingly, had the ICE agents in
Cotzo-jay
obtained a daytime warrant and executed it at night, the Second Circuit would not have assessed the claim for Fourth Amendment egregiousness because such claims in the Second Circuit are analyzed under a Rule 41 harmless error analysis.
See Burke,
. The reasonableness of the seizure in
Summers
was justified by three law enforcement objectives: (1) "preventing flight in the event that incriminating evidence is found”; (2) "minimizing the risk of harm to the officers”; and (3) facilitating "the orderly completion of the search” with the assistance of the detained occupants.
. Because we hold that the force used by the ICE agents was measured and not excessive in the constitutional sense, we reject Yanez's stand-alone egregious Fourth Amendment violation claim based on the amount of force used by the agents. Moreover, to the extent that Yanez challenges the scope and duration of her seizure on Fourth Amendment egregiousness grounds, we reject this argument on the basis that her seizure was reasonable in its scope and duration. Under
Summers,
law enforcement officers are entitled to detain occupants of a premises for the whole length of most warranted searches.
. We note that, even under the Ninth Circuit’s more alien-friendly qualified immunity egregiousness standard, Yanez would not prevail. As noted in Footnote 22, the law is unsettled on the question of whether the nighttime execution of a daytime warrant, without consent or exigent circumstances, is a Fourth Amendment violation. Given the state of the law, it cannot be said that the ICE agents in our case acted pursuant to the “unequivocal doctrinal backdrop" necessary for a finding of egregiousness under the Ninth Circuit's more lenient egregiousness standard.
Martinez-Medina,
