Lead Opinion
Hall, Circuit Judge:
*610Petitioner Gerard Patrick Matthews seeks review of an August 2016 decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals ("BIA"), affirming an April 2016 decision of an Immigration Judge ("IJ") that ordered Matthews removed to Ireland on the ground that his convictions for endangering the welfare of a child under New York Penal Law ("NYPL") § 260.10(1) made him removable under Immigration and Nationality Act ("INA") § 237(a)(2)(E)(i),
We DENY the petition for review.
BACKGROUND
Petitioner Gerard Patrick Matthews is a native and citizen of Ireland who has lived in the United States as a lawful permanent resident since 1989. Matthews, who was physically and sexually abused as a child, has a long history of alcoholism and has repeatedly exposed himself in public while intoxicated. Between 1990 and 2011, these public exposure incidents resulted in at least nine convictions for public lewdness and two convictions for endangering the welfare of a child under *611New York Penal Law ("NYPL") § 260.10(1).
In 2011, the Department of Homeland Security placed Matthews in removal proceedings through service of a Notice to Appear ("NTA"). The NTA charged Matthews as removable on the ground that his New York convictions for endangering the welfare of a child were crimes of child abuse, child neglect, or child abandonment under
On remand, the Government added an additional charge that Matthews was removable for having been convicted of two crimes involving moral turpitude ("CIMTs") based on the public lewdness convictions in 1990 and 1994. See INA § 237(a)(2)(A)(ii),
In April 2016, the IJ denied all relief and ordered Matthews removed. No. A042 231 142 (Immig. Ct. N.Y. City Apr. 7, 2016). The IJ found that Matthews's public lewdness convictions were not CIMTs, but concluded that Matthews was removable for crimes of child abuse, neglect, or abandonment based on his convictions under NYPL § 260.10(1). The IJ relied on the BIA's precedential decision in Matter of Mendoza Osorio ,
In August 2016, the BIA dismissed Matthews's appeal. In re Gerard Patrick Matthews, No. A042 231 142 (B.I.A. Aug. 30, 2016). The BIA agreed that Matthews was removable, rejecting his argument that Mendoza Osorio misinterpreted the scope of New York's law and holding that NYPL § 260.10(1) "requires a knowing act with a likelihood of harm to a child." Certified Administrative Record ("CAR") at 4. The BIA also agreed with the IJ that Matthews did not merit discretionary relief. Id. at 5.
Matthews, who is represented by pro bono counsel, timely petitioned for review.
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
Where, as here, "the BIA has adopted the IJ's reasoning and offered additional commentary, we review the decision of the IJ as supplemented by the BIA." Gertsenshteyn v. U.S. Dep't of Justice ,
II. The BIA's Definition of "Crime of Child Abuse"
Matthews was ordered removed under
At a minimum, this definition encompasses convictions for offenses involving the infliction on a child of physical harm, even if slight; mental or emotional harm, including acts injurious to morals; sexual abuse, including direct acts of sexual contact, but also including acts that induce (or omissions that permit) a child to engage in prostitution, pornography, or other sexually explicit conduct; as well as any act that involves the use or exploitation of a child as an object of sexual gratification or as a tool in the commission of serious crimes, such as drug trafficking.
Importantly, this is not the first time we have reviewed the BIA's conclusion that a state child endangerment offense is a removable crime of child abuse, neglect, or abandonment under
Although the BIA's definition of 'a crime of child abuse' is expansive, it is not unlimited. Soram confirms that a state child-endangerment statute qualifies as a 'crime of child abuse' under the INA only if it requires, as an element of the crime, a sufficiently high risk of harm to a child ... this limitation ensures that the BIA's treatment of state child-endangerment statutes remains within the realm of reason.
Id . The BIA has agreed with this position. In Mendoza Osorio , the agency "recognize[d] that there are child endangerment statutes that do not require a sufficiently high risk of harm to a child to meet the definition of child abuse, neglect, or abandonment under the [INA]."
Whether a New York misdemeanor conviction for endangering the welfare of a child is a crime of child abuse remains an open question of law in this Circuit. Florez had conceded that NYPL § 260.10(1) fell within the BIA's definition, and therefore we did not need to decide the issue in that case. Florez ,
III. Matthews's Arguments on Appeal
Matthews has two arguments. First, he challenges our decision in Florez and argues that we must revisit the Chevron issue in light of a recent Supreme Court decision, Esquivel-Quintana v. Sessions , --- U.S. ----,
A. Revisiting Florez
"In our Circuit, panels are 'bound by the decisions of prior panels until such time as they are overruled either by an en banc panel of our Court or by the Supreme Court.' " United States v. Gill ,
In Esquivel-Quintana the Supreme Court interpreted
*615Esquivel-Quintana ,
In Esquivel-Quintana , the Supreme Court did not reject Chevron outright or mandate any particular approach to statutory interpretation. At most, the Supreme Court's decision reminds courts to use all available tools of statutory construction in order to discern Congress's intent before concluding that a statutory term is ambiguous and deferring to the implementing agency's interpretation. Cf. Chevron ,
B. The Categorical Approach
As noted above, the BIA and federal courts agree that state child endangerment statutes must require something more than a mere possibility of nonserious harm to qualify as a crime of child abuse, neglect, or abandonment under the INA. See Florez ,
In determining whether NYPL § 260.10(1) is a crime of child abuse, we employ the "categorical approach," looking only to the text of NYPL § 260.10(1) and New York's interpretation of that statute to determine whether there is a categorical match with the BIA's definition. Florez ,
Under this categorical approach, "[a]n alien's actual conduct is irrelevant to the inquiry, as the adjudicator must 'presume that the conviction rested upon nothing more than the least of the acts criminalized' under the state statute." Mellouli v. Lynch , --- U.S. ----,
The Supreme Court first announced the realistic probability standard in 2007 in Duenas-Alvarez ,
In Moncrieffe , the Supreme Court again referenced the "realistic probability" component of the categorical approach.
Other than in Duenas-Alvarez and Moncrieffe , the Supreme Court has not expanded or again discussed the "realistic probability" approach in the context of determining removability. Importantly, the Supreme Court has not yet "specif[ied] what type of evidence may be used to satisfy the 'realistic probability' requirement." Nicanor-Romero v. Mukasey ,
C. The BIA's Definition of a Crime of Child Abuse is a Categorial Match with NYPL § 260.10(1)
Section 260.10(1) criminalizes, as relevant here, "knowingly act[ing] in a manner likely to be injurious to the physical, mental, or moral welfare of a child less than seventeen years old." New York defines the requisite mens rea , "knowingly," as follows: "A person acts knowingly with respect to conduct or to a circumstance described by a statute defining an offense when he is aware that his conduct is of such nature or that such circumstance exists." NYPL § 15.05(2). "Likely" is defined as "probable," "showing a strong tendency," or "reasonably expected." Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014). The New York Court of Appeals has interpreted NYPL § 260.10(1) as requiring both that the defendant acted "with an awareness of the potential for harm" and "that the harm was likely to occur, and not merely possible." People v. Hitchcock ,
The case law illustrates that although the question of whether a defendant's conduct is likely to harm a child is highly "fact specific," evidence of likely harm is required to convict a defendant under *619NYPL § 260.10(1). Johnson ,
In People v. Simmons , the defendant was charged with "repeatedly directing vulgar remarks of a sexual nature" to a child roughly two years old.
New York appellate courts have reversed NYPL § 260.10(1) convictions after finding insufficient evidence or improper instructions regarding either a defendant's knowledge or an actual likelihood of physical, mental, or moral harm to a child. See People v. Hosue ,
As the BIA discussed in Mendoza Osorio ,
This is not a situation, therefore, in which the state statute, on its face, stretches further than the BIA's definition; instead, the state statute and the BIA's definition appear to be a categorical match.
D. Matthews Has Not Demonstrated a Realistic Probability that the Statute is Applied More Broadly than the BIA's Definition
Where a statute is not facially overbroad, the realistic probability approach requires a noncitizen to demonstrate "that the State actually prosecutes the relevant offense in cases" that fall outside the federal definition. Moncrieffe ,
Matthews does not argue that the facts underlying his convictions do not match the BIA's definition of a crime of child abuse. Rather, he argues that New York courts have imposed liability for child endangerment in situations that may be illustrative of "bad parenting" or other "minor missteps," but do not actually pose a likelihood of physical, mental, or moral harm to a child. Petitioner's Br. at 50. He points to two categories of cases: "home alone" cases and cases involving the commission of criminal activity, such as controlled substance use or possession, in the presence of children.
For the "home alone" cases, Matthews and the dissent cite People v. Reyes , in which a New York criminal court denied a defendant's motion to dismiss a child endangerment charge as facially insufficient. 20 Misc.3d 1129A,
We hold that the issue of whether there is some minimum time that a child must be left alone in order to hold a defendant liable under PL § 260.10(1) is ill-suited for resolution on a motion to dismiss for facial insufficiency. Among the factors which would appear appropriate for consideration are the age of the child, the length of time involved, the maturity of the particular child, and the reason why the child was left alone.
Id. at *1. If the case proceeded to trial, the prosecution would have been put to its burden to convince a jury that the defendant's conduct resulted in a likelihood of harm to her child and that the defendant knew that her conduct was likely to result in injury to her child. Reyes and other "home alone" cases illustrate that New York courts are cognizant of the line between "bad parenting" and child endangerment, and provide prosecutors and juries with guideposts for determining when the factual circumstances of a case establish culpability under NYPL § 260.10(1).
The dissent, by contrast, highlights Reyes and other decisions in which New York trial courts upheld the sufficiency of criminal misdemeanor complaints brought under Section 260.10(1) for the proposition that the state courts are applying the statute inconsistently and, accordingly, more broadly than the federal definition. While we appreciate the dissent's concern that some statements by trial courts may not correctly interpret the state statute, there is no question that the statute, as interpreted by the New York Court of Appeals, is a categorical match with the BIA's definition, and there is no New York appellate decision cited by the dissent that has upheld a conviction that sweeps more broadly than the BIA definition.
*622The dissent notes correctly that the Supreme Court has yet to articulate the contours of the "realistic probability" test to argue that our analysis is not so limited, but it is for this precise reason that we find ourselves constrained from reading these cases as contravening the interpretation espoused by New York's highest court.
For similar reasons, we decline to rely upon charging documents to alter our analysis. Amici have submitted several redacted arrest reports, complaints, and misdemeanor informations that charge defendants with violating NYPL § 260.10(1) for conduct such as: driving with a suspended license with a child in the car, shoplifting while caring for an infant or toddler, leaving a nine-year-old and sleeping five-year-old in a car for ten minutes with the windows open, yelling and knocking items from a shelf in the presence of two children, and smoking marijuana in a public playground while children are playing. Matthews, amici, and the dissent argue that these charging documents show a realistic probability that New York prosecutes conduct that only poses a minimal risk of harm to children.
The Government does not contest the authenticity of these documents, although in Matthews's case the IJ and BIA relied on Mendoza Osorio , a precedential case in which the BIA refused to consider charging documents without proof of a subsequent conviction, reasoning that "a judge or jury may have found that the facts as charged were insufficient to support a conviction."
Even if we could consider these charging documents, we are not convinced that they would change the outcome of this case. On the one hand, we recognize the concern expressed by Matthews, amici, and the dissent that prosecutors may be overcharging conduct under the child endangerment statute, and that the vast majority *623of child endangerment charges result in guilty pleas and minimal sentences. The dissent argues that we can consider these charging documents, in combination with a high incidence of guilty pleas, to infer that defendants are pleading guilty to charges that are broader than the BIA's definition. Amici, however, have not submitted any evidence that these charging documents led to convictions (whether through guilty pleas or trial), or that any court upheld the allegations in these documents as facially sufficient. Without specific evidence linking charging documents to guilty pleas, we have no way of knowing the circumstances of the individual offenses that caused the prosecutors to bring the charges or the defendants to plead to those charges. Moreover, this is not a situation where we are without guidance because, as we have previously explained, New York's highest court has clarified the least-acts-criminalized by NYPL § 260.10(1) and requires a likelihood of harm to a child to support a conviction. For this reason, we agree with the BIA's decision in Mendoza Osorio and conclude that the charging documents and the cases Matthews and the dissent point to are not enough to show a realistic probability that NYPL § 260.10(1) covers conduct that falls outside the BIA's definition of a crime of child abuse.
CONCLUSION
Because we hold that NYPL § 260.10(1) is a categorical match with the BIA's definition of "crime of child abuse," to which we owe Chevron deference, and because Matthews has not established a realistic probability that the statute encompasses conduct that stretches further than the BIA's definition, we DENY the petition for review.
Matthews also has a 1995 conviction for third-degree assault under NYPL § 120.00, for which he was sentenced to three years' probation. This conviction was not charged as a basis for removal.
Under Chevron , courts ask, first, whether a statute is ambiguous. If it is not ambiguous, courts must apply the statute's clear meaning. Second, if the statute is ambiguous, courts defer to a permissible interpretation of the statute by the administrative agency responsible for its enforcement.
In an unpublished decision that pre-dated Soram , we expressed skepticism about whether NYPL § 260.10(1) was a crime of child abuse, but we remanded for the BIA to define a "crime of child abuse" in the first instance. Guzman v. Holder ,
Esquivel-Quintana had pleaded no contest to a California statute criminalizing "unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor who is more than three years younger than the perpetrator" and defining a "minor" as "a person under the age of 18 years."
A June 2018 Supreme Court decision analyzing a different INA provision also concluded that "the Court need not resort to Chevron deference" if "Congress has supplied a clear and unambiguous answer to the interpretive question at hand." Pereira v. Sessions , --- U.S. ----,
Matthews overemphasizes Esquivel-Quintana 's survey of state criminal statutes, which was only one of several sources the Supreme Court looked to in that case. See
We review the BIA's interpretation of NYPL § 260.10(1) de novo , without according Chevron deference, because state criminal law falls outside the BIA's area of expertise. See Gill v. INS ,
To the extent that Matthews takes issue with New York's inclusion of "moral harm" against children, we note that the BIA's definition also encompasses "convictions for offenses involving ... mental or emotional harm, including acts injurious to morals." Velazquez-Herrera ,
Similarly, although New York criminal courts are somewhat divided on whether the possession and use of marijuana and other controlled substances pose a sufficient risk of harm to qualify as child endangerment, the cases distinguish between situations in which children are actually exposed to controlled substances, and those in which the defendant made an effort to hide or conceal the illicit substances. Compare Grajales ,
In Armed Career Criminal Act ("ACCA") cases, moreover, which also employ the categorical approach and realistic probability test, the Supreme Court and other Courts of Appeals have recognized that federal courts are bound by the highest state court's interpretations of state law. See Johnson v. United States ,
We have taken judicial notice of material and undisputed changes in country conditions that occur between the BIA's decision and our review, see Hoxhallari v. Gonzales ,
The dissent would grant Matthews's petition on the additional and independent ground that the BIA's current definition of "child abuse" cannot be applied retroactively to Matthews's 2002 and 2003 state convictions. Counsel, however, has not raised this issue, and we therefore do not reach it. Nor do we foreclose the possibility that another petitioner might challenge an order of removal premised on convictions that predated the BIA's contemporaneous definition in a proper case.
Similarly, although we appreciate the policy concerns that Matthews, amici, and the dissent have thoughtfully highlighted-such as the risk of separating families or disqualifying domestic violence victims from obtaining immigration relief-these concerns are not present in Matthews's case, and he has not presented evidence that such concerns have materialized in the context of New York's child endangerment law.
Dissenting Opinion
I respectfully dissent.
New York Penal Law ("NYPL") § 260.10(1) provides in relevant part, "A person is guilty of endangering the welfare of a child when: (1) He or she knowingly acts in a manner likely to be injurious to the physical, mental or moral welfare of a child less than seventeen years old. ..." The Board of Immigration Appeals ("BIA") has found the far-ranging and vaguely contoured terms of this state misdemeanor child endangerment statute to be categorically equivalent to the similarly ambiguous federal definition of the phrase "crime of child abuse, child neglect, or child abandonment." Under the Immigration and Nationality Act ("INA"), non-citizens convicted of crimes falling under this federal definition are both removable from the United States and absolutely barred from seeking many forms of discretionary relief.
Our court has previously deferred to and affirmed the agency's legal interpretations *624of the federal statute. See Florez v. Holder ,
Even accepting the BIA's interpretation of the INA, however, the agency's decision to equate New York "child endangerment" law categorically with INA "child abuse"-a decision first set forth in Matter of Mendoza Osorio ,
For example, in New York, individuals have been convicted under § 260.10(1) for leaving a sleeping child unattended in an apartment for at least fifteen minutes, People v. Reyes , 20 Misc.3d 1129A,
In my view, these facts, supported by reliable data about how often the state prosecutes the crime and obtains guilty pleas that are punished by non-carceral sentences, take the state crime significantly out of alignment with the INA's definition of child abuse. They demonstrate that, *625for immigration law purposes, the crimes are not categorically equivalent.
Relying primarily on published New York state appellate decisions, the majority declines to consider the full spectrum of publicly available data and evidence of prosecutions under the statute. But we need not be so restricted: the data and the lower court decisions are largely in the public record, and the texts of those decisions that are nominally "unreported" are nonetheless publicly available. Even if Matthews may not have presented these precise data and court decisions to the BIA, in assessing the "realistic probability" of prosecution under the statute as we apply the categorical approach, our panel may and indeed must consider such public data that reflects the reach of the statute as it is actually applied. These data and decisions paint a picture of prosecutions and guilty pleas showing that the statute's broad and ambiguous language is enforced in a far more expansive, flexible, and subjective fashion than the reported case law might lead one to expect. To overlook this material is to rely on a flawed foundation in concluding that, as prosecuted, New York misdemeanor "child endangerment" is equivalent to the INA's definition of "child abuse."
The results of the equation are troubling: to adopt the BIA's conclusion of categorical equivalence in 2019, and to apply that conclusion retroactively, is to impose consequences on guilty pleas entered years ago that were then unimaginable for a non-citizen defendant. See generally Obeya v. Sessions ,
Aggravating these circumstances yet further, under the INA, individuals convicted of a crime of "child abuse" are categorically ineligible for the cancellation of removal that is otherwise available to non-permanent residents. 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(b)(1)(C). This discretionary form of relief requires the petitioner to show that removal would effect "exceptional and extremely unusual hardship" to a U.S. citizen- or lawful permanent resident- child (or other qualifying relative).
The majority's affirmance of the BIA's erroneous conclusion also opens the door to consequences that are fundamentally at odds with Congress's stated aim in enacting *626the immigration portions of the Violence Against Women Act ("VAWA"). These authorize immigration courts to provide discretionary relief from removal for individuals who have been "battered or subjected to extreme cruelty" by a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident. 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(b)(2)(A)(i). But individuals convicted of a crime falling within the INA definition of "child abuse" are ineligible for cancellation of removal under these "battered spouse or child" provisions.
The majority thus errs, in my view, by denying Matthews's petition.
I.
Gerard Matthews became a lawful permanent resident of the United States in 1989, having emigrated to this country from Ireland.
In 2016, the BIA entered a removal order against him based primarily on his convictions in 2002 and 2003 under the New York misdemeanor child endangerment statute, NYPL § 260.10(1).
To prevail on his petition for review, Matthews must prove that § 260.10(1) criminalizes conduct falling outside the INA's definition of a "crime of child abuse, child neglect, or child abandonment"-for present purposes, the operative phrase in the INA.
A. Defining the Generic INA Offense
Determining whether NYPL § 260.10(1) criminalizes conduct beyond the generic INA offense of child abuse requires that we first identify that generic definition.
The BIA has not made the task a simple one: its understanding of the "generic offense" has changed significantly over the past two decades. In the late 1990s, the BIA focused on acts of "cruelty" to children, construing the INA phrase to cover *627"[a]ny form of cruelty to a child's physical, moral or mental well-being." In re Rodriguez-Rodriguez ,
At a minimum, this definition encompasses convictions for offenses involving the infliction on a child of physical harm, even if slight; mental or emotional harm, including acts injurious to morals; sexual abuse, including direct acts of sexual contact, but also including acts that induce (or omissions that permit) a child to engage in prostitution, pornography, or other sexually explicit conduct; as well as any act that involves the use or exploitation of a child as an object of sexual gratification or as a tool in the commission of serious crimes, such as drug trafficking.
Two years after Velazquez-Herrera was decided, in Matter of Soram ,
In 2016, in Matter of Mendoza Osorio ,
Even before its decisions in Soram and Mendoza Osorio , we pointed out (albeit in a non-precedential order), that the agency's standards for the level and type of risk required by the INA's generic definition of "child abuse" have been evolving *628and expanding; its limits remain unclear. Guzman v. Holder ,
What is clear is that the BIA has deemed that the level of risk was adequate in the Colorado statute considered in Soram to meet the generic INA child abuse definition-a "reasonable probability that the child's life or health will be endangered"-but inadequate in the California statute considered in Fregozo -a child's "person or health may be endangered." Recognizing the haziness of this conception, one of our sister Circuits has recently concluded that a conviction under a Pennsylvania child endangerment statute that "merely requires conduct that could threaten a child's welfare " does not amount to a crime of child abuse under the INA's generic definition. Zhi Fei Liao v. Attorney Gen .,
With this background, I turn briefly to the text of the relevant New York law. As noted above, NYPL § 260.10(1) provides that a defendant is guilty of misdemeanor child endangerment when "[h]e or she knowingly acts in a manner likely to be injurious to the physical, mental or moral welfare of a child." Unlike the California statute at issue in Fregozo , § 260.10(1) by its terms criminalizes only conduct that is "likely" to create a physical, mental, or moral injury. In Florez , the petitioner did not contest the point; accordingly, we assumed without deciding that the New York statute was coextensive with the federal definition,
Consequently, we must determine whether, as evidenced by actual prosecutions and convictions, we nonetheless discern a "realistic probability" that New York convicts individuals for conduct generating risks of harm of a likelihood or severity below the federal threshold. See Hylton v. Sessions ,
B. The Majority's Application of the "Realistic Probability" Test
As the majority observes, the New York Court of Appeals has ruled that a conviction under § 260.10(1) requires that a defendant have acted "with an awareness of the potential for harm," and "that the harm was likely to occur, and not merely possible." People v. Hitchcock ,
1) The "Home Alone" Cases and N.Y. Court Rulings on Motions to Dismiss for Facial Insufficiency
The main category cited by Matthews and amici is the "home alone" cases-in which a defendant is charged with violating § 260.10(1) for having left a child unattended for some period of time. For example, in People v. Reyes , a defendant was prosecuted for "allegedly leaving her [sleeping] four year old child in an apartment, unsupervised, for at least fifteen minutes." 20 Misc.3d 1129A,
The majority reasonably proposes that, "if [ Reyes ] proceeded to trial, the prosecution would have been put to its burden to convince a jury that the defendant's conduct resulted in a likelihood of harm to her child and that the defendant knew that her conduct was likely to result in injury to her child." Maj. Op. at 621. Therefore, it follows, Reyes illustrates that "New York courts are cognizant of the line between 'bad parenting' and child endangerment, and provide prosecutors and juries with guideposts for determining when the factual circumstances of a case establish culpability ...." Id .
With respect, I must disagree with that conclusion. Although the Reyes court's decision to commit the judgment to a jury is *630understandable, the "guideposts" that the majority sees in Reyes strike me as largely illusory. While New York state courts have published dispositions resolving motions to dismiss criminal complaints brought under § 260.10(1), as happened in Reyes , the parties have pointed to no judicial statements resolving a sufficiency challenge to a defendant's conviction on "home alone" charges under § 260.10(1), and I have identified none. This leaves the actual guideposts available for prosecutors making charging decisions and for defendants making plea decisions in fact encased in fog.
This vagueness persists, but not because New York only rarely prosecutes "home alone" cases under § 260.10(1) or has only recently begun to do so. Numerous New York courts have found criminal misdemeanor complaints under § 260.10(1) facially sufficient for prosecution on facts reminiscent of Reyes . See, e.g. , People v. Hot , 58 Misc.3d 1215A,
Despite the apparent frequency of prosecutions in "home alone" cases over an extended period, New York courts continue to express a range of inconsistent judicial views about legal sufficiency. See Eury ,
The reported data are similar for the other years in the dataset, which covers from 1990 through 2015.
These dramatic figures should not be surprising, even apart from the well-known frequency of plea bargains in the criminal justice system: the data further show that, in prosecutions under § 260.10(1) from 2000 to 2015, less than 20% of convictions resulted in any term of imprisonment at all; 43% of convictions led only to probation or a fine; and over 35% of convictions resulted in what the state calls a "conditional discharge," meaning a non-carceral sentence to which certain conditions are attached. Amici Br. 10. Significant here, by statute, a "conditional discharge" embodies a judicial finding that "neither the public interest nor the ends of justice would be served by a sentence of imprisonment" or even by probation. NYPL § 65.05(1)(a). When, in over one-third of prosecutions brought under the statute, the sentence for pleading guilty is of this type (and is understood to bear no immigration consequences), a defendant has little incentive to contest the charges or proceed to trial.
Despite these data, the majority's approach appears to require Matthews to show that a § 260.10(1) defendant charged with conduct outside the INA's generic definition could be convicted at trial and have his conviction upheld on appellate review. Absent that appellate statement, the construction of the statute that underlies his conviction has little import, the reasoning would go.
This approach is certainly defensible as a formal matter: after all, the New York state courts, not its prosecutors (or the local federal courts), have the final word on the correct construction of New York laws. But the Supreme Court has never described the "realistic probability" test in these terms, nor in my estimation does it make sense to require such a showing here. Rather, in Duenas-Alvarez , the Court required only a showing that "the State would apply its statute to conduct that falls outside the generic definition."
The Supreme Court has not as yet applied, and we are rarely, if ever, called upon to apply the "realistic probability" test to misdemeanor statutes that criminalize conduct that is punished so leniently as the mine-run of prosecutions under § 260.10(1). But because the analysis that we undertake requires us to identify "the least of the acts criminalized under the state statute," Mellouli v. Lynch , --- U.S. ----,
If the allegations in Reyes , discussed above, were deemed sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss, the case suggests that some defendants (indeed, based on the statistical evidence before us, possibly many defendants) have pleaded guilty to similar offense conduct. The only remaining question, then, is whether the conduct alleged in Reyes and similar "home alone" cases more closely approximates conduct creating the "sufficiently high risk of harm to a child" we required in Florez or the "bare potential for nonserious harm" described by the Ninth Circuit in Fregozo and distinguished by the BIA in Mendoza Osorio ,
*633For these reasons, I conclude that Matthews has carried his burden of showing a "realistic probability" that New York prosecutes conduct under § 260.10(1) that falls outside the INA's generic definition of child abuse. I would grant his petition for review on this basis.
2) Import of the Charging Documents Presented by Amici
In similar vein, Matthews's amici have presented several arrest reports, complaints, and misdemeanor informations-the authenticity of which the Government does not contest-as reflecting New York State decisions to charge various individuals with state child endangerment misdemeanor violations for conduct such as: (1) driving with a suspended license while a minor child is in the car (Amici App. 2); (2) "yell[ing] and swing[ing] his backpack" in a store and knocking objects off shelves, thereby injuring a child (Amici App. 9-10); and (3) shoplifting while accompanied by children (Amici App. 12, 14, 16).
But the majority's position must be that, absent any evidence that the allegations in the charging documents ever led to convictions or were upheld by state courts as facially sufficient, these documents, too, do not suggest that individuals in New York have a "realistic probability" of conviction under § 260.10(1) for conduct falling outside the INA's generic definition of "child abuse." See Maj. Op. at 622-23. Such documents alone may not be sufficient to carry Matthews's burden, it is fair to say. But the broad range of conduct that they reflect as warranting state criminal charges further suggests that the statute has been used to charge conduct less than the generic INA definition of a crime of child abuse.
*634In sum, the charging documents adduced by amici illustrate further that, in addition to the "home alone" cases discussed above, New York State pursues prosecutions and secures convictions under § 260.10(1) in situations that, while doing no credit to the individuals convicted, " 'creat[e] only the bare potential for nonserious harm to a child.' " Mendoza Osorio ,
II.
Beyond its unduly constrained analysis of the realities of NYPL § 260.10(1), the BIA's holding that Matthews is removable suffers from another troubling flaw. The agency's determination to apply its categorical equation of New York child endangerment with the INA definition of "child abuse" retroactively to Matthews and to others, newly rendering them deportable, can be expected to have a devastating effect on those who pleaded guilty to the New York misdemeanor years ago, understanding then that the likely consequence would be only probation or conditional discharge. The parties did not pursue the implications of this observation in their briefs on appeal here. But the agency has not proposed that its equation of New York law and the INA's generic definition has only prospective force, and its actions with regard to Matthews surely demonstrate the contrary.
We recently re-affirmed the following statement of five factors that we "weigh ... to determine whether an agency may apply a new rule retroactively":
(1) whether the case is one of first impression, (2) whether the new rule presents an abrupt departure from well-established practice or merely attempts to fill a void in an unsettled area of law, (3) the extent to which the party against whom the new rule is applied relied on the former rule, (4) the degree of the burden which a retroactive order places on a party, and (5) the statutory interest in applying a new rule despite the reliance of a party on the old standard.
Obeya v. Sessions,
Here, as in Obeya , the first and fourth Lugo factors "are not seriously at issue in the case before us"; both favor Matthews.
Between 1999 and 2008, as observed in Part I, the BIA's sole statement concerning the generic federal definition was that it encompassed "[a]ny form of cruelty to a child's physical, moral or mental well-being." Rodriguez-Rodriguez ,
In this context, where the BIA has materially changed its interpretation of the generic offense, the second Lugo factor-whether there has been an "abrupt departure"-weighs in favor of Matthews. Consequently, because "[t]here can be little doubt that, as a general matter, alien defendants considering whether to enter into a plea agreement are acutely aware of the immigration consequences of their convictions," INS v. St. Cyr ,
Accordingly, even if I agreed with the merits of the BIA's recent alignment of § 260.10(1) and the generic federal definition, I would still hold that, under Obeya and Lugo , this rule could not be applied retroactively to Matthews and those similarly situated. I would grant his petition for review on this ground as well. The majority does not address this question and its opinion should not foreclose other individuals from challenging the BIA's retroactive application of its definition to them.
III.
Even apart from retroactivity concerns, the implications of the BIA's interpretation of § 260.10(1) that the majority affirms here today reach well beyond Matthews's case. In addition to being at odds with the "realistic probability" analysis, the holding leads to harsh results that I believe are unlikely to have been intended by Congress.
As the BIA recounted in Matter of Velazquez-Herrera , when passing the statute that added "a crime of child abuse, child neglect, or child abandonment" to the list of offenses rendering an individual deportable, Congress "clearly intended to single out those who have been convicted of maltreating or preying upon children."
Indeed, the BIA has adduced no evidence that Congress (in enacting
Paradoxically, it is children who will suffer harm under the agency's interpretation of § 260.10(1) -a law intended for their protection. In addition to subjecting lawful permanent residents to deportation, under the agency's rule, non -permanent residents become not only removable but also statutorily ineligible for cancellation of removal because of such a conviction. See 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(b)(1)(C) (excluding aliens "convicted of an offense under section ... 1227(a)(2)" from such relief). Even in cases where a non-permanent resident can otherwise prove that removal would result in exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to U.S. citizen or lawfully resident children, the agency's position, affirmed by the majority, will compel the immigration courts to deny them relief. See
I am also concerned that another vulnerable group will be harmed by this result as well-victims of domestic violence. Under the BIA's interpretation, a conviction under § 260.10(1) will also render a noncitizen ineligible for cancellation of removal under the "battered spouse or child" provisions of VAWA. See 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(b)(2)(A)(iv) (excluding individuals deportable under "paragraphs ... (2) through (4) of section 1227(a)" from relief). This provision allows an immigration court, subject to certain conditions, to grant cancellation of removal to individuals who have been "battered or subjected to extreme cruelty" by a spouse who is a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident.
In sum, the majority affirms an agency ruling that inflicts an array of troubling collateral consequences on a broad class of non-citizens. That Congress so intended, sub silentio, by making a crime of "child abuse" a removable offense strikes me as implausible. These considerations, too, support the conclusion reached in Parts I and II that Matthews's petition for review should be granted.
* * *
Our country's immigration laws address the tension between promoting public safety by removing non-citizens who have violated our criminal laws in a domestic setting, on one hand, and pursuing the "underlying intention ... regarding the preservation of the family unit," Nwozuzu v. Holder ,
In its incorrect ruling that New York misdemeanor child endangerment law is equivalent to the INA's generic definition of child abuse, the BIA ignores the real-world application of the New York statute. It also averts its eyes from the real-world effect of its decision: the needless and potentially permanent separation of children from their parents. Retroactive application of the agency's ruling will run afoul of the principles that we established in Lugo and Obeya . Its prospective application will inflict needless suffering on some of the most vulnerable members of our society.
For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.
Attachment
*638Arrest Year Count 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015* New York State Total Arrests 1484 1787 2077 2186 2505 3000 3703 4079 4459 4510 4615 4730 4827 4563 4463 4634 4793 4765 4851 5123 4946 4890 4905 4836 4468 2392 Open-No Dispo Reported 83 146 152 103 138 156 182 207 190 180 344 336 360 350 374 337 339 301 359 379 408 477 520 646 1403 1791 Convicted-Verdict 6 12 18 4 16 17 17 24 28 29 22 25 27 22 27 14 20 25 20 34 19 12 14 15 6 0 Convicted-Plea 737 858 1019 1122 1349 1573 2067 2160 2476 2510 2469 2500 2714 2489 2422 2509 2522 2594 2584 2753 2539 2415 2560 2394 1889 398 Dismissed 589 686 775 869 852 1099 1255 1478 1523 1536 1551 1618 1472 1459 1392 1519 1622 1538 1586 1630 1664 1624 1468 1498 912 123 Acquitted 5 9 8 11 14 11 10 15 15 21 13 18 14 20 14 14 17 23 22 15 13 17 11 7 8 2 Not Prosecuted 22 13 33 19 48 61 61 77 89 84 85 102 86 80 100 102 124 127 132 143 146 174 123 126 113 57 Other 42 63 72 58 88 83 111 118 138 150 131 131 154 143 134 139 149 157 148 169 157 171 209 150 137 21 Prison 3 2 1 0 5 4 5 6 5 10 12 8 10 5 9 11 2 7 11 7 6 4 6 5 2 0 Time Served 48 40 40 55 55 78 98 95 113 90 111 143 117 139 101 102 117 110 124 120 120 117 122 149 111 36 Jail 92 96 125 123 166 190 265 285 275 285 267 275 294 248 286 307 310 343 337 373 323 303 370 328 226 56 Jail+Probation 27 20 30 24 40 42 51 69 73 73 51 54 77 61 68 55 68 52 69 66 64 43 45 46 25 4 Probation 115 135 184 191 203 247 343 338 366 374 386 344 385 366 360 347 361 294 297 317 279 236 270 216 185 27 Fine 239 263 322 329 409 497 633 677 834 899 819 881 930 895 762 826 768 820 797 816 704 723 745 654 525 107 Cond Discharge 212 307 328 393 467 514 659 685 817 780 829 800 907 766 813 843 868 942 922 1031 1017 957 962 984 796 166 Other 7 7 7 11 20 18 30 30 21 28 16 20 21 31 30 32 48 51 47 57 45 44 54 27 25 2
These facts are taken from the April 7, 2016 order of the Immigration Judge finding Matthews removable.
A prior removal order was entered against him in 2011 based on convictions that he sustained in the 1990s for public lewdness, a violation of NYPL § 245.00. The order was rescinded after he successfully challenged it. See Matthews v. Holder , 590 Fed. App'x 75 (2d Cir. 2015).
Section 237(a)(2)(E)(i) of the INA is codified at
The BIA's discussion in Rodriguez-Rodriguez was dictum. Nevertheless, the agency cited its "cruelty" formulation in several non-precedential decisions preceding Velazquez-Herrera . See, e.g., In re Pacheco Fregozo ,
In turn, several Circuit courts deferred to the formulation stated in Rodriguez-Rodriguez , and this Court, in a footnote, suggested that it provided the operative definition. See Ochieng v. Mukasey ,
The Ninth Circuit's decision in Martinez-Cedillo and Judge Wardlaw's dissent in that case were withdrawn pending en banc review. Martinez-Cedillo v. Barr ,
The majority's application of the "realistic probability" test is largely consistent with that of the BIA in Mendoza Osorio ,
Worthy of observation in connection with VAWA, with the sole exception of Watson , only women were charged in these "home alone" cases.
The Government has not contested the accuracy of the statistics presented by amici, which amici advise were obtained by amicus Immigrant Defense Project from the New York State government pursuant to a request for information under New York's Freedom of Information Law. Amici Br. 23 n.8. I see no reason why they should not be subject to judicial notice. See Fed. R. Evid. 201(b)(2) ("The court may judicially notice a fact that is not subject to reasonable dispute because it: ... can be accurately and readily determined from sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.")
These numbers do not add up to 100% because 359 cases remained open without disposition; 132 cases were not prosecuted; and 148 cases in the chart were simply labeled "other," without further specification.
The full database cited by amici is available at https://www.immigrantdefenseproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/DCJS-EWOCdata-arrs-dispos-sents.pdf (last accessed June 3, 2019).
Tending to reinforce this conclusion, New York courts have accepted remarkably slim "risk of harm" showings in some § 260.10(1) prosecutions. For example, in People v. Simmons ,
Judge Titone observed in dissent that the prosecution itself had "put forth proof that the young girl here did not understand appellant's lewd questions," and opined that the jury had "no evidentiary basis ... to conclude that the young girl would likely be harmed"; rather, the "evidence pointed only to the conclusion that the child here was nothing more than a baby who was capable of mouthing the words 'yes, yes' but said this to 'everything' regardless of context or content." Id. at 832,
In my view, the Simmons decision and cases of this ilk provide another persuasive indication that state prosecutors apply NYPL § 260.10(1) outside the generic federal definition.
The majority accepts the government's argument that we should not consider these charging documents because Matthews did not introduce them into the administrative record below. See
Although it did not survive appellate review, one particular reported conviction also tends to confirm the impression created by amici's submissions that the statute is charged broadly and on occasion idiosyncratically. In this odd case, a horse-farm owner was convicted after a bench trial of violating § 260.10(1) "after she injected a dog with a tranquilizer in the presence of a child." People v. Kanciper ,
See note 5, supra , for Martinez-Cedillo 's subsequent appellate history.
The Report of the House Committee on the Judiciary accompanying the legislation explained:
Domestic battery problems can become terribly exacerbated in marriages where one spouse is not a citizen, and the non-citizen[']s legal status depends on his or her marriage to the abuser. Current law fosters domestic violence in such situations by placing full and complete control of the alien spouse's ability to gain permanent legal status in the hands of the citizen or lawful permanent resident spouse. ... Consequently, a battered spouse may be deterred from taking action to protect himself or herself, such as filing for a civil protection order, filing criminal charges, or calling the police, because of the threat or fear of deportation.
H. R. Rep. 103-395 at 26,
