Lead Opinion
Victorine Pafe, a native of Cameroon, filed an asylum application on April 11, 2002. A hearing before an Immigration Judge (“IJ”) was scheduled for November 7, 2002. However, Pafe’s attorney informed her that she was not required to attend. The day before the hearing, Pafe learned that her attorney’s advice was incorrect, but she could not travel to the hearing location in time. The IJ entered an in abstentia removal order against her. On June 13, 2008, Pafe filed a motion to reopen her case, which the IJ and the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) denied as untimely. Pafe now petitions for review of the BIA’s decision, arguing that her two previous attorneys’ performances were deficient and that the deadline for filing her motion to reopen should therefore be equitably tolled.
“We review the BIA’s denial of a motion to reopen removal proceedings for an abuse of discretion.” Kanyi v. Gonzales,
In the immigration context, the doctrine of equitable tolling is “sparingly invoked” for ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims. Habchy v. Gonzales,
The Supreme Court’s recent decision discussing equitable tolling in the habeas context, Holland v. Florida, 560 U.S.-,
*970 Holland not only wrote his attorney numerous letters seeking crucial information and providing direction; he also repeatedly contacted the state courts, their clerks, and the Florida State Bar Association in an effort to have [his attorney] — the central impediment to the pursuit of his legal remedy — removed from his case. And, the very day that Holland discovered that his AEDPA clock had expired due to [his attorney’s] failings, Holland prepared his own habeas petition pro se and promptly filed it with the District Court.
Id. In contrast, Pafe, as previously discussed, waited nearly three years before hiring new attorneys to replace each of her ineffective ones and did not file her motion to reopen until over five years after it was due. Accordingly, Pafe has not shown even “reasonable diligence,” and her petition for review is denied.
Notes
. Pafe told the IJ that Mofor himself gave her the motion, and the IJ relied on her possession of the facially fraudulent motion as evidence of her lack of diligence, reasoning that had she read the motion she would have recognized Mofor’s deficient performance. At oral argument on appeal, Pafe’s current attorney stated that Mofor did not give Pafe the motion, but rather her second attorney found the motion in the file he obtained from Mofor. Because "our judicial review is limited to the administrative record," Averianova v. Holder,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I dissent. Given the terrible advice, misleading and false information, and obvious misconduct by licensed attorneys representing petitioner Ms. Pafe, Ms. Pafe should be given another opportunity to reopen her proceedings to permit her to seek asylum in this country.
As noted by the majority, the petitioner in Holland v. Florida, 560 U.S.-,
The factual underpinning and reasoning leading the Supreme Court in Holland to rule that equitable tolling might lie for petitioner Holland is sound and proper precedent for this court to remand Ms. Pafe’s claim for additional consideration by the IJ. In Holland, counsel ignored the petitioner’s repeated requests for information regarding the status of his case, misadvised the petitioner regarding the applicable law relevant to tolling of the limitations period, and ignored the petitioner’s numerous requests to file a timely § 2254 petition.
Ms. Pafe received similar treatment from her attorneys. Bokwe Mofor, Ms. Pafe’s first attorney, gave her inaccurate advice that she did not have to attend the hearing on the removal petition; falsely advised Ms. Pafe that he had filed a motion to reopen; and was generally evasive and not responsive to her various requests regarding the status of her case, repeatedly advising her to be patient.
Six months after Ms. Pafe asked Mofor to file a motion to reopen, she followed up with Mofor, inquiring about the status of her case. Mofor advised her to be patient. Ms. Pafe nevertheless continued to make efforts to contact Mofor. Upon learning Mofor was moving out of the country, Ms. Pafe immediately secured new counsel.
Robert Oswald, Ms. Pafe’s second attorney, agreed to file a motion to reopen, but never did, despite having been paid a substantial sum of money to do so. In response to Ms. Pafe’s repeated attempts to contact Oswald over the next two years, his staff assured Ms. Pafe that her case was proceeding and that they were waiting for a response to a FOIA request.
This new counsel, Oswald, and his staff led Ms. Pafe to believe that her case was proceeding properly. Nothing in the record put Ms. Pafe on notice that her attorneys, or their representatives, were lying to her and that she should have acted
We are aware of the lengthy time period in this case-approximately six years between initial denial and the filing by present counsel of a motion to reopen her case. This lengthy time period is important, but without evidence of lack of diligence by Ms. Pafe, it is not enough to reject her motion to reopen in light of the record as a whole.
Accordingly, I would grant the petition for review, and remand the matter to the BIA with orders that it allow the IJ to reopen Ms. Pafe’s removal hearing, and allow the parties to supplement the record on the issue of due diligence, if either or both parties wish to do so.
. Upon being retained by Ms. Pafe, Oswald requested, pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act, that U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services forward to him a copy of Ms. Pafe’s file. Oswald gave Ms. Pafe an unsigned copy of the FOIA request.
