Ismar and Efraulio Pinto-Montoya petition for review of an order of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) denying petitioners’ motion for reconsideration of a prior BIA order summarily dismissing their appeal. See In re Pinto-Montoya, Nos. A78 428 273, A78 428 277 (B.I.A. Oct. 28, 2005); In re Pinto-Montoya, Nos. A78 428 273, A78 428 277 (BIA Aug. 11, 2005), aff'g In re Pinto-Montoya, Nos. A78 428 273, A78 428 277 (Immig.Ct.N.Y.City, Feb. 24, 2004). The Immigration Judge (“IJ”), after concluding that petitioners had not been stopped or seized by immigration officials during an incident at the airport, denied petitioners’ motion to suppress the statements they made to the officials and ordered them removed. On appeal, petitioners argue that (1) their encounter with immigration officials at the airport was a seizure within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment; and (2) that the alleged stop was sufficiently “egregious” to justify suppression of the evidence obtained because petitioners were stopped solely on the basis of their race and nationality.
We conclude that petitioners’ contact with immigration officials at the airport was not a seizure within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment because no force, threat of force, or other assertion of authority was used by the officials. Because petitioners were not seized, the statements obtained from petitioners by the immigration officials were properly admitted.
BACKGROUND
Petitioners, brothers who are natives and citizens of Guatemala, arrived at John F. Kennedy airport in New York on a flight from Los Angeles on February 8, 2001. As they disembarked from the plane, immigration agents in plainclothes approached them and asked them, in Spanish, about their immigration status. When *128 petitioners admitted that they were in the United States illegally, the officers detained them and conducted additional questioning. As part of the questioning, both petitioners signed sworn statements conceding that they entered the United States unlawfully and were “in the United States in violation of U.S. immigration law.”
Shortly after the events at the airport, the INS commenced removal proceedings against petitioners. Petitioners did not file applications for relief from removal or contest their status but, instead, moved to suppress the evidence obtained during their questioning at the airport on the basis that they had been stopped at the airport solely on the basis of their race and nationality. Respondents contended that petitioners were apprehended pursuant to a larger interdiction project conducted by the former Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”). In support of their position, respondents submitted a declaration from the agent who “signed off’ on the form documenting petitioners’ apprehension. Although the agent was not present when petitioners were interviewed and detained, he was the supervisor of the operation under which petitioners were selected for questioning.
The declaration explained that the INS, after “observ[ing] various trends in the routes taken by [aliens illegally smuggled into the country],” had developed a protocol for identifying and questioning suspected smugglers and their clients. Plainclothes agents would approach individuals as they were disembarking from a plane, ask whether they would be willing to speak to the agents, and permit them to walk away if they did not. If an individual agreed to speak to the agents, he would be taken to a separate area, where the agents would reveal their identities and ask him questions about his immigration status. According to the protocol, “[t]he questioning at this point would also be voluntary. If the [person] did not want to answer the questions [he] would be free to leave.” Individuals who “provided sufficient information to establish alienage and removability” would be taken into custody and transported to an INS office for processing. The agent described the criteria used in the protocol as follows:
In determining who would be identified for questioning, the protocol dictated that Agents look for passengers typically of Mestizo physical appearance (a person of mixed Spanish and American Blood [sic]) who would be inappropriately dressed in light of the season (i.e., they would not be wearing or carrying cold weather coats in the winter). The targeted people would also generally not have any baggage and bypass the baggage claim. They often would also carry airline issued food with them off the plane.
Petitioners arrived in New York on one of the flights identified by the INS as “likely to contain illegal aliens.”
The IJ, after reviewing the parties’ submissions on the appropriateness of suppression, held a hearing to take testimony from petitioners regarding the circumstances under which they were approached and questioned. Petitioners testified that they did not meet any of the criteria in the protocol other than choice-of-flight and racial characteristics; they were wearing jackets, had checked luggage, and did not take airline food with them. They further testified that, as they left the plane, they were approached by a man dressed in casual clothing who asked if they had “papers” and inquired whether they had “permission to stay in this country.” Both answered these questions in the negative. Ismar Pinto-Montoya stated that he answered the questions rather than walking *129 away because the individual asking the questions was standing in front of him and “could have pulled [him] back.” Efraulio Pinto-Montoya stated that he agreed to speak with the agent because other passengers from the plane — all of whom were described by the Pinto-Montoyas as “Spanish” — were being questioned at the same time. Both petitioners testified that the immigration officials did not identify themselves as such until after petitioners admitted that they were in the country illegally. Petitioners were then transported to another location where they were questioned by the same agents and signed the statements conceding their unlawful entry.
Based on petitioners’ testimony, the IJ concluded that the petitioners’ contact with immigration officials at the airport was not a stop or seizure because they spoke to the agents voluntarily.
[Petitioners] did not testify to any actions by the agent[s] that would be intimidating. There was no testimony that voices were raised or that threats were made. No one told [petitioners] that they had to answer the question[s] or that certain consequences would flow from not answering the questions.
The IJ also observed that the circumstances, as described by petitioners, were such that a reasonable person would have believed himself free to leave: the officers were in plainclothes, did not identify themselves as immigration officials and had no other physical indicia — for example, badges — identifying them as law enforcement officials. As the IJ noted: “For all [petitioners] knew the person who asked them about their status was a civilian____” The IJ further concluded that even if petitioners had been seized within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment, their detention and questioning was not so “egregious” as to justify suppression.
The BIA summarily dismissed petitioners’ appeal, and petitioners filed a motion for reconsideration of that decision. After determining that “there was no stop or seizure at the airport” and that there was “nothing unreasonable or egregious about the officerfs’] encounter with the [petitioners],” the BIA denied petitioners’ motion for reconsideration.
DISCUSSION
“When the BIA briefly affirms the decision of an IJ and adopts the IJ’s reasoning in doing so, we review the IJ’s and the BIA’s decisions together.”
Wangchuck v. Dep’t of Homeland Sec.,
Our immigration laws permit an immigration official to “interrogate” without a warrant “any alien or person believed to be an alien as to his right to be or to remain in the United States.” 8 U.S.C. § 1357(a)(1). The applicable regulations governing “interrogation and detention not amounting to arrest,” 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(b), state that
(1) Interrogation is questioning designed to elicit specific information. An immigration officer, like any other person, has the right to ask questions of anyone as long as the immigration officer does not restrain the freedom of an individual, not under arrest, to walk away.
*130 (2) If the immigration officer has a reasonable suspicion, based on specific articulable facts, 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, the immigration officer may briefly detain the person for questioning. 1
Petitioners’ claim raises the question of whether the exclusionary rule applies in immigration proceedings at all and under what circumstances it might apply. In criminal proceedings, evidence obtained as a result of an illegal seizure or an unlawful arrest is, of course, subject to the exclusionary rule.
See, e.g., Wong Sun v. United States,
In
Lopez-Mendoza,
the Supreme Court considered the applicability of the exclusionary rule to immigration proceedings.
See
A plurality of the Court, in a separate section of the opinion, specifically reserved the question of whether an exclusionary remedy would be available “if there developed good reason to believe that Fourth Amendment violations by INS officers were widespread”
2
or if immigration officials committed “egregious violations of
*131
Fourth Amendment or other liberties that might transgress notions of fundamental fairness and undermine the probative value of the evidence obtained.”
Id.
at 1050-51,
Respondents maintain that the PintoMontoyas were selected for questioning “at least in part[ ] because they arrived on a particular flight ... known to be used for alien smuggling.” Petitioners, however, contend that they were targeted solely on the basis of race. In addition, although the IJ and BIA both concluded that there was nothing unreasonable or egregious about the encounter between petitioners and the immigration officials, the affidavit of the special agent in charge of the operation indicates that “[i]n determining who would be identified for questioning, the protocol dictated that Agents look for passengers” who, inter alia, had a “Mestizo physical appearance.”
We need not consider whether a stop and seizure pursuant to the protocol might constitute conduct so egregious as to justify suppression because we conclude that, in the instant case, petitioners were not seized within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.
Cf. INS v. Delgado,
The dispositive inquiry for determining whether the agents’ contact with petitioners amounted to a seizure within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment is whether the encounter was consensual.
See id.; see also Florida v. Bostick,
Physical restraint or an assertion of authority to restrain a person’s freedom of movement by law enforcement officers would, in most instances, constitute a seizure.
See, e.g., Brendlin v. California,
— U.S. -,
Petitioners’ contention that the agents were blocking the ramp and thereby restraining petitioners’ freedom of movement does not compel a contrary conclusion. In Delgado, the Supreme Court considered and rejected a similar argument that stationing agents near the means of egress constituted a seizure of all of the people on the other side of the exit. As the Court explained:
[T]here is nothing in the record indicating that ... the agents at the doors actually [prevented people from leaving]. The obvious purpose of the agents’ presence at the factory doors was to insure that all persons in the factories were questioned. The record indicates that the INS agents’ conduct in this case consisted simply of questioning employees and arresting those they had probable cause to believe were unlawfully present in the factory. This conduct should have given respondents no reason to believe that they would be detained if they gave truthful answers to the questions put to them or if they simply refused to answer. If mere questioning does not constitute a seizure when it occurs inside [a place], it is no more a seizure when it occurs at the exits.
Delgado,
Petitioners have not argued that the immigration laws were violated or that the agents exceeded their authority to question aliens or persons believed to be aliens. See 8 U.S.C. § 1357(a)(1); see also 8 C.F.R.. § 287.8(b)(1) (“An immigration officer, like any other person, has the right to ask questions of anyone as long as the *133 immigration officer does not restrain the freedom of an individual, not under arrest, to walk away.”). Nor do we find any record evidence of any such violation.
Because we conclude that petitioners were not seized within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment, we need not consider what role petitioners’ racial characteristics played in the agents’ decision to approach them for questioning.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the petition for review is denied.
Notes
. The remainder of the provision states that Information obtained from this questioning may provide the basis for a subsequent arrest, which must be effected only by a designated immigration officer, as listed in 8 C.F.R. § 287.5(c)....
8 C.F.R. § 287.8(b)(3).
. In their submissions to the Court, petitioners argue for the first time that Fourth Amendment violations by immigration authorities are so widespread as to make exclusion appropriate in these circumstances. Because they did not raise the issue before the BIA, it has not been exhausted and is therefore not appropriately before us.
See
8 U.S.C. § 1252(d)(1);
Melnitsenko v. Mukasey,
