OPINION OF THE COURT
(March 4, 2009)
Darvin E. Richardson appeals from a judgment of conviction on one count of
I. Background
Richardson was arrested on November 30, 1989, in St. Thomas, after attempting to smuggle marijuana onto the island aboard a commercial flight. He subsequently pled guilty to one count of Importation of a Controlled Substance, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 952, and one count of Possession of a Controlled Substance Aboard an Aircraft Arriving in the United States, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 955. He was sentenced to four months imprisonment on each count, the terms to run concurrently, and three years of probation. At the time of judgment, Richardson had been lawfully admitted for permanent residency in the United States for almost ten years and he claimed to have children who were U.S. citizens.
Upon entry of the criminal judgment in March of 1990, Richardson was released for time served. Two months later, in May of 1990, the government initiated deportation proceedings, serving Richardson with an Order to Show Cause, Notice of Hearing, and Warrant for Arrest of Alien.
On May 21, Richardson, then unrepresented by counsel, signed a waiver (the “May Waiver”) in which he stipulated to the charges against him, accepted deportability, requested immediate departure to St. Kitts, and waived his right to appeal the deportation order. That stipulation was voided, however, when Hans Burgos, an attorney for the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) in Puerto Rico, crossed out and initialed key paragraphs in it. After speaking with Richardson, Burgos had become convinced that Richardson “was not aware, nor was he well informed, of the consequences of signing the stipulation.” (App. at 23.)
The next day, May 22, David Iverson entered his appearance as counsel for Richardson and, soon thereafter, on June 19, Richardson again signed a waiver (the “June Waiver”). It was identical in content to the May Waiver. Richardson says that he does not recall either Iverson or an immigration judge explaining to him the effect of the waiver. A Mr. R. Ortiz, an INS attorney, signed the June Waiver on behalf of the United States. 1 The document does not contain a signature line for Richardson’s counsel and Iverson did not sign it.
The United States Department of Justice sent Richardson a letter, which is dated June 22, 1990, (the “Deportation Letter”) and contains the following paragraph:
Should you wish to return to the United States you must write this office or the American Consular Office nearest your residence abroad as to how to obtain permission to return after deportation. By law ... any deported person who within five years returns without permission is guilty of a felony. If convicted he may be punished by imprisonment of not more than two years and/or a fine of not more than $1,000.00.
(App. at 27.) On or about the same day, Richardson was deported to St. Kitts.
Some seventeen years later, Richardson tried to return to St. Thomas. On March 6, 2007, he flew to the island but was detained at the airport when he showed his valid British passport and his name triggered an alert that he had previously been convicted of a controlled substances violation and had been deported. According to
Richardson filed a motion to dismiss the indictment. In particular, he collaterally attacked his deportation; he claimed that the United States Sentencing Guidelines pertaining to § 1326(b)(2) are unconstitutional; and he argued that the government should be collaterally estopped from charging him under § 1326(a) because of representations that it had made in the Deportation Letter. The District Court held a series of hearings on the motion. Neither Iverson nor any INS attorneys who worked on the matter testified as to what had transpired during Richardson’s deportation proceedings. On June 22, 2007, the District Court denied Richardson’s motion to dismiss, 2 concluding that he could not collaterally attack his deportation and that his challenge to the Sentencing Guidelines and his collateral estoppel argument had to await later proceedings. Richardson appeals only the conclusion that he cannot press a collateral attack of his deportation.
II. Discussion 3
At the heart of Richardson’s appeal is his claim that the June Waiver is not valid because it was not intelligently executed. Not only does Richardson contest the validity of the June Waiver, he also claims that, by presuming it to be valid, the District Court improperly shifted the burden of proof as to waiver from the government to him. Richardson contends that he is permitted to collaterally challenge his deportation because, first, he is exempted from any requirement regarding exhaustion of administrative remedies, second, the District Court’s determination that he waived his right to judicial review is erroneous, and, third, his deportation proceeding was fundamentally unfair. Because Richardson’s collateral attack on his deportation is premised on the invalidity of the June Waiver, we address at the outset the threshold issues of whether the District Court improperly placed the burden of proving invalidity on Richardson and whether the June Waiver is valid. Then we turn to the merits of Richardson’s collateral attack.
A. The June Waiver Was Intelligently Executed and is Valid
We have not before addressed whether the government has the burden of proving the validity of a written waiver in an immigration proceeding or whether the burden falls on the alien to prove that the waiver is invalid. We do so now and conclude that the burden is properly placed on the alien.
An alien validly waives his rights associated with a deportation proceeding
Contrary to Richardson’s suggestion, we do not regard the result reached here by the District Court as in conflict with the decision of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in
United States v. Lopez-Vasquez,
The immigration judge made no effort to determine whether Lopez-Vasquez individually wished to waive his right to appeal, and the mass waiver by silence made it impossible to determine whether he made a voluntary and intelligent decision to do so. Mass silent waiver creates a risk that individual detainees will feel coerced by the silence of their fellows. The immigration judge’s directive that to preserve the right to appeal a detainee must stand up “so that I can talk to you about that” did nothing to lessen this risk. Indeed, it tended to stigmatize detainees who wished to appeal and to convey a message that appeal was disfavored and contingent uponfurther discussion with the immigration judge.
Id. at 754. Given this focus on the risk inherent in the particular process before it, we are not confident that the Lopez-Vasquez Court would have found a signed, written waiver which expressly acknowledged the required understanding, insufficient to carry the government’s initial burden of proof and shift that burden to the alien.
Moreover, in reaching its conclusion in
Lopez-Vasquez,
the Court relied on the Supreme Court’s discussion of waiver in
Brewer v. Williams,
The
Lopez-Vasquez
panel drew a false parallel between the nature of the right protected by the Supreme Court in
Brewer
and that at issue in
a waiver of administrative remedies and appellate rights in a deportation proceeding.
Brewer
concerned a right “indispensable to the fair administration of our adversary system of criminal justice[,]”
On the contrary, there is a distinction between fundamental constitutional rights — including the right to counsel at issue in
Brewer
— and rights granted by statutes, such as the administrative and appellate rights at issue here.
See Northern Pipeline Const. Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co.,
It may be helpful to begin by recognizing that, in the first instance, the burden of proving waiver in this case was on the government and that it carried its burden by producing the written waiver signed by Richardson. Richardson’s decision to contest that waiver required more of him than his mere assertion that the waiver should not count. It required him to provide reasons and supporting evidence to explain why the waiver should not be given effect. In sum, we conclude that, when challenging the validity of a written waiver of rights in a deportation proceeding, the alien bears the burden of proving that the waiver is invalid. 5 Since Richardson had that burden with respect to the June Waiver, we turn to whether he has carried it.
Richardson contends that the June Waiver was invalid because he was not notified of his administrative remedies prior to signing it. As proof, he relies heavily on the notation that INS attorney Burgos made when voiding the May Waiver, the notation saying that Richardson had not been “aware” or “well informed” of the consequences of signing that stipulation. Richardson also attacks the June Waiver because his attorney did not sign it, and because the Immigration Judge allegedly failed to inform him that he might be eligible for discretionary relief under section 212(c) of the Immigration and Naturalization Act (“INA”), 8 U.S.C. § 1182(c) (1995) (repealed by Illegal Immigrant Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA), Pub. L. No. 104-208, Div. C, § 304(b), 1996 U.S.C.C.A.N. (110 Stat.) 3009-597). None of those arguments is sufficient.
First, Burgos’s cancellation of the May Waiver shows at most only what Richardson knew in May, not what he had learned by June. In the intervening month, he was represented by counsel and had further interactions with INS officials who presumably were aware of and not eager to replicate the defects their colleague Mr. Burgos had discovered in the May Waiver. It is entirely possible that Richardson was fully informed in June and simply decided that he wished to return to St. Kitts. As conceded by his counsel at oral argument, that possibility is as likely as any other explanation for his decision to sign the June Waiver, and, once we place the burden of proof on Richardson, his argument on this front fails.
Next, Richardson contends that the June Waiver should have been signed by his counsel, and we agree that would have been the better course, but that does not mean the waiver is invalid. The omission of a signature line for an attorney of record betrays a less than careful approach to memorializing the parties’ agreement, but
Finally, with regard to the Immigration Judge’s failure to inform Richardson of potential relief under § 212(c), we have clearly stated before that “there is no constitutional right to be informed of possible eligibility for discretionary relief.”
Bonhometre v. Gonzales,
B. Richardson May Not Collaterally Attack His Deportation
Having determined that Richardson has not proven his waiver to be invalid, we turn to his final contention on this appeal, that his deportation is subject to collateral attack. “Fundamental precepts of due process provide an alien subject to illegal re-entry prosecution under 8 U.S.C. § 1326 with the opportunity to challenge the underlying removal order under certain circumstances.”
Charleswell,
1. Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies
Richardson does not contend that he has exhausted his administrative remedies as required by § 1326, but rather that he is exempted from the exhaustion requirement. He claims exemption on three bases: that the June Waiver was invalid; that the ineffective assistance of his counsel rose to the level of a due process violation; and that the INS lawyers created a conflict of interest by communicating with him. However, none of those contentions is supported by the record. First, as already discussed, nothing in the record undermines the facial validity of the June Waiver. As to Richardson’s second claim, he has failed to produce any evidence that would permit us to conclude that his counsel was ineffective by Fifth Amendment standards. 7 Similarly, while Richardson contends that INS attorneys created a conflict of interest by directly informing him of his rights despite his having been represented by counsel, there is no proof in the record to support that or any other allegation of a conflict.
Likewise, Richardson’s claim that he was denied meaningful judicial review of his deportation proceedings because his counsel was not informed of Richardson’s own intent to sign the June Waiver is unsupported by the record. Richardson correctly points out that a failure to notify counsel that counsel’s client is facing removal proceedings has been found to deprive the represented alien of meaningful judicial review.
See United States
v.
Dorsett,
3. Fundamental Unfairness
To establish that a deportation proceeding was fundamentally unfair, an alien must show both that there was a fundamental defect in the proceeding and that the defect caused him prejudice.
See Charleswell,
III. Conclusion
Richardson has failed to meet his burden of demonstrating that the June Waiver was invalid and has further failed to demonstrate the prerequisites for collaterally attacking his deportation. We therefore will affirm the judgment and conviction entered by the District Court.
Notes
Mr. Ortiz’s first name does not appear in the record.
The court entered an amended order on June 25 in which it corrected a mistake as to Richardson’s birthday but made no substantive changes. We review that amended order for purposes of this opinion.
The District Court of the Virgin Islands had jurisdiction over this case pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3231 and 48 U.S.C. § 1612(a). We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review
de novo
the District Court’s determination that Richardson may not collaterally challenge his deportation.
United States v. Charleswell,
The government would have us draw the same inference from
United States v. Encarnacion-Galvez,
Section 1326(d) plainly states that an alien may not challenge a deportation order’s validity unless he or she “demonstrates” that all three statutory prerequisites are satisfied, one of which is exhaustion of any administrative remedies. Therefore, the statutory language supports placing the burden of proof on the alien to demonstrate that a written waiver of rights is invalid where, as here, the alien argues that he or she is exempted from exhausting any administrative remedies.
Given the civil nature of deportation proceedings, an alien seeking to demonstrate the invalidity of a written waiver will be held to a “preponderance of the evidence” standard.
See United States
v.
Martinez-Amaya,
We also note that even when an alien satisfies the objective criteria for relief under § 212(c) — meaning that (1) he is the spouse, parent, or child of a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident; (2) deportation would result in extreme hardship to that spouse, parent, and/or child; (3) the alien’s admission would not undermine national welfare or security — relief is ultimately granted only at the discretion of the Attorney General.
B ecause the Sixth Amendment right to counsel is inapplicable in immigration proceedings, the question is whether Richardson’s counsel was so ineffective as to violate his Fifth Amendment due process rights. See Xu Yong Lu v. Ashcroft, 259 F.3d 127, 130 (3d Cir. 2001). We note that it is unclear whether ineffective assistance of counsel constitutes an exception to the exhaustion requirement of § 1326. More broadly, we have yet to determine whether the exhaustion requirement is prudential, and therefore subject to exception, or jurisdictional. Because we conclude that Richardson has failed to produce evidence that his counsel was ineffective, we do not reach either of those issues.
We acknowledge that it is an open issue in this Circuit whether an alien can demonstrate prejudice by showing that there is a reasonable likelihood that relief under § 212(c) would have been granted by the Attorney General, had the alien been adequately informed. However, we need not reach the issue of whether Richardson has demonstrated prejudice because we have already determined both that there was no fundamental defect in the deportation proceedings and that Richardson has failed to meet his burden on either the exhaustion or opportunity-for-judicial-review prongs of the collateral attack inquiry laid out in § 1326(d).
