WISSAM IBRAHIM AL-SAKA v. JEFFERSON B. SESSIONS, III, Attorney General
No. 17-3951
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
September 18, 2018
RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b). File Name: 18a0205p.06
Decided and Filed: September 18, 2018
Before: BATCHELDER, SUTTON, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.
COUNSEL
ON BRIEF: Mohamed Elsharnoby, Dearborn, Michigan, for Petitioner. Rebecca Hoffberg-Phillips, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Respondent.
SUTTON, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which BATCHELDER, J., joined, and WHITE, J., joined in part. WHITE, J. (pg. 11), delivered a separate opinion concurring in all but the discussion of the applicability of the Fifth Amendment due process guarantee.
OPINION
SUTTON, Circuit Judge. Wissam Ibrahim Al-Saka received permanent residency on the condition that he remain married to Hanadi Hashem, a U.S. citizen, for at least two years. He ran afoul of that condition when Michigan annulled the marriage months after he arrived here. The immigration authorities refused to waive the condition, found that Al-Saka and Hashem did not
I.
A Lebanese citizen, Al-Saka married Hashem, a U.S. citizen, in Beirut in August 1999. He entered the United States in March 2001 as a conditional permanent resident based on his marriage to Hashem.
The marriage did not last. Just weeks after he entered the United States, the couple signed a religious divorce. In August 2001, the Lebanese government granted a legal divorce. Two months later, Michigan annulled the marriage at Hashem‘s request after finding that “there had been no marital cohabitation.” A.R. 665. All of this extinguished the condition that justified Al-Saka‘s permanent-residence status: the marriage to Hashem.
Al-Saka remained in this country nonetheless. In January 2003, he married another woman in Lebanon. That February, he took steps to remove the permanent-residence condition. Because he had divorced Hashem, he could not file a joint petition with her, as the law requires. See
In November 2016, an immigration judge held a hearing about his request. Al-Saka described his marriage to Hashem in Lebanon. He said that they lived together for three months in a house his father had bought for them. Then Hashem returned to the United States. She later traveled back to Lebanon and stayed another five or six months before returning to the United States in January 2001. According to Al-Saka, he followed her in March 2001 after recovering from a car accident. Al-Saka claimed Hashem met him at the airport but seemed “a little bit cold.” A.R. 135. He said he spent the first seven months at her house in Dearborn, Michigan. But the marriage soon fell apart. He admitted that he traveled back and forth to Lebanon over the next several years and spent as much as eight months there during one stint.
Two of Hashem‘s relatives testified on Al-Saka‘s behalf. He also submitted written statements from various friends and family, including Hashem‘s mother and aunt, as well as photos from the wedding and medical reports documenting his ankle injury from the car accident.
The immigration judge denied the waiver requests and held that the government could remove him. Al-Saka‘s testimony, she found, lacked credibility. Although he testified that he lived with Hashem in Dearborn during his first seven months in the United States, the I-751 form submitted to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services in 2003 said that he spent just three weeks in Michigan before moving to Louisiana for five months. She also noted that the Michigan annulment certificate, unlike his testimony, denied any “marital cohabitation.” A.R. 71. She found that Al-Saka and Hashem did not marry in good faith, and refused to waive the joint-petition requirement. She rejected his hardship claim on the ground that his family remained in Lebanon. See
Al-Saka appealed the decision to the Board of Immigration Appeals and added one other claim: that he received ineffective assistance of counsel. The Board affirmed.
II.
We review the Board‘s decision as the final agency determination, including the parts of the immigration judge‘s decision the Board adopted. Khalili v. Holder, 557 F.3d 429, 435 (6th Cir. 2009). Al-Saka raises three claims: (1) that the Board erred when it held that he did not marry in good faith; (2) that the Board in the alternative should have forgiven the marriage fraud and allowed him to stay anyway; and (3) that the Board as a last alternative should have remanded the case to the immigration judge for a new hearing because he received ineffective assistance of counsel at the first hearing.
Joint Petition Waiver. The government conditioned Al-Saka‘s permanent residency on his marriage to Hashem, a U.S. citizen. Someone in his position typically would need to file a joint petition with his spouse to request a release from the condition.
That limitation limits Al-Saka‘s request for relief. He says the Board erred when it found that he did not enter the marriage in good faith and denied the waiver on that ground. But he “aims the bulk of [his] fire not at the legal standards the Board applied but at its assessment of [his] credibility and the way it weighed the evidence.” Johns, 678 F.3d at 406. One example: He faults the immigration authorities for discrediting his testimony after finding that part, but not all, of it conflicted with his past statements. Another example: He faults the immigration judge for giving little weight to the photos, affidavits, and testimonial evidence that described the couple‘s relationship in Lebanon. But both arguments aim at assessments committed to the Secretary‘s discretion and over which we lack jurisdiction. Id.
Perhaps appreciating the problem, Al-Saka pitches many of his claims as substantial-evidence arguments, which we may consider. Id. at 407. Even then, however, we may not second guess the Board‘s credibility and weight-of-the-evidence assessments. Id. Put another way: After accepting both assessments, we may decide whether substantial evidence supports the decision. Id. at 408.
It does. The record supports the district court‘s finding that the couple did not marry in good faith. Al-Saka offered no evidence that the couple owned any joint assets or bank accounts. They spent much of their time apart. Although Al-Saka said that they had intended to stay in Lebanon to build a life together, Hashem petitioned to make him a conditional permanent
Al-Saka says that the immigration authorities erred by focusing on the couple‘s relationship once they arrived in the United States rather than the span of their relationship. See In re Laureano, 19 I. & N. Dec. 1, 2–3 (B.I.A. 1983). That is not accurate. The immigration judge considered “all admitted evidence in its entirety” and came to a decision after a “careful review of the entire record.” A.R. 61, 72. She described the evidence regarding Al-Saka‘s relationship with Hashem in Lebanon in detail; she just did not find it convincing.
Fraud Waiver. Al-Saka asks us, alternatively, to check the Board‘s decision to remove him even if he did commit marriage fraud. The Act gives the Attorney General discretion to waive the removal of certain aliens who meet the statutory criteria even if they “were inadmissible at the time of admission” because they committed fraud or misrepresented their status.
We need not reach the statutory question. The immigration judge and the Board assumed without deciding that the Attorney General could waive removal for those who commit marriage fraud. They then used that discretion to deny Al-Saka‘s request because the factors that weighed against a waiver outweighed those in favor of a waiver. We see no advantage to resolving the
Ineffective Assistance of Counsel. Aliens subject to removal do not have a right to government-provided counsel. But they may hire their own counsel, of course.
Al-Saka‘s challenge fails. The Board correctly held that Al-Saka failed to show any cognizable deficiency by counsel. His counsel‘s choices not to subpoena his ex-wife Hashem and her mother or to hire an expert in Islamic matrimony amount to the kinds of tactical decisions left to counsel‘s discretion and do not undermine the fairness of the proceeding. Perhaps more notably, Al-Saka fails to show any prejudice from the decisions. He points to no affidavit or other record evidence showing what new insights the witnesses could bring or how those insights could have changed the outcome of his case. See Gaye v. Lynch, 788 F.3d 519, 530–31 (6th Cir. 2015). His Lozada/Compean claim thus lacks merit.
One loose end needs tying. Al-Saka suggests that, even aside from his Lozada/Compean claim, his private lawyer‘s conduct violated the Fifth Amendment. That is wrong.
Before Lozada, it is true, a few circuits raised the possibility that aliens might be able to bring ineffective-assistance claims under the Due Process Clause‘s guarantee of a fair hearing in
That, indeed, is what the Board sees itself as doing. The Attorney General has told the Board that it has the discretion to craft an administrative remedy for ineffective-assistance claims. See In re Compean, 25 I. & N. Dec. at 3. Since then, the Department of Justice has promulgated a proposed rule to establish a modified Lozada framework in the Federal Register “based on the Attorney General‘s statutory authority and discretion” under the Immigration and Nationality Act. Motions to Reopen Removal, Deportation, or Exclusion Proceedings Based Upon a Claim of Ineffective Assistance of Counsel, 81 Fed. Reg. 49,556, 49,557 & n.3 (proposed July 28, 2016) (citing
That also is the best reading of our decisions. Yes, many of them contain references to the Due Process Clause. But they also invoke Lozada or later decisions of the Board. See, e.g., Sako, 434 F.3d at 863 (noting that circuit precedent “mirror[s]” Board precedent); Denko v. INS, 351 F.3d 717, 722 n.3 (6th Cir. 2003); Hamid v. Ashcroft, 336 F.3d 465, 468 (6th Cir. 2003); Huicochea-Gomez, 237 F.3d at 699; see also Mezo v. Holder, 615 F.3d 616, 620 (6th Cir. 2010) (citing the Lozada analysis in Huicochea-Gomez). None of these published decisions establishes a Fifth Amendment right to counsel in a removal proceeding or for that matter grants relief to a claimant who cannot meet the Board‘s ineffective-assistance requirement but can still establish a freestanding violation of the Fifth Amendment. This reading also is consistent with the Department of Justice‘s view. Congress has granted the Attorney General authority to implement the immigration laws fairly through the Board and the immigration judges.
No other approach makes sense. The Constitution does not guarantee a freestanding right to government-provided counsel in an immigration hearing. Start with the fount from which the right flows in the criminal context: the Sixth Amendment. All agree that it guarantees counsel only to criminal defendants; it does not apply to aliens in civil removal proceedings. See INS v. Lopez-Mendoza, 468 U.S. 1032, 1038 (1984).
Turn to the Fifth Amendment. It does not offer immigrants a right to effective assistance denied to them in the one constitutional provision specifically about the right to counsel. The Due Process Clause constrains the federal government, not private citizens. Pub. Util. Comm’n of D.C. v. Pollak, 343 U.S. 451, 461–62 (1952). It regulates private individuals only if the government coerces them or otherwise makes common cause with them in a joint activity. See Thomas v. Nationwide Children‘s Hosp., 882 F.3d 608, 612 (6th Cir. 2018). Otherwise, an individual‘s private actions do not violate another individual‘s due process rights. See S.F. Arts & Athletics, Inc. v. U.S. Olympic Comm., 483 U.S. 522, 542–43, 547 (1987); Jackson v. Metro. Edison Co., 419 U.S. 345, 358–59 (1974).
Unlike in criminal cases, the government has no role in appointing counsel in immigration hearings because the Due Process Clause does not guarantee a right to government-provided counsel in civil litigation. See Coleman v. Thompson, 501 U.S. 722, 752 (1991). Removal proceedings are “purely civil action[s]” designed “to provide a streamlined determination of eligibility” and “put an end to a continuing violation of the immigration laws.” Lopez-Mendoza, 468 U.S. at 1038–39. The Fifth Amendment simply does not guarantee the
That is not to say that a private actor could never facilitate a Fifth Amendment “fundamental fairness” violation. Immigration hearings remain government proceedings and remain overseen by governmental actors. Aliens facing removal have a right to be heard before an immigration court that honors their due process right to a fair hearing. See
But poor lawyering, such as missed filing deadlines, bad litigation tactics, and the like, does not count as a due process violation merely because it rises to the level of poor lawyering. An alien has a right only to the opportunity to follow the proper procedures and to make his case before the immigration authorities. What he chooses to do with that is his own business. And his proceeding is fundamentally fair if the government gives him that opportunity. If he thinks it
Linking the Board‘s administrative remedy (Lozada and Compean) to the Fifth Amendment by the way will not help immigrants. The Fifth Amendment requires a proceeding to be “fundamentally unfair” before it kicks in. Dowling v. United States, 493 U.S. 342, 352–53 (1990). That is not an easy standard to meet. It may require more than the showing of prejudice that the Board currently requires. And it assuredly requires more than the proposed Lozada/Compean amendment that would require only that the immigrant satisfy the Strickland standard. In trusting the federal government to administer removal proceedings, Congress did not “limit[]” it “to the very least that the Constitution demands.” Magala, 434 F.3d at 526. It allowed the agency to create an administrative remedy that provides greater protections than the Fifth Amendment requires. We should respect that remedy, and leave it at that.
We affirm.
CONCURRENCE
HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge, concurring. I join in the majority opinion1 except its discussion of the applicability of the Fifth Amendment due process guarantee to counsel in immigration proceedings. Because the Lozada framework satisfies any arguable constitutional due process requirements pertaining to the effective assistance of immigration counsel, I find the majority‘s discussion unnecessary.
