Plaintiffs-Appellants Zoila Contreras and Yolanda Siliezar appeal from a May 26, 1981 judgment of the District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Jacob Mishler, Judge), dismissing their claim for damages against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 2671-2680. The complaint sought damages for an allegedly unlawful warrantless arrest of plaintiffs and a warrantless search of their apartment by officers of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS).
*308 INS officers received an anonymous tip that three persons living in a third-floor apartment in Brooklyn were illegal aliens. All three were described and one was identified. The officials determined to pursue their investigation by observing activity near the apartment building in question. Officers approached a woman (Siliezar) exiting the building who fit one of the descriptions and who stopped and turned when she saw the officers questioning a neighbor. After telling the officers that she was from Guatemala, she made a movement toward a passerby in an attempt to engage his attention. Siliezar then refused to answer any further questions and was taken into custody. As the officers and Siliezar then entered the apartment building, Siliezar broke away and frantically knocked on the door to a first-floor apartment and then again on the door to a second-floor apartment. She was then removed from the building.
Officer McAllister then went to the third-floor apartment and knocked on the door. Plaintiff Contreras opened the door dressed in a housecoat. Contreras walked into the public hallway and admitted that she had entered the country illegally. She told McAllister she had a passport. Contreras then indicated that she had no objection to the officer’s entering her apartment but she refused to accompany him. With the assistance of a neighbor, Officer McAllister explained to Contreras that he wanted her to get her passport and to get dressed so that she could be processed as an illegal alien at INS. Once in the apartment, Officer McCarthy made a security check. No drawers or packages were opened. Other officers then entered; Officer Samborsky accompanied Contreras while she dressed. When Contreras motioned toward a box on a shelf of a closet, Officer Samborsky saw a passport and seized it as well as an unemployment booklet she had noticed under the passport.
The District Court found that the tip when taken together with the confirmation of some of the informant's information sufficed to create a reasonable suspicion that justified the stop of Siliezar for questioning.
Terry v. Ohio,
In order to recover damages, plaintiffs must first show that the warrantless arrests and search were unlawful. An INS officer’s authority to arrest an individual without a warrant is defined by 8 U.S.C. § 1357(a)(2) (1976):
(a) Any officer or employee of the [INS] . .. shall have power without warrant—
(2) to arrest any [illegal alien] ... if he has reason to believe that the alien so arrested is in the United States in violation of any [immigration law] and is likely to escape before a warrant can be obtained for his arrest.. ..
On appeal, plaintiffs do not contest that the officers had probable cause to believe that plaintiffs were in the country illegally. However, they contest the presence of the second prerequisite for a warrantless arrest of an illegal alien — reason to believe that the alien is likely to escape before a warrant can be obtained for his or her arrest. Because of the difficulty of making an on-the-spot determination as to the likelihood of escape without any opportunity to verify information provided or to conduct a full-scale interview, “an [INS] officer’s determination will not be upset if there is any reasonable basis for it.”
Marquez v. Kiley,
In this case Contreras acknowledged to the arresting officers that she had entered this country illegally. Her liability to deportation was as clear-cut and undisputed as in
Ojeda-Vinales.
As for Siliezar, her acknowledgement that she was from Guatemala, the absence of a claim of lawful status, and her attempt to evade custody satisfied the “likely to escape” criterion. Under all the circumstances, there was an adequate factual basis for the officers’ determination that in light of their experience and training as INS officers they reasonably believed that both plaintiffs were likely to escape before they could secure an arrest warrant.
Ojeda-Vinales v. INS, supra; United States v. Alvarado,
There is sufficient factual support for the District Court’s finding that Contreras authorized the entry into the apartment for the purpose of affording her the opportunity to change clothes.
Cf. Washington v. Chrisman,
— U.S. —, —,
Plaintiffs have therefore not sustained their burden of proving that the officers’ actions were unlawful — the initial requirement for recovery under the Federal Tort Claims Act.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. Officer McAllister’s testimony that he had only a minor concern that Contreras would escape when she left her apartment and walked into the public hallway pertains only to the officer’s fear of escape at that moment and is not indicative of an unlikelihood of escape if the officers had left to secure a warrant.
