NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 20a0158n.06
Case No. 19-3429
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
FILED
Mar 16, 2020
JOSE ARISTONDO-LEMUS, et al., ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
)
Petitioners, )
) ON PETITION FOR REVIEW
v. ) FROM THE BOARD OF
) IMMIGRATION APPEALS
WILLIAM P. BARR, Attorney General, )
) OPINION
Respondent. )
)
BEFORE: GRIFFIN, WHITE, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.
NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judge. The Board of Immigration Appeals (Board) denied Jose
Adolfo Aristondo-Lemus (Jose) and Amanda Judith Sosa de Aristondo’s (Amanda) motion to
reopen their removal proceedings. They petition this court to review that decision. Because our
precedent controls the question that Petitioners ask us to resolve, we DENY the petition for review.
I.
Both Petitioners are natives and citizens of Guatemala. Jose arrived in the United States
in early 2001 as a non-immigrant visitor with authorization to remain in the United States for a
temporary period not to exceed six months. Amanda arrived later that year also as a non-immigrant
visitor with authorization to remain for a temporary period not to exceed six months. Both Jose
and Amanda remained in the country without authorization beyond the end of their six-month
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periods. So the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) served on each a “Notice to Appear”
(NTA) dated February 2008. (A.R. 6-2 PageID 411, 515.)
The NTAs charged each with removability under 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(1)(B). They required
each to appear “on a date to be set at a time to be set to show why [the Petitioner] should not be
removed from the United States based on the charge(s) set forth.” (Id. at 411, 515.) DHS later
sent each a notice of hearing—dated March 2008 for Jose’s and September 2008 for Amanda’s—
titled “NOTICE OF HEARING IN REMOVAL PROCEEDINGS[.]” (Id. at 408, 513.) Each
notice of hearing specified the place and date for the hearing.
Petitioners applied for asylum. During their removal proceedings, however, the
immigration judge (IJ) found that Petitioners failed to establish their eligibility for asylum. But
instead of a removal order, the IJ granted Petitioners voluntary departure and instructed them to
each post bond and depart the country before October 30, 2009. The Board also rejected
Petitioners’ appeal and remanded to the IJ. And in 2013 the Board rejected Petitioners’ appeal
from the IJ’s decision on remand.
By late 2018, Petitioners had not departed the country. Instead, they moved to reopen the
Board’s earlier decision. They asked the Board to reopen Petitioners’ removal proceedings and
remand them to the IJ for further proceedings.
The Board denied Petitioners’ motion. First, it found the motion untimely. Petitioners
filed the motion about five years after the Board’s decision, well beyond the ninety-day deadline.
Second, it acknowledged that the ninety-day deadline does not apply to motions seeking asylum
based on changed country conditions in the country of nationality, but concluded that because
Petitioners failed to show “materially changed country conditions or circumstances in Guatemala”
the evidence submitted likely would not change the result in Petitioners’ cases. (Id. at 4.)
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Third, the Board addressed Petitioners’ challenge that the immigration court lacked
jurisdiction over the earlier proceedings. “[A] a defective NTA is incapable of vesting the
[immigration] court with jurisdiction[.]” (Id. at 17.) Petitioners contended that the NTAs sent to
them were defective under Pereira v. Sessions, 138 S. Ct. 2105 (2018). The documents labeled
“Notice to Appear” that Petitioners received did not specify a time and date for Petitioners’
appearance. (Id. at 15.) And those documents provided Petitioners a P.O. Box address for the
hearing’s location. They argued that a P.O. Box address “is not really a location” but “is a mail
receptable” because it “is physically impossible” to “conduct[] [a court hearing] inside a P.O.
Box.” (Id. at 16.) The Board rejected that argument as well. Under the Board’s precedent, the IJ
did have jurisdiction over Petitioners’ proceedings. (Id. at 4 (citing Matter of Bermudez-Cota, 27
I&N Dec. 441 (B.I.A. 2018)).)
Last, the Board addressed Petitioners’ argument that Amanda “is eligible for cancellation
of removal based on Pereira v. Sessions[.]” (Id. at 17 (emphasis omitted).) Petitioners argued that
the defective NTAs they received “d[id] not trigger the stop-time rule for determining eligibility
for cancellation of removal.” (Id. at 18.) And “[h]ad Amanda accrued 10 years of physical
presence in the United States[,] . . . she would have been eligible to apply for cancellation of
removal” because “her mother is a lawful permanent resident.” (Id.) So Petitioners asked the
Board to “reopen” both Petitioners’ removal proceedings and remand them to the IJ “to determine
eligibility for cancellation of removal . . . in light of . . . Pereira v. Sessions[.]” (Id. (emphasis
omitted).)
The Board refused. Even if the stop-time rule did not apply, the Board found that Amanda
still would not have been eligible for cancellation of removal. She last entered the country in 2001.
So at the time of the IJ’s first decision in 2009, she “had not accrued the necessary 10 years of
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continuous physical presence.” (Id. at 4.) But it reasoned that a notice of hearing with the time-
and-place information would trigger the stop-time rule and “perfect[]” the NTA. (Id.) Amanda
received the notice of hearing with the time and place “before she had acquired the 10 years of
continuous physical presence required for cancellation of removal.” (Id.) That perfected the NTA
and triggered the stop-time rule. Thus, in either scenario, Amanda “had not accrued the necessary
10 years of continuous physical presence” to qualify her for cancellation of removal. (Id.)
As a result, the Board denied Petitioners’ motion to reopen. This petition for review
followed.
II.
Petitioners raise only one issue on appeal: May a later-issued document that informs the
non-citizen of the date, time, or location of the initial removal hearing combined with an earlier
document without that information trigger the “stop time rule[?]”1 (Pet’r Br. at 8.)
“The Attorney General may cancel removal of . . . an alien who is inadmissible or
deportable from the United States if the alien” meets four criteria. 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(b)(1). One
of those criteria requires that “the alien” must “ha[ve] been physically present in the United States
for a continuous period of not less than 10 years immediately preceding the date of such
application[.]” Id. § 1229b(b)(1)(A). Under the stop-time rule, the ten years of continuous
physical presence is “deemed to end . . . when the alien is served a notice to appear under section
1229(a)[.]” Id. § 1229b(d)(1). A notice to appear must include various categories of information
1
On appeal, Petitioners do not assert that the immigration court had no jurisdiction over
the proceedings. (Pet’r Br. at 6 n.2.) They also do not raise the issue of whether they established
a material change in circumstances affecting their eligibility for asylum-related relief and
protection. (Id.) And they only raise one argument in their opening brief on appeal. So we
consider any other argument Petitioners raised before the Board—e.g., the timeliness of their
motion—abandoned. See United States v. Johnson, 440 F.3d 832, 845–46 (6th Cir. 2006).
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including “[t]he time and place at which the [removal] proceedings will be held.” Id.
§ 1229(a)(1)(G)(i).
Petitioners urge us to answer the question they raise on appeal in the negative and to remand
the matter to the Board for further proceedings. The documents “labeled as [] NTA[s]” that DHS
issued here lacked the date, time, or location of the initial removal proceedings. (Pet’r Br. at 15–
19.) But, they argue, “the time and place of the hearing must be designated in an NTA to trigger
the stop time rule.” (Id. at 16.) They also urge us to find that the notice of hearing did not cure
the defect in the earlier document labeled NTA and served to each Petitioner because they assert
that “a subsequently served notice of hearing specifying” that information does not satisfy
§ 1229(a) and the stop-time rule. (Id. at 17–18 (describing the notice of hearing as a “poor
substitute” for an NTA).)
But our precedent controls; under any standard of review, we must answer the question
affirmatively. “[W]ritten communications to a noncitizen in multiple components or installments
may collectively provide all the information necessary” to meet 8 U.S.C. §§ 1229b(d) and 1229(a).
Garcia-Romo v. Barr, 940 F.3d 192, 201 (6th Cir. 2019). So “the government triggers the stop-
time rule when it sends a noncitizen all the required categories of information under
§ 1229(a)(1)(A)–(G) through one or multiple written communications.” Id. (emphasis added).
Petitioners correctly note that DHS sent Jose and Amanda documents labeled “Notice to
Appear” without the information required by statute. (A.R. 6-2 PageID 411, 515.) But DHS later
sent them each a notice of hearing that contained the missing information. The documents sent to
Petitioners “collectively provide[d] all the information necessary” to satisfy the statute. Garcia-
Romo, 940 F.3d at 201. Accordingly, once Petitioners received that information, “the government
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trigger[ed] the stop-time rule[.]” Id. And the government did so within ten years for each
Petitioner.
III.
Our precedent bars Petitioners’ sole argument on appeal. For this reason, we DENY the
petition for review.
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