State of New York MEMORANDUM
Court of Appeals This memorandum is uncorrected and subject to
revision before publication in the New York Reports.
No. 17
The People &c.,
Respondent,
v.
Cesar Garcia,
Appellant
Mark W. Zeno, for appellant.
David M. Cohn, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM:
The order of the Appellate Term should be affirmed.
Defendant was originally charged with public lewdness, two counts of forcible
touching, and two counts of sexual abuse in the third degree after police officers observed
him masturbating on a subway platform and pressing himself against two women on a
subway car. The People thereafter filed a prosecutor’s information reducing the two class
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A misdemeanor charges of forcible touching to attempted forcible touching, so that the top
charges against defendant were Class B misdemeanors obviating his right to a jury trial
under state statute (see CPL 340.40).1 After a bench trial, defendant was convicted of
public lewdness and acquitted of all other charges. The Appellate Term affirmed the
conviction. Applying our holding in People v Suazo (32 NY3d 491 [2018])—decided after
defendant’s conviction—the court held that defendant had not met his burden of
establishing deportability based on the crimes for which he was tried (63 Misc 3d 158 [A]).
While the Appellate Term first improperly conducted the deportability analysis
based only on the crime of conviction, that court went on to correctly analyze defendant’s
deportability based on all the charges he faced (see Suazo, 32 NY3d at 508). It remained,
however, “the defendant’s burden to overcome the presumption that the crime charged is
petty and establish a Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial” (id. at 507). We agree with the
Appellate Term that here, defendant’s conclusory allegation that he was deportable if
convicted “on any of the charged B misdemeanors,” supported by a bare citation to 8 USC
§ 1227 (a) (2) (A) (ii), under which an alien is deportable if “convicted of two or more
crimes involving moral turpitude, not arising out of a single scheme of criminal
misconduct,” was insufficient to establish his right to a jury trial.
In Suazo, by contrast, defendant’s assertion that “the possibility of deportation upon
conviction rendered the class B misdemeanors sufficiently serious to mandate a jury trial
1
Effective July 1, 2022, CPL 340.40 as amended now extends the right to a jury trial to all
defendants charged with a misdemeanor offense in local criminal court (L 2021, ch 806).
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under the Sixth Amendment” met his burden to show deportability because it was clear
from the face of the accusatory instrument “that at least one of the charges lodged against
him . . . qualified as a deportable offense” (32 NY3d at 494, 508). Our dissenting colleague
asserts that defendant’s charges “required no greater analysis or piecing together of federal
law than that in Suazo” (dissenting op at 9). But the insufficiency of defendant’s assertion
is quite ably demonstrated by the dissent’s “cursory review” of this issue, which spans
pages of text and includes a 34-line footnote analyzing federal immigration law (dissenting
op at 6-11, 10-11 n 1). Holding this defendant to the standard we articulated in Suazo, as
we do and the Appellate Term did below, does not create an “ambiguous and heightened
burden,” nor does it violate “the principle of stare decisis” (dissenting op at 2-3).
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WILSON, J. (dissenting):
Charged with three B misdemeanor offenses and facing the threat of potential
deportation upon conviction, Cesar Garcia demanded a jury trial, informing the court that
“any of the charged B misdemeanors would result in deportability under 8 USC § 1227
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(a)(2)(A)(ii).” Today, the majority holds his clear statement was insufficient to invoke his
constitutional right to a jury trial, as recognized in Suazo (32 NY3d 491, 493 [2018]). Mr.
Garcia’s request is no less clear and no less accurate that Mr. Suazo’s was, yet Mr. Garcia
is denied the jury trial Mr. Suazo was granted.
In Suazo, we held that deportation constitutes a significant consequence of criminal
conviction such that even for an otherwise petty offense, if the charges bear the potential
for deportation upon conviction, a defendant is entitled to a jury trial under the Sixth
Amendment (id.). I dissented in Suazo because federal law provides for deportation itself
without a jury trial, hence the possibility of deportation cannot, in my view, confer the right
to a jury trial where none otherwise exists (32 NY3d at 518). However, the principle of
stare decisis is important; courts that overturn settled precedent simply because a court as
currently composed would have decided the initial case differently are functioning as
legislative bodies, not courts. “The doctrine of stare decisis provides that once a court has
decided a legal issue, subsequent appeals presenting similar facts should be decided in
conformity with the earlier decision” (People v Bing, 76 NY2d 331, 337 [1990]). Indeed,
“the doctrine of stare decisis is of fundamental importance to the rule of law” (Welch v
Texas Dept. of Highways and Public Transp., 483 US 468, 494 [1987]). “Adherence to
precedent promotes stability, predictability, and respect for judicial authority…For all
these reasons, [the United States Supreme Court] will not depart from the doctrine of stare
decisis without some compelling justification” (Hilton v South Carolina Public Railways
Commn., 502 US 197, 202 [1991]). Our Court has recognized that stare decisis “promotes
predictability in the law, engenders reliance on our decisions, encourages judicial restraint
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and reassures the public that our decisions arise from a continuum of legal principle rather
than the personal caprice of the members of this Court” (People v Peque, 22 NY3d 168,
194 [2013]). Wrong though I believe Suazo to be, my duty is to follow it.
The majority follows Suazo, but only to a point. I agree with the majority that Suazo
requires a court to determine a person’s deportability based on the crimes with which the
defendant is charged—not those for which the person was ultimately convicted. I also agree
with the majority’s recognition that Suazo governs this case, inasmuch as Suazo’s
Constitutional rule applies to all pending cases as a substantive requirement of
constitutional criminal procedure (see Griffith v Kentucky, 479 US 314, 328 [1987]).
However, the majority’s creation of an ambiguous and heightened burden to invoke a
defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to a jury in this context is incompatible with Suazo.
Because Mr. Garcia supported his motion with the clear and accurate statement that if he
were convicted of any of the charged B misdemeanor crimes, he would face the potential
of deportation, his conviction after a bench trial violated his constitutional rights.
I.
On June 25, 2015, an undercover police officer standing on the northbound 4 train
platform at Union Square observed Mr. Garcia with his hand in his pants pocket. Mr. Garcia
appeared to be masturbating. After approximately 10 minutes, the officer followed Mr.
Garcia onto an arriving train, where he pushed “his groin up against a woman’s buttocks
and repeatedly rub[bed] against her.” He then departed that train and boarded a different,
southbound train. The officer again followed him and observed Mr. Garcia push his groin
into a second woman.
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Mr. Garcia was subsequently charged with two counts of forcible touching (PL
130.52), two counts of sexual abuse in the third degree (PL 130.55), and one count of public
lewdness (PL 245). Prior to trial, the people moved to reduce the charges to B
misdemeanors. Mr. Garcia then moved for a jury trial. In the affirmation and memorandum
of law supporting the motion, his counsel disclosed that Mr. Garcia was a non-citizen and
stated that “any of the charged B misdemeanors would result in deportability under 8 USC
§ 1227 (a)(2)(A)(ii).” Mr. Garcia cited to Blanton v City of North Las Vegas (489 US 538
[1989]) and Padilla v Kentucky (559 US 356 [2010]) to argue that deportation constitutes
a severe statutory penalty, rendering the charges serious offenses that warranted a jury trial.
Mr. Garcia’s motion and supporting papers were filed well before we decided Suazo.
In the in-court colloquy, the People relied on People v Urbaez (10 NY3d 773
[2008]) to assert their right to reduce the charges to B misdemeanors to avoid giving Mr.
Garcia a jury trial. The People did not dispute Mr. Garcia’s contention that his conviction
of any of the B misdemeanors would render him subject to deportation. Although the Trial
Court described Mr. Garcia’s argument as “interesting,” it denied the application “based
upon the fact that I believe that the Court of Appeals, at least at this stage, has said that the
People have broad discretion in reducing these cases and moving forward on a bench trial.”
However, the court noted that the issue “may ultimately resolve in defense favor if the
definition of serious is looked at as more than just potential incarceration.” After a bench
trial, the trial court acquitted Mr. Garcia of the forcible touching and sex abuse charges but
convicted him of public lewdness. Mr. Garcia was sentenced to seven days of community
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service with a $200 mandatory surcharge and a $50 DNA fee. He was subsequently
deported.
While Mr. Garcia’s case was on appeal, we decided People v Suazo (32 NY3d at
491). The Appellate Term invited the parties to submit supplemental briefing on the
application of Suazo to the case at bar. The People argued that defendant failed to meet his
burden under Suazo to show that he would be deportable if convicted because whether
public lewdness is a crime involving moral turpitude (CIMT) is an unsettled question. Mr.
Garcia countered that Suazo entitled him to a jury trial and that his sentence should be
vacated. He further argued that the People had not preserved any argument about the
charged crimes not posing a threat of deportation, because they could have disputed that
proposition when Mr. Garcia raised it. Mr. Garcia also argued that affirming on the
People’s newly advanced ground would violate People v LaFontaine (92 NY2d 470
[1998]).
The Appellate Term held that Mr. Garcia was not entitled to a jury trial because “he
failed to meet his burden to establish that a conviction for public lewdness carries the
potential for deportation.” The Appellate Term also accepted the People’s arguments that
(a) even if public lewdness is a CIMT, 8 USC § 1227 (a) (2) (A) (ii) requires conviction of
two or more CIMTs, and (b) the charged offenses arose out of a single scheme of criminal
misconduct and so would not have rendered him deportable. Mr. Garcia appeals.
II.
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In Suazo, we held that the Sixth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which
“guarantees that a defendant will be judged by a jury of peers if charged with a serious
crime,” entitles a noncitizen defendant charged with a crime carrying the potential penalty
of deportation to a jury trial (32 NY3d at 493). The majority and I agree that Suazo applies
to Mr. Garcia and that, if he was charged with crimes carrying the potential for deportation,
he was entitled to a jury trial and his conviction must therefore be reversed. The sole issue
presented is whether Mr. Garcia met his burden in his motion for a jury trial to alert the
court of the potential for deportation were Mr. Garcia to be convicted of the B
misdemeanors with which he was charged.
In Suazo, we explicitly recognized that our holding would “obligate New York
courts. . . to determine the potential immigration consequences associated with pending
charges” (id. at 507). Responding to the People’s concerns for the “practicalities of
litigating a defendant’s immigration status” we explained “that it is the defendant’s burden
to overcome the presumption that the crime charged is petty and establish a Sixth
Amendment right to a jury trial” (id.). Nonetheless, we noted that where parties disagree,
the courts would need to weigh in on the matter, but that “our courts are competent to
resolve such questions as they are presented” even at the cost of some judicial efficiency
(id.).
In Suazo, we did not expressly elaborate on what a defendant must allege—exactly
how much proof or reasoning a defendant must provide—to meet this burden. Still, Mr.
Suazo’s submission to the trial court, arguing that he faced the potential for deportation, is
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both instructive and binding. The majority’s deviation from that precedent is obvious when
comparing Mr. Suazo’s allegation, which we held legally sufficient to entitle him to a
reversal of his conviction, with Mr. Garcia’s, which the majority now holds is insufficient:
Mr. Suazo Mr. Garcia
“Regardless of whether he is charged with “Despite the maximum period of
A or B misdemeanors, Mr. Suazo faces the incarceration for each of the counts being
possibility of a sentence far harsher than less than 6 months in the instant matter, Mr.
that of mere incarceration. As a non- Garcia is entitled to a jury trial because the
citizen, should Mr. Suazo be convicted of charges against him constitute a ‘serious’
any of the misdemeanors for which he is offense due to the immigration
charged, Mr. Suazo will be deportable.” consequences of a conviction on each of
the charges. The Immigration and
Nationality Act (INA) provides that a
noncitizen ‘is deportable’ and ‘shall, upon
the order of the Attorney General, be
removed’ from the United States upon
conviction of any crime listed in 8 U.S.C. §
1227 (a) (2), including: certain ‘crimes
involving moral turpitude’. . . . Mr. Garcia
is a non-citizen for whom conviction on
any of the charged B misdemeanors would
result in deportability under 8 U.S.C. §
1227 (a)(2)(A)(ii). See, Muhurv v Tryon,
11-CV-539A, 2011 WL 601 6606 (WDNY
Dec. 2, 2011) (same for P.L. § 130.52);
Purveegiin v. U.S. I.N.S. Processing Ctr.,
73 F Supp 2d 411, 414 (SDNY 1999) (same
for P.L. § 130.55).”
Indeed, in Suazo we accurately described Mr. Suazo’s request for a jury trial as “assert[ing]
that he was a noncitizen charged with deportable offenses, and . . . argu[ing] that the
possibility of deportation upon conviction rendered the class B misdemeanors sufficiently
serious to mandate a jury trial under the Sixth Amendment” (32 NY3d at 494). Mr. Suazo
cited no federal law, nor did his memorandum of law contain additional analysis on
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deportability to support the above-quoted statement. Nonetheless, we held that his motion
was sufficient to trigger our scrutiny, ultimately resulting in our holding that at least one
of the crimes with which he was charged could render a noncitizen deportable (id.).
Accordingly, we found Mr. Suazo was entitled to a new trial (id. at 509).
As is patent from the above side-by-side comparison, Mr. Garcia substantially
exceeded that threshold. Mr. Garcia asserted he was a noncitizen “for whom conviction on
any of the charged B misdemeanors would result in deportability under 8 U.S.C. § 1227
(a)(2)(A)(ii), including: certain ‘crimes involving moral turpitude’” and cited two federal
immigration cases. In the first, Muhury v Tryon, the defendant challenged his immigration
detention when immigration authorities commenced removal proceedings after his
conviction for forcible touching (PL § 130.52), which the immigration court determined
was a crime involving moral turpitude (11-CV-539A, 2011 WL 6016606, *1 [WDNY Dec.
2, 2011]). In the second, Purveegiin v U.S. I.N.S. Processing Ctr., the defendant also sought
release from immigration detention initiated when he was deemed eligible for deportation
after conviction for crimes involving moral turpitude, including third-degree sexual abuse
(PL § 130.52) (73 F Supp 2d 411, 414 [SDNY 1999]). If Mr. Suazo’s allegation, containing
no citation or authority at all, was sufficient to trigger his right to a jury trial, Mr. Garcia,
whose claim was far more robustly stated and supported, must also have met the threshold
required to raise the issue.
The difference between the charges against Mr. Suazo and Mr. Garcia does not
affect the threshold requirement each defendant was entitled to meet. In 2018, when we
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decided Suazo, as now, the Immigration and National Act (INA) provides that a noncitizen
may face deportation for conviction for a variety of crimes (8 USC § 1227 [a] [2] [A]).
Most relevant to Mr. Suazo’s charges, a noncitizen becomes deportable after conviction of
any crime of domestic violence, defined as “any crime of violence…against a person
committed…by an individual with whom the person shares a child in common” (8 USC §
1227 [a] [2] [E] [i]). Mr. Suazo was charged with several crimes but was not explicitly
charged with any “domestic violence” offense—rather, to become deportable, Mr. Suazo’s
crimes needed to have occurred in circumstances that meet the domestic violence definition
provided in the INA (8 USC § 1227 [a] [2] [E] [i]). Mr. Suazo offered no statement meeting
that definition; instead, he nakedly asserted that a conviction would render him deportable
for any of his offenses. Nonetheless, our Court proceeded to do exactly that analysis, citing
federal immigration cases and New York law to hold that one of the charges—criminal
obstruction of breathing or blood circulation—was violent and would qualify, under the
circumstances, as a crime of domestic violence rendering a noncitizen deportable (32 NY3d
at 508-509). Thus, in Suazo, in which some amount of legal analysis was needed to
determine if the charges fell within the INA’s enumerated crimes triggering deportability,
we did not require the defendant to make any specific argument to that effect.
Mr. Garcia’s charges required no greater analysis or piecing together of federal law
than that in Suazo. Most relevant to Mr. Garcia, the INA provides that a noncitizen may be
deported or face forcible removal from the country after conviction for “two or more crimes
involving moral turpitude, not arising out of a single scheme of criminal misconduct” (8
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USC § 1227 [a] [2] [A] [ii]). Mr. Garcia’s circumstances would render him deportable in
the event he was convicted of two or more crimes considered to be crimes of moral
turpitude and not arising out of a single scheme of criminal misconduct. Thus, just like Mr.
Suazo, who would only face deportation if his charges met particular circumstances
provided for in federal law, Mr. Garcia’s deportability depended on a determination of
whether his charges are crimes of moral turpitude and if they occurred in a single scheme
of criminal misconduct. This determination is no more or less complicated a task than that
the Court accepted in Suazo with only a bare statement from Mr. Suazo that he would be
deportable if convicted of any of his charges. Mr. Garcia, who cited two cases of federal
law, went further.1 The majority provides no reason for distinguishing between the two
1
Even a cursory review of relevant federal law confirms support for Mr. Garcia’s
allegation that his crimes could be considered crimes of moral turpitude not committed in
a single scheme of criminal misconduct. The Board of Immigration Appeals interprets the
“single scheme” language to mean “that when an alien has performed an act, which, in
and of itself, constitutes a complete, individual and distinct crime, he is deportable when
he again commits such an act, even though one may closely follow the other, be similar
in character, and even be part of an overall plan of criminal misconduct” (Matter of
Adetiba, 20 I & N Dec 506, 509 [BIA 1992]). In contrast, there is a single scheme of
criminal misconduct “where one crime constituted a lesser offense of another, … where
the two crimes flow from and are the natural consequence of a single act of criminal
misconduct,” or where there is “no substantial interruption that would allow the
participant to associate himself from his enterprise and reflect on what he has done” (id).
In Matter of Islam, the BIA held that its interpretation of the “single scheme”
provision is controlling and should be uniformly applied in all circuits throughout the
country (25 I & N Dec 637, 641 [BIA 2011]). In applying Adetiba, Federal Courts, which
afford Chevron deference to the BIA’s interpretation of the Immigration and Nationality
Act (see Michel v INS, 206 F3d 253, 262 [2d Cir 2000]), have interpreted the single
scheme exception very narrowly. For example, the Fourth Circuit affirmed an order of
deportation where the appellant was convicted of two separate crimes for passing two
fraudulent checks at two different stores in a mall during a single shopping trip
(Akindemowo v US INS, 61 F3d 282 [4th Cir 1995]). Similarly, in Szonyi v Whitaker, the
Ninth Circuit affirmed the BIA’s determination that the appellant’s multiple convictions
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analyses and requiring significantly more from Mr. Garcia than we did of Mr. Suazo. The
doctrine of stare decisis compels us to decide Mr. Garcia’s case as we did Mr. Suazo’s. 2
III.
Having undermined the only precedent available to defendants confronting charges
bearing the potential for deportation (Suazo), it is impossible to discern what the majority
would find sufficient for noncitizen defendants to say to meet their burden. What exactly
Mr. Garcia must have shown in order to carry his burden is utterly unmentioned in the
majority’s brief memorandum decision, leaving future defendants only to wonder what it
is they must submit to a court in order to vindicate their Constitutional right to a jury of
their peers. Perhaps the majority would have been satisfied had Mr. Garcia stated that the
for sexual offenses committed against three women in the same location over the course
of a five to six hour window following a bout of heavy drinking did not constitute a
single scheme because “the acts, though similar in character, were distinct, because the
commission of one can occur without the commission of the other” (915 F3d 1228, 1256
[9th Cir 2019]). In Chavez-Alvarez v Attorney Gen. United States, the Third Circuit held
that two convictions—the first for sodomy and the second for making false statements
seven hours later about whether the defendant committed sodomy—did not arise out of a
"single scheme" of criminal misconduct (850 F3d 583, 587 [3d Cir 2017]). Likewise, Mr.
Garcia was charged with two counts of sexual abuse based on separate incidents
involving different victims occurring at different locations, each of which could occur
without the commission of the other. I conclude that the charged offense carried a
potential penalty of deportation and so Mr. Garcia should have been afforded a jury trial.
2
The majority’s complaint about the length of the immediately preceding paragraph and
footnote conflates two things: whether Mr. Garcia said at least as much as Mr. Suazo, thus
entitling him to a jury trial, and the thoroughness with which I will write to demonstrate
how wrong the majority is. It turns out I could have written much less, because the majority
has no substantive disagreement with that paragraph or footnote. Its only response is to
invent a new category of rhetorical device (beyond logos, ethos and pathos) in which the
thoroughness of an explanation proves its error. Perhaps we can call it “diligentos,” on the
off chance someone wishes to use it henceforth.
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charged crimes were ones involving moral turpitude instead of citing federal law
establishing just that. Two reasons counsel against that requirement. First, the holding
would in fact announce no rule at all. Little is clear about how much Mr. Garcia would
need to argue or how he would have needed to support that assertion and for other
defendants facing any of the litany of enumerated crimes triggering deportability in the
INA, how far each might need to argue or link up the logical steps leading to deportability
would be impossible to predict. Second, requiring a stricter standard of proving a particular
likelihood of deportability, for example here that a federal court would probably or
definitively have found Mr. Garcia’s crimes to be ones of moral turpitude undercuts the
emphasis we placed in Suazo on the “potential” and not certainty of deportation triggering
the right to a jury trial (32 NY3d at 493, 507). That distinction is important—requiring
certainty in an area that evolves and changes as frequently as discretionary federal decision
making under immigration law would create a standard so exacting that few defendants
would ever meet it. The inevitable ambiguity surrounding immigration consequences of
state convictions should cut in favor of defendants—not against.
Perhaps the majority would have required Mr. Garcia to anticipate and refute the
People’s unpreserved argument (made for the first time on appeal, not at trial) 3 that his
3
In countless other cases, the People regularly argue both procedural bars (such as
preservation and insufficiency of motion papers) doom a defendant’s claim and, in the
alternative, that a defendant’s argument fails on the merits. Indeed, in the Appellate Term
in this instance, the People did exactly that. There is no reason the People could not have
argued, in response to Mr. Suazo’s request for a jury trial, that the B misdemeanor charges
constituted a single scheme for federal immigration law purposes, so that even if he were
right that the potential for deportation entitled him to a jury trial, he was not facing
deportation because federal law requires two convictions not arising from a single scheme.
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crimes constituted a single scheme of criminal misconduct. Again, to require such a
detailed anticipation of a counterargument, particularly given the long list of crimes
triggering deportability under the INA, would provide no guidance to future litigants who
may also wonder what possible counterarguments they are now also required to assert in
the first instance. Nor would any purpose of judicial efficiency be furthered. If the People
find a counterargument to deportability in the INA statute, such as the occurrence of crimes
of moral turpitude in a single scheme, it in fact furthers the Court’s own aims of efficiency
and the adversarial system to require the People to raise and preserve that argument, lest
omnibus motions take on even greater length as defendants attempt to anticipate every
possible counterargument in immigration law.
Besides the difficulty of imagining the requirements of the majority’s new rule and
the policy reasons undergirding it, which for the reasons above I question, one compelling
reason exists to keep the burden of noncitizen defendants seeking to invoke their
constitutional right to a jury trial realistic and feasible: the importance of the right. In Suazo,
we explained:
“[t]here can be little doubt that deportation is a sufficiently
severe penalty to puncture the six-month demarcation between
serious and petty offenses because the loss of liberty associated
therewith is analogous to that inherent in incarceration and
because deportation—which may result in the indefinite
expulsion from the country and isolation from one’s family—
is frequently more injurious to noncitizen defendants than six
months or less of imprisonment” (id. at 500).
The People chose not to do so, instead standing on their argument that no jury trial right
attached to B misdemeanors, regardless of the deportation consequences.
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Such an important consequence and attendant constitutional right as trial by jury
should not depend on an ambiguous or unnecessarily exacting procedural standard for
invocation. Because I cannot see, and the majority does not provide, any basis to deviate
from Suazo, I dissent.
Order affirmed, in a memorandum. Chief Judge DiFiore and Judges Garcia, Cannataro,
Troutman and Winslow concur. Judge Wilson dissents in an opinion, in which Judge
Rivera concurs. Judge Singas took no part.
Decided May 24, 2022
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