MARIN

Court: Board of Immigration Appeals
Date filed: 1978-07-01
Citations: 16 I. & N. Dec. 581
Copy Citations
33 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                                                             Interim Decision #2666




                                 MATTER OF MARIN

                            In Deportation Proceedings

                                       A 13923847
                                         -




                        Decided by Board August 4, 1978
(1) An application for discretionary relief under section 212(c) of the Act necessitates a
  balancing of the adverse factors of record evidencing an alien's undesirability as a
  permanent resident with the social and humane considerations presented in his behalf to
  determine whether the granting of relief is in the best interest of this country.
(2)A statutorily eligible applicant who has the right to apply for relief under section 212(c)
  must be given the reasonable opportunity to come forward with favorable con-
   siderations which may offset the adverse matters of record.
(3) The equities that an applicant for relief under section 212(c) must bring forward to
  establish that favorable discretionary action is warranted will depend in each case on
  the nature and circumstances of the ground of exclusion sought waived and on the
  presence of any additional adverse factors (factors previously deemed favorable and
  unfavorable set forth)
(4) An applicant for discretionary relief under section 212(c) who has been convicted of a
  serious drug offense must demonstrate "uriusuar . or "outstanding" countervailing
  equities before a favorable exercise of discretion will be considered.
(5) An applicant for relief under section 212(e) who has a criminal record will ordinarily be
  required to make a showing of rehabilitation before relief will be granted as a matter of
  discretion.
(6) There is no irrebuttable presumption that a confined or recently convicted alien can
  never establish either that rehabilitation has occurred vr that relief under section 212(e)
  should otherwise be granted.
(7) The recency of a conviction and the fact of confinement are matters relevant to the
  consideration of whether an alien has demonstrated his rehabilitation and whether relief
  should be granted as a matter of discretion.
(8)A District Director is not required to withhold the issuance of an Order to Show Cause
  in the case of a confined or recently convicted alien who is statutorily eligible for relief
  under section 212(c) in order to provide the alien a better opportunity to demonstrate
  his rehabilitation.
(9) The decision to institute deportation proceedings is vested in the discretion of the
  District Director and the Board of Immigration Appeals is not the proper forum in
  which to seek a review of the rationale underlying a District Director's decision in this
  regard.
CHARGE:
   Order: Act of 195Z-3ection 241(e)(11) [8 U.S.C. 1261(o.)(11)] Conviction of nareoti'es
                           charge

                                             581
interim vecimon IF LUOU

ON BEHALF OF RESPONDENT:                        ON BEHALF OF SERVICE:
  Willard H. Myers, III, Esquire                  George W. Masterton
  Prisoners' Legal Services of New York           Appellate Trial Attorney
  515 Lake Street
  Elmira, New York 14901
BY: Milhollan, Chairman; Appleman, Maguire, and Farb, Board Members


    In a decision dated August 23, 1977, the immigration judge found the
respondent deportable as charged, denied his application for a waiver of
inadmissibility under section 212(c) of the Immigration and Nationality
Act, 8 U.S.C. 1182(c), and ordered his deportation to Colombia The
respondent has appealed. The appeal will be dismissed.
    The respondent, a 46-year-old native and citizen of Colombia, was
admitted to the United States for lawful permanent residence on Feb-
 ruary 3, 1965. In March 1976, he entered a guilty plea in a New York
 State criminal court to the felony charge of criminal sale of cocaine. On
April 29, 1976, he was sentenced to the minimum mandatory sentence
provided under New York law for that offense, an indeterminate sen-
tence of one year to life. Including credited pretrail confinement, the
respondent served some 20 months of this sentence (from November
 1975 through May 1978) in New York State penal institutions.
    On May 11, 1977, while still confined, an Order to Show Cause was
issued charging the respondent with being deportable under section
241(a)(11) of the Act, 8 U.S.C. 1251(a)(11), as an alien convicted of a
designated drug offense. At the hearing held on July 20, 1977, the
respondent conceded deportability. The immigration judge accordingly
found him deportable as charged and that finding is not in issue on
appeal.
    At the deportation hearing, the respondent applied for relief under
section 212(c) of the Act. That section provides, in pertinent part, that
aliens lawfully admitted for permanent residence who temporarily pro-
ceed abroad voluntarily and not under an order of deportation, and who
are returning to a lawful unrelinquished domicile of seven consecutive
y ears, may be admitted in the discretion of the Attorney General with-
out regard to certain specified grounds for exclusion enumerated in
section 212(a) of the Act. The grounds specified include an alien who has
been convicted of a drug offense, as set forth in section 212(a)(23) of the
Act, 8 U.S.C. 1182(a)(23). In light of our decision in Matter of Silva,
Ititerim Decision 2532 (BIA 1976), the immigration judge properly con-
cluded that the respondent was statutorily eligible for relief from depor-
ttion under section 212(c) even though he had not proceeded abroad
subsequent to his entry for lawful permanent residence. See Francis v.
INS, 532 F.2d 268 (2 Cir. 1976).
    Section 212(e), however, does not provide an indiscriminate waiver

                                          582
                                                          interim uecision /FLOOD

for all who demonstrate statutory eligibility for such relief. Instead, the
Attorney General or his delegate is required to determine as a matter of
discretion whether an applicant warrants the relief sought. The alien
bears the burden of demonstrating that his application merits favorable
consideration.
   In the case before us, the immigration judge concluded that the
respondent had failed to establish that "a waiver of deportability Masi
merited as a matter of discretion." ' In this regard, he noted the nature
of the respondent's criminal offense and subsequent confinement and
concluded that a waiver should not be granted absent a showing of
"unusual or outstanding equities." Other than his residence in the
United States for 12 years, however, the respondent was "unable to
advance any substantial equities." z He was single, childless, and had no
relatives residing in this country. His closest relatives (a brother and
sister) both lived in Colombia. 'The respondent's employment history
was sporadic and he presented no evidence that he would have particu-
lar difficulty returning to Colombia other than stating that "life [was]
too hard there."
   Based on the "entire record," the immigration judge concluded that
the respondent's conviction as a drug offender had not been sufficiently
offset by his "twelve years of residence in the United States" and "his
adjustment to prison life" to warrant the granting of discretionary relief
under section 212(0_ The application for relief was accordingly denied.
   On appeal, the respondent, through counsel, states that the "decision
of the immigration judge denying [his section 212(c)] application . . . in
the exercise of discretion was neither founded upon standards which
have been promulgated through regulation or adjudication, nor did the
standards applied rest upon a permissible basis." The respondent sub-
mits that a wealth of preeendenti al standards exist regarding the discre-
tionary granting of section 212(e) relief, that the immigration judge
made a "radical departure from the precedent decisions of this Board
[by instead] employing the standards of Matter of Fernandez, supra,
and Matter of Arai, supra," that he did so without citation or comment
on the existing precedent decisions, that this departure "violated any
standard for fair play, as well as due process," and that the factors
actually relied upon by the immigration judge were impermissible.

     The immigration judge cited Matter of Fernandez, 14 1. & N. Dec. 24 (BIA 1972)
(involving a section 212(h) waiver) as permitting him to refuse to entertain the section
212(c) application because the respondent was still in prison, but he in fact accepted the
application and allowed the respondent the full opportunity to present evidence in support
of a favorable exercise of discretion.
   2 The immigration judge noted the factors deemed favorable in our decision in Matter of
Anti, 15 1. & N. Dec. 404 (BIA 1070) (involving adjustment of status under section 245 of
the Act) and examined the record for their presence.

                                          583
Interim Decision #2666

   We find no merit to this basis of appeal. The Board has not adopted an
inflexible test for an immigration judge to use to determine as a contclus-
 ory matter whether section 212(c) relief should be granted as a matter of
 discretion. The undesirability and "difficulty, if not impossibility, of
 defining any standard in discretionary matters of this character which
 may be applied in a stereotyped manner" has long been recognized . See
Matter of L—, 3 I. & N. Dec. 767 (BIA 1949; A.G. 1949) (involving the
seventh proviso to section 3 of the Act of 1917). Instead, it has been held
that each case must be judged on its own merits. The immigration judge
must balance the adverse factors evidencing an alien's undesirability as
a permanent resident with the social and humane considerations pre-
sented in his behalf to determine whether the granting of section 212(c)
relief appears in the best interests of this country.
    In order to provide the framework for an equitable application of
discretionary relief, the Board has enunciated factors relevant to the
issue of whether section 212(c) relief should be granted as a matter of
discretion. Among the factors deemed adverse to a respondent's appli-
cation have been the nature and underlying circumstances of the exclu-
sion ground at issue, the presence of additional significant violations of
tins country's immigration laws, the existence of a criminal record and,
if so, its nature, recency, and seriousness, and the presence of other
evidence indicative of a respondent's bad character or undesirability as
a permanent resident of this country. See, for example, Matter of
C'arraseo, Interim Decision 2579 (BIA 1977), aff d on other grounds,
C arraseo-Favela v. INS, 563 F.2d 1220 (5 Cir. 1977); Matter of Ed-
ward-3, 10 I. & N. Dec. 506 (BIA 1963, 1964); Matter of M—, 3 I. & N.
Dec. 804 (BIA 1949) (involving the seventh proviso to section 3 of the
Irranigration Act of 1917); Matter of V—, 1 I. & N. Dec. 293 (BIA 1942)
(seventh proviso); Matter of G—, 1 I. & N. Dec. 8 (BIA 1940; A.G. L940)
(seventh proviso).
   Although in an individual case, one or more of these adverse factors
may ultimately be determinative of whether section 212(c) relief is in
fact granted, their presence does not preclude a respondent from pre-
senting evidence in support of a favorable exercise of discretion. See
r-issian v. INS, 548 F.2d 325, 330 (10 Cir. 1977). 3 Favorable con-
siderations have been found to include such factors as family ties within
the United States, residence of long duration in this country (particu-

     .Matter of Fernandez, supra, which involved an application for section 212(h) relief
filled by an incarcerated applicant in exclusion proceedings, should not be read as permit-
tlaig an immigration judge to decline to entertain an application for relief under section
213(c) by a statutorily eligible respondent merely because he is held in confinement. A
re spondent with the right to apply for such relief must be given the reasonable opportu-
niity to meet his burden of establishing that relief should he granted as a matter of
dtseretion. See Matter of M—, 71. & N. Dec. 368 (BIA 1956).

                                           584
                                                Interim Decision #2666 .
laxly when the inception of residence occurred while the respondent was
of young age), evidence of hardship to the respondent and family if
deportation occurs, service in this country's Armed Forces, a history of
employment, the existence of property or business ties, evidence of
value and service to the community, proof of a genuine rehabilitation if a
criminal record exists, and other evidence attesting to a respondent's
good character (e.g., affidavits from family, friends, and responsible
community representatives). See Matter of Edwards, supra; Matter of
G—A—, 7 I. & N. Dec. 274 (BIA 1956); Matter of F—, 6 I. & N. Dec.
537 (BIA 1955); Matter of S , 6 I. & N. Dec. 392 (BIA 1954; A.G. 1955);
                           —


Matter of M , 5 I. & N. Dec. 598 (BIA 1954); Matter of G Y G--, 4 I.
            —                                             —   —


& N. Dec. 211 (BIA 1950; Act'g A.G. 1951) (seventh proviso); Matter of
M , 3 I. & N. Dec. 804 (BIA 1949) (seventh proviso); Matter of V I ,
  —                                                                —   —


3 I. & N. Dec. 571 (BIA 1949) (seventh proviso); Matter of L—, supra;
Matter of V—, supra; Matter of G—, supra.
   Upon review of the record as a whole, the immigration judge is
required to balance the positive and adverse matters to determine
whether discretion should be favorably exercised. The basis for the
immigration judge's decision must be enunciated in his opinion. In some
cases, the minimum equities inherent in eligibility for section 212(c)
relief (i.e., residence of at least seven years and status as a lawful
permanent resident) may be sufficient in and of themselves to warrant
favorable discretionary action. No general standard has been adopted
that applications for such relief should ordinarily be granted in the
absence of unfavorable factors, however, as an application for section
212(c) relief of necessity carries with it at least one adverse considera-
tion (the ground of exclusion sought waived). Compare Matter of Arai,
supra (involving standards for discretionary review of application for
adjustment of status under section 245 of the Act). See also Matter of
alas, Interim Decision 2485 (BIA 1974; A.G. 1976).
   The equities that an applicant for section 212(c) relief must bring
forward to establish that favorable discretionary action is warranted
will depend in each case on the nature and circumstances of the ground
of exclusion sought waived and on the presence of any additional ad-
v erse matters. As the negative factors grow more serious, it becomes
incumbent upon the applicant to introduce additional offsetting favor-
able evidence, which in some cases may have to involve unusual or
outstanding equities. Such a showing at times may be required solely by
virtue of the circumstances and nature of the exclusion ground sought
waived.
   The standards provided in this area have of necessity been general in
n ature. The framework for the desired equitable availability of discre-
tionary relief under section 212(c), however, is furnished by the enunci-
ation of factors deemed relevant to the decision-mating process, the

                                   585
 Interim Decision #2666

 requirement that the immigration judge specify the basis for any discre-
 tionary decision reached, and the presence of this Board to review any
 such decision on appeal.
    It is within this context that the respondent submits that the immi-
 gration judge when exercising his discretion made a "radical departure"
 from the precedent decisions of the Board. We find no such departure,
 "radical" or otherwise. The immigration judge reviewed the record as a
whole after providing the respondent the complete opportunity to intro-
 duce offsetting equitable matters in his behalf. Based on the nature of
the adverse matters of record, the immigration judge concluded that
favorable discretionary action should be withheld absent a showing of
"unusual" or "outstanding" equities. Matter of Arai, supra, was cited in
this regard. We agree that such a requirement was proper in view of
both the nature of the criminal offense at issue here its recency, and ',


the significant period (some 30 months) for which the respondent was
confined.
    The respondent objects to the immigration judge's citation to Matter
of Arai, supra. As a general rule it is prudent to avoid cross-application,
as between different types of relief from deportation, of particular
principles or standards for the exercise of discretion. In the present
ease, however, the reference to Arai concerned only the general ap-
proach stated there (i.e., the balancing of favorable and unfavorable
factors within the context of the relief sought). This may be applied to
any case involving the exercise of discretion.
    Appellate counsel states that the Arai standards require a showing of
"unusual" or "outstanding" equities in every section 245 case in which
adverse factors appear. An adverse matter will be present in every
section 212(c) application. It is, therefore, submitted that if the Arai
standards are adapted in section 212(e) cases, the existence of the single
urifavorable matter inherent in such cases would improperly become the
"trigger for a showing by the applicant of a higher order of equities
• - ." This requirement, it is argued, would be "inconsistent with the
ameliorative purpose of the statute."
    The problem with this analysis, however, lies in a mistaken reading of
Afatter of Arai, supra. The decision in Arai did not mandate a showing
of extraordinary equities in every case in which adverse matters ap-
pear. It merely indicated that dependent upon the nature of the adverse

      Clear distinctions arise in the Act in the treatment of aliens convicted of drug offenses
ark d those convicted of other crimes. Compare sections 241(a)(4) and 241(a)(11). Also see
se etion 241(h)• Crwart Chow Tok v. INS, 538 F.2d 36 (2 Cir. 1976); Oliver v. INS, 517 F.2d
426 (2 Cir. 1975). In view of this disparate statutory treatment and the disfavor with
rihich we view such offenses, we require a showing of unusual or outstanding countervail-
1113g equities by applicants for discretionary relief who have been convicted of serious drug
°frames, particularly those involving the trafficking or sale of drugs.

                                             586
                                                   Interim Decision #2666

  matters of record, such a showing might be required. This is equally
  true in the context of a section 212(c) application. The immigration
  judge was not mistaken in this regard as he clearly based his require-
  ment for a showing of "unusual" or "outstanding" countervailing
  equities on the nature of the unfavorable matters in the record before
  him, rather than on the mere fact that adverse factors were present.
  We, therefore, find no error in the immigration judge's reference to
  Matter of Arai, supra.
      We further agree that the equities presented by respondent did not
   sufficiently offset the adverse matters of record. The respondent states
  that the factors deemed relevant by the immigration judge were in large
  part impermissible. In this regard, it is submitted that the immigration
  judge improperly deemed the respondent's absence of close family ties
  to this country to be an "adverse" matter.
      A respondent, however, bears the burden of demonstrating that
  discretionary relief should be exercised in his behalf. Thus, while the
  absence of a particular favorable matter (e.g., close family ties) is not an
  "adverse" factor, it will of necessity make it more difficult for a respon-
, dent to successfully establish that he warrants the relief sought. Here,
  it is clear from the immigration judge's decision that he did not treat the
  respondent's familial status as a negative factor requiring a showing of
  countervailing equities. He merely noted the absence of family ties in
   Lhe context of the respondent's failure to allow sufficient equities to
  offset the specified adverse matters.
      We find no merit to the challenge to the other considerations cited by
  the immigration judge in reaching his decision on the exercise of discre-
  tion (e.g., the presence of a brother and sister in Colombia; the absence
  of a showing of unusual "hardships" if deported) for the same reasons
  noted above. Each factor cited was relevant to the issue of whether
  discretion should be favorably exercised, and each was considered by
  the immigration judge in the context of finding that the respondent had
  failed to come forward with sufficient equities to offset the significant
 unfavorable evidence.
    As an additional, but related, basis of appeal, the respondent submits
 that new standards must be adopted with specific regard to the treat-
 ment of applications for section 212(c) relief filed by imprisoned aliens_
 It is stated that the Board has required applicants with a criminal
 record to demonstrate a "positive rehabilitation" before discretionary
 relief will be granted. The respondent submits that we have tied this
 showing of rehabilitation exclusively to time-based factors (i.e., the
 recency of the offense or fact of present confinement). The result, it is
 argued, is that a District Director by merely electing to issue an Order
 to Show Cause while an alien is confined can effectively preclude any
 successful application by that respondent for section 212(c) relief. This

                                     587
 Interim Decision #2666

 leads the respondent to the "inescapable conclusion" that under the
 Board's present standards the prosecution of incarcerated aliens is
 "selective," "impermissible," and clearly at variance with the due pro-
 cess and equal protection clauses of the United States Constitution. It is
 urged that the remedy to this perceived constitutional defect is either
for the Board to adopt revised standards which would permit an incar-
cerated alien to demonstrate his "entitlement to relief without regard to
the fact that he is currently confined" and without use of a "time-based
 measure . . : of reformation" or for the Board to "forbid the commence-
 ment of proceedings altogether [against incarcerated aliens] until [they
 have] been permitted a sufficient period [to demonstrate their] reforma-
 tion."
    We find no merit to this ground of appeal. It is true that applicants for
 section 212(c) relief who have criminal records will ordinarily be re-
 quired to make a showing of rehabilitation. It is also true that this Board
has found both the fact of confinement and the recency of the offense to
 be relevant to the question of whether rehabilitation has been estab-
 lished. However, although those factors may ultimately in given cases
be determinative of the issue, we have never adopted a "conclusive"
time-based standard of reformation that creates an irrebuttable pre-
sumption that a confined alien can never establish either that he is
rehabilitated or that relief should otherwise be granted. 5
    Confined aliens and those who have recently cumulated eihninal acts
Nvill have a more difficult task in showing that discretionary relief should
be exercised in their behalf than aliens who have committed the same
offenses in the more distant past. Dependent upon the nature of the
offense and the circumstances of confinement, it may well be that a
confined respondent will not be able to demonstrate rehabilitation. This
does not mean, however, that different and constitutionally defective
standards are applied to aliens, depending on whether they are recent
criminals, in confinement, or released ex-offenders. The same test for
the exercise of discretion is applied to each category of aliens. It is the
factual circumstances that the alien finds himself in as a result of his own
misconduct that results in the varying difficulty for successful applica-
tion for discretionary relief. This fact does not mandate that standards
be adopted which ignore considerations clearly relevant to the issue of

    a The cases cited by respondent in this regard, with one exception, merely found that
the passage of time without further criminal activity was indicative of rehabilitation. See,
For example, Matter of G—A—, supra.; Matter of —, supra. InMatter of Carrasco, supra.
We found simply that on the facts there before us discretionary relief was appropriately
denied the respondent in view of the recency of his conviction and the nature of his crime
(importing 26 pounds of marihuana). None of the cases cited held that confined or recently
c onvicted aliens could never establish that discretionary relief under section 212(c) wao
warranted.

                                           588
                                                             Interim Decision #2666

rehabilitation and the exercise of discretion. Nor does it compel a
District Director to withhold instituting proceedings in cases where an
alien is either recently convicted or still confined in order to give the
alien a better opportunity to demonstrate his rehabilitation. See section
242(h) of the Act, 8 U.S.C. 1252(h).
   In any case involving discretionary relief, the timing of the issuance of
the Order to Show Cause can have a significant effect on either statu-
tory eligibility for the relief sought or on the circumstances relevant to
the exercise of discretion. That fact alone, however, does not render a
District Director's decision to institute proceedings suspect. The re-
spondent cites Lennon, v. United States, 387 F. Supp. 561 (S.D. N.Y.
1975) (involving an allegation that deportation proceedings were insti-
tuted against an alien solely because of his lawful exercise of constitu-
tional rights). We find no allegation or evidence, however, of an abuse of
discretion of the nature at issue in Lennon. 6
   We finally note in this regard that the decision to institute deportation
proceedings is vested hi the discretion of the District Director. 8 C.F.R.
242.1(a). This Board is an administrative body of limited jurisdiction and
is not the proper forum in which to seek review of the rationale underly-
ing a District Director's decision to issue an Order to Show Cause.
Matter of Lennon,, Interim Decision 2304 (BIA 1974), rev'd on other
grounds, Lennon v. INS, 527 F.2d 187 (2 Cir. 1975); Matter of
Gcroninzo, 13 I. & N. Dec. 680 (BIA 1971).
  Upon review of the record, we conclude that the immigration judge's
decision is supported by both law and fact. We find no merit to the
arguments advanced on appeal by the respondent. The appeal will
accordingly be dismissed.
  ORDER: The appeal is dismissed.




  ° The respondent notes that the New York and Buffalo districts of the Service and the
New York State Department of Correctional Services (D.O.C.S.) have entered into an
agreement by which each will cooperate to locate the expeditiously determine the immi-
gration status of aliens incarcerated in the New York State Correctional System. Respon-
dent concedes that the agreement not only is of benefit to the Service and the D.O.C.S.,
but also is of benefit in several ways to the alien. We find nothing arising from this
agreement that eitimi indicates or implies a. District Director's abdication of discretion or
abase thereof.

                                            589