Legal Research AI

Rajah v. Mukasey

Court: Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
Date filed: 2008-09-24
Citations: 544 F.3d 427
Copy Citations
43 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
     06-3493-ag, 06-3811-ag, 06-4102-ag, 06-5390
     Rajah et al v. Mukasey

 1                    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
 2
 3                        FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
 4
 5                           August Term, 2007
 6
 7   (Argued in Tandem: November 21, 2007 Decided: September 24, 2008)
 8
 9                         Docket   No.       06-3493-ag
10                         Docket   No.       06-3811-ag
11                         Docket   No.       06-4102-ag
12                         Docket   No.       06-5390-ag
13
14   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
15   MOHAMED RAJAH, SAID NAJIH, SAADE BENJELLOUN, SAMER EMILE EL ZAHR,
16                              Petitioners,
17
18                                  -v.-
19      MICHAEL B. MUKASEY, ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES,*
20       MICHAEL CHERTOFF, SECRETARY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
21    SECURITY, PETER SMITH, SPECIAL AGENT IN CHARGE OF THE NEW YORK
22        DISTRICT OF U.S. IMMIGRATION AND CUSTOMS ENFORCEMENT,**
23                              Respondents.
24
25   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
26
27      B e f o r e:WINTER, WALKER, and CALABRESI, Circuit Judges.

28      Petitioners are aliens who responded to the Special Call-In

29    Registration Program instituted after the terrorist attacks on

30   September 11, 2001, and were subsequently placed in deportation



          *
           Pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 43(c)(2),
     Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey is automatically substituted
     for former Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales as a respondent
     in this case.
          **
           Pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 43(c)(2),
     Special Agent in Charge Peter Smith is substituted for former
     Special Agent in Charge Martin Ficke as a respondent in this
     case.


                                          1
1    proceedings.   They petition for review of deportation orders

2    issued by the Board of Immigration Appeals.   The petitioners make

3    various regulatory, statutory, administrative, and constitutional

4    arguments in support of their claims.   For the reasons stated

5    below, we reject these claims and hold that the petitioners are

6    deportable, with the exception of Petitioner Rajah.   Petitions

7    denied in part, granted in part.

 8
 9                        ANA C. POTTRATZ AND WNYONG AUSTIN, Lutheran
10                        Social Services of New York, New York, New
11                        York for Petitioners.
12
13                        TOM DUPREE, Deputy Assistant Attorney General
14                        for Peter D. Keisler, Assistant Attorney
15                        General, Civil Division, U.S. Department of
16                        Justice, Washington, D.C. (Song E. Park on
17                        the brief for Mr. Rajah, James A. Hunolt on
18                        the brief for Mr. Najih, Leslie McKay on the
19                        brief for Mr. El Zahr, Jesse M. Bless on the
20                        brief for Mr. Benjelloun; M. Jocelyn Lopez
21                        Wright of counsel for Mr. Rajah and Mr.
22                        Najih, Linda S. Wernery of counsel for Mr. El
23                        Zahr, David V. Bernal of counsel for Mr.
24                        Benjelloun) for Respondents.
25
26                        Lynn M. Kelly, Executive Director, Justice
27                        Center, New York City Bar Association, New
28                        York, New York (Linda Marie Kenepaske, Alice
29                        Morey, and Myriam Jaidi on the brief) for
30                        Amicus Curiae New York City Bar Association.
31
32
33
34   WINTER, Circuit Judge:

35        Mohamed Rajah, Said Najih, Saade Benjelloun, and Samer Emile

36   El Zahr petition for review of deportation orders issued by the




                                        2
1    Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”).1   Each petitioner responded

2    to a Special Call-In Registration Program (“Program”), after the

3    terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.   The Program required

4    non-immigrant alien males over the age of 16 from designated

5    countries to appear for registration and fingerprinting.

6    Following their registration, each petitioner was placed in

7    deportation proceedings and ordered deported.   They challenge the

8    deportation orders principally on the grounds that:    (i) the

9    Program lacks statutory authorization;   (ii) the Program is

10   invalid as a matter of administrative law; (iii) the Program

11   violates equal protection; (iv) evidence obtained during the

12   Program should be suppressed under the Fourth and Fifth

13   Amendments; and (v) regulatory violations in the course of the

14   Program require the vacating of their deportation orders.    Two

15   petitioners make other claims specific to their cases.    With the

16   exception of Rajah, we reject their arguments and deny the

17   petitions for review for the reasons stated below.    We remand

18   Rajah’s case to the BIA on the grounds discussed by Judge

19   Calabresi, in an opinion filed concurrently with this.    See Rajah

20   v. Mukasey, ___ F.3d ___, No. 06-3493-ag (2d Cir. September 23,



          1
           Abdulraqeeb Alqaidaei also petitioned for review of a
     deportation order and his petition was heard in tandem with the
     other petitioners. After oral argument, Alqaidaei withdrew his
     petition for review. Alqaidaei v. Mukasey, No. 06-3494 (2d Cir.
     Filed July 26, 2006) (dismissed July 25, 2008).


                                     3
1    2008).

2    I.   BACKGROUND

3         After the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, the

4    Attorney General instituted the National Security Entry-Exit

5    Registration System (“NSEERS”).       NSEERS required the collection

6    of data from aliens upon entry and periodic registration of

7    certain aliens present in the United States.      Its purpose was to

8    enhance the monitoring of aliens and the enforcement of

9    immigration laws.2   The Special Call-In Registration Program was

10   part of NSEERS.   It required alien males from certain designated

11   countries who were over the age of 16 and who had not qualified

12   for permanent residence to appear for registration and

13   fingerprinting and to present immigration related documents.3


           2
           For a description of the program’s original aims, see John
     Ashcroft, Attorney General Prepared Remarks on the National
     Security Entry-Exit Registration System (June 6, 2002),
     http://www.usdoj.gov/archive/ag/speeches/2002/
     060502agpreparedremarks.htm.


           3
           The outlines of the Program were set forth in an enabling
     regulation that read:
               The Attorney General, by publication of
               a notice in the Federal Register, also may
               impose such special registration,
               fingerprinting, and photographing
               requirements upon nonimmigrant aliens who are
               nationals, citizens, or residents of
               specified countries or territories (or a
               designated subset of such nationals,
               citizens, or residents) who have already been
               admitted to the United States or who are

                                       4
1   Individuals who did not appear for required registrations were

2   threatened with possible arrest.       The affected countries were

3   Muslim majority states and North Korea.       The Program did not

4   include citizens of these countries who were women, were under

5   the age of 16, or were qualified to be permanent residents in

6   this country.   For those individuals whose immigration status was

7   in order, registration generally had no special consequences.

8   But for those individuals, such as the petitioners, whose

9   immigration status was not in order, registration led to




              otherwise in the United States.

    8 C.F.R. 264.1(f)(4) (2003). See also Registration & Monitoring
    of Certain Nonimmigrants, 67 Fed. Reg. 52,584 (Dep’t of Justice
    Aug. 12, 2002) (final rule) (promulgating the final enabling
    rule). The specific groups of aliens subject to registration
    were designated in a series of additional notices. See, e.g.,
    Registration of Certain Nonimmigrant Aliens from Designated
    Countries, 67 Fed. Reg. 67,766 (Dep’t of Justice Nov. 6, 2002)
    (notice). In all, aliens from 25 countries were subject to
    registration. The first group included Iran, Iraq, Libya, Sudan
    and Syria. Id. The second group included Afghanistan, Algeria,
    Bahrain, Eritrea, Lebanon, Morocco, North Korea, Oman, Qatar,
    Somalia, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates, and Yemen. Registration
    of Certain Nonimmigrant Aliens from Designated Countries, 67 Fed.
    Reg. 70,526 (Dep’t of Justice Nov. 22, 2002) (notice). The third
    group included Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. Registration of
    Certain Nonimmigrant Aliens from Designated Countries, 67 Fed.
    Reg. 77,642 (Dep’t of Justice Dec. 18, 2002) (notice). The
    fourth group included Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, Jordan, and
    Kuwait. Registration of Certain Nonimmigrant Aliens from
    Designated Countries, 68 Fed. Reg. 2,363 (Dep’t of Justice Jan.
    16, 2003) (notice).


                                       5
1    deportation proceedings.4

2         Although the experiences of the petitioners varied to some

3    extent, they followed the same general pattern, deviations from

4    which will be noted where relevant.   Their experiences typically

5    consisted of a registration day and an interrogation day.5   On

6    their registration days, petitioners appeared at the then-INS6

7    facility at 26 Federal Plaza in New York City, filled out a few

8    forms, and presented documentation or information, such as

9    passports, immigration forms, or alien registration numbers.      At

10   the end of the registration day, they were instructed to return

11   on a subsequent day on which they were interrogated.   On their

12   interrogation days, the petitioners were generally taken to the


          4
           See Department of Homeland Security, Fact Sheet; Changes to
     National Security Entry/Exit Registration System (NSEERS) (2003),
     http://www.dhs.gov/xnews/releases/press_release_0305.shtm (last
     visited June 30, 2008).


          5
           Benjelloun was registered on April 24, 2003, and
     interrogated on June 17, 2003. Najih was registered on April 24,
     2003, and interrogated on June 4, 2003. Rajah was registered on
     January 9, 2003, and interrogated on April 22, 2003. The only
     exception to the two-day rule is El Zahr, who was both registered
     and interrogated on September 5, 2003.


          6
           The Immigration and Naturalization Service became part of
     the Department of Homeland Security on March 1, 2003. Press
     Release, United States Department of Homeland Security,
     Department of Homeland Security Facts for March 1, 2003 (Feb. 28,
     2003, available at http://www.dhs.gov/xnews/releases/press_
     release_0100.shtm.


                                     6
1    10th floor of 26 Federal Plaza and subjected to questioning.

2    This questioning was frequently preceded by a pat-down search and

3    often occurred in a closed room while the petitioners were seated

4    on a chair that had shackles attached, although none of the

5    petitioners were shackled.   At some point, petitioners received a

6    Notice to Appear for removal proceedings.    Some were then placed

7    in holding cells for a period of time.

8          In the removal proceedings, the petitioners argued, inter

9    alia, that the Program was not authorized by statute and was

10   unconstitutional.   They also contended that their hearings should

11   be terminated without prejudice to renewal due to various alleged

12   regulatory violations committed by the then-INS, discussed in

13   detail infra.   Immigration Judges (“IJs”) declined to rule on the

14   ultra vires and constitutional claims as outside their

15   adjudicatory powers.   Although the IJs’ opinions differed in some

16   respects, they also held that any regulatory violations that may

17   have occurred did not require termination of the proceedings or

18   suppression of any crucial evidence.   The IJs then found the

19   petitioners removable based on the information presented in the

20   course of their registration and interrogation.   The BIA upheld

21   the IJs’ decisions in their essential respects.

22         These petitions for review followed.

23   II.   DISCUSSION

24         Petitioners mount a variety of legal challenges to the


                                      7
1    Program and the deportation proceedings brought against them.

2    However, no claim is made that they were, or are, in the country

3    legally or entitled to asylum or withholding of removal; it is

4    therefore undisputed that they are deportable.

5         Their challenges, then, claim that their deportation

6    proceedings were so tainted by the Program and associated events

7    that we should, for prophylactic purposes, either prevent their

8    deportation altogether, suppress evidence of their deportability

9    collected in the course of the Program, or require that the

10   deportation proceedings be rerun.

11   a)   Legality of the Program

12        1)      Statutory Authorization

13        Petitioners argue that the Attorney General had no statutory

14   authority to enact the Program.        If the Program was in fact

15   simply rogue conduct by immigration authorities, some remedy, the

16   dimensions of which we need not address, would be called for.

17   Cf. Montilla v. INS, 926 F.2d 162, 169 (2d Cir. 1991) (noting

18   that agencies that exhibit carelessness in complying with their

19   own rules undermine public confidence).         However, statutory

20   authorization for the Program is abundant.

21        Title 8 U.S.C. § 1303(a)7 grants the Attorney General broad


           7
               8 U.S.C. § 1303(a) reads, in its entirety:
                   Notwithstanding the provisions of sections
                   1301 and 1302 of this title, the Attorney
                   General is authorized to prescribe special

                                            8
1    power to prescribe regulations for “registration and

2    fingerprinting” of certain classes of aliens.   Among the

3    enumerated classes of aliens subject to such rules is a catch-all

4    provision including “aliens of any other class not lawfully

5    admitted to the United States for permanent residence.”     8 U.S.C.

6    § 1303(a).   This language facially authorizes the Program, which

7    prescribed registration for a class of aliens who had not

8    qualified for permanent residency.    See Kandamar v. Gonzales, 464

9    F.3d 65, 73 (1st Cir. 2006) (noting that 8 U.S.C. §§ 1305 and

10   1303(a) “give[] the Attorney General great latitude in setting

11   special registration requirements”)

12        Petitioners note that the Program classifies on the basis of

13   nationality.   They then argue that, because national-origin

14   classifications are often disfavored, see, e.g., 42 U.S.C. §

15   2000a(a) (forbidding discrimination in public accommodations

16   based on national origin), Section 1303(a) should be construed to

17   avoid such classifications.   However, immigration regulation



               regulations and forms for the registration
               and fingerprinting of (1) alien crewmen, (2)
               holders of border-crossing identification
               cards, (3) aliens confined in institutions
               within the United States, (4) aliens under
               order of removal, (5) aliens who are or have
               been on criminal probation or criminal parole
               within the United States, and (6) aliens of
               any other class not lawfully admitted to the
               United States for permanent residence.


                                      9
1    differs fundamentally from the legal contexts relied upon because

2    classifications on the basis of nationality are frequently

3    unavoidable in immigration matters.   See, e.g., Romero v. INS,

4    399 F.3d 109, 112 (2d Cir. 2005) (discussing and upholding

5    NACARA, a statute granting preferential immigration treatment to

6    Cubans and Nicaraguans); Narenji v. Civiletti, 617 F.2d 745 (D.C.

7    Cir. 1979) (discussing and upholding registration requirements

8    targeting Iranian nationals).   Given the importance to

9    immigration law of, inter alia, national citizenship, passports,

10   treaties, and relations between nations, the use of such

11   classifications is commonplace and almost inevitable.     Indeed,

12   the very concept of “alien” is a nationality-based

13   classification.

14        In arguing for their proposed construction of the statute,

15   petitioners rely upon the cannon of ejusdem generis.    Ejusdem

16   generis is “an aid to statutory construction problems suggesting

17   that where general words follow a specific enumeration of persons

18   or things, the general words should be limited to persons or

19   things similar to those specifically enumerated.”    United States

20   v. Turkette, 452 U.S. 576, 581 (1981).   Petitioners assert that,

21   because the other categories in Section 1303(a) are all

22   immigration statuses or factors that could affect immigration

23   status, see Note 6, supra, the catch-all provision should not be

24   interpreted to authorize nationality-based distinctions.


                                     10
1           Ejusdem generis has no relevance here.     The list of specific

2    classes contained in Section 1303(a) contains a motley assortment

3    of groups, including alien crewmen and aliens on parole or

4    probation, so diverse that it provides no aid in construing the

5    “any other class” language.       Therefore, we follow Section

6    1303(a)’s clear language that allows nationality-based

7    classifications.       See Narenji, 617 F.2d at 747 (finding that 8

8    U.S.C. § 1303(a) allows the Attorney General to draw immigration

9    distinctions based on nationality).

10          Petitioners also assert that, because Congress has proposed

11   enforcement methods specifically targeted at terrorism, Section

12   1303(a) should not be interpreted to authorize the Program.

13   However, there is no tension whatsoever between Congress passing

14   specific laws targeting terrorism and the Attorney General using

15   broad powers granted under existing       statutes toward the same

16   end.

17          A second statute authorizing the Program is Section 1305(b).8

            8
                The relevant portion of 8 U.S.C. § 1305 reads:
                         (b) Current address of natives of any
                         one or more foreign states

                         The Attorney General may in his
                         discretion, upon ten days notice,
                         require the natives of any one or more
                         foreign states, or any class or group
                         thereof, who are within the United
                         States and who are required to be
                         registered under this subchapter, to
                         notify the Attorney General of their

                                          11
1    It empowers the Attorney General to require “the natives of any

2    one or more foreign states, or any class or group thereof . . .

3    to notify the Attorney General of their current addresses and

4    furnish such additional information as the Attorney General may

5    require.”   This reference to “additional information” is a broad

6    grant of power and, on its face, authorizes the collection of

7    information contemplated by the Program.9   See Kandamar, 464 F.3d

8    at 73.   The petitioners attempt to restrict the reach of this

9    statute to information about addresses, noting that the title of

10   the subsection refers only to addresses.    However, “the title of

11   a statute . . . cannot limit the plain meaning of the text.”

12   Pennsylvania Dep’t of Corr. v. Yeskey, 524 U.S. 206, 212 (1988)



                     current addresses and furnish such
                     additional information as the Attorney
                     General may require.

     The fact that the statute applies only to aliens “required to be
     registered under this subchapter” does not insulate the
     petitioners from its reach. Title 8 U.S.C. § 1302 is part of the
     same subchapter as the instant statute and requires all aliens
     over 14 years of age in the United States for more than 30 days
     to be registered and fingerprinted, absent a waiver from the
     Attorney General. 8 U.S.C. § 1302. The petitioners are
     therefore “required to be registered under this subchapter,” as
     all those within the reach of the Program are over the age of 14.


          9
           It is possible that the statute might be read not to
     authorize the gathering of information whose collection, in
     itself, might raise constitutional questions. But none of what
     was sought under the Program before us is of that sort. As a
     result, we express no view on such hypothetical fact gathering.

                                     12
1    (internal quotation marks omitted).    Accordingly, 8 U.S.C. §

2    1305(b) also provides authority for the Program.

3         2)   Administrative Law Challenges

4         Petitioners next claim that the Program was invalidly

5    promulgated because the relevant regulations were not subject to

6    the required public notice and comment.    The Program was

7    implemented in two stages.    In the first stage, the Attorney

8    General promulgated a general enabling regulation that set forth

9    a framework for alien registration but did not designate specific

10   groups to be registered (“Enabling Regulation”).    See 8 C.F.R. §

11   264.1(f)(4).   The Enabling Regulation was subjected to notice and

12   comment procedures.   See Registration & Monitoring of Certain

13   Nonimmigrants, 67 Fed. Reg. 40,581, 40,582 (Dep’t of Justice June

14   13, 2002) (proposed rule).    In the second stage, the Attorney

15   General issued notices specifying the groups to be registered

16   (“Group Specifications”).    See, e.g., Registration of Certain

17   Nonimmigrant Aliens from Designated Countries, 67 Fed. Reg.

18   67,766 (Dep’t of Justice Nov. 6, 2002) (notice).    The Group

19   Specifications designated, inter alia, the countries whose

20   nationals were subject to the Program.    Promulgation of the Group

21   Specifications occurred without notice and comment, which in the

22   petitioners’ view, was required by the Administrative Procedure

23   Act (“APA”).   See 5 U.S.C. § 553 (describing the APA’s notice and

24   comment requirement).   We disagree.


                                      13
1         Although the Group Specifications would ordinarily be

2    subject to notice and comment procedures, these procedures were

3    not required here because the Group Specifications fell within

4    the APA’s foreign affairs exemption.    The APA provides that

5    notice and comment procedures do not apply to regulations

6    involving “a military or foreign affairs function of the United

7    States.”   5 U.S.C. § 553(a)(1).    “For the exception to apply, the

8    public rulemaking provisions should provoke definitely

9    undesirable international consequences."    Zhang v. Slattery, 55

10   F.3d 732, 744 (2d Cir. 1995) (citation omitted), superceded by

11   statute on other grounds, by 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42).

12        There are at least three definitely undesirable

13   international consequences that would follow from notice and

14   comment rulemaking.   First, sensitive foreign intelligence might

15   be revealed in the course of explaining why some of a particular

16   nation’s citizens are regarded as a threat.    Second, relations

17   with other countries might be impaired if the government were to

18   conduct and resolve a public debate over why some citizens of

19   particular countries were a potential danger to our security.

20   Third, the process would be slow and cumbersome, diminishing our

21   ability to collect intelligence regarding, and enhance defenses

22   in anticipation of, a potential attack by foreign terrorists.

23        Petitioners advance two principal counter-arguments.    First,

24   they assert that the foreign affairs exception is inapplicable


                                        14
1    because the regulation itself did not contain a statement of the

2    undesirable international consequences flowing from the

3    application of notice and comment review.   There is, however, no

4    requirement that the rule itself state the undesirable

5    consequences.   Cf. Jean v. Nelson, 711 F.2d 1455, 1478 (11th Cir.

6    1983) (looking to the trial record to determine whether there

7    were any definitively negative international consequences that

8    would flow from notice and comment rulemaking), vacated and rev’d

9    on other grounds, 727 F.2d 957 (1984) (en banc).   This is

10   particularly so when the consequences are seemingly as evident as

11   they are in this case.

12        Petitioners also appear to assert that there is insufficient

13   evidence that the group specification was tied to the President’s

14   foreign policy.   Yassini v. Crosland, 618 F.2d 1356, 1361 (9th

15   Cir. 1980) (upholding immigration restrictions on Iranian

16   nationals during the hostage crisis after becoming satisfied that

17   the then-INS Commissioner was acting to further policies

18   expressed in a presidential directive and that the restrictions

19   were enacted after consultation with the Attorney General -- who

20   had in turn consulted the President about United States policy

21   toward Iran).   There is, however, no burden of proof to be

22   carried with regard to a connection to the President’s conduct of

23   foreign affairs where the relevance to international relations is

24   facially plain, and no presumption that a cabinet officer, such


                                     15
1    as the Attorney General, is acting as a rogue until proven

2    otherwise.     See Malek-Marzban v. INS, 653 F.2d 113, 115-16 (4th

3    Cir. 1981) (upholding a similar INS action, reasoning that the

4    foreign relations link was “obvious” and quoting the INS’s own

5    explanation of its activities that was published in the Federal

6    Register); see also Nademi v. INS, 679 F.2d 811, 814 (10th Cir.

7    1982).     Moreover, the notice announcing the enabling regulation

8    stated that, in deciding which countries to designate for

9    registration, the Attorney General would confer with the

10   Secretary of State, an officer who is well placed to be aware of

11   the President’s policy and to ensure that other officers conform

12   to it.10    Registration & Monitoring of Certain Nonimmigrants, 67

13   Fed. Reg. 52,584, at 52,589 (Dep’t of Justice Aug. 12, 2002)

14   (final rule).

15        3)    Equal Protection

16        Petitioners also argue that their deportation orders violate

17   their rights under the Equal Protection component of the Fifth

18   Amendment’s Due Process Clause because the immigration laws were



          10
           The notice stated, “The listing of countries from which
     nonimmigrant aliens will be subject to special registration is
     determined by the Attorney General in consultation with the
     Secretary of State, thereby ensuring that foreign policy
     implications will be considered when evaluating the possible
     designation of any specific country.” Registration & Monitoring
     of Certain Nonimmigrants, 67 Fed. Reg. 52,584, at 52,589 (Dep’t
     of Justice Aug. 12, 2002) (final rule).


                                       16
1    selectively enforced against them based on their religion,

2    ethnicity, gender, and race.   See United States v. Armstrong, 517

3    U.S. 456, 464 (1996) (noting that selective prosecution claims

4    are cognizable under the Equal Protection component of the Fifth

5    Amendment’s Due Process Clause); see also Bolling v. Sharpe, 347

6    U.S. 497, 499 (1954) (noting that “discrimination may be so

7    unjustifiable as to be violative of [the] due process [clause of

8    the Fifth Amendment.]”)   We agree that a selective prosecution

9    based on an animus of that kind would call for some remedy.    Cf.

10   Zahra v. Town of Southold, 48 F.3d 674, 683 (2d Cir. 1995)

11   (stating the general grounds on which selective enforcement

12   claims may be sustained).   In that regard, the Supreme Court has

13   “not rule[d] out the possibility of a rare case in which the

14   alleged basis of discrimination is so outrageous” that a

15   selective enforcement challenge can be allowed in a deportation

16   hearing despite the jurisdiction-stripping provisions of 8 U.S.C.

17   § 1252(g).   Reno v. American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Comm., 525

18   U.S. 471, 491 (1999); see also 8 U.S.C. § 1252(g) (providing that

19   “no court shall have jurisdiction to hear any cause . . . on

20   behalf of any alien arising from the decision . . . by the

21   Attorney General to commence proceedings [or] adjudicate cases

22   . . . against any alien under this chapter.”).

23        Courts “have long recognized the power to expel or exclude

24   aliens as a fundamental sovereign attribute exercised by the


                                     17
1    Government's political departments largely immune from judicial

2    control.”    Fiallo v. Bell, 430 U.S. 787, 792 (1977) (internal

3    quotation marks omitted).    Indeed, “[t]he most exacting level of

4    scrutiny that we will impose on immigration legislation is

5    rational basis review.    Under this review, legislation will

6    survive a constitutional challenge so long as there is a facially

7    legitimate and bona fide reason for the law.”    Romero v. INS, 399

8    F.3d 109, 111 (2d Cir. 2005) (internal quotation marks omitted).

9    “Distinctions on the basis of nationality may be drawn in the

10   immigration field by the Congress or the Executive. . . . [and

11   must be upheld] [s]o long as [they] are not wholly irrational

12   . . . .”    Narenji v. Civiletti, 617 F.2d 745, 747 (D.C. Cir.

13   1979) (citations omitted).

14        No circumstance calling for a remedy is present here.      There

15   was a rational national security basis for the Program.     The

16   terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 were facilitated by the

17   lax enforcement of immigration laws.    See Nat’l Comm’n on

18   Terrorist Attacks upon the U.S., 9/11 Commission Report 384

19   (2004).    The Program was designed to monitor more closely aliens

20   from certain countries selected on the basis of national security

21   criteria.    See Registration & Monitoring of Certain

22   Nonimmigrants, 67 Fed. Reg. 52,584 (Dep’t of Justice Aug. 12,

23   2002) (final rule).    The individuals subject to special

24   registration under the Program were neither citizens nor even

                                      18
1    lawful permanent residents.    They were asked to provide

2    information regarding their immigration status and other matters

3    relevant to national security.    They were not held in custody for

4    appreciable lengths of time.    Those whose immigration status was

5    not valid were subject to generally applicable legal proceedings

6    to enforce pre-existing immigration laws.    In sum, the Program

7    was a plainly rational attempt to enhance national security.      We

8    therefore join every circuit that has considered the issue in

9    concluding that the Program does not violate Equal Protection

10   guarantees.   See Kandamar v. Gonzales, 464 F.3d 65, 73-74 (1st

11   Cir. 2006); Ali v. Gonzales, 440 F.3d 678, 681 n.4 (5th Cir.

12   2006); Zafar v. U.S. Att’y Gen., 461 F.3d 1357, 1367 (11th Cir.

13   2006); Shaybob v. Att’y Gen., 189 Fed. Appx. 127, 129-30 (3d Cir.

14   2006); Hadayat v. Gonzales, 458 F.3d 659 (7th Cir. 2006) (finding

15   that the court had no jurisdiction to review the claim); Malik v.

16   Gonzales, 2007 WL 98115 (4th Cir. 2007).

17        To be sure, the Program did select countries that were, with

18   the exception of North Korea, predominantly Muslim.    Petitioners

19   argue, without evidence other than that fact, that the Program

20   was motivated by an improper animus toward Muslims.    However, one

21   major threat of terrorist attacks comes from radical Islamic

22   groups.   The September 11 attacks were facilitated by violations

23   of immigration laws by aliens from predominantly Muslim nations.

24   The Program was clearly tailored to those facts.    It excluded



                                      19
1    males under 16 and females on the ground that military age men

2    are a greater security risk.   Muslims from non-specified

3    countries were not subject to registration.   Aliens from the

4    designated countries who were qualified to be permanent residents

5    in the United States were exempted whether or not they were

6    Muslims.   The program did not target only Muslims:   non-Muslims

7    from the designated countries were subject to registration.

8    There is therefore no basis for petitioners’ claim.

9         Petitioners also challenge the Program based on their

10   perception of its effectiveness and wisdom.   They argue, among

11   other things, that it has not succeeded in catching many

12   terrorists.   However, we have no way of knowing whether the

13   Program’s enhanced monitoring of aliens has disrupted or deterred

14   attacks.   In any event, such a consideration is irrelevant

15   because an ex ante rather than ex post assessment of the Program

16   is required under the rational basis test.    Sammon v. New Jersey

17   Bd. of Med. Exam’rs, 66 F.3d 639, 645 (3d Cir. 1995) (“If the

18   legislature [predicts that a statute] will serve the desired

19   goal, the court is not authorized to determine whether . . . the

20   desired goal has been served. The sole permitted inquiry is

21   whether the legislature rationally might have believed . . . that

22   the desired end would be served.”) (emphasis added).   Because we

23   find that there was no circumstance present in the design and

24   implementation of the Program calling for a remedy, we conclude



                                     20
1    that the petitioners’ selective enforcement under 8 U.S.C. §

2    1252(g) is unavailing.    See American-Arab Anti-Discrimination

3    Comm., 525 U.S. at 490.

4         4)   Fourth and Fifth Amendments

5         Petitioners claim that any evidence of their deportability

6    obtained during the Program must be suppressed because it was the

7    product of violations of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments.     There

8    is no question that compliance with the Program was mandatory and

9    that petitioners were required to produce documents and answer

10   questions relevant to their immigration status.     There is also no

11   question that the documents produced and answers given provided

12   the evidence on which their deportation was ordered.

13        “In order to prove that an alien is subject to removal for

14   overstaying his visa, DHS need only show that the alien was

15   admitted as a nonimmigrant for a temporary period, that the

16   period has elapsed, and that the nonimmigrant has not departed.”

17   Zerrei v. Gonzales, 471 F.3d 342, 345 (2d Cir. 2006) (internal

18   quotation marks and ellipsis omitted).     In non-visa-overstay

19   cases, “[t]he INS must show only identity and alienage; the

20   burden then shifts to the respondent to prove the time, place and

21   manner of his entry.”    INS v. Lopez-Mendoza, 468 U.S. 1032, 1039

22   (1984); see also 8 U.S.C. § 1361.     As noted, the information

23   collected during the registration and interrogation phases showed


                                      21
1    that each petitioner was subject to removal, and the suppression

2    of that evidence would undermine the existing deportation orders.

3         Aliens are generally subject to registration requirements as

4    a condition of obtaining a visa and entering the country and,

5    therefore, of remaining in it.    See 8 U.S.C. § 1201(b) (requiring

6    registration as part of most visa applications); 8 U.S.C. §

7    1304(d) (stating that all aliens who are required to register

8    will be issued proof of registration).    Aliens are also required

9    to maintain and produce required documents regarding their

10   status.    See Kandamar, 464 F.3d at 74 (“Certainly, there can be

11   little doubt about DHS’s authority to inspect and photograph

12   . . . passport[s] and other documentation.”).    Most non-immigrant

13   aliens are issued I-94s11 on their arrival in the United States,

14   are required to keep their I-94s with them at all times, and are

15   subject to criminal penalties for failing to do so.    See 8 U.S.C.

16   § 1304(e); United States v. Abrams, 427 F.2d 86, 91 (2d Cir.

17   1970).    The obvious purpose of these requirements is to ensure


          11
           The I-94 serves as proof that the alien has validly
     entered the country, see Department of Customs and Border
     Protection, FAQs on the Arrival-Departure Record (I-94 Form) &
     Crewman Landing Permit (I-95 Form) (Feb. 25, 2008),
     http://www.cbp.gov/xp/cgov/travel/id_visa/i-94_instructions/
     arrival_departure_record.xml, has complied with certain
     registration requirements, see 8 C.F.R. § 264.1(a) (noting that
     the I-94 is proof of registration), and has a right to remain for
     a set time period.

                                      22
1    that an alien’s I-94 will be available for inspection by

2    immigration enforcement officials under appropriate

3    circumstances.   The statutory framework also contemplates that

4    aliens will possess valid passports while in the United States.

5    As a condition of admission, entering non-immigrant aliens must

6    have a passport valid for six months after the end date of their

7    authorized stay.   See 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(7)(B)(i)(I-II).     As a

8    result, each of the petitioners was obligated to provide just

9    such evidence; none had the right to remain silent with regard to

10   such matters; and none suffered a constitutional violation.

11         The Program was designed in large part to determine by an

12   updated registration the status of the specified aliens and was

13   clearly valid for reasons discussed above.    The aliens in

14   question had no right to remain in the country while not

15   cooperating in the Program.    They, therefore, had no right to

16   remain silent or to decline to provide information relevant to

17   immigration status.

18        In immigration proceedings, suppression of evidence is

19   available only under limited circumstances under either the

20   Fourth or Fifth Amendment.    With regard to Fourth Amendment

21   violations, suppression is warranted only when the evidence

22   indicates “either (a) that an egregious violation that was

23   fundamentally unfair has occurred, or (b) that the violation --

24   regardless of its egregiousness or unfairness -- undermine[s] the

                                      23
1    reliability of the evidence in dispute.”    Almeida-Amaral v.

2    Gonzales, 461 F.3d 231, 235 (2d Cir. 2006).

3         In the present matter, there was no Fourth Amendment

4    violation, much less one that was egregious or that undermined

5    the probative value of evidence collected.    The Fourth Amendment

6    does provide protection against random or gratuitous questioning

7    related to an individual’s immigration status.    For example,

8    government agents may not stop a person for questioning regarding

9    his citizenship status without a reasonable suspicion of

10   alienage.    United States v. Brignoni-Ponce, 422 U.S. 873, 884

11   (1975); see also id. at 884 n.9 (reserving decision on whether

12   that suspicion must be of illegal alienage or may be of mere

13   alienage).    However, the government does not violate the Fourth

14   Amendment by obtaining documents or statements in the course of

15   an alien’s compliance with a statutorily authorized registration

16   program.

17        An alien’s presence in the country is conditioned upon

18   compliance with such requirements.    Immigration laws, difficult

19   to enforce by their very nature, would become completely

20   unenforceable if an alien, once in the country, could then refuse

21   all compliance with requests for information relevant to

22   immigration status from immigration authorities.    Moreover,

23   petitioners make no claim that any alleged Fourth Amendment

24   violation undermined the probative value of documents or



                                      24
1    statements taken from them.

2         Nor does the Fifth Amendment provide any grounds to suppress

3    evidence collected from the petitioners on their interview days.

4    We have noted that the Fifth Amendment protects aliens in

5    deportation proceedings from procedures that transgress the

6    fundamental notions of “fair play” that animate the Fifth

7    Amendment.   Montilla v. INS, 926 F.2d 162, 164 (2d Cir. 1991).

8         However, the Fifth Amendment does not protect an alien from

9    having to provide information relevant to the registration that

10   is a condition of their presence in the country.   This

11   information includes passports, I-94s, or other documents or oral

12   statements regarding their immigration status.

13        The Fifth Amendment protects not only statements that are

14   themselves evidence of criminal violations, but also “those

15   [statements] which would furnish a link in the chain of evidence

16   needed to prosecute the claimant for a federal crime.”    United

17   States v. Hubbell, 530 U.S. 27, 38 (2000).   Moreover, in limited

18   circumstances, the act of producing a document can be

19   testimonial, as when the act of producing the document is

20   evidence that the document exists.   See In re Grand Jury Subpoena

21   Duces Tecum Dated Oct. 29, 1992, 1 F.3d 87, 93 (2d Cir. 1993).

22   Forcing an alien to perform the act of producing a foreign

23   passport, I-94, or statement regarding immigration status at

24   least arguably forces the alien to admit alienage and thus



                                     25
1    provide possible evidence of one or more crimes involving

2    immigration violations.   See Lopez-Mendoza, 468 U.S. at 1038

3    (collecting statutes); see also 8 U.S.C. § 1302 (failure to

4    register unless exempted by the attorney general); 8 U.S.C. §

5    1306 (willful failure to register); 8 U.S.C. § 1325 (evading

6    inspection).   Therefore, an alien who is not in legal status

7    could be exposed to further investigation and subsequent

8    prosecution by producing a foreign passport, I-94, or statements

9    regarding immigration status.

10        However, the Fifth Amendment does not protect the

11   petitioners either from being forced to turn over their passports

12   and I-94s or to answer questions related to their immigration

13   status.   The Fifth Amendment is not an impediment to the

14   enforcement of a valid civil regulatory regime.   This is so for

15   three specific reasons.   First, the Fifth Amendment’s act of

16   production privilege does not cover records that are required to

17   be kept pursuant to a civil regulatory regime.    In re Two Grand

18   Jury Subpoenae Duces Tecum Dated Aug. 21, 1985, 793 F.2d 69, 73

19   (2d Cir. 1986).   The documents at issue here are such “required

20   records.”   A central rationale for the required records rule is

21   that “if a person conducts an activity in which record-keeping is

22   required[,] . . . he may be deemed to have waived his privilege

23   with respect to the act of production –- at least in cases in

24   which there is a nexus between the government's production



                                     26
1    request and the purpose of the record-keeping requirement.”   Id.

2    The petitioners in our case voluntarily entered this country on

3    the condition of maintaining the required documentation and

4    thereby waived any right they might otherwise have had to refuse

5    to produce those documents in response to immigration inquiries

6    such as the Program.   Just as a taxpayer’s W-2 forms are required

7    records not subject to the Fifth Amendment because they are a

8    mandatory part of a civil regulatory regime, so too are the

9    passports and I-94s at issue in the current case.   Cf. In re Doe,

10   711 F.2d 1187, 1191 (2d Cir. 1983).

11        Second, the Program was a valid reporting requirement.

12   Notwithstanding the protections of the Fifth Amendment, the

13   government may require disclosure of information where the area

14   of inquiry is regulatory rather than criminal, where the field

15   subject to the disclosure obligation is not permeated with

16   criminal statutes, and where there is a substantial non-

17   prosecutorial interest served by the reporting regime.   United

18   States v. Dichne, 612 F.2d 632, 639-41 (2d Cir. 1979) (upholding

19   the Bank Secrecy Act, which required reporting the transportation

20   of more than $5,000 into or out of the United States).   All of

21   these criteria are satisfied by the Program.   Immigration law is

22   generally regulatory rather than criminal.   Indeed, deportation

23   hearings are civil proceedings.    INS v. Lopez-Mendoza, 468 U.S.

24   1032, 1038 (1984).   To be sure, there are some crimes related to



                                       27
1    immigration violations.   But the level of criminal regulation in

2    immigration matters is far less, and almost of a different order

3    from that which governs those areas where reporting requirements

4    have been struck down.    See Dichne, 612 F.2d at 640 (noting that

5    reporting requirements invalidated by the Supreme Court generally

6    required disclosure of “information which would almost

7    necessarily provide the basis for criminal proceedings

8    . . . for the very activity that [the subject of the reporting

9    requirement] was required to disclose.”).   Finally, the

10   regulatory -- in contrast to criminal law enforcement -- interest

11   in the Program is evident because the Program was designed to

12   further protect national security interests by enhancing

13   immigration law enforcement.   Accordingly, the Program was valid

14   as a reporting requirement not subject to Fifth Amendment

15   protections.

16        Third, because they were merely a condition on the continued

17   receipt of an immigration benefit, the statements required by the

18   program were not compelled for purposes of the Fifth Amendment.

19   We have held that statements required as a condition of receiving

20   a government benefit are not protected by the Fifth Amendment

21   because they are not compelled.    See Ciccone v. Sec’y of Dep’t of

22   Health & Human Serv., 861 F.2d 14, 18 (2d Cir. 1988) (holding

23   that statements required on an application for Social Security

24   benefits are not compelled and therefore not protected).    The



                                       28
1    statements required under the Program were merely a condition on

2    the continued receipt of the government benefit of being allowed

3    to remain in this country.   Any alien who did not wish to

4    register could avoid doing so because the notices requiring

5    registration applied only to those who remained in the United

6    States after a certain date.   See, e.g., Registration of Certain

7    Nonimmigrant Aliens from Designated Countries, 67 Fed. Reg.

8    67,766 (Dep’t of Justice Nov. 6, 2002) (notice) (noting that the

9    reporting requirement applies “only to certain nonimmigrant

10   aliens from one of the countries designated in this Notice . . .

11   who will remain until at least December 16, 2002.”); Registration

12   of Certain Nonimmigrant Aliens from Designated Countries, 67 Fed.

13   Reg. 70,526 (Dep’t of Justice Nov. 22, 2002) (notice);

14   Registration of Certain Nonimmigrant Aliens from Designated

15   Countries, 67 Fed. Reg. 77,642 (Dep’t of Justice Dec. 18, 2002)

16   (notice); and Registration of Certain Nonimmigrant Aliens from

17   Designated Countries, 68 Fed. Reg. 2,363 (Dep’t of Justice Jan.

18   16, 2003).   Although those subject to the Program were threatened

19   with arrest if they failed to register, this fact does not alter

20   the analysis.   Aliens faced arrest only if they enjoyed the

21   benefit without complying with the condition -- just as someone

22   illegally receiving Social Security benefits faces arrest.

23   Although to be sure, the petitioners were illegally present in

24   the country, they enjoyed the de facto immigration benefit of



                                     29
1    residing in the United States while under the protection of many

2    of our laws.   For the foregoing reasons, there was therefore no

3    Fifth Amendment privilege for the petitioners to refuse to

4    produce immigration documents or to refuse to answer questions

5    about their immigration status.

6         Of course, the foregoing discussion has no relevance to

7    government inquiries that are focused on independent crimes only

8    tangentially related to an alien’s immigration status -- for

9    example, questions about drug sales that might, if a conviction

10   followed, constitute an aggravated felony requiring an alien’s

11   deportation.   See 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii) (requiring

12   deportation of aliens who commit aggravated felonies).

13   b)   Regulatory Violations and Remedies

14        Petitioners argue that the INS violated a variety of its

15   regulations in the course of registering, interrogating, and

16   arresting them.    They further argue that the existence and nature

17   of the regulatory violations call for some remedy.    In some

18   instances, the petitioners did suffer regulatory violations.    In

19   other instances -- for example, where there were insufficient

20   factual findings made to enable definitive review -- we assume

21   for purposes of argument that their rights under the regulations

22   were violated.    In no instance, however, was a regulatory

23   violation of a kind or a degree that would require suppression of

24   evidence or termination of the proceedings with or without

                                       30
1    prejudice to renewal.   We first discuss the claimed violations.

2         1) Regulatory Violations

3              A) Arrest Without Warrant: 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)(ii)

4         Benjelloun, Najih, and El Zahr were arrested without a

5    warrant on their investigation day.   That these arrests were in

6    violation of 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)(ii), which provides that “[a]

7    warrant of arrest shall be obtained except when the designated

8    immigration officer has reason to believe that the person is

9    likely to escape before a warrant can be obtained,” is not

10   seriously disputed.   Also, Rajah alleges facts that, if true,

11   show that he was arrested without a warrant in violation of the

12   regulations.   Although we have no findings on the issue from the

13   BIA, we may assume that such a violation occurred because it does

14   not affect our disposition of this matter.

15             B)    Failure of Arresting Officer to Identify Himself

16                   and Failure to State Reasons for Arrest:   8 C.F.R.

17                   § 287.8(c)(2)(iii)

18        Title 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)(iii) provides:

19                   (iii) At the time of the arrest, the
20                   designated immigration officer shall, as
21                   soon as it is practical and safe to do
22                   so:
23
24                         (A) Identify himself or herself as
25                         an immigration officer who is

                                      31
1                         authorized to execute an arrest;
2                         and
3
4                         (B) State that the person is under
5                         arrest and the reason for the
6                         arrest.
7
8         Three of the petitioners -- Najih, El Zahr, and Benjelloun

9    -- can either show, or allege facts that, if proven, would show,

10   a violation of this Section.   Najih and El Zahr were not informed

11   of their arrest until after substantial questioning had occurred,

12   and Benjelloun may not have been informed of his arrest at all.

13   Rajah does not argue that his rights under this section were

14   violated.

15        With respect to Najih, Benjelloun and El Zahr, the IJs found

16   that this regulation was not violated because the petitioners

17   received various forms from the INS indicating that they were

18   being arrested and why they were being arrested at some point on

19   their interrogation day.   However, it may be that it was

20   “practical and safe” to provide notice once the petitioners

21   reached the 10th floor of 26 Federal Plaza.   The agents were

22   questioning aliens in the agency’s own building in an environment

23   it controlled.   Before being admitted to the 10th floor -- or not

24   long afterwards -- the petitioners were searched.   Absent a

25   compelling reason to the contrary in a particular case, notice of



                                     32
1    arrest could easily have been provided shortly after each

2    petitioner reached the 10th floor rather than after questioning

3    had continued for some time.   We therefore assume the regulation

4    was violated.

5              C)    Post Arrest Exam by Arresting    Officer:   8 C.F.R.

6                    287.3(a)

7         Two of the petitioners -- Najih and Rajah -- challenge

8    rulings by the IJs that their rights under 8 C.F.R. § 287.3(a)

9    were not violated.   Title 8 C.F.R. § 287.3(a) provides:

10             An alien arrested without a warrant of arrest
11             . . . will be examined by an officer other
12             than the arresting officer. If no other
13             qualified officer is readily available and
14             the taking of the alien before another
15             officer would entail unnecessary delay, the
16             arresting officer, if the conduct of such
17             examination is a part of the duties assigned
18             to him or her, may examine the alien.
19
20        It is not clear which party bears the burden of showing

21   whether there was an officer, other than the arresting officer,

22   available to conduct the examination.   Putting the burden on the

23   agency seems unreasonable.   Demonstrating that all officers were

24   otherwise occupied would require that the agency record in great

25   detail and contemporaneously the actions of every officer at a

26   given location during every working period.     Putting the burden

27   on the alien also seems unreasonable.   Arrested aliens cannot

28   learn of the idleness of immigration officers.    In any event, we

                                     33
1    need not determine where the burden lies because we may assume,

2    for purposes of argument, that this regulation was violated with

3    respect to all of the petitioners.

4              D)    Right to Counsel at Examination:   8 C.F.R. §

5                    292.5(b)

6         Title 8 C.F.R. § 292.5(b) provides that: “[w]henever an

7    examination is provided for in this chapter, the person involved

8    shall have the right to be represented by an attorney or

9    representative . . . .”    Although the petitioners allege that

10   attorneys were not permitted on the 10th floor, none of the

11   petitioners claims to have brought an attorney to his

12   examination.   El Zahr claims that his Salvation Army caseworker

13   was not permitted to accompany him to the 10th floor.    Even if

14   true, this is not a violation, because she was neither an

15   attorney nor a “representative” as specified in the regulations.

16   See 8 C.F.R. 292.1(a).

17             E)   Coercion:   8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)(vii)

18        Title 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)(vii) provides that “[t]he use

19   of threats, coercion, or physical abuse by the designated

20   immigration officer to induce a suspect to waive his or her

21   rights or to make a statement is prohibited.”

22        Determining when coercion has occurred is a fact-specific


                                      34
1    inquiry.   In re Garcia, 17 I. & N. Dec. 319, 320 (BIA 1980)

2    (confession was involuntary when an alien was misinformed about

3    his rights, his attempts to contact his lawyer were interfered

4    with, and he spent substantial time in custody).   Navia-Duran v.

5    INS, 568 F.2d 803, 810 (1st Cir. 1977) (statements given by an

6    alien arrested in the middle of the night, actively misinformed

7    about her rights, and threatened with imminent deportation were

8    involuntary).   Bong Youn Choy v. Barber, 279 F.2d 642, 647 (9th

9    Cir. 1960) (an alien’s statements were involuntary when he was

10   interrogated for seven hours, lasting into the early morning

11   hours, and threatened with prosecution for perjury).

12        No petitioner claims to have either waived a right or made a

13   statement as a result of such coercion.   However, the regulatory

14   language prohibits coercive conduct undertaken with a motive of

15   seeking to elicit such a waiver or statement whether or not the

16   conduct succeeds.   Because we may assume that unproductive

17   coercive conduct with the prohibited intent violates the

18   regulation, it does not affect our disposition of this matter.

19        Each petitioner claims that the entire Program was coercive

20   -- including both the registration and interrogation days.     The

21   petitioners’ experiences during their registration days entailed

22   nothing coercive for purposes of the regulation.   They were asked


                                     35
1    questions relevant to the Program by government officers and gave

2    relevant statements or documents in response to those questions.

3    As discussed infra, they had no right to remain silent or

4    otherwise be uncooperative.    Although the petitioners often may

5    have endured long waits before their interviews, been interviewed

6    under threat of criminal sanctions, and sometimes may have been

7    subject to impolite treatment, none of these conditions rises to

8    the level of coercion.   Impoliteness and slow service are

9    unfortunate, but not uncommon, characteristics of many ordinary

10   interactions with government agencies, such as, for example,

11   registering a motor vehicle.   Moreover, the threat of criminal

12   sanctions for willfully failing to provide required regulatory

13   information does not make providing the information coercive in

14   the sense of the regulation any more than laws prohibiting

15   willful failure to file a tax return make the filing of a return

16   a product of impermissible coercion.

17        Turning to the interrogation days, neither Benjelloun,

18   Najih, nor Rajah were coerced.   Their questioning did not involve

19   the kind of circumstances that prior courts have found coercive,

20   such as marathon questioning or misinformation as to their

21   rights.

22        El Zahr’s interrogation lasted seven hours but was

23   interrupted twice when he was put in a cell, each time for short



                                      36
1    periods of time.     For much of the time he was interrogated, he

2    was not told why the interrogation was taking place.     He was not

3    explicitly threatened or given misinformation about his rights.

4    The IJ found the length of the interrogation to be coercive.

5         2.   Remedies

6         We may, therefore, assume that significant regulatory

7    violations took place with regard to each of the petitioners

8    during the interrogation/arrest phase.     We turn now to the

9    possible remedies for such violations:     (i) invalidation of the

10   deportation orders with prejudice; (ii) suppression of all

11   evidence obtained during the registration and interrogation

12   phases; and (iii) terminating the deportation proceedings without

13   prejudice to the starting of new deportation proceedings.

14              A)   Invalidation of the Deportation Orders with

15                   Prejudice

16        We may assume, without deciding, that a regulatory violation

17   or violations so egregious as to shock the conscience would call

18   for invalidation of the deportation orders with prejudice to the

19   renewal of deportation proceedings against a petitioner whose

20   rights were violated.     Cf. Almeida-Amaral v. Gonzales, 461 F.3d

21   231, 234 (2d Cir. 2006) (authorizing exclusion of evidence for,

22   inter alia, egregious Fourth Amendment violations).     By way of


                                       37
1    contrast, conduct of a less culpable nature would not suffice to

2    justify the draconian remedy of permanently preventing the

3    deportation of an otherwise deportable alien.

4         None of the violations here approached such a level of

5    egregiousness.     Warrantless arrests were made, but, when made,

6    there was a powerful showing of probable cause -- in fact,

7    conclusive evidence of deportability.      The failure to inform some

8    petitioners of their arrest and reasons for it was entirely

9    harmless, and the interrogation of El Zahr, while undoubtedly

10   unpleasant, did not rise beyond the level of being long and

11   tiresome.

12               B)   Suppression of Evidence

13        As noted earlier, we have held that suppression of evidence

14   in immigration proceedings is warranted when an egregious or

15   fundamentally unfair violation of applicable law occurred or when

16   a violation of applicable law undermines the reliability of the

17   evidence in question.     See Almeida-Amaral, 461 F.3d at 234.

18   Again, none of the regulatory violations here were egregious or

19   fundamentally unfair or impaired the reliability of the evidence

20   of petitioners’ deportability.

21        The BIA’s jurisprudence may differ somewhat.     Under its

22   caselaw, for regulatory violations not impacting fundamental

23   rights, suppression is generally only available when (i) the


                                       38
1    regulation was for the benefit of the alien, and (ii) the

2    violation prejudiced the alien.    In re Garcia-Flores, 17 I. & N.

3    Dec. 325, 327-28 (BIA 1980).    On the record before us, there is

4    no reason to believe that the BIA failed to properly apply its

5    own standards.

6              C)   Termination Without Prejudice

7         Petitioners argue that their deportation proceedings should

8    be terminated without prejudice to renewal as a result of the

9    pre-hearing regulatory violations described above.

10        We have held that regulatory violations occurring during a

11   deportation hearing that affect fundamental rights derived from

12   the Constitution or federal statutes require such termination,

13   even without a showing of prejudice.    Montilla, 926 F.2d at 170

14   (requiring termination even when the regulatory violation caused

15   no prejudice); Waldron v. United States, 17 F.3d 511, 518 (2d

16   Cir. 1993) (clarifying that Montilla applies only to cases

17   implicating fundamental rights derived from federal statutes or

18   the Constitution).   However, we have never decided whether a non-

19   egregious, harmless regulatory violation occurring prior to a

20   hearing requires termination.

21        We hold that pre-hearing regulatory violations are not

22   grounds for termination, absent prejudice that may have affected

23   the outcome of the proceeding, conscience-shocking conduct, or a

24   deprivation of fundamental rights.     With regard to termination,


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1    we have sought to strike a balance between protecting the rights

2    of aliens, deterring government misconduct, and enabling

3    reasonably efficient law enforcement.     See Montilla, 926 F.2d

4    168-69; Waldron, 17 F.3d at 518.      In the case of harmless, non-

5    egregious, pre-hearing violations, termination would provide no

6    benefit other than a windfall delay to the deportable alien.

7    Unlike a violation occurring during a hearing, the alien’s second

8    deportation hearing would be no more fair than, or even different

9    from, the first.   Similarly, there are no societal benefits from

10   entitling deportable aliens to extend their time in the United

11   States because of harmless technical violations of regulations in

12   the pre-hearing phase.

13        With regard to deterrence and efficiency, termination for

14   pre-hearing regulatory violations would have little deterrent

15   effect, and the resulting burden on enforcement operations would

16   be substantial.    The enforcement of immigration laws is subject

17   to significant resource constraints.     Forcing the system to

18   litigate every regulatory dispute, no matter how harmless or

19   technical, as a routine part of deportation proceedings would

20   impose a burden of far greater magnitude than any benefit to be

21   gained.

22        In INS v. Lopez-Mendoza, 468 U.S. 1032 (1984), the Court

23   denied suppression for routine Fourth Amendment violations in

24   deportation proceedings because, inter alia, an exclusionary rule



                                      40
1    would provide little deterrent effect at a great administrative

2    cost.   The Court reasoned, in part, that because only a small

3    fraction of deportation cases actually resulted in hearings

4    rather than voluntary departures, any violation would so rarely

5    harm a case that an exclusionary rule would be unlikely to shape

6    agents’ behavior.   Id. at 1044.    The Court also noted that

7    litigating the conduct surrounding an arrest would impose an

8    intolerable administrative burden on the immigration enforcement

9    system.   Given that officers may arrest several aliens per day,

10   they “cannot be expected to compile elaborate, contemporaneous,

11   written reports detailing the circumstances of every arrest.”

12   Id. at 1049.   Moreover, deportation hearings, which depend on

13   simplicity and efficiency, would become immensely complicated if

14   testimony had to be heard on the detailed circumstances of each

15   arrest.   Id. at 1049.

16        The tradeoffs in our case are similar.     Given the dimensions

17   of the problems in immigration enforcement, arresting officers

18   cannot be expected even to remember each arrest, much less the

19   precise details of what happened and what was said.     It would

20   enormously decrease the productivity of such officers to require

21   them to compile extensive contemporaneous documentation regarding

22   the details of each investigation and arrest of an alien solely

23   to rebut allegations of technical, non-prejudicial regulatory

24   violations made well after their memory of events had faded.       Nor



                                        41
1    would the deterrent effect of a termination-without-prejudice

2    remedy be potent given the rarity of formal hearings where such

3    violations would affect an immigration officer’s enforcement

4    record and the prospect that such hearings could simply be re-

5    run.    In short, using termination as a remedy for pre-hearing

6    violations promises a substantial drain on agency resources with

7    little gain in immigrants’ significant rights under the

8    regulations.

9           It may be that the Montilla/Waldron rule grants remands

10   somewhat more liberally for regulatory violations than the rule

11   that we adopt.    But it makes sense to grant remands more

12   frequently for regulatory violations occurring during a hearing

13   because such remands impose a far smaller burden on the agency.

14   For regulatory violations during hearings, there is a trial

15   transcript documenting the proceedings and little need for

16   witnesses or additional documentation.    Even there, however, we

17   have limited relief to violations of fundamental rights.

18          Accordingly, we hold that aliens are not entitled to

19   termination of their proceedings for harmless, non-egregious pre-

20   hearing regulatory violations.    Those are the circumstances

21   before us, and we, therefore, reject the petitioners’ claims for

22   termination without prejudice.

23   c)   Individual Claims

24          Najih and Rajah raise additional claims specific to the



                                      42
1    facts of their cases.   Najih’s claims are treated here while

2    Rajah’s claim is discussed in Judge Calabresi’s opinion also

3    issued today.

4         Najih claims that there was insufficient evidence to find

5    him removable because the IJ relied on documents attached to the

6    government’s brief that were not formally admitted into evidence,

7    never made him plead to the charge, and never held a formal

8    evidentiary hearing on his removability.     Najih does not argue

9    that the evidence relied on by the IJ and the BIA was actually

10   flawed; rather he claims that because of these procedural

11   defects, no evidence of his removability was ever properly

12   presented.

13        Though informal, the procedure followed below was not so

14   erroneous as to merit a remand.    With regard to the documents on

15   which the IJ relied to establish deportability, the BIA found

16   that the IJ effectively admitted them when he accepted the

17   government’s brief.   Najih points to no specific authority

18   indicating that this procedure is improper.     Nor does it appear

19   to have prejudiced him in any way.     The authenticity of the

20   documents is not challenged, and he had notice that the IJ

21   believed they were sufficient to “establish a prima facie case of

22   removability and sustain the charge in the [notice to appear]”

23   when the IJ ruled on his termination motion.     Najih was therefore

24   on notice that he should raise any issues regarding the documents



                                       43
1    and failed to do so.

2           With regard to the IJ’s failure to make Najih plead, the

3    regulations provide that “[t]he immigration judge shall require

4    the respondent to plead to the notice to appear by stating

5    whether he or she admits or denies the factual allegations and

6    his or her removability . . . .”      8 C.F.R. § 1240.10(c).

7    However, no remand is warranted.      Najih twice refused to plead,

8    preferring to press only his motion for termination.      This claim

9    is therefore forfeited.

10          With regard to the holding of an evidentiary hearing, the

11   regulations state that the IJ “shall receive evidence as to any

12   unresolved issues, except that no further evidence need be

13   received as to any facts admitted during the pleading.”        8 C.F.R.

14   § 1240.10(d).    Given the presence of the documents attached to

15   the government’s brief, the lack of any dispute about their

16   authenticity and reliability, and the conclusiveness of the

17   documents as to Najih’s immigration status, there were no

18   unresolved issues regarding Najih’s removability and hence no

19   need for a hearing.    For these reasons, none of Najih’s

20   procedural claims merit a remand.

21   III.    CONCLUSION

22          For the foregoing reasons, the petitions for review are

23   denied with the exception of petitioner Rajah whose case is

24   remanded according to the opinion by Judge Calabresi.



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