In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________________
Nos. 15-‐‑2204 & 16-‐‑1864
MARGARITA DEL PILAR FITZPATRICK,
Petitioner,
v.
JEFF SESSIONS, Attorney General of the United States,
Respondent.
____________________
Petitions for Review of Orders of the
Board of Immigration Appeals.
No. A097 846 616
____________________
ARGUED JANUARY 17, 2017 — DECIDED FEBRUARY 13, 2017
____________________
Before EASTERBROOK, WILLIAMS, and SYKES, Circuit Judges.
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge. Margarita Del Pilar Fitzpat-‐‑
rick, a citizen of Peru, had lived in the United States for three
years when she applied for a driver’s license in Illinois. She
contends that when filling out the forms at the Department
of Motor Vehicles she displayed her green card and her Pe-‐‑
ruvian passport—but she admits that she also checked a box
claiming to be a citizen of the United States. The form sternly
warns aliens not to check that box, and Fitzpatrick does not
2 Nos. 15-‐‑2204 & 16-‐‑1864
contend that she has any difficulty understanding written
English. (She came to the United States in 2002 to study Eng-‐‑
lish in college, and after earning a certificate as a medical
translator she spent some time working as an interpreter be-‐‑
fore training as a nurse.) As required by the motor-‐‑voter law,
52 U.S.C. §§ 20503–06, the form also contained a checkbox
that would lead to registration as a voter. Fitzpatrick main-‐‑
tains that the desk clerk asked whether she wanted to regis-‐‑
ter, and when she inquired “Am I supposed to?” he replied:
“It’s up to you.” She checked that box, was duly registered,
and in 2006 twice voted in elections for federal officials.
Aliens are forbidden to vote in federal elections. 18 U.S.C.
§611. Another statute, 8 U.S.C. §1227(a)(6), provides for the
removal of aliens who vote in violation of either state or fed-‐‑
eral law. After discovering that Fitzpatrick had voted in a
federal election, the Department of Homeland Security initi-‐‑
ated removal proceedings. An Immigration Judge and then
the Board of Immigration Appeals (initially and when deny-‐‑
ing reconsideration) decided that she must indeed leave the
United States, even though she has led a productive and
otherwise-‐‑unblemished life in this country, is married to a
U.S. citizen, and has three U.S.-‐‑citizen children. Her children
were born in Peru and naturalized after arrival. Her own
2007 application for citizenship is what brought her 2006
voting to light, when response to questions asked of all ap-‐‑
plicants she honestly described her voting history.
Fitzpatrick acknowledges that she voted in apparent vio-‐‑
lation of §611, which does not require proof that the alien
knew that only citizens can vote in federal elections. See Ki-‐‑
mani v. Holder, 695 F.3d 666 (7th Cir. 2012). Nonetheless, she
contends, she did not actually violate §611, because she had
Nos. 15-‐‑2204 & 16-‐‑1864 3
official approval to act as she did. Her lawyer calls this the
“entrapment by estoppel” defense; we suggested in Keathley
v. Holder, 696 F.3d 644 (7th Cir. 2012), that a better label
would be “official authorization.” But names don’t matter.
The defense is available to someone who makes complete
and accurate representations to a public official and then re-‐‑
ceives permission from that official, when acting within the
scope of his or her authority. (We observed in Keathley that a
high school principal can’t permit aliens to vote, but that
voting officials may have at least apparent authority to do
so.) Fitzpatrick cannot make out either ingredient of this de-‐‑
fense.
First, she did not make accurate disclosures when apply-‐‑
ing. She checked the box claiming U.S. citizenship. She is lit-‐‑
erate in English and has no excuse for making that misrepre-‐‑
sentation. As we observed in Kimani, statements such as “I
didn’t read the form carefully” or “I didn’t think this
through before acting” or “I didn’t understand the legal sig-‐‑
nificance of what I was doing” may be explanations, but
they are not excuses.
Second, no one told her that aliens are entitled to vote.
Indeed, no one told her that aliens are entitled to register to
vote. A clerk asked whether she wanted to register and add-‐‑
ed “It’s up to you.” That statement—apparently following a
script that Illinois then required clerical officials to use—was
a refusal to give advice, not an assurance that it was lawful
to register. Federal law forbids state officials to say anything
that will discourage an applicant for a driver’s license from
registering to vote. 52 U.S.C. §20506(a)(5)(C). This statute
leads to unhelpful responses such as the one Fitzpatrick re-‐‑
ceived. What happened to Fitzpatrick and other aliens such
4 Nos. 15-‐‑2204 & 16-‐‑1864
as Keathley has led Illinois’s Secretary of State to revise the
department’s Field Operations Manual to require clerks to
remind applicants that citizenship is essential to voting, but
the omission of that advice in 2005 still left Fitzpatrick with a
noncommittal answer.
What’s more, even if the clerk had assured Fitzpatrick (as
he did not) that she was entitled to register, that assurance
differs from authorization to vote. Because different units of
government have different requirements for voting, it may
be proper for aliens to register even though they must take
care not to vote in elections for certain offices. Fitzpatrick
had time after receiving her voter-‐‑registration card to deter-‐‑
mine which elections she could participate in. Even a curso-‐‑
ry search would have turned up the rule against an alien’s
voting in a federal election—just as a cursory search would
have revealed that a person registered in Illinois cannot vote
for Governor of Indiana. Registration to vote simply does
not imply authorization to vote in any election one chooses.
Fitzpatrick is well educated and understands English; it is
not too much to ask that she find out before voting whether
an alien can cast a ballot in a federal election. States may
deem it wise to inform all who register about the require-‐‑
ments for voting in particular elections, but failure to pro-‐‑
vide that advice does not amount to official authorization for
aliens to vote in all elections.
The panel inquired at oral argument whether Fitzpatrick
is the kind of person the Attorney General and the Depart-‐‑
ment of Homeland Security want removed from the United
States. The answer was yes—that consideration had been
given to exercising prosecutorial discretion in Fitzpatrick’s
favor, but that the possibility had been resolved adversely to
Nos. 15-‐‑2204 & 16-‐‑1864 5
her. That decision is entrusted to executive officials, leaving
us no option other than to deny the petitions for review of
the BIA’s decisions.