Michael Hiraldo Arias, A057 150 954 (BIA Aug. 31, 2016)
Michael Hiraldo Arias, A057 150 954 (BIA Aug. 31, 2016)
Michael Hiraldo Arias, A057 150 954 (BIA Aug. 31, 2016)
Department of Justice
A 057-150-954
Enclosed is a copy of the Board's decision and order in the above-referenced case.
Sincerely,
DOYUtL c
t1/V1.)
Donna Carr
Chief Clerk
Enclosure
Panel Members:
Adkins-Blanch, Charles K.
O'Connor, Blair
O'Leary, Brian M.
Userteam: Docket
Savage, Layne C.
Law Office of Layne C. Savage
132 Dorrance Street
Providence, RI 02903
A 057-150-954
Date of this notice: 8/31/2016
Enclosed is a copy of the Board's decision in the above-referenced case. This copy is being
provided to you as a courtesy. Your attorney or representative has been served with this
decision pursuant to 8 C.F.R. 1292.S(a). If the attached decision orders that you be
removed from the United States or affirms an Immigration Judge's decision ordering that you
be removed, any petition for review of the attached decision must be filed with and received
by the appropriate court of appeals within 30 days of the date of the decision.
Sincerely,
DorutL C
WV'L)
Donna Carr
Chief Clerk
Enclosure
Panel Members:
Adkins-Blanch, Charles K.
O'Connor, Blair
O'Leary, Brian M.
Userteam:
Cite as: Michael Hiraldo Arias, A057 150 954 (BIA Aug. 31, 2016)
;,
Date:
AUG 3 1 2016
In re: MICHAEL HIRALDO ARIAS a.k.a. Michael Hiraldo a.k.a. Michael Arias Hiralgo
FORr0THE BOARD
OJ,.___
Cite as: Michael Hiraldo Arias, A057 150 954 (BIA Aug. 31, 2016)
IN REMOVAL PROCEEDINGS
In Removal Proceedings
DETAINED
)
)
Respondent
CHARGE:
APPLICATION:
Motion to Reopen
ON BEHALF OF RESPONDENT
Luanne Santelises, Esq.
222 Reservoir Avenue, 2nd Floor
Providence, Rhode Island 02907
ON BEHALF OF DHS
Assistant Chief Counsel
Office of the Chief Counsel
15 New Sudbury Street, Room 425
Boston, Massachusetts 02203
Procedural History
The Respondent, Michael Hiraldo Arias, is a 29 year old native and citizen of the
Dominican Republic. Exh. 1. The Respondent became a lawful permanent resident (LPR) of the
United States on June 23, 2005. Id On or about September 23, 2010, the Respondent was
convicted in the Providence District Court at Providence, Rhode Island, of the offense of
"possession of marijuana first [offense, in] violation of 21-28-4-0l(c)(l)(B) of the Rhode Island
General Laws. Id.; Exh. 2 (Rhode Island District Court Docket No. 2010 013696). On April 3,
2013, the Respondent arrived at Boston Logan International Airport in East Boston,
Massachusetts, and sought admission to the United States as an LPR. Exh. 1, Exh. 2 (Form 1213, Record of Deportable/lnadmissible Alien, p. 2). Based on his September 2010 conviction,
Department of Homeland Security (OHS) immigration officials determined that the Respondent
was inadmissible to the United States and should be placed into removal proceedings. See Exh.
2 (Form 1-213, Record of Deportable/Inadmissible Alien, p. 2). The Respondent provided
immigration officials at the airport with the following home address: "74 Daboll Street
1
Provdence, Rhode Island 02907." Id. (Form 1-213, Record of Deportable/Inadmissible Alien, p.
1); see Resp't's Mot. to Reopen, p. 2, Tab A, p. 1 (Feb. 23, 2016).
The Respondent failed to appear at his August 28, 2013, hearing. See Order of the
Immigration Judge (Aug. 28, 2013). Based on Record evidence, including a certified record of
conviction concerning the Respondent's September 2010 conviction and a Form I-213, Record
of Deportable/Inadmissible Alien concerning the Respondent, the Court found the Respondent
removable as charged by clear, convincing, and unequivocal evidence. See Exh. 2. Accordingly,
the Court ordered the Respondent removed to the Dominican Republic in absentia. Order of the
Immigration Judge (Aug. 28, 2013).
II.
Motion to Reopen
On February 23, 2016, the Respondent filed a motion asking the Court to reopen his
removal proceedings. See Resp't's Mot. to Reopen (Feb. 23, 2016). The Respondent contends
that he did not receive notice of his August 28, 2013, hearing. Id. at Tab A, p. 1. He explains
that when he returned to the United States from the Dominican Republic in April 2013, he was
questioned by immigration officials at Boston Logan International Airport. Id. According to the
Respondent, after he provided these officials with his address - "74 Daboll Street 3rd,
Providence, RI 02907" - he was "given a document and told that [he] would receive a notice
from the [I]mmigration [C]ourt with a hearing date." Id. at 1-2. The Respondent's Motion
identifies this document as a "Notice to Appear." Id. at Motion, p. 3. The Respondent further
submits that he "never received a letter from [the C]ourt or from any other office from
immigration." Id. at Tab A, p. 2. His Motion cites the decision of the Board of Immigration
Appeals (BIA or Board) in Matter of G-Y-R-, 23 I&N Dec. 181, 187 (BIA 2001), for the
proposition that the Court may conduct proceedings in absentia only after an alien receives a
NTA apprising the alien of his obligation to provide immigration officials with a current address.
Id. at Motion, p. 4. Regarding notice, the Motion concludes that, considering this precedent, as
well as the circumstances of the Respondent's case, "it was clearly improper for the Court to
proceed in absentia." Id. at 5. In the alternative, the Motion seeks sua sponte reopening, citing
the Respondent's United States citizen and LPR relatives residing in Rhode Island, and the plans
of the Respondent - who was the victim of a felony assault - to pursue a U visa. Id. at 6.
On July 18, 2013, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) mailed the Respondent,
via regular mail to the above-quoted address, a Notice to Appear, bearing the same date. Exh. 1.
The NTA makes allegations consistent with the aforementioned facts, and charges the
Respondent as removable from the United States pursuant to section 212(a)(2)(A)(i)(II) of the
Act, as an alien convicted of a controlled substance offense. Id. The NTA ordered the
Respondent to appear before an Immigration Judge at the Boston Immigration Court (Court) to
show why he should not be removed from the United States, but listed the Respondent's hearing
date at the Court as "on a date to be set at a time to be set." See id. Subsequently, the Court sent
the Respondent, via regular mail to the above-quoted address, a hearing notice dated August 1,
2013. Exh. IA. This notice informed the Respondent that he was scheduled to appear at the
Court on August 28, 2013, at 9:30 a.m. Id.
. On March 17, 2016, DHS filed a motion opposing the Respondent's Motion to Reopen.
DHS Mot. in Opposition to Reopening (Mar. 17, 2016). DHS's motion contends that the
Respondent's motion fails to demonstrate that he was not properly notified of his August 28,
2013, hearing. Id Accordingly, DHS's motion urges the Court to deny the Respondent's
Motion to Reopen. Id.
III.
Standards of Law
The Immigration Judge may upon his own motion at any time, or upon a motion by OHS
or a respondent, reopen or reconsider any case in which he has made a decision, unless
jurisdiction is vested with the Board oflmmigration Appeals. 8 C.F.R. I003.23(b)(l) (2016).
Subject to limited exceptions, a motion to reopen must be filed within ninety days of the date of
entry of a final administrative order of removal, deportation, or exclusion. 8 C.F.R.
1003.23(b)(1). An order of removal entered in absentia may be rescinded at any time if the
alien demonstrates that he or she did not receive notice of the hearing. INA 240(b)(5)(C)(ii)
(2016); 8 C.F.R. 1003.23(b)(4)(ii).
Notice of a hearing in removal proceedings, including in the form of a NTA, shall be
served either in person or, where personal service is impractical, by regular mail to the alien's
last known address. INA 239(a)(l); 8 C.F.R. 1003.13. Where a NTA is served by regular
mail, the Court may not conduct proceedings in absentia unless there is "proof of attempted
delivery [of the NTA] to the last address provided by the alien in accordance with [section
239(a)(l)(F) of the Act]." Id at 239(c). Section 239(a)(l)(F) of the Act provides that an NTA
must specify (1) the requirement that the alien must immediately provide (or have provided) the
Attorney General with a written record of an address and telephone number (if any) at which the
alien may be contacted respecting removal proceedings; (2) the requirement that the alien must
provide the Attorney General immediately with a written record of any change of the alien's
address or telephone number; and (3) the consequences under section 240(b)(5) of the Act of
failure to provide address and telephone information pursuant to section 239(a)(l )(F) of the Act.
INA 239(a)(l)(F).
the Act
The Board found that an address is provided in accordance with section 239(a)(l)(F) of
. . . only if the alien has first been informed of the particular statutory address
obligations associated with remova] proceedings and of the consequences of
fai1ing to provide a current address. Because that information is first
communicated in the [NTA], the alien must receive the [NTA] before he ...can
"provide" an address in accordance with section 239(a)(I )(F). In cases where
[DHS] uses the mail to de1iver the [NTA] to the alien, the "last address" or the
"most recent address" provided by the alien "in accordance [section
239(a)(l)(F)]" wiU necessarily be an address arising from the alien's receipt of
the advisals contained in the [NTA].
Matter of G-Y-R-, 23 I&N Dec. at 187-88 (emphasis and quotations in original). Accordingly,
the Board determined that the notice requirement leading to an in absentia order cannot be
3
The Court will now issue a decision on the Respondent's Motion to Reopen.
satisfied by mailing the [NTA] to an alien's last known address when the alien does not receive,
or cannot be charged with receiving, the NTA. Id at 189. Regarding when an alien can be
charged with receiving a mailed NTA, the Board conceptualized a situation where "the [NTA]
reaches the correct address but does not reach the alien through some failure in the internal
workings of the household." See id.
While the Court may reopen a case at any time under its sua sponte power, such authority
is used sparingly as a general rule; it is not meant to be a "general remedy for any hardships
created by enforcement of the time and number limits in the motions regulations, but rather as an
extraordinary remedy reserved for truly exceptional situations." Matter of G-D-, 22 I&N Dec.
1132, 1133 (BIA 1999); see also Matter ofJean, 23 l&N Dec. 373, 380 n.9 (A.G. 2002).
IV.
The Court finds that the Respondent was properly notified of his proceedings. The
Respondent's motion admits that he was personally served with a NTA at Boston Logan
International Airport in April 2013. See Resp't's Mot. to Reopen, Motion, p. 3; Tab A, p. 2.
Because the Respondent was personally served with a NTA, it was proper for the Court to
proceed in absentia. See INA 239(a)(l), 240(b)(5)(C)(ii). In this respect, the Court finds that
the Respondent's reliance on Matter of G-Y-R- and section 239(c) of the Act, each of which
apply in circumstances where a NTA is served by mail, is misplaced. Moreover, the NTA that
the Respondent received in hand at the airport informed him of "the particular statutory address
obligations associated with removal proceedings and of the consequences of failing to provide a
current address." See INA 239(a)(l)(F); Matter of G-Y-R-, 23 I&N Dec. at 187. Because the
Respondent was apprised of these obligations and consequences when he was personally served
with the NTA at the airport, the Court finds that the address the Respondent provided to
immigration officials at the airport-the same address where DHS mailed a subsequent NTA and
where the Court mailed a hearing notice-was provided in accordance with section 239(a)(l)(F)
of the Act. 1
1
The Respondent submits that the address he provided to immigration officials at the airport in April 2013 was "74
Daboll Street 3rd, Providence, RI 02907." DHS's records indicate that the Respondent provided only "74 Daboll
Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02907," as his address. See Exh. 2 (Form I-213, Record of
Following the Board's decision in Matter of G-Y-R-, the United States Court of Appeals
for the First Circuit (First Circuit) recognized that because the Act no longer contains the
requirement that mailed NTAs be sent via certified mail, evidence of non-receipt of a NTA,
"such as documentary evidence from the Postal Service, simply [may] not exist." Kozak v.
Gonzales, 502 F.3d 34, 36 ( 1st Cir. 2007) (quoting Nibagwire v. Gonzales, 450 F.3d 153, 157
(4th Cir. 2006)). The First Circuit reasoned that in some cases, "the only direct evidence of non
receipt may be an affidavit, signed and sworn by the alien, stating that he did not receive the
[NTA]," but also acknowledged that "a bare, uncorroborated, self-serving denial of receipt, even
if sworn, is weak evidence." Id at 36-37 (citing Joshi v. Ashcroft, 389 F.3d 732, 737 (7th Cir.
2004)). Accordingly, the First Circuit determined that the Board should "take into account all
relevant evidence surrounding the purported non-receipt," and "[left] it to the [Board] to come up
with a new standard to be applied to aliens .who claim non-receipt of [NTAs] sent by regular
mail." Id. (emphasis in original) (citing Lopes v. Gonzales, 468 F.3d 81, 86 (2d Cir. 2006).
Because the Respondent received adequate notice of his proceedings, and it was therefore
appropriate for the Court to proceed in absentia, the Court declines to reopen the Respondent's
proceedings on lack of notice grounds. See INA 239(a)(l), 240(b)(5)(C)(ii).
The Court additionally declines to reopen the Respondent's proceedings sua sponte. The
Respondent's motion alleges that he has United States citizen and LPR relatives, including a
United States citizen child. Resp't's Mot. to Reopen, Motion, p. 6 (Feb. 23, 2016). It also
discloses that the Respondent plans to pursue a U visa as the "victim of a felony assault [who
has] cooperated with the prosecution of the suspect." Id ; see id at Tab B, p. 3. The Respondent
is not currently pursuing this relief, and furthermore, the Court is without jurisdiction over such
relief. See Matter of Sanchez Sosa, et al. , 25 I&N Dec. 807, 811 (BIA 2012) ("The USCIS has
exclusive jurisdiction over U visa petitions and applications for adjustment of status under
section 245(m) of the Act. See 8 C.F.R. 214.14(c)(l), 245.24(f), (k) . . . "); see also Matter of
Yauri, 25 I&N Dec. 103, 110 (BIA 2009) (agency is without authority to reopen proceedings to
allow respondents to pursue matters over which the agency does not have jurisdiction).
Ultimately, the Court does not find the Respondent's situation to be of a truly exceptional nature
sufficient to warrant the extraordinary remedy of sua sponte reopening. See Matter of G-D-, 22
I&N Dec. at 1133; see also Matter ofJean, 23 I&N Dec. at 380 n.9.
Deportable/lnadmissible Alien, p. 1 ). The Court considers OHS's records reliable. See Matter ofBarcenas, 1 9 I&N
Dec. 609, 6 1 1 (BIA 1 988) (" Absent any indication that a Form 1-2 1 3 contains information that is incorrect or was
obtained by coercion or duress, that document is inherently trustworthy . . . "). Moreover, the Court does not
consider the minor discrepancy between the address stated by the Respondent in his Motion and the address in
OHS' s records material; neither the NTA sent to the Respondent by OHS nor the hearing notice sent to the
Respondent by the Court, each using the address in DHS's records, was returned as undeliverable. See Exhs. I, IA.
Furthermore, even if DHS had not personally served the Respondent with a NTA at the
airport in April 2013, and instead only mailed the Respondent the July 2013 NTA, the Court
would find that the Respondent was properly notified of his removal proceedings. The burden is
on the Respondent to demonstrate that he was not properly notified of his proceedings; so, here,
to demonstrate non-receipt of his NTA. See INA 240(b)(5)(C); 8 C.F.R. 1003.23(b)(4)(ii);
see also Kozak, 502 F.3d at 35. Although the Respondent submitted a sworn affidavit claiming
that he did not receive a NTA or a hearing notice, he does not deny living at this address in July
or August of 2013. See Resp't's Mot. to Reopen, Tab A, pp. 1-2; compare id. with Matter ofG
Y-R-, 23 I&N Dec. at 182 (where there was evidence indicating that an alien had moved).
Additionally, the NTA sent by DHS to the Respondent and the hearing notice sent by the Court
to the Respondent - each of which used the address that DHS's records indicated the Respondent
provided at the airport-were not returned as undeliverable. See Exhs. 1, IA; compare id with
Matter of G-Y-R-, 23 I&N Dec. at 182 (where a mailed NTA was returned as undeliverable).
Considering all of the evidence, the Court finds that the Respondent may be properly charged
with receiving the NTA mailed to him by DHS in July 2013. See Kozak, 502 F.3d at 37. As
such, the address used on this NTA qualifies as an address provided by the Respondent in
accordance with section 239(a)(l)(F) of the Act, and the Court was authorized to conduct
proceedings in absentia. See Matter of G-Y-R-, 23 I&N Dec. at 189-90 ("If the alien actually
receives or can be charged with receiving that mailed notice, then the address used by [DHS]
qualifies as a 239(a)(l)(F) address, and in absentia proceedings are thereafter authorized.").
APR 2 2 2016
Date
MATTHEW D'ANGELO
Immigration Judge