Carmine Esposito v. Immigration and Naturalization Service

936 F.2d 911
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 8, 1991
Docket90-2332
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 936 F.2d 911 (Carmine Esposito v. Immigration and Naturalization Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carmine Esposito v. Immigration and Naturalization Service, 936 F.2d 911 (7th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

FLAUM, Circuit Judge.

Carmine Esposito entered the United States using a false passport in April 1984. The use of fraudulent documents to gain entry to the United States is unlawful, and constitutes grounds for exclusion and deportation. In this appeal, Esposito raises several challenges to the INS’s attempt to deport him.

I.

Individuals who enter the United States “by fraud, or willful[] misrepresentation] [of] a material fact,” are subject to exclusion, 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(19), and deportation, 8 U.S.C. § 1251(a)(1). Mr. Esposito is one such individual. He presented immigration officials at the border with an Italian passport bearing his picture, but someone else’s name. Esposito admitted at his deportation hearing that he paid 700,000 lire, or roughly $1,000, for the false passport. He compounded his fraud by using a false name when he completed an 1-94 immigration form at his point of entry. 1 Upon settling in the United States, Esposi-to assumed a different false name — “John Michael Phelan” — under which he lived for three years, until a run-in with authorities detailed below.

Soon after the INS was alerted to Espo-sito’s fraud, it sought to have him deported. An immigration judge found Esposito excludable and deportable as a consequence of his violation of § 1182(a)(19), as *913 did the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA or Board). 2

II.

On appeal, Esposito argues that the BIA should have granted his request for a waiver of exclusion and deportation. He points first to 8 U.S.C. § 1182(i), which provides that “The Attorney General may, in his discretion,” waive exclusion of an individual who has entered the country on the basis of fraud or willful misrepresentation of material fact “in the case of an alien who is the spouse, parent, or son or daughter of a United States citizen....”

Esposito meets the eligibility requirements of § 1182(i), as his spouse is a citizen of the United States. The BIA, acting as the Attorney General’s designee, nevertheless exercised its discretion not to afford Esposito a waiver of exclusion. Esposito claims that this decision constituted an abuse of discretion. He also contends that the Board erred in considering certain damaging evidence in denying his waiver request. Resolution of Esposito’s claims requires that we take a closer look at his circumstances and the Board’s decision.

The Board identified a number of factors that it said supported its decision not to exercise its discretion in Esposito’s favor. First, it pointed to three in absentia criminal convictions entered against Esposito in Italy for criminal association, forgery, and unlawful possession of firearms. Esposito was convicted of the first two in 1984 shortly after he left Italy and came to the United States, and the third in 1986, also while living in this country. The record suggests that a Naples police investigation which culminated in the first two convictions prompted Esposito’s decision to leave Italy in 1984 and gain entry to the United States by fraud.

The Board also gave weight to the Italian government’s efforts to have Esposito extradited in 1987. In March of that year, Esposito was arrested in the United States pursuant to an Italian extradition request. The request indicated that Esposito had been indicted in Italy on 12 counts of murder and one count of attempted murder. It further listed Esposito’s in absentia convictions as grounds for extradition. A magistrate found that Italian authorities had presented evidence sufficient to establish probable cause to believe that Esposito had committed the offenses in question, and the district court affirmed that finding in a habeas corpus proceeding. See Esposito v. Adams, 700 F.Supp. 1470 (N.D.Ill. 1988). Soon thereafter, as a result of certain procedural complications in Italy which remain unexplained, the Italian government withdrew its extradition request. The charges against Esposito, however, are still pending in that country.

Esposito objects to the introduction of this evidence against him. He contends that it was fundamentally unfair for the BIA to consider the in absentia convictions, pending charges, and extradition request in exercising its discretion to deny his application for a § 1182(i) waiver. See Bustos-Torres v. INS, 898 F.2d 1053, 1055 (5th Cir.1990) (use of evidence in deportation proceedings must be “fundamentally fair” so as not to deprive aliens of due process of law); Marlowe v. INS, 457 F.2d 1314 (9th Cir.1972) (same). Specifically, Esposito claims that the evidence suggesting his criminal involvement “is shrouded with conflict and unreliability.” Petitioner’s Brief at 41. He disputes the correctness of his in absentia convictions, challenging the credibility of witnesses who testified against him, and in more wholesale fashion, the fundamental fairness of the Italian criminal justice system which generated the convictions. He further argues that in absentia convictions are juris-dictionally suspect and may not be used as grounds to exclude an alien from the United States. See Matter of Piraino, 12 I & N Dec. 508 (BIA 1967); Matter of F —, 8 I & N Dec. 469 (BIA 1959). Finally, Esposi-to claims that it was fundamentally unfair for the Board to consider the pending murder charges as a mark against him.

*914 We find these objections to be without merit. As to Esposito’s in absentia convictions, we note first that the BIA did not predicate his exclusion and deportation upon those convictions, as he suggests. Rather, his exclusion was based on his use of fraudulent immigration documents, and the Board merely considered his in absen-tia convictions in deciding whether to grant him a waiver of exclusion and deportation. Esposito’s reliance on Board decisions which cast doubt on the validity of in ab-sentia convictions as statutory grounds for deportation is thus misplaced. The question remains whether in absentia convictions can be considered by the Board for the more limited purpose of deciding whether to exercise its discretion to waive exclusion and deportation.

Esposito does not contest the relevance to the waiver calculus of evidence suggesting an alien’s past involvement in criminal activity. He argues, however, that convictions obtained in absentia are constitutionally infirm and cannot be considered by the Board as proof that he committed the crimes with which he was charged.

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