D.B. ex rel. R.M.B. v. Cardall

826 F.3d 721, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 11091, 2016 WL 3387884
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 20, 2016
DocketNo. 15-1993
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 826 F.3d 721 (D.B. ex rel. R.M.B. v. Cardall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D.B. ex rel. R.M.B. v. Cardall, 826 F.3d 721, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 11091, 2016 WL 3387884 (4th Cir. 2016).

Opinions

Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded by published opinion. Judge KING wrote the majority opinion, in which Judge AGEE joined. Judge FLOYD wrote a dissenting opinion.'

KING, Circuit Judge:

Dora Beltrán — also referred to as D.B. — appeals the district court’s denial of her petition for a writ of habeas corpus, seeking relief as next friend of R.M.B., her minor son. R.M.B., a native of Guatemala, is being held as an unaccompanied alien child (a “UAC”) by the Office of Refugee Resettlement (the “Office”), an agency of the Department of Health and Human Services (the “DHHS”). The Office has declined to release R.M.B. to his mother because it deems her incapable of providing for his physical and mental well-being. Beltrán maintains that the Office lacks statutory authority to detain R.M.B., and that his detention also contravenes substantive and procedural due process. By decision of August 5, 2015, the district court rejected Beltrán’s statutory and constitutional claims and denied her request for habeas corpus relief. See D.B. v. Poston, 119 F.Supp.3d 472 (E.D. Va. 2015) (the “Opinion”). As explained below, we affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand.

I.

A.

We draw the pertinent facts with respect to this proceeding from the district court’s Opinion and other aspects of the record.1 R.M.B. was born in Guatemala in February 1999. In 2005, at the age of six, he left Guatemala with his mother and three siblings and illegally entered the United States. Beltrán and her children settled in Rio Bravo, Texas, near the Mexican border. Soon thereafter, Beltrán married a man who was either a citizen or a lawful permanent resident of this country.

Because Beltrán’s husband physically abused her on a regular basis, she filed a petition with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (the “USCIS”), seeking classification as the spouse of an abusive citizen or lawful permanent resident — a type of relief authorized by the Violence Against Women Act (the “VAWA”). Bel-trán’s VAWA petition was approved by the USCIS in September 2012. In February 2013, the USCIS granted deferred action to R.M.B. as a derivative beneficiary [726]*726of his mother’s VAWA petition. See J.A. 25-26 (explaining that deferred action “is an administrative choice to give some cases lower priority for removal,” and that the USCIS did not then anticipate pursuing removal proceedings against R.M.B.).2 According to Beltrán, she was thereafter granted an adjustment of status by the USCIS and became a lawful permanent resident. R.M.B.’s immigration status, however, was never adjusted. On May 6, 2015, his deferred action was extended through April 6, 2016.

R.M.B. has had a difficult upbringing. For example, he witnessed his step-father physically abusing his mother on multiple occasions. In December 2012, the State of Texas removed Beltran’s children from her custody after she left them at home alone. Five months later, in May 2013, a Texas court restored custody to Beltrán.

R.M.B. exhibited serious behavioral problems while the family lived in Rio Bravo. During the period from 2011 to 2013, he was arrested on multiple occasions. In July 2012, he was found guilty by a state juvenile court of making a terroristic threat and placed on probation. He also ran away from home several times. R.M.B. used alcohol and tobacco at ten or eleven years of age, marijuana by twelve, and hard drugs by fourteen. R.M.B. has admitted being involved with gangs, as well as smuggling drugs and immigrants across the Mexican border. He advised a psychologist that he has carried a gun and on one occasion shot and killed a man.

Hoping that a new environment would improve R.M.B.’s behavior, Beltrán moved her family in July 2013 about 160 miles from Rio Bravo to Corpus Christi, Texas. In approximately October 2013, however, R.M.B. (then fourteen years old) ran away from their Corpus Christi home and returned to Rio Bravo, where he found a job smuggling undocumented immigrants from the Mexican border to McAllen, Texas.

On December 15, 2013, Border Patrol agents arrested R.M.B. in Rio Grande City, Texas, near the Mexican border. R.M.B. told one of the agents that he was waiting to pick up a group of undocumented immigrants. The agent allowed R.M.B. to call his mother, who told him to “remind the agent that he had VAWA.” See J.A. 71. According to the agent, R.M.B. “displayed a bad attitude towards his mother over the phone” and hung up on her. See J.A.S. 45. During the phone call, Beltrán also spoke with the Border Patrol agent, advising him that she and R.M.B. “had VAWA and that we were filling out the papers and doing the other things we needed to do to become permanent residents.” See J.A. 71. Beltrán emphasized that she “had immigration papers that would prove all of this.” Id. The agent directed Beltrán to look for her papers and said he would call back in about fifteen minutes. Beltrán found the papers, got in her car, and began driving from Corpus Christi to Rio Grande City. She had driven thirty or forty miles when the Border Patrol agent called back. The agent told Bel-trán to return home because the Border Patrol had decided to detain R.M.B. and send him to a youth shelter. When Beltrán insisted that she had the appropriate papers, the Border Patrol agent threatened to arrest her if she showed up. As a result, Beltrán returned to Corpus Christi.

Shortly after R.M.B.’s December 15, 2013 arrest, the Border Patrol decided that he was a UAC. The relevant statute underlying that determination, found at § 279 of Title 6, defines a UAC as a child who:

[727]*727(A) has no lawful immigration status in the United States;
(B) has not attained 18 years of age; and
(C) with respect to whom—
(i) there is no parent or legal guardian in the United States; or
(ii) no parent or legal guardian in the United States is available to provide care and physical custody.

See 6 U.S.C. § 279(g)(2) (the “UAC definition”). Pursuant to its UAC finding, the Border Patrol transferred R.M.B.’s custody to the Office — as the agency responsible for providing care and custody of all UACs — and initiated removal proceedings against him.

Since his transfer to the Office’s custody in late 2013, R.M.B. has been housed in seven different care provider facilities in five states. While in the Office’s custody, R.M.B.’s behavioral problems have continued. He has, for example, fought with facility employees and residents and engaged in sexually aggressive behavior toward staff members. R.M.B. has also exhibited self-harming behavior and expressed suicidal thoughts. On one occasion, he briefly escaped from the Office’s custody by kicking out the window of a transport van.

In about January 2014, Beltran submitted a family reunification request to the Office, asking for R.M.B.’s release to her custody. The Office promptly ordered a home study, after determining that one was necessary to properly evaluate Bel-tran’s reunification request. The home study recommended against releasing R.M.B. to Beltran, concluding that her home did “not appear to be a safe and stable environment by evidence of [Bel-tran’s] abusive relationship with her spouse.” See J.A.S. 68.

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826 F.3d 721, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 11091, 2016 WL 3387884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/db-ex-rel-rmb-v-cardall-ca4-2016.