Doe v. Pompeo

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedJanuary 27, 2021
Docket1:19-cv-24829
StatusUnknown

This text of Doe v. Pompeo (Doe v. Pompeo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. Pompeo, (S.D. Fla. 2021).

Opinion

United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida

Ivan Aguilera, Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Civil Action No. 19-24829-Civ-Scola ) Michael R. Pompeo and others, ) Defendants. )

Order On Motion for Summary Judgment This matter is before the Court upon the Plaintiff Ivan Aguilera’s motion for summary judgment. For the reasons set forth below, the Court grants the Plaintiff’s motion (ECF No. 46.) 1. Background In this declaratory judgment action, the Plaintiff, Ivan Aguilera, seeks a declaration from the Court establishing that he is a United States Citizen, pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1503 and 28 U.S.C. § 2201. This dispute spins out of the Plaintiff’s 2017 application to the United States Department of State (“DoS”) to renew his passport, which had previously been issued by DoS in 1989, 1996, 2002, and 2007 based on a Texas birth certificate allegedly showing the Plaintiff was born in El Paso County, Texas. Upon review of his application, DoS Special Agents informed Mr. Aguilera that they had come into possession of a Mexican birth certificate relating to the Plaintiff, and on the basis that the Mexican birth certificate apparently showed that Mr. Aguilera was born in Mexico rather than Texas, DoS declined to issue Mr. Aguilera a new passport. Ivan Aguilera is the son of Alberto Aguilera Valdez, a renowned singer and songwriter of Latin American music. Alberto performed under the stage name Juan Gabriel and sold over 100 million albums during his forty-year plus career. Alberto passed away in 2016. The Plaintiff stated in an affidavit that he lived his entire life believing he was born in Texas and never received information from his father; his biological mother, Marisela Roman; or his adoptive mother, Laura Elena Salas Campa, indicating otherwise. Accordingly, the Plaintiff claims his Texas birth certificate, which indicates he was born in El Paso County, Texas is legitimate, and the competing Mexican birth certificate relied upon by the government is a forgery. Mr. Aguilera’s Texas birth certificate states that he was born at 7315 Highway 28, Canutillo, El Paso County, Texas on January 1, 1988 at 11:30 a.m. (ECF No. 43-2; ECF No. 45 at ¶ 10.) The Texas birth certificate further indicates that his father is Alberto Aguilera and that his mother is Marisela Roman. (ECF No. 45, 49 at ¶ 11-12.) The birth certificate was witnessed by Socorro Vasquez and was registered with the local registrar on June 22, 1988. (ECF No. 43-2.) Like the Texas birth certificate, the competing Mexican birth certificate also indicates that Mr. Aguilera was born at January 1, 1988 at 11:30 a.m. While this birth certificate indicates that Alberto Aguilera is the Plaintiff’s father, the birth certificate instead lists Laura Elena Salas Campa as the Plaintiff’s mother. A second difference between the birth certificates pertains to the witnessing of the documents. While the Texas birth certificate was witnessed by Socorro Vasquez, the Mexican birth certificate was witnessed by Raul Iragorri Rivero and Osvaldo Manuel Quintanar Sanchez. The Plaintiff argues, however, that these witnesses could not have witnessed the Mexican birth certificate because they did not meet his father until almost a year after his birth in 1989. (Rivero Interview, ECF No. 57-1, at 6 (Q: “You know Alberto in ’88?” A: “No. No, impossible. My daughter was less than one year old . . . My daughter was born on February 17, of ’89, and a few days after I met Juan Gabriel”); see also Sanchez Interview, ECF No. 57-2 at 2 (Q: “But you tell me that in the year ’88 you didn’t know Juan Gabriel, right?” A: “No, no. No., because I started [in] ’89, or late ’89 with them. So, it is not possible that, that it had been in ’88.”).) The Mexican birth certificate was registered with the local registrar on January 7, 1988, six days after the Plaintiff’s birth. (See generally, ECF No. 43-2; ECF No. 60-1 (English translation).) Mr. Aguilera claims because of his father’s notoriety, he has been subjected to numerous lawsuits by individuals claiming to be heirs, states he has been extorted, and argues that at least one individual has relied upon the disputed Mexican birth certificate in one such lawsuit. (ECF Nos. 45, 49 at ¶¶ 40-42, 47.) The Plaintiff points to several facts in support of his claim that the Texas birth certificate is legitimate, and the Mexican birth certificate is a forgery. First, the Plaintiff notes that he has repeatedly been issued passports by DoS. On November 16, 1988 his father applied for a United States passport on his behalf. The passport application provided a United States address for the Plaintiff and listed Alberto as his father and Marisela Roman as his mother. After initial processing, DoS requested additional information to process the Plaintiff’s passport application, including medical records for the Plaintiff’s mother as well as records from the physician who attended to the Plaintiff and his mother after his birth. In response to DoS’s request, the Plaintiff provided his mother’s medical records, as well as a March 10, 1989 letter from Raul Rivera, M.D., an El Paso, Texas physician which stated “this is certification that I was summoned to examine the mother and the child on January 2, 1988. Her address was 7315 Hi[gh]way 28 in Canutillo, Texas. . . . I found the mother on a post-partum state with no complications. Examination of the infant also revealed no significant abnormality.” (ECF No. 43-5.) Dr. Rivera died in 2016, before the Mexican birth certificate was discovered. (ECF No. 58, at 7.) Dr. Rivera’s letter, which was received by DoS, appears to contain a handwritten marking added by the government stating “verified,” accompanied by a handwritten date of April 14, 1989. DoS ultimately issued Mr. Aguilera a passport in 1989, and reissued his passport in 1996, 2002, and 2007. In 2008, Mr. Aguilera obtained a Mexican passport by virtue of his father’s Mexican citizenship, which states that Mr. Aguilera was born in El Paso, Texas. (See ECF No. 43-25, see generally ECF No. 45, 46 at ¶ 16-19, 21-22, 35-38.) Second, in 1989, the Plaintiff’s biological parents participated in court proceedings in Texas to terminate the parental rights of the Plaintiff’s biological mother, Marisela Roman. The initial petition, filed in January 1989 noted that Alberto and Marisela Roman live at 7315 Highway 28, Canutillo, El Paso County, Texas and states that the Plaintiff was born in Canutillo, El Paso County, Texas. (ECF No. 43-15, at 1.) In the lawsuit, Alberto contemporaneously affirmed that the Plaintiff was “born to Marisela Roman in Canutillo, El Paso County, Texas” and Marisela Roman confirmed the same in various filings. (ECF No. 43-15 at 4-7.) As part of these proceedings, the court found that the Plaintiff’s birthplace was Canutillo, El Paso County, Texas. (ECF No. 43-15 at 8-9.) Ultimately, Marisela Roman’s parental rights over the Plaintiff were terminated in June 1989. (ECF No. 43-15 at 14-15.) While the government does not dispute these proceedings occurred, they do dispute the sworn statements made by the Plaintiff’s parents to the extent they conflict with the Mexican birth certificate. (See ECF No. 49 at ¶¶ 24-31.) Third, in September 1990, Laura Elena Salas Campa, the individual listed as the Plaintiff’s mother on his Mexican birth certificate adopted Mr. Aguilera. The parties agree that, consistent with Texas law, a new birth certificate for the Plaintiff was issued, removing Marisela Roman as his mother and listing Laura Elena Salas Campa in her place. (ECF Nos.

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