Dorley v. Cardinale

119 F. Supp. 3d 345, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 104286, 2015 WL 4722616
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 10, 2015
DocketCivil Action No. 14-07005
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 119 F. Supp. 3d 345 (Dorley v. Cardinale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorley v. Cardinale, 119 F. Supp. 3d 345, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 104286, 2015 WL 4722616 (E.D. Pa. 2015).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

PAPPERT, District Judge.

Plaintiff Amah Konah Dorley (“Dorley”) appeals the decision of the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (“USCIS”) denying his Form 1-360 self-petition as the abused spouse of his third wife, a United States citizen. Dorley brings this appeal against Defendants Joseph A. Cardinale (“Cardinale”), Alejandro Mayorkas (“Mayorkas”) and Jeh Johnson (“Johnson”) (collectively “Defendants”) as officers of USCIS or other United States governmental agencies charged with adjudicating applications for immigration benefits.

Dorley and Defendants have filed cross motions for summary judgment. Dorley argues that Defendants acted unreasonably in denying his self-petition on the basis that Dorley had previously attempted to evade immigration laws and entered into a “sham marriage” with his second wife in violation of Section 204(c) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (“the Act”), 8 U.S.C. § 1154(c). Defendants maintain that USCIS’ denial of Dorley’s self-petition was “reasonable on multiple fronts” and supported by substantial evidence in the record. For the reasons that follow, the Court will deny Dorley’s motion and grant the Defendants’.1

I.

Dorley is a citizen of Liberia who resides with and supports his biological children and step-children of prior spouses in Coatesville, Pennsylvania. (Compl. ¶2.) Dorley has remarried at least two times since moving to the United States. (Admin.R. 2-3.)2

[349]*349Dorley married his first wife, A-B,3 in Liberia on July 25, 1985. (Admin.R. 2.) Dorley entered the United States on February 14, 1989 on a visitor’s visa and obtained a Liberian divorce from A-B on May 15, 1989. (Id. at 2, 362, 559.) Dorley married his second wife, E-J,4 in Pennsylvania on November 16,1989. (Id. at 744.) E-J was a United States citizen. (Id. at 2, 742.) On December 22, 1989, E-J filed a Form 1-130 immigration petition on behalf of Dorley.5 (Id. at 2-3, 742-43.) E-J’s petition was denied on November 1, 1994 under Section 204(c) of the Act6 after an investigation by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”)7 revealed that Dorley and E-J had entered' into their marriage not in good faith, but “for the purpose of procuring an immigration benefit.” (Id. at 3, 515-18.)

In the course of their investigation, the INS officers made a number of discoveries that led to their finding that the marriage between Dorley and E-J was a sham. Through a records check with the Department of Welfare, E-J was found to be receiving food stamps, medical assistance, and cash at an address different from her alleged marital address with Dorley. (Admin.R. 517.) When an agent visited this address, a long-term resident of the first floor apartment told the agent that E-J lived upstairs with two men named Roger and Richard. (Id.) In addition, “other persons have identified [E-J’s] photo as a person they have seen in the neighborhood.” (Id.)

When the INS officers visited Dorley and E-J’s listed marital address, they found another woman living in the apartment with Dorley. (Admin.R. 516.) This woman claimed to be Dorley and E-J’s roommate, but stored her clothes in Dor-ley’s bedroom. (Id.) The INS officers found a “crib sheet” in the bathroom which appeared to list E-J’s personal information, including her astrological sign, height, weight, clothing and shoe sizes, and food likes.and dislikes. (Id. at 516, 520.) The INS’ denial decision explained that these “kind[s] of ‘crib sheets’ are often used by [350]*350persons involved in sham marriages to guide the participants through their marriage fraud interviews.” (Id. at 516.) The INS officers also found little to no mad for E-J at the alleged marital address. (Id.)

The INS officers interviewed the owner of Dorley’s apartment complex. (Admin.R. 516.) Despite a stated familiarity with all tenants due to the relatively small size of the complex, the owner did not recognize a photo of E-J. (Id.) In contrast, she did recognize a photo of Dorley and stated that she knew another African female resided in the apartment with him. (Id.) Neither did Dorley’s neighbor across the hall'recognize a photo of E-J,'but “refused to comment • further indicating that she did not want to get [Dorley] into trouble.” (Id. at 516-17.) Dorley appealed the INS’ denial of E-J’s Form 1-130 to the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”). (Id. at 3, 499-500.): The appeal was denied because Dorley, as the beneficiary and not the filer of the 1-130,- had no standing to appeal. (Id.)

Dorley divorced E-J nearly five years later on May 24, 1999. (AdmimR. 3, 479.) On July 29, 2000, Dorley married his third wife .and alleged abusive spouse, T-S,8 in Pennsylvania. (Id. at 3, 478.). T-S, a United States citizen, filed an 1-130 immigrant petition on Dorley’s behalf on May 26, 2004. (Id. at 3, 382-83.) This petition was approved on August 5, 2004, after which Dorley filed an 1-485 application for permanent resident status on November 16, 2004. ' (Id. at 3, 393-96.) On September 24, 2008, USCIS denied Dorley’s 1-485 application and revoked T-S’ mistakenly approved 1-130 petition pursuant to Section 204(c) of the Act based on Dorley’s sham marriage to E-J. (Id. at 3, 382-83.)

Dorley later filed a Form 1-360 self-petition seeking to classify himself as the abused spouse of T-S on December 22, 2010. (Admin.R, 3, 266-77.) The affidavit submitted • in support of Dorley’s 1-360 self-petition describes his tumultuous marriage with T-S, but does not discuss the bona fides of his second marriage to E-J. (Id. at 121-25 (proffering with regards to second marriage only that: “In December 1989, I married [E-J], a U.S. citizen. We filed immigration papers together but she developed a drug problem and the marriage failed.”).) On September 13, 2011, USCIS sent Dorley a Request for Evidence, stating that the “evidence submitted with your form is insufficient” and asking .for,- inter alia, “clear and convincing evidence” to establish that Dorley’s marriage with E-J was not a sham. (Id. at 200-05.) Dorley responded in December 2011 with additional .evidence, including a Pennsylvania state police report showing Dorley to have no prior criminal record, letters and affidavits from various people attesting to Dorley’s good character and confirming T-S’ abuse of him, and several pictures depicting Dorley and E-J together. (Id. at 206-17.) On January 10, 2013, USCIS denied Dorley’s 1-360 self-petition, finding the evidence insufficient to establish that Section 204(e)’s bar did not apply. (Id. at 73-75.)

Dorley appealed USCIS’ decision on his 1-360 and provided additional evidence on three different occasions in an effort to show the bona fides of his second marriage to E-J. (Admin.R.

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Bluebook (online)
119 F. Supp. 3d 345, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 104286, 2015 WL 4722616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorley-v-cardinale-paed-2015.