Eugenio Alonso-Juarez v. Pamela Bondi

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 12, 2026
Docket24-2476
StatusPublished

This text of Eugenio Alonso-Juarez v. Pamela Bondi (Eugenio Alonso-Juarez v. Pamela Bondi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eugenio Alonso-Juarez v. Pamela Bondi, (8th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit ___________________________

No. 24-2476 ___________________________

Eugenio Alonso-Juarez

Petitioner

v.

Pamela Bondi, Attorney General of the United States

Respondent ____________

Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals ____________

Submitted: October 20, 2025 Filed: March 12, 2026 ____________

Before GRUENDER, STRAS, and KOBES, Circuit Judges. ____________

STRAS, Circuit Judge.

Eugenio Alonso-Juarez faces deportation. His hope is that the hardship to his family will make it possible for him to stay. See 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(b)(1)(D) (discussing cancellation of removal). With nothing “exceptional” or “extremely unusual” about it, however, we deny the petition for review. Id. I.

A native of Mexico, Alonso-Juarez illegally entered the United States over a decade ago and settled in Missouri along with his wife. He experienced some bad luck a few years later, when he had removal proceedings brought against him and suffered multiple injuries after falling from a roof.

The immigration proceedings have not gone his way. After admitting he was removable, he requested cancellation based on “exceptional and extremely unusual hardship” to his two American-born children. Id. At one point, he asked for more time to gather evidence about his injuries, but the immigration judge denied it for lack of good cause. See Choge v. Lynch, 806 F.3d 438, 441 (8th Cir. 2015) (discussing the standard for granting a continuance).

Only he and his wife testified at the removal hearing. Both explained that deportation would cause hardship for their children, mainly because of the lower standard of living and poor educational prospects in Mexico. Each also thought work would be harder to find there.

The immigration judge denied relief. Although Alonso-Juarez satisfied several requirements for cancellation of removal, he did not show that a qualifying relative would suffer “exceptional and extremely unusual hardship.” 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(b)(1)(D). The Board of Immigration Appeals agreed—both with the denial of a continuance and his ineligibility for relief—and dismissed the appeal.

II.

The purpose of asking for a continuance, as Alonso-Juarez told the immigration judge, was to gather medical reports to document his injuries. If they were as severe as he thought, then it would show the “potential insufficiency of medical care” in Mexico and his inability “to work and earn a livable wage,” which would have strengthened his claim of hardship. Even though granting a continuance -2- usually lies within the discretion of the immigration judge, see Thimran v. Holder, 599 F.3d 841, 845 (8th Cir. 2010), our review is de novo because Alonso-Juarez claims that the denial of one violated his due-process rights, see Zacarias-Velasquez v. Mukasey, 509 F.3d 429, 435 (8th Cir. 2007). The constitutional test is whether rejecting the request was a “fundamental procedural error” that “prejudice[d]” him. Alva-Arellano v. Lynch, 811 F.3d 1064, 1066 (8th Cir. 2016).

The immigration judge and the Board both concluded that there was no good cause for a continuance, primarily because “the record already contained documentary evidence relating to [Alonso-Juarez’s] medical condition.” Getting to “fundamental procedural error” is an even steeper hill to climb. Id. By the time of the hearing, he was awaiting a single medical report from a doctor evaluating his workers’ compensation claim. It is unclear what it would have added to a record that included several already. Immigration judges are free to “avoid unduly protracted proceedings,” Thimran, 599 F.3d at 845 (citation omitted), and moving them along here was not fundamentally unfair, see Choge, 806 F.3d at 441–42.

Nor was it prejudicial. See Alva-Arellano, 811 F.3d at 1066. At this point, we can only guess what the extra report would have said, because he never provided it to the Board or us. Perhaps it would have been helpful, perhaps not. What we can say is that there is no basis on this record to conclude that “the outcome of the proceeding may . . . have been different” if the immigration judge had given him a continuance. Tun v. Gonzales, 485 F.3d 1014, 1026 (8th Cir. 2007).

III.

Missing was the hardship necessary for cancellation of removal. Not just any will do: it must be “exceptional and extremely unusual.” 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(b)(1)(D). Even if Alonso-Juarez showed that deportation would pose a hardship for his children, the immigration judge ruled that nothing was “exceptional” or “extremely unusual” about it. Id.

-3- A.

Reviewing a hardship determination is new to us. Before Wilkinson v. Garland, we left it to the immigration judge and the Board. 601 U.S. 209 (2024); see, e.g., Meraz-Reyes v. Gonzales, 436 F.3d 842, 843 (8th Cir. 2006) (per curiam) (holding that it was “precisely the discretionary determination that Congress shielded from our review”). Post-Wilkinson, however, “application of the exceptional and extremely unusual hardship standard to a given set of facts is reviewable.” 601 U.S. at 217. Now we just need to figure out how to do it.

The how includes the standard of review. Wilkinson provides a clue. It says that the hardship determination is, “inescapably, a mixed question of law and fact.” Id. at 221. For a “mixed question,” picking a standard “depends . . . on whether answering it entails primarily legal or factual work.” U.S. Bank N.A. ex rel. CWCapital Asset Mgmt. LLC v. Vill. at Lakeridge, LLC, 583 U.S. 387, 396 (2018); see Guerrero-Lasprilla v. Barr, 589 U.S. 221, 228 (2020) (noting that this test provides the “proper standard” for review of “mixed questions in . . . a district, bankruptcy, or agency decision” (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted)). If a case requires us to “expound on the law, particularly by amplifying or elaborating on a broad legal standard,” our review is de novo. U.S. Bank, 583 U.S. at 396. But clear error or another deferential standard applies when a mixed question “immerse[s] [the] court[] in case-specific factual issues,” like “marshal[ing] and weigh[ing] evidence, mak[ing] credibility judgments, and otherwise address[ing] . . . narrow facts that utterly resist generalization.” Id. (citation omitted).

Properly categorizing the hardship inquiry depends, once again, on Wilkinson, which places the focus on whether a qualifying relative would suffer hardship “substantially different from, or beyond, that which would normally be expected from [an applicant’s] deportation.” 601 U.S. at 222 (quoting In re Monreal- Aguinaga, 23 I. & N. Dec. 56, 65 (B.I.A. 2001)).

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Related

Thimran v. Holder
599 F.3d 841 (Eighth Circuit, 2010)
Zacarias-Velasquez v. Mukasey
509 F.3d 429 (Eighth Circuit, 2007)
Singh v. Gonzales
495 F.3d 553 (Eighth Circuit, 2007)
Moses Choge v. Loretta E. Lynch
806 F.3d 438 (Eighth Circuit, 2015)
Ruben Alva-Arellano v. Loretta E. Lynch
811 F.3d 1064 (Eighth Circuit, 2016)
U. S. Bank N. A. v. Village at Lakeridge, LLC
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Lidia Ramirez v. Jefferson B. Sessions, III
902 F.3d 764 (Eighth Circuit, 2018)
Fallou Ndiaye v. William P. Barr
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Monasky v. Taglieri
589 U.S. 68 (Supreme Court, 2020)
Guerrero-Lasprilla v. Barr
589 U.S. 221 (Supreme Court, 2020)
MONREAL
23 I. & N. Dec. 56 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 2001)
Alberto Hernandez v. Merrick B. Garland
28 F.4th 917 (Eighth Circuit, 2022)
Dickinson v. Zurko
527 U.S. 150 (Supreme Court, 1999)
Santos-Zacaria v. Garland
598 U.S. 411 (Supreme Court, 2023)
Situ Wilkinson v. Attorney General United States
131 F.4th 134 (Third Circuit, 2025)
Gonzalez-Juarez v. Bondi
137 F.4th 996 (Ninth Circuit, 2025)

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