G-Q

9 I. & N. Dec. 376
CourtBoard of Immigration Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1961
Docket1158
StatusPublished

This text of 9 I. & N. Dec. 376 (G-Q) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Board of Immigration Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
G-Q, 9 I. & N. Dec. 376 (bia 1961).

Opinion

MATTER OP G—Q---

In DEPORTATION Proceedings

A-5176004

Deckled by Board August 1, 1961 Deportability—Communist Party membership—Materiality of personal advo- cacy or awareness of Party doctrines. (1) Ruling in Galvan v. Press, 347 U.S. 522 (1954), that support or knowl- edge or communist rarty's advocacy of force ana violence was not in- tended to be prerequisite to deportation remains unimpaired by subsequent judicial decisions. However, inquiry into whether an alien personally advo- cated violence may be material if it is part of an effort by the alien to show that his membership was accidental, artificial, or unconsciously in appearance only, or within Rowoldt. (2) Respondent's motion to reopen deportation proceedings for purpose of testifying on issue of personal advocacy and belief in Party's doctrines of force and violence is denied whete record reflects that respondent refused to testify on claim of privilege at six deportation hearings in 1956, that he offered no testimony or evidence at previous reopening obtained at his in- stance to allow him to establish he was within Rowoldt, and there is un- contrad icted testimony to prove that his membership in the Communist Party was both voluntary and Meaningful. DEPORTABLE: Act of 1952—Section 241(a) (6) [8 U.S.C. 1251 (a ) (6)1—After entry, member of a section, subsidiary, branch, affiliate, or subdivision of the Communist Party of the United States.

BEFORE THE BOARL

DISCUSSION: This is a motion for reopening of proceedings. It follows judicial review affirming the finding of cleportability en- tered by this Board on May 18, 7959. The motion will be denied. Tho respondent, a 41 your old male, a native and citizen of Mox ico, has been a resident of the United States since 1920. We found he was a member of the Communist Party from about 1948 to at least the end of 1950. At the six deportation hearings held from April 1956 to July 1956, the respondent refused to testify on a claim of privilege. At a hearing reopened on his motion so that he could testify, the respondent offered no evidence on the ground that the Service had failed to make out a case. Reopening is now requested so that the respondent may testify that he did not advocate the 376 overthrow of the Government by force and violence and that he had no knowledge that the Communist Party advocated the over- throw of the Government by force and violence. It is stated that such testimony was not offered previously because it was not known that it was admissible and material. The Service opposes the motion contending that the respondent has had since 1953 to present the facts and has refused to avail him- self of the many opportunities given, including one which was granted to him at his request after deportation had been ordered, and that the offer of proof neither contests the existence of mem- bership nor goes to the question of its meaningfulness. The Serv- ice, quoting Jimenez v. Barber, 252 F.2d 550, contends that the re- spondent must take the consequences of the course of defense which ha pursued and points to the threat which is offered the deportation process if an alien who has been ordered deported and who has secured administrative and judicial review can upset deportation proceedings by asserting his willingness to testify after having re- fused when he had an opportunity. The respondent was ordered deported on the basis of his mem- bership in the Communist Party under a statute whose scheme was explained in Galvan v. Press, 347 U.S. 522, where the Supreme Court, which had been urged to construe the statute "as providing for the deportation only of those aliens who joined the Communist Party fully conscious of its advocacy of violence, and who, by so joining, thereby committed themselves to this violent purpose," ruled that the law "* * * appears to preclude an interpretation which would require proof that an alien had joined the Communist Party with full appreciation of its purposes and program." The Supreme Court stated that "* * * it * * * did not exempt 'innocent' members of the Communist Party." The conclusion of the Supreme Court was "that support, or even demonstrated knowledge, of the Communist Party's advocacy of violence was not intended to be a prerequisite to deportation. It is enough that the alien joined the Party, aware that he was joining an organization known as the Communist Party which operates as a distinct and active political organization, and that he did s6 of his own free will." Shortly after the decision in the respondent's case, Raw,"ldt v. Perfecto, 355 U.S. 115, was decided. The Service had sought the deportation of Rowoldt who had been a member of the Communist Party for about a year in 1935. Uncontradicte.d evidence in the record revealed that Rownldt joined at a time when he had no job and was concerned primarily with obtaining food, clothing and shelter. The Supreme Court held that under the facts presented, Rowoldt's affiliation with the Communist Party may well have been wholly devoid of any political implications and was, therefore, not 377 "meaningful." After Rowoldt was decided, we received a motion from the respondent, couched in similar terms to the present mo- tion, asking for reconsideration of the case (which we denied) and asking for "* * * the right to offer testimony to show that he in fact can place himself within the framework of the rule laid down in Rowoldt, which to his knowledge would have been to no avail prior to the decision of the Supreme Court *." We reopened the proceedings to give the respondent an opportunity to bring himself within the framework of Rowoldt. At the reopened hear- ing he offered no evidence and refused to testify claiming the Serv- ice had failed to make a case. After the respondent was again found deportable by this Board, he filed a complaint for judicial review. The district court dis- missed the complaint. Appeal to the circuit court was dismissed on December 8, 1960 (Gastelum-Quinories v. Rogers, 286 F.2d 824, C.A. D.C.). This motion was filed almost five months later (May 4, 1961). It is the respondent's belief that the court of appeals, in reviewing the administrative proceedings in his case, ruled that meaningful association is equivalent to advocacy of the overthrow of the Government by force and violence; that the court of appeals believed that the respondent, had been given an opportunity to tes- tify with regard to his personal advocacy, although the respondent did not have the opportunity for had he offered to testify on this point the special inquiry officer would have ruled it was not ma- terial under Galvan; and that the respondent must now be given an opportunity to testify on the issue of belief in force and violence and the Party's advocacy of forceful overthrow. It requires a far stretch of the imagination to interpret Gastelum Quinones as modifying either GaLvan, or Rowoldt, making deporta- tion dependent upon proof that the alien or the Party advocated the forceful overthrow of the Government.

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9 I. & N. Dec. 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/g-q-bia-1961.