Hashem Lahijani v. U.S. Attorney General

133 F. App'x 591
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedApril 25, 2005
Docket04-12060; BIA A76-428-068
StatusUnpublished

This text of 133 F. App'x 591 (Hashem Lahijani v. U.S. Attorney General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hashem Lahijani v. U.S. Attorney General, 133 F. App'x 591 (11th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Hashem Lahijani seeks review of the Board of Immigration Appeals’s decision to affirm the immigration judge’s denial of his motion to reopen his removal proceedings. We reluctantly deny his petition.

I.

Lahijani is an Iranian citizen. He is a musician, which doesn’t sit well with the mullahs who currently run the Iranian government. On “several occasions,” Lahijani has been detained and tortured for playing his instrument. He is also Jewish. This, too, does not sit well with the mullahs. Iranian Jews are regularly charged with made-up allegations of spying for Israel and sentenced to long terms in jail by government-sponsored kangaroo courts.

Lahijani fled Iran so that he would no longer be tortured and have to live under the constant fear of being arrested. He came to the United States on February 10, 1998. After Lahijani left, the Iranian police raided his family’s home looking for him. Lahijani’s brother was arrested for spying and communicating with the west *593 ern world; he lost his job and the title to his home.

In this country Lahijani petitioned for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture on May 11, 1998. Thereafter, the Immigration and Naturalization Service charged Lahijani with removal, which Lahijani conceded. The INS scheduled a hearing before an immigration judge in Miami on November 5,1998.

On the appointed day, Lahijani and his attorneys, Edward Abramson and Samuel Blanco, showed up twenty minutes late. Tropical Storm Mitch had hit Miami the night before, making it difficult to drive on the roads. When the three men arrived at the hearing, the IJ had already ordered that Lahijani be removed in absentia.

Abramson and Blanco moved to reopen the hearing because of an “exceptional circumstance,” namely, the fact that a tropical storm had hit Miami the night before the hearing. The IJ denied the motion, stating that “traffic is not an exceptional circumstance excusing one’s appearance.” Through Abramson and Blanco, Lahijani appealed to the BIA on February 16, 1999, but a decision did not come quickly.

Soon after his attorneys filed the appeal, Lahijani moved to California. Abramson and Blanco told him to fill out the appropriate change of address form and send it back to them. They said they would forward it on to the INS.

But as the months passed and the BIA continued to sit on his appeal, Lahijani became concerned that he might be deported while it was pending. He tried to call Abramson and Blanco, but they would not return his phone calls. On his last attempt, the firm told Lahijani that Blanco, who was primarily responsible for his case, had moved and it did not know where he had gone.

Troubled by that news, Lahijani asked another attorney, Sheila Latimer, to find out the status of his appeal. In April 2000, over a year after Abramson and Blanco had filed Lahijani’s appeal of the IJ’s decision, Latimer filed a “Notice of Entry of Appearance as Attorney or Representative Before the Board of Immigration Appeals,” signed by both her and Lahijani. Latimer also filed a motion to expedite the BIA’s decision on Lahijani’s appeal because Lahijani “lives with the threat of forcible removal to Iran absent the asylum hearing he sought when he fled to this country seeking refuge.”

Finally, more than two years after La-timer’s motion to expedite the appeal, the BIA granted Lahijani’s motion to reopen his asylum hearing on June 25, 2002. It remanded the case for further proceedings before the IJ, and notified Latimer that a new hearing had been scheduled for Lahijani on July 19, 2002. No notice was sent to Lahijani in California, presumably because the INS did not have his address. Apparently, Abramson and Blanco had not sent in the form as they had promised.

Latimer, however, did not believe that Lahijani was her client (nor did Lahijani believe that Latimer was his attorney because he did not pay her and did not sign a representation agreement with her). She did not inform Lahijani that he had won his appeal and that his hearing had been rescheduled. As a result, on the day of the hearing neither Lahijani nor Latimer showed up. The IJ again ordered that Lahijani be removed in absentia.

Meanwhile, after several more months of hearing nothing about his appeal (because Latimer had not passed on the information), Lahijani hired a third attorney, Marjan Bahmani, to inquire about the status of his case. Bahmani was informed that a new hearing had been scheduled on July 19, but that because Lahijani or his *594 counsel had not shown up, the IJ had again ordered that Lahijani be removed in absentia.

Bahmani immediately filed a motion with the IJ to reopen the hearing, arguing that Abramson and Blanco had been ineffective by not notifying Lahijani of the hearing, and that the situation in Iran had worsened since Lahijani had filed his original asylum petition. The IJ denied this second motion to reopen the asylum hearing because Lahijani failed to allege facts sufficient to demonstrate that his prior counsel was ineffective.

The BIA summarily affirmed and adopted the IJ’s decision. Lahijani now offers four reasons why his petition to review the BIA’s decision should be granted.

II.

Lahijani first contends that he did not receive notice of the rescheduled hearing. Thus, Lahijani argues, the IJ abused its discretion by denying his second motion to reopen his asylum hearing. Lahijani is incorrect.

The immigration statutes require the INS to serve an alien with proper notice of his asylum hearing. If it does not serve the alien with proper notice, the hearing is invalid and can be reopened at anytime. See 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(b)(5)(C)(ii). Actual notice, however, is not required. The INS meets its statutory obligation if it serves the alien’s counsel of record with notice of the hearing. Anin v. Reno, 188 F.3d 1273, 1277 (11th Cir.1999); see also Matter of Boroeio, 1985 WL 56044, 19 I. & N. Dec. 255, 259 (1985).

That’s what happened here. Latimer filed a “Notice of Entry of Appearance” on April 27, 2000, stating, “I hereby enter my appearance as attorney (or representative) for and at the request of the following named person(s): Hashem Lahijani.” The INS served Latimer, Lahijani’s counsel of record, with proper notice of the July 19, 2002 hearing on July 3, 2002. Lahijani does not argue that this notice was defective. Accordingly, the INS’s July 3, 2002 notice to Latimer was also a constructive notice to Lahijani of his rescheduled hearing. See Anin, 188 F.3d at 1277.

III.

In the alternative, Lahijani contends that, despite the fact that he had constructive notice of the hearing, his failure to appear was due to the exceptional circumstance that his counsel was ineffective and therefore, should be excused.

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Related

Anin v. Reno
188 F.3d 1273 (Eleventh Circuit, 1999)
Fernandez-Bernal v. Attorney General of the United States
257 F.3d 1304 (Eleventh Circuit, 2001)
Gbaya v. United States Attorney General
342 F.3d 1219 (Eleventh Circuit, 2003)
LOZADA
19 I. & N. Dec. 637 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1988)
BAROCIO
19 I. & N. Dec. 255 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
133 F. App'x 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hashem-lahijani-v-us-attorney-general-ca11-2005.