Igor Alexeyevich Suvorov v. Alberto R. Gonzales 1 , Attorney General

441 F.3d 618, 2006 WL 770462
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 28, 2006
Docket04-3911
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 441 F.3d 618 (Igor Alexeyevich Suvorov v. Alberto R. Gonzales 1 , Attorney General) 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
Igor Alexeyevich Suvorov v. Alberto R. Gonzales 1 , Attorney General, 441 F.3d 618, 2006 WL 770462 (8th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

BEAM, Circuit Judge.

Igor Suvorov filed a petition for review from the Board of Immigration Appeals’ (BIA) affirmance of the Immigration Judge’s (IJ) decision denying Suvorov’s waiver of inadmissibility request under section 216(c)(4)(B) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), 8 U.S.C. § 1186a(c)(4)(B). Suvorov’s request under section 216(c)(4)(B) would have waived the requirement that he and Jeana Lindell file a joint petition to remove the conditional basis of his permanent residence status. The IJ denied Suvorov’s request, determining that Suvorov did not enter into the marriage in good faith. In its affirmance, the BIA entered a final order of removal.

Deportability is not at issue in this case; all parties concede that Suvorov is deport-able. The issue is whether Suvorov qualifies for relief from removal, specifically whether there is a “good faith” basis for a waiver of the joint filing requirement. Our analysis requires us to review the IJ’s credibility determinations. However, the government questions our jurisdiction to reach the merits of Suvorov’s claim. We dismiss Suvorov’s petition.

*619 1. BACKGROUND

At the time of his hearing Suvorov was a forty-three-year-old divorced native and citizen of Russia who entered the United States on May 27, 1990, as a non-immigrant fiancé. He married Jeana Lindell on August 18, 1990, in Illinois and became a permanent resident on a conditional basis on December 24, 1990. 2 The two separated on March 21, 1991, and divorced on August 5, 1991, before the two-year period of conditional residence expired under 8 U.S.C. § 1186a. Suvorov and Lindell did not jointly petition the Attorney General for removal of the conditions on Suvorov’s status. 3 Suvorov’s conditional status was terminated on May 5, 1993, and deportation proceedings began shortly thereafter.

The IJ’s thorough fifty-eight page opinion highlights the testimony and exhibits presented in this case. It reviews the courtship of Suvorov and Lindell as well as the circumstances surrounding their brief marriage. Testimony was taken in October 1997. While both sides presented various witnesses who were familiar with the couple, the witnesses that provided the most pertinent testimony, according to the IJ, were Suvorov, Lindell, and Robin Buehring, the daycare provider of a coworker of Suvorov and Lindell.

Suvorov and Lindell first met in Russia in 1985 when Suvorov lived there and Lin-dell was traveling there on a tour. She noticed a lapel pin worn by Suvorov displaying the Soviet and American flags and began having conversations with him. 4 They spent about three days together during Lindell’s five-week trip that summer. Lindell then made a second trip to Russia in December 1985, spending most of her two-week winter vacation with Suvorov. In June 1986, Lindell returned to Russia yet again and the parties began to talk about marriage. Lindell visited again in the summer of 1987. After that the couple did not have much, if any, contact for about one and one-half years.

Twice Lindell sought to have Suvorov visit her and have him apply for a visitor’s visa at the United States Consulate, which he did. Twice his request was denied. Later, with the help of a congressman, they sought a flaneé visa and it was issued. Suvorov arrived in the United States in May 1990 and the two lived in Wisconsin. After their August wedding, the couple resided in Wisconsin Rapids and worked together at a company called CCLS, a group home for developmentally and mentally disabled individuals. Suvorov and Lindell acted as a normal couple, sending out Christmas cards, celebrating birthdays and socializing as a couple. There was *620 also evidence that Lindell suffered from depression, which required medication. Further, there was conflicting testimony about whether the couple ever consummated their relationship. Evidence of other problems that might have existed was presented including Suvorov’s alleged carousing and the occurrence of arguments between them.

Twenty-one-year-old Barb Lewis was a supervisor at CCLS and knew both Suvo-rov and Lindell. In March 1991, Lindell received a phone call from Buehring, a woman that Lindell did not know, but who cared for Barb Lewis’s young son. Among other things, Buehring informed Lindell that Suvorov had copied parts of Lindell’s diary and provided them to Lewis and other colleagues of Lindell. Buehring further told Lindell that Suvorov and Lewis had relations and that Suvorov actually had plans to leave Lindell on June 6, 1991, the date upon which Suvorov supposedly believed he would receive permanent status. She said he then planned to move to New York City with Lewis. Buehring told Lindell that Suvorov only married Lindell for the green card. She further revealed to Lindell that Suvorov’s father was not dead, as Suvorov had told Lindell during their courtship, but rather that he had a stepfather and that Suvorov never knew his biological father. In fact, during their courtship, Suvorov had told Lindell that his fathfer was ill and had been denied medical treatment due to Suvorov’s relationship with an American. The week that she received Buehring’s phone call Lindell packed up her belongings and left Suvorov. Their divorce was final in August of that year.

Buehring testified that Suvorov asked Lewis to look through the diary to find damaging information about Lindell to show that Lindell was crazy. Suvorov testified that he ultimately had a sexual relationship with Lewis but that they were only friends until the time that Lindell left him. Later, he also discussed marriage with Lewis but no formal plans were made.

In his July 7, 2003, order, the IJ held that he had no reason to discredit the testimony of Lindell and Buehring. He determined that Lindell entered the marriage in good faith and could find no motivation for Buehring to fabricate the information she provided. The IJ discredited Suvorov’s testimony, noting that Suvorov’s story to Lindell about the identity and death of'his father was “an extremely serious lie,” a matter that caused the IJ concern. The IJ also questioned Suvorov’s credibility given his behavior in stealing Lindell’s diary to, purportedly, find evidence that Lindell was crazy and to publish excerpts to others, a total violation of Lindell’s trust. And, the IJ noted that Suvorov began a sexual relationship with Lewis, possibly even the day after Lindell moved out, and referenced indications in the record that Suvorov hoped to immigrate to the United States from the time he met Lindell. “The timing of all these events calls into serious question whether or not [Suvorov] was still interested in maintaining his relationship with his wife at the time immediately preceding her leaving him.” In fact, Suvorov’s behavior in February and March of 1991 was the deciding factor in the IJ’s determination. The IJ might have granted the waiver except that this behavior called into question Suvorov’s intentions regarding the marriage.

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Bluebook (online)
441 F.3d 618, 2006 WL 770462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/igor-alexeyevich-suvorov-v-alberto-r-gonzales-1-attorney-general-ca8-2006.