J

8 I. & N. Dec. 568
CourtBoard of Immigration Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1960
DocketID 1052
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 I. & N. Dec. 568 (J) 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
J, 8 I. & N. Dec. 568 (bia 1960).

Opinion

MATLER OF J

In DEPORTATION Proceedings A-3322627 Decided by Board February 23, 1960

Evidence—Failure to testify—Unfavorable inference proper only after prima tack case of deportability is established. Unfavorable inference from alien's refusal to testify can be drawn only after a prima facie case of deportability has been established. Record should also reflect that the alien was requested to give testimony, that there was a refusal to testify, and ti_e ground of the refusal.

CHARGE ;

Order: Act of 1952—Section 241(a) (6) f8 U.S.C. 1251(a) (6)1—Member of or affiliated with the Communist Party of the United States after entry.

BEFORE THE BOARD

Discussion: This is an appeal from the order of the special in- quiry officer requiring respondent's deportation on the ground stated above. Respondent, a 55-year-old married female, a native and last a national of Russia, has been a resident of the United States since her admission for permanent residence in 1905. The special inquiry officer found that she had been a member of the Communist Party of the United States at least in the years 1946 through 1949. The appeal will be sustained. The case was previously before us on appeal. On November 18, 1958, we reopened proceedings so that statements made by Govern- ment witnesses prior to the hearing might be made available to respondent. Reopened hearing was held on June 24, 1959. At the reopened hearing, a statement made by Government witness M— was produced; M — was called as a witness; he identified the statement as one he had made in 1954; and over objection of counsel the statement was put into the record. Counsel refused to examine the witness. The examining officer said there were no other state- ments known to the Government. Counsel was not permitted to question the examining officer on this matter. An offer was made to recall the other witnesses to make them available to counsel for questioning concerning statements they had made. Counsel rejected

568 the offer. He asked that a hearing de move be given. By briefs and at the two oral arguments, counsel raised questions of due proc- ess and the constitutionality of the laws governing the case; he argued, that the evidence is not reasonable, substantial, and proba- tive and that even if Communist Party membership is established it is of such a "nominal" nature that proceedings must be terminated; that hearing should have been reopened de 'move; that respondent should have the right to question the examining officer to determine whether other statements existed which might have to be produced; and that it was improper to draw a presumption from the silence of respondent. The Service representative argued the evidence is sufficient; that the examining officer's claim as to the nonexistence of additional statements should have been sufficient; that in any event counsel was given an opportunity to reexamine the witnesses to determine if there were statements, and did not; that an inference has not been drawn from the silence of respondent, but that the evidence of the Government stands uncontroverted; and that the hearing offi- cer handled the case properly. The burden of proving that respondent was a member of the Communist Party is upon the Government. This burden requires the Service to establish its case by evidence that is reasonable, sub- stantial, and probative. Respondent has been in the United States for 55 years. She was eight months old when she entered. She is married to a citizen of the United States and has two United States citizen children. We cannot say that the proof which is required has been furnished by the Service. The special inquiry officer rested his case upon these matters: (1) Respondent attended closed Communist Party meetings; (2) Respondent's name appears in a Communist Party bulletin as one who recruited members; (5) Respondent sold the "Daily Worker," Communist Party paper. We shall deal with each of the items seriatim. Attendance at closed meetings of the Communist Party is found from testimony of M . At the hearing, M— testified that he had been a mem- ber of the Communist Party from 1936 to 1940 and from 1942 to 1948. He stated that he collected dues; that some of the Commu- nist Party meetings were restricted only to members; that he first met respondent (C J—) at a picnic in about 1947 or 1948; that in 1947 and 1948 she occasionally attended meetings of the Communist Party restricted only to members; and that he had been at open meetings with respondent. He could not give an estimate of the number of meetings because he could not recall. He testified that respondent took part. in the meetings, but he could not recall enough about the meetings to give details. He said that respondent

569 sold the "Daily Worker"; and that when they had "an affair or something" he had seen her at work in the kitchen scrubbing. He said that he had a membership card but that he could not say whether respondent had one. He stated that he did not know "any other J s as members" of the Communist Party during the pe- riod of his membership. A statement made by M— prior to the hearing reveals that he vas asked whether he knew a person by the name of "C pr Mrs. R J " and that he replied that he "was acquainted with a person known as Mrs. R J "; that he first met, her in about 1937 or 1938; that he met her at meetings of the International Workers Order; and that during 1946 and 1947 he saw her on sev- si:31 occasions at closed meetings of the Communist Party. He said that he could not recall having ever seen either her Communist Party ,card pr payment of Communist Party dues by her. He stated that respondent would have had to have been a member of the Communist Party to have attended the meetings and that he knew respondent's husband R J to have attended closed meetings of the Com- munist Party. We pan give M 's testimony little weight. His recollection is admittedly poor. He could not recall what went on at the meetings or what respondent did there. His statement made in 1954 differs from his testimony at the hearing as to when he fist met respondent and the years he saw her at Communist Party meetings. In his statement, he apparently attempted to make the distinction between knowing Mrs. R J and C J and each reference to respondent was in terms of Mrs. J or Mrs. 1t J . Yet, at the hearing, he identified respondent as if he had known her as C J . At the hearing, the witness testified he did not know any other J—s as a member of the Communist Party; yet, his statement in 1954 reveals that he knew that R J attended closed meetings of the Communist Party which were open only to members of the Party. Moreover, it is strange that the witness, who had the duty of collecting dues, did not collect from respondent. In view of the limited association M had with respondent, the pas- sage of time, his poor recollection, the discrepancies in his testimony, and the lack of care in making the distinctions that he knew about, we cannot find M 's testimony reasonable, substantial, and proba- tive proof of membership in the Communist Party. The record also fails to establish how AI knew that the meetings were closed -meetings. The special inquiry officer has found that respondent's name ap- pears in a 1946 Communist Party bulletin as one who recruited -members. Exhibit 5 shows that one "C. J " was an active worker in recruiting members for the Communist Party. The special in- 570 quiry officer found that respondent is the "C. J ." The special inquiry officer came to this conclusion because street directories for the area listed only one "C. J ," and M had testified that he knew no other J who was a member of the Communist Party.

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Related

GUEVARA
20 I. & N. Dec. 238 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1991)

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Bluebook (online)
8 I. & N. Dec. 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-bia-1960.