Jorge Velasquez-Garcia v. Eric Holder, Jr.

760 F.3d 571, 2014 WL 3611591
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 23, 2014
Docket13-2610
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 760 F.3d 571 (Jorge Velasquez-Garcia v. Eric Holder, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jorge Velasquez-Garcia v. Eric Holder, Jr., 760 F.3d 571, 2014 WL 3611591 (7th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

WOOD, Chief Judge.

The Child Status Protection Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1153(h) (the Act), allows the adult children of lawful permanent residents to maintain child status if their parent filed a visa petition on their behalf while they were still under 21. This provision, enacted in 2002, prevents such children from “aging out” of visa priority during the years in which their petition is under review by immigration authorities. But an immigrant may take advantage of this provision only if he “sought to acquire the status of an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence within one year” of his visa number becoming available. Id. § 1153(h)(1)(A).

Jorge Argenis Velásquez-García (Velás-quez) is the adult child of a lawful permanent resident. In 2005, when Velasquez was 17, his father filed a visa petition on his behalf. For our purposes, Velásquez’s visa number became available in March 2011. Although Velásquez took some steps to acquire permanent-resident status within one year of that date, he did not file a formal application for permanent status until May 2012, fourteen months after his visa number became available. Later yet, the Board of Immigration Appeals adopted a new rule in a case called Matter of O. Vazquez-, the new rule required an immigrant to file or attempt to file a substantially complete application for permanent status within one year in order to satisfy the “sought to acquire” prerequisite of 8 U.S.C. § 1153(h)(1)(A). Because Velasquez had not done so, the Board found that he failed to meet the requirement and ordered him removed.

Although we find the Board’s new interpretation of the Act’s ambiguous language to be reasonable, we conclude that retroac *575 tive application of the new one-year filing rule works a manifest injustice in Velás-quez’s case. We therefore remand to the Board for redetermination under the statutory interpretation in effect prior to the O. Vazquez decision.

I

Velásquez, born in Mexico in 1987, entered the United States without being admitted or paroled in 1994 when he was seven years old. In 2001, Velásquez’s father, a lawful permanent resident, filed on his behalf a Form 1-130 petition, which seeks approval for eligible family members to apply for an immigrant visa or adjustment of residence status. Although properly filed, that petition was later deemed abandoned, unbeknownst to Velásquez or his father. In 2005, when Velásquez was 17 years old, his father filed another 1-130 petition on his behalf. That petition was approved in 2009 when Velásquez was 22 years old. Approval put Velásquez in line to apply for permanent residence, which he could do only when an immigrant visa number became available to him.

Velásquez’s visa number became available on March 1, 2011 (after a period of visa “retrogression” that is irrelevant for our purposes, see Visa Retrogression, U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services (June 14, 2011) http://www.uscis.gov/green-card/ green-card-processes-and-procedures/visa-availabihty-priority-dates/visa-retrogression) (last visited July 23, 2014). About two weeks later, Velásquez visited an attorney to inquire about his status and to inform the attorney that he wanted to apply for his “green card.” A week later, Velásquez retained the attorney to investigate his eligibility for permanent residence. The attorney filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request with the U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services (CIS), seeking information about “[a]ll I-130 applications and approval notices” relating to Velásquez. Six months later, in September 2011, CIS sent the attorney documents indicating that Velásquez’s first 1-130 petition had been “denied due to abandonment.” The abandoned petition was nevertheless important because it enabled Velásquez to qualify for certain amnesty provisions enacted in the 2006 amendments to the immigration laws. See 8 U.S.C. § 1255(i). CIS’s response did not mention that Velásquez had only months left to apply for permanent status before losing priority as a resident’s child.

After receiving the FOIA response, the attorney met with Velásquez to discuss adjusting his status. But according to the attorney, “nothing became more solid or concrete.” Velásquez later told an immigration judge that he intended to apply for permanent status, but he was “just trying to get the money together” to pay the myriad costs and fees associated with changing status. No one informed either Velásquez or his father about any filing deadline, for reasons we detail below. Meanwhile, Velásquez caught the attention of immigration officials as the result of two misdemeanor infractions: a conviction in 2007, at the age of 20, for simple possession of marijuana, and a guilty plea in January 2012 to a charge of driving under the influence (DUI), for which he served 15 days in county jail.

Upon his release from jail on February 15, 2012, Velásquez was immediately taken into immigration custody and served with a Notice to Appear for removal proceedings. The Notice to Appear was filed with the immigration court on March 8. It charged that he was removable as an alien convicted of a controlled-substance offense and as an alien present in the country without being admitted or paroled. Velás-quez did not contest the grounds for his removability. In late February, Velás-quez’s retained counsel unsuccessfully requested his release on bond. At the first *576 hearing in immigration court on April 19, the judge set a May 17 deadline for Velasquez to file an application for permanent status. Velásquez filed the application on May 10, a week before the court-imposed deadline but about fourteen months after his visa number became available.

On June 8, 2012, more than three months after Velasquez’s one-year statutory deadline had passed, the Board of Immigration Appeals decided Matter of O. Vazquez, 25 I & N Dec. 817 (BIA 2012). The Board’s decision in O. Vazquez narrowly interpreted critical language in the Act — whether the alien “sought to acquire” within one year the status of a person lawfully admitted for permanent residence — to require that an immigrant make a fully compliant application for permanent residence or one with only technical defects within one year, unless exceptional circumstances prevented the immigrant from filing such an application. This decision departed sharply from three prior non-precedential Board decisions, which had required only a showing that the immigrant took “substantial steps” to acquire permanent status in order to qualify for the Act’s protection. See In re Murillo, No. A099 252 007, 2010 WL 5888675 (BIA Oct. 6, 2010); In re Castillo-Bonilla, No. A98 282 359, 2008 WL 4146759 (BIA Aug. 20, 2008); In re Ji Young Kim, No. A77 828 503, 2004 WL 3187209 (BIA Dec. 20, 2004). The Eleventh Circuit (the only court of appeals to consider these decisions) elected to follow their approach in Tovar v. U.S. Att’y Gen., 646 F.3d 1300, 1304-05 (11th Cir.2011).

II

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Bluebook (online)
760 F.3d 571, 2014 WL 3611591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jorge-velasquez-garcia-v-eric-holder-jr-ca7-2014.