Julio Baltazar-Alcazar Maria Guadalupe Baltazar v. Immigration and Naturalization Service

386 F.3d 940, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 21858
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 21, 2004
Docket02-73363
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 386 F.3d 940 (Julio Baltazar-Alcazar Maria Guadalupe Baltazar v. Immigration and Naturalization Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Julio Baltazar-Alcazar Maria Guadalupe Baltazar v. Immigration and Naturalization Service, 386 F.3d 940, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 21858 (9th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

McKEOWN, Circuit Judge.

Julio Baltazar-Alcazar (“Mr. Baltazar”) and Maria Guadalupe, Baltazar (“Mrs. Bal-tazar”) petition for review of a Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) order denying their application for suspension of deportation. The issue before us is whether the Baltazars were denied the right to counsel when the immigration judge banned an entire law firm from representing them at their deportation hearing. We conclude that the Baltazars did not knowingly and voluntarily waive their statutory right to counsel of choice and that they were prejudiced by the denial of that right. We grant the petition for review.

I. Background

The background and sequence of the proceedings is important to our decision, so we recount the events in some detail. The Baltazars, both born in Mexico, entered the United States without inspection and have lived here since 1989. In late 1996, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) commenced separate deportation proceedings against each of them. Judge Martin presided over Mr. Baltazar’s case, and Mrs. Baltazar’s case was assigned to Judge Latimore. In the preliminary stages of the proceedings, James Valinoti represented both of them. Each admitted the factual allegations in the order to show cause, conceded deport- *942 ability, and applied for suspension of deportation.

On the day of Mr. Baltazar’s originally-scheduled merits hearing, his counsel, Vali-noti, delivered a substitute notice of appearance indicating that Stephen Alexander would be representing Mr. Baltazar. Neither Alexander nor Valinoti showed up for the hearing.

Frustrated by the attorneys’ failure to appear, the judge told Mr. Baltazar: “[W]e can do one of two things, either I can give you an opportunity to retain other counsel, someone other than an attorney from Mr. Valinoti’s office or from Mr. Alexander’s office. Alternatively, you can proceed and speak for yourself.” (emphasis added). Mr. Baltazar expressed his desire to find another attorney and the judge set a new date for his hearing. Judge Martin gave Mr. Baltazar a list of local legal aid agencies and cautioned him that if he failed to retain counsel by the date of the continued hearing, he would be expected to proceed pro se.

Before the rescheduled date for Mr. Bal-tazar’s hearing, Mrs. Baltazar’s case was consolidated with her husband’s and transferred to Judge Martin. The motion to consolidate the cases was submitted to Judge Martin by Monica Hagan, an attorney from Valinoti’s office. The Baltazars arrived for their consolidated merits hearing with Hagan as their attorney. At the outset of the hearing, Judge Martin played a recording of the earlier proceeding during which he banned Valinoti’s entire firm from representing Mr. Baltazar. Judge Martin explained that the Baltazars’ options were to “[ejither go ahead and speak pro se before this Court, have Ms. Hagan represent just the female respondent separately and just have the case sent back to Judge Latimore or any other proposal that you care to make to the Court.”

After a recess to confer with Hagan, the Baltazars appeared before Judge Martin without their counsel. The following colloquy regarding the Baltazars’ representation by counsel ensued:

Q: Well, to the female respondent, what do you wish to do? Do you wish to have your case heard with your husband’s and go ahead and speak today or do you wish a continuance and have your case sent back to Judge Latimore where you can seek representation of anybody you wish before Judge Latimore?
A: I want to continue with this case together with my husband. I don’t want us to be separated.
Q: Well, unfortunately your husband’s case should have been heard a long time ago and it was not solely because of the fact that his attorneys did not appear with him and this matter’s been dragging on for over two year’s [sic] time. Are you saying you want to get another attorney to represent you?
A: I want to continue with the same attorneys we had before. We’ve spoken to them, they’ve apologized and they gave us a reason why they couldn’t come last time.
Q: All right. Well, ... if you’d like to have the same attorneys represent you, then I would suggest that your case proceed separately before Judge Latimore. I’ve had no such explanation from either Mr. Alexander or Mr. Valinoti and I previously advised your husband that, you know, either he obtained other counsel for purposes of the merits hearing or that he be prepared to speak for himself. You’ve indicated that you wish to continue to be represented by counsel. You have that right. You don’t have a right nec *943 essarily to have your case heard with your husband’s case.... And since I believe your right to counsel takes precedence over any right to anything else and you’ve indicated that you want to have the same counsel represent you, I’m going to sever your case from your husband’s and return it to Judge Lati-more for further hearing and if, as you have stated, you wish to have Mr. Valinoti’s [sic] represent you, then you will be free to do so.... Do you understand?
A: Yes, one moment, but—
Q: Do you understand?
A: If that’s not possible, in other words what I want to do is to continue the case but not get separated. But if it can’t be done, then okay.
Q: Well, I’ll go off the record one moment and ask Judge Latimore if she’s willing to hear both of your cases together. But if she’s not, then your case will be going back to Judge Latimore and I will hear your husband’s case here. I will not permit counsel to represent your husband in the hearing before this Court, given the previous inconvenience caused by counsel to this Court. This is a situation that we have a continuing problem with here in Los Angeles. Counsels are retained and changed on short notice out in the hallways, they come in frequently unprepared and it’s— the situation is very frustrating for the Court and about all I can do when I’m inconvenienced as I was on the day that I previously set for your husband’s merits hearing, when I was ready to go but he wasn’t ready to go because of the failure of counsel to communicate with each other or failure of your husband to communicate with counsel or whatever, the bottom line is all I can do is say, “Fine, we’ll put it over and give the respondent another chance to retain counsel and if he doesn’t, proceed pro se.” And that’s pretty much what we’ve done here and I’m not going to — I’m going to hold to that position in this case.

Judge Martin then went off the record and contacted Judge Latimore. When Judge Latimore refused to take the consolidated cases, Judge Martin again asked Mrs. Bal-tazar what she wanted to do:

Q: So the question is do you want to go ahead and speak for yourself pro se with your husband’s case today or do you want me to sever your case from your husband’s and just hear yours separately represented by counsel of your choice at another time?
A: No, I’d like to continue together with my husband without an attorney.
Q: Without an attorney?

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Bluebook (online)
386 F.3d 940, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 21858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/julio-baltazar-alcazar-maria-guadalupe-baltazar-v-immigration-and-ca9-2004.