Lopez-Alegria v. Ilchert

632 F. Supp. 932, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29254
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedFebruary 14, 1986
DocketC-86-0380 RFP
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 632 F. Supp. 932 (Lopez-Alegria v. Ilchert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lopez-Alegria v. Ilchert, 632 F. Supp. 932, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29254 (N.D. Cal. 1986).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

PECKHAM, Chief Judge.

INTRODUCTION

Petitioner Milton Lopez-Alegria filed this action on February 9, 1986, under section 106(a)(9) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C.A. § 1105a(a)(9). The action' seeks a writ of habeas corpus to restrain the District Director of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) from deporting petitioner to El Salvador. Petitioner seeks the stay pending the Board of Immigration Appeals’ (“BIA”) decision on his appeal from an immigration judge’s denial of his motion to reopen deportation proceedings. The court grants petitioner’s request.

FACTS

The INS arrested petitioner, who had entered this country without inspection in 1980, on March 10, 1982. Petitioner appeared before an immigration judge on May 24, 1982, on an Order to Show Cause why he should not be deported. At that hearing, petitioner was represented by Sister Margaret Phelan, a legal case worker for Catholic Social Services. Sister Phelan is not a lawyer. Petitioner’s representative admitted his deportability and designated El Salvador as the country of deportation. She stated that petitioner would go to El *934 Salvador only if he could not obtain a visa from any other country. When asked at the hearing if he had ever been convicted of a crime, petitioner replied that he had not, failing to mention a conviction for a misdemeanor petty theft. The immigration judge gave petitioner until July 24, 1982, to depart.

Petitioner failed to depart on July 24, 1982. .The INS mailed petitioner a Final Order of Deportation on January 25, 1983, ordering petitioner to report for deportation on February 15, 1983. Petitioner did not report for deportation; he presently claims that he never received this order. The record is ambiguous on this point because it does not show that petitioner signed the certified mail receipt for the order.

The INS apprehended petitioner at his Oakland home on January 16, 1986. On that date, petitioner applied for a stay of deportation with the District Director, and filed a motion to reopen deportation proceedings and for a stay of deportation with the Immigration Court in San Francisco. On January 17, 1986, the immigration judge granted a stay of deportation pending a decision on petitioner’s motion to reopen.

Petitioner sought reopening of his deportation proceeding so that he could apply for asylum or temporary withholding of deportation. The declaration in support of his motion states that petitioner did not file for asylum in 1982 because he feared that the INS would forward information on his application to the Salvadorean authorities. The declaration adds facts concerning petitioner’s fear of returning to El Salvador. For example, petitioner is the son-in-law of the deceased former commander of the revolutionary forces in El Salvador. Petitioner had also been married to the commander’s daughter, who the Salvadorean police had killed during a demonstration at the Venezuelan Embassy. Petitioner’s declaration adds that the National Police have charged him with subversive activities and once kidnapped him. The motion to reopen adds that petitioner is currently married to a lawful, permanent resident of the United States, and that they have a child who was born in this country.

The record also includes a report by a special agent of the INS, containing “information from a confidential informant.” According to this unspecified informant, petitioner was involved in terrorist activities in El Salvador, kidnapped and executed the Minister of Education, and is a fanatic Marxist who carried a 9 milimeter pistol and cyanide capsule. The informant adds that if the United States attempted to deport petitioner, petitioner would hijack the plane to Cuba. Petitioner disputes these allegations, but states that they support his claim that the El Salvadorean authorities view him as a dangerous revolutionary.

On January 26, 1986, while the immigration judge’s stay of deportation was still in effect, the Acting District Director of the INS denied petitioner’s separate application for a stay of deportation. The INS moved petitioner from the Oakland City Jail on January 27, taking him to San Francisco Airport for deportation. The INS did not notify petitioner’s counsel of record of this move. After petitioner’s representative discussed this matter with an Assistant District Director, the INS stopped the deportation and returned petitioner from Los Angeles to San Francisco.

On February 4, 1986, the immigration judge denied petitioner’s motion to reopen and vacated the stay of deportation. The brief denial states that petitioner did not present “new facts of a material nature which could not have been presented or discovered at his former [1982] deportation hearing.” Certified Administrative Record at 19. Petitioner, whose deportation was scheduled for February 10, immediately filed an appeal to the BIA, and made a request, by telephone, for a stay. The BIA denied the request for a stay on February 5.

On February 5, Marta Palacios contacted petitioner. Palacios, petitioner’s cousin, offered an affidavit that contained information of recent events in El Salvador involving petitioner’s family. The affidavit *935 states that Palacios conversed with petitioner’s mother in approximately June 1985. During the phone conversation, petitioner’s mother stated that she and two of petitioner’s brothers had been arrested within the previous year and a half. Both brothers had been beaten and the authorities never filed formal charges against any of the three.

Based on this new information, petitioner withdrew his appeal to the BIA and filed a new motion to reopen. Petitioner’s motion to reopen also containted a request, for a stay. Petitioner supplemented the new motion to reopen with additional facts concerning his fear of persecution. Cert.Admin.Rec. at 20-22. According to this supplemental declaration, petitioner had associated with leaders of the opposition in El Salvador. The declaration also provides details of the National Police’s torture of petitioner when they kidnapped him. Petitioner adds that Roberto D’Aubisson specifically named him on a list of subversives, many of whom were later killed.

On February 6, 1986, at 4:20 Pacific Time, the immigration judge denied petitioner’s renewed motion to reopen. The decision states that “there is no indication that [petitioner] would be singled out for persecution.” Cert.Admin.Rec. at 1. In addition, “in view of [petitioner’s] past statements and conduct, his present evidence and claim cannot be believed.” Id.

Petitioner sought relief in this court on February 9 because he could not contact the BIA until after the deportation order would take effect the following morning. This court temporarily stayed the deportation order on February 9, pending further court order at the February 12 hearing. During that hearing, petitioner presented additional affidavits in support of his claim. The affidavit of Mario Alberto Hernandez, for example, states that members of petitioner’s family had been beaten and tortured “in order to force from them the whereabouts of [petitioner].” Petitioner also represented that the BIA stated they would not consider any requests for a stay while this court retained jurisdiction over this matter.

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632 F. Supp. 932, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lopez-alegria-v-ilchert-cand-1986.