Lydia Mason v. Michael Mukasey

306 F. App'x 897
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 7, 2009
Docket07-4431
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 306 F. App'x 897 (Lydia Mason v. Michael Mukasey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lydia Mason v. Michael Mukasey, 306 F. App'x 897 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

BOGGS, Chief Judge.

Petitioner Lydia Mason, a citizen of Liberia, filed a motion to reopen her case before an Immigration Judge (“IJ”) to seek an adjustment of status on the basis of her marriage to a United States citizen. The motion was denied as untimely. Mason’s motion to reconsider the denial of the motion to reopen was likewise denied by the IJ and affirmed by the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) without a separate opinion. Mason now appeals from the BIA’s decision. Mason conceded that her motion to reopen, filed nearly eight years after a final order of removal was issued against her, was untimely. She now argues that the IJ and the BIA abused their discretion by refusing to use their discretionary authority to waive the applicable 90-day filing deadline on “humanitarian grounds.” Mason submits that in the event of her removal, no one would be available to care for her United States citizen husband, who is diagnosed with cancer, and their two United States citizen children, ages eight and four. Because we are without power to review the BIA’s decision not to exercise its discretionary power, we dismiss the petition.

I

Lydia Mason, a citizen of Liberia, was admitted to the United States on December 7, 1996 as a non-immigrant visitor, authorized to remain no later than June 6, 1997. Mason filed an application for asylum, withholding of removal and protection under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”) on May 26, 1998. Her application recounted the following: both of her parents were assassinated as a result of their tribal ethnicity (Krahn) and them affiliation with the government of former president Samuel K. Doe; she was arrested, raped, and held captive for about six months by Charles Taylor’s National Patriotic Front of Liberia (“NPFL”). She then fled, was arrested again by the NPFL, and eventually escaped to Guinea; her brother was also arrested and executed by Taylor’s soldiers. On September 25, 1998, Mason’s *898 application was denied, apparently because it was not filed within one year of entry. 1 The IJ also denied Mason’s application for voluntary departure and ordered her removed to Liberia. On the date the order of removal was entered, Mason was engaged to be married to Humphrey Wood-son (“Woodson”), then a legal permanent resident, and was six months pregnant with his child.

Mason’s appeal from the removal order was filed one day late by her attorney,, resulting in the BIA’s dismissal of the-appeal as untimely on December 11, 1998. 2 The BIA’s dismissal transformed the September 25, 1998 decision into a final order of removal. In a signed and sworn affidavit, Mason states that she was not aware of the dismissal of her appeal. She explained that she moved to Texas and lost touch with her attorney, who relocated his office, and whom she was unable to locate. Mason communicated her relocation to the erstwhile INS and her attorney, but never received any communications from either regarding the status of her appeal. Because she was not aware of the BIA’s action, Mason did not appeal the BIA’s decision.

In August 2001, Mason married Wood-son, who became a United States citizen in January 2001. 3 The couple has two children, now ages eight and four, both of whom are United States citizens. In the eight years that intervened between the final removal order and her motion to reopen, Mason has obtained and renewed an Employment Authorization Document (Form 1-765) from the INS and later from the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) several times in Texas. Mason also states that the INS requested that she have her biometrics taken in Texas in 2001. Every contact with the relevant immigration authorities prior to April 2006 gave Mason the impression that “all was well.” At some point prior to April 2006, Mason sought to adjust her status to that of a legal permanent resident on the basis of her marriage to a United States citizen. Accordingly, Mason’s husband filed an alien relative visa petition on her behalf. Mason states that she learned about her final order of removal only when she was arrested during an adjustment of status *899 interview in Dallas, Texas on April 6, 2006. 4 On June 27, 2006, Mason filed a motion to reopen her case for consideration of adjustment of her status to that of a lawful permanent resident on the basis of her marriage, attaching the following: a copy of a notice that an alien relative petition (Form 1-130) was received by DHS on April 14, 2006; a copy of Mason’s and Woodson’s marriage certificate; a copy of Woodson’s Naturalization Certificate; birth certificates of Mason’s and Woodson’s children; police records attesting to Mason’s lack of a criminal record; a copy of Mason’s 1996 visa to enter the United States; a copy of an Employment Authorization card issued in March 2000; affidavits from both Mason and Woodson; and letters from Mason’s employers attesting to her great value as employee in support of Mason’s attempts to reopen her case.

On July 21, 2006, the IJ denied Mason’s petition to reopen as untimely. On October 13, 2006, Mason filed a supplement to the motion to reopen, attaching a notice from the DHS that an alien relative petition (Form 1-130) on her behalf was approved on September 14, 2006 and a copy of the DHS’s Order of Supervision. On October 18, 2006, the IJ reissued his July 21 order, which was originally mailed in error to the wrong attorney. Because the time for Mason to appeal that decision has expired, the IJ reconsidered the July 21 decision sua sponte and incorporated that decision into the October 18, 2006 order.

On November 11, 2006, Mason filed a “Motion to Reconsider on Humanitarian Grounds” before the IJ, requesting that the court waive the 90-day time limit for the motion to reopen based on humanitarian grounds. Mason stated that her United States citizen husband has been diagnosed with cancer, and there would be no one to care for her husband and United States citizen children should she be removed, inflicting hardship on the family. Mason has attached, in addition to documents previously submitted in support of her motion to re-open, a notice from the DHS that her employment authorization (Form 1-765) was approved on October 16, 2006 and documentation of Woodson’s medical condition (thyroid cancer).

On December 14, 2006, the IJ denied the motion to reconsider, reiterating that the September 25, 1998 order of removal was final, and that the 2006 motion to reopen was untimely. The IJ concluded that Mason did not allege any errors of fact or law in the IJ’s prior denial of the motion to reopen, thereby failing to raise a viable reason for a reconsideration. Insofar as Mason was asking for the IJ to exercise his sua sponte authority to reopen, the IJ declined to do so.

On January 12, 2007, Mason appealed to the BIA. On September 27, 2007, the BIA affirmed the IJ’s decision without a separate opinion. Mason now appeals the BIA’s decision affirming the denial of her motion to reconsider the prior denial of her motion to reopen.

II

When “the BIA affirm[s] the IJ’s decision without opinion, we review the IJ’s decision as the final agency decision.” Hassan v. Gonzales,

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