M/V SARU MERU

20 I. & N. Dec. 592
CourtBoard of Immigration Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1992
DocketID 3190
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 20 I. & N. Dec. 592 (M/V SARU MERU) 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
M/V SARU MERU, 20 I. & N. Dec. 592 (bia 1992).

Opinion

Interim Decision #3190

MATTER OF M/V SARU MERU In Fine Proceedings NOL 900002

Decided by Board October 19, 1992

(1) Fine liability under section 273(d) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1323(d) ( 1988), is absolute for bringing a stowaway to the United States and failing to detain him until he has been inspected by an immigration officer, even when the carrier did not know about the stowaway until after he was apprehended ashore. (2)There is no provision for mitigation of fines imposed under section 273(d) of the Act. (3) The Immigration and Naturalization Service can refrain from instituting fine proceedings, but that is a matter of prosecutorial discretion over which the Board of Immigration Appeals has no jurisdiction. (4) The Service's Operations Instructions are not binding on the Board, but the Board can adopt the policies that are manifested in the Operations Instructions, which it has done with respect to Operations Instructions 273.1 requiring the Service to secure affidavits to support the record for fine proceedings under section 273(d) of the Act. (5) In cases where there is doubt about whether a carrier has brought stowaways to the United States and permitted them to land illegally, the Service has the burden of proof to establish those facts with persuasive evidence. BASIS FOR FINE: Act of 1952—Sec. 273(d) U.S.C. § 1323(d)]—Failed to detain alien stowaways ON BEHALF OF CARRIER: ON BEHALF OF SERVICE: Derek A. Walker, Esquire David M. Dixon Chaffe, McCall, Phillips, Toler & Sarpy Appellate Counsel 2300 Energy Centre 1100 Poydras Street New Orleans, Louisiana 70163-2300

BY: Milhollan, Chairman; Dunne, Morris, Vacca, and Heilman, Board Members

In a decision dated February 12, 1990, the National Fines Office Director imposed administrative fines totalling $3,000 on the carrier for three -violations of section 273(d) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1323(d) (1988), and denied a request from the carrier for mitigation of the fine amounts. The carrier has appealed. The appeal will be sustained. On September 27, 1989, the carrier arrived at the port of New Orleans, Louisiana, after a voyage from Puerto Cabello, Venezuela. 592 Interim Decision #3190

The carrier's crew was inspected by an immigration officer on the morning of the ship's arrival. The shipmaster told the immigration officer that there were no stowaways on the ship. Later that morning, after the immigration officer had left the carrier's ship, the master discovered the presence of a stowaway on the ship_ The master contacted the United States Border Patrol to report that a stowaway had been found on the ship. By the time the Border Patrol agent had reached the ship, five more stowaways had been discovered. The stowaways said that they had not received assistance from crewmen on the ship. On September 29, 1989, 2 days later, the shipmaster contacted the Border Patrol again to report that some crewmen might have been involved in the stowaway incident and that apparently there were three more stowaways who had not been found. Consequently, the Border Patrol agent who had conducted the stowaway investigation returned to the ship to investigate further. He interviewed the crewmen who were thought to have been involved in the incident. They admitted that they had been paid by the stowaways to assist them in boarding the ship and to provide for their needs during the voyage. Their statements indicated further that three additional stowaways had been on the ship. They explained that these stowaways left the ship when it waived at the port, and the other six stowaways wanted to wait for some reason before leaving the ship.' On September 27, 1989, a Notice of Intention to Fine under Immigration and Nationality Act (Form 1-79) was issued in which it is alleged that the carrier failed to detain the three unidentified alien stowaways as required by section 273 of the Act, and, therefore, that fines totalling $3,000 would be imposed for three violations of that section of the Act. The carrier responded to the Notice of Intention to Fine in a letter dated January 4, 1990, in which the carrier argues that fines should not be imposed in the circumstances of this case. The carrier also submitted a letter from the Border Patrol agent who conducted the investigations. The letter includes the following statement: Suffice it to say that the Master and crew of the vessel as well as the shipping agent, Ernesto Lugo of West Indies Agencies Inc. assisted and cooperated to the greatest degree possible with the United States Border Patrol in the investigation of the incident. Their cooperation and high degree of honesty resulted in the discovery that 3 of the stowaways had escaped the vessel as well as the discovery that organized smuggling had taken place involving a small portion of the crew. It is a fact that without their assistance the investigation of the incident would have been severely

This information was taken from reports in the file from the fines officer who investigated the incident and from the Border Patrol agent referred to above.

593 Interim Decision #3190

handicapped. This level of cooperation from a shipping agent had been virtually unknown to the Border Patrol in New Orleans in this type of case. In his decision, the National Fines Office Director rejects the carrier's arguments, imposes fines totalling $3,000 for three violations of section 273(d) of the Act, and rejects a request that the carrier had made for mitigation of the fine amounts. The carrier has appealed this decision. On appeal, the carrier contends that there is insufficient proof in the record to establish that three additional stowaways were on the carrier's ship, or alternatively, if there were additional stowaways, the record does not establish when or where they left the ship. The carrier emphasizes in this regard that it only reported the possibility of additional stowaways. The carrier had no knowledge of additional stowaways being on its ship. The existence of the alleged stowaways is supported entirely by hearsay reports of unworn oral statements taken from the detained stowaways and the crewmen who had assisted the stowaways. The carrier notes in this regard that the Immigration and Naturalization Service was required by its Operations Instructions to take affidavits or sworn statements as support for the imposition of fines under section 273(d) of the Act. According to the carrier, it is inconsistent with the statute's intent and purpose to impose penalties for failing to detain stowaways in cases such as this one in which the carrier did not know that there were stowaways on its ship. The carrier argues that knowledge is a presupposition to liability for failing to detain stowaways. The carrier also contends that it was error for the National Fines Office Director to infer that there is no authority to rescind fines simply because such authority is not specified in the statute. The carrier notes that relief from fines in the form of remission can be granted for bringing undocumented aliens to the United States in violation of section 273(a) of the Act. The carrier argues that there is less culpability in the case where a carrier brings a stowaway without knowing of the presence of the stowaway than in the situations involving the bringing of aliens 'without proper documents. The carrier asserts that there is no basis for believing that Congress would treat one who passively acts in ignorance more harshly than one acting intentionally or in clear disregard of the law.

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Bluebook (online)
20 I. & N. Dec. 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mv-saru-meru-bia-1992.