Nunoo v. BAUSMAN

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 22, 2022
Docket2:21-cv-02169
StatusUnknown

This text of Nunoo v. BAUSMAN (Nunoo v. BAUSMAN) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nunoo v. BAUSMAN, (E.D. Pa. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

GEORGE NUNOO : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 21-2169 : KATHLEEN BAUSMAN, et al. :

MEMORANDUM with Findings of Fact & Conclusions of Law KEARNEY, J. February 22, 2022 Ghana native George Nunoo met citizen Dawn Nunoo in 1999 when he toured New York with other Ghana dancers. The two married in 2000. Mr. Nunoo promptly sought lawful permanent resident status based on marrying a United States citizen. The United States Immigration and Naturalization Services denied him lawful permanent resident status in 2001 finding he offered no basis to support a finding of a bona fide marriage to citizen Dawn Nunoo. Mr. Nunoo tried again two years later. He attached tax document and affidavits and again swore to a bona fide marriage with Dawn Nunoo but concealed his relationship with another woman, Patience Lamptey, with whom he had a child weeks earlier. In a November 2005 interview with Immigration and Naturalization Services concerning his 2003 petition, Mr. Nunoo again failed to disclose the birth of his child in 2003 and a second child with Ms. Lamptey born in September 2005. The United States granted him lawful permanent resident status in December 2005 based on a bona fide marriage to Dawn Nunoo without knowing of his two children with Ms. Lamptey. He then twice petitioned for naturalization in 2013 and 2016. The United States denied his naturalization application in 2017 finding he did not disclose his two children with Ms. Lamptey when it granted him lawful permanent resident status. He now petitions for our review of the denial of his 2016 naturalization petition. We conducted a bench trial two months ago where we admitted exhibits and evaluated witness credibility. We find Mr. Nunoo willfully misrepresented material facts intending to obtain an immigration benefit in 2005. This material misrepresentation renders him ineligible to naturalize. We deny Mr. Nunoo’s petition for review consistent with our findings of fact and conclusions of law. I. Findings of Fact

1. George Nunoo immigrated to the United States from Ghana in 1997.1 2. Mr. Nunoo, a professional dancer, immigrated to the United States with a P-3 visa, designating him as an entertainer or performer.2 3. Mr. Nunoo met United States citizen Dawn Nunoo (née Powell) after a dancing performance in 1999.3 4. Mr. Nunoo married Dawn Nunoo in 2000.4 5. Dawn Nunoo was twenty-seven years older than Mr. Nunoo when they married.5

The United States denies Mr. Nunoo’s first application for lawful permanent resident status in 2001. 6. Dawn Nunoo petitioned for alien relative status in 2001 (an “I-130” petition) for the United States Immigration and Naturalization Services (“Services”) to recognize Mr. Nunoo as her spouse.6 7. Mr. Nunoo then applied to adjust his status to lawful permanent resident (an “I- 485” petition) in 2001 based on Dawn Nunoo’s I-130 petition.7

8. Services denied the petitions in 2001. Services found Mr. Nunoo and Dawn Nunoo offered no documents or basis to show they shared a “bona fide marital relationship.”8 9. Mr. Nunoo understood why Services denied the petitions.9 10. Mr. Nunoo had a son with Patience Lamptey in August 2003.10 Mr. Nunoo again applies for lawful permanent resident status in 2003. 11. The Nunoos waited until after the birth of Mr. Nunoo’s child with Ms. Lamptey to try again to petition for lawful permanent resident status. 12. Mr. Nunoo filed a second I-485 petition and Dawn Nunoo filed a second I-130 petition on or after September 30, 2003 through Mr. Nunoo’s counsel Jill Nagy.11

13. Unlike his 2001 petition, Mr. Nunoo submitted joint tax returns, joint bank accounts, evidence of cohabitation, and affidavits of third parties attesting to their marriage’s legitimacy.12 14. Services required Mr. Nunoo to “[l]ist your present husband/wife, all your sons and daughters (if you have none, write ‘none.’)” on the I-485 petition.13 15. Mr. Nunoo did not list his child with Ms. Lamptey in the section of the I-485 petition requiring him to disclose his children.14 16. Mr. Nunoo certified his answers to the I-485 petition as true under penalty of perjury.15 17. Mr. Nunoo signed, but did not date, his I-485 petition.16

18. Attorney Nagy signed and dated Mr. Nunoo’s I-485 petition on September 30, 2003.17 19. Dawn Nunoo signed and dated the I-130 petition submitted in connection with Mr. Nunoo’s I-485 petition on September 30, 2003, the same date Attorney Nagy signed the I-485 petition.18 Mr. Nunoo denies children during a 2005 interview for lawful permanent resident status. 20. Services Officer Gwynne Dinolfo interviewed Mr. Nunoo and Dawn Nunoo together on November 22, 2005 in connection with their September 30, 2003 application for Mr. Nunoo’s lawful permanent resident status.19 21. Mr. Nunoo and Ms. Lamptey had a second child together on September 19, 2005.20 22. Officer Dinolfo does not have specific recall of her November 22, 2005 interview of the Nunoos.21 23. Officer Dinolfo interviewed applicants on behalf of the Services for nine years by the time she interviewed the Nunoos.22 24. Officer Dinolfo followed her standard practice of notating the applications during

interviews.23 Officer Dinolfo notated the answers in red pen to the questions she asked applicants.24 25. Officer Dinolfo followed a standard practice of asking applicants seeking lawful permanent resident status: “Do you have any children?”25 26. Officer Dinolfo followed her standard practices during her interview of the Nunoos.26 27. Officer Dinolfo asked Mr. Nunoo and Dawn Nunoo “if they had any children?”27 28. Officer Dinolfo also asked Mr. Nunoo directly if he had children.28 29. Mr. Nunoo told Officer Dinolfo he did not have children despite having two children with Ms. Lamptey.29

30. Officer Dinolfo wrote “No children” in red ink on the I-485 petition in the section where Mr. Nunoo should have disclosed his child.30 31. Officer Dinolfo sought to discover whether Mr. Nunoo had children regardless of the children’s mother because—as Services’s question on the I-485 petition suggests—Officer Dinolfo needed to learn about “all” the applicant’s “sons and daughters,” including stepchildren and adopted children.31 32. Services approved Mr. Nunoo’s September 2003 I-485 petition on December 14, 2005, allowing him to become a lawful permanent resident of the United States. 32

Mr. Nunoo’s denials in November 2005 prevented Officer Dinolfo from investigating further. 33. Had Mr. Nunoo told Officer Dinolfo he had two children, Officer Dinolfo would have “investigated it further” by asking the children’s age, name, birth certificates, and mother.33 34. Officer Dinolfo would have investigated further because an applicant having children with someone besides their spouse “could be a fraud indicator” when a petitioner seeks lawful permanent resident status based on marriage.34 35. Children outside of a marriage could show the petitioner’s “marriage may not have been bona fide.”35

The Nunoos divorce while Mr. Nunoo and Ms. Lamptey have more children. 36. The Nunoos separated in 2005 after their interview with Officer Dinolfo.36 Dawn Nunoo had become ill and told Mr. Nunoo he should “find someplace to move.”37 37. Mr. Nunoo moved in with Ms. Lamptey (the mother of his two children) in 2007.38 38. Mr. Nunoo and Ms. Lamptey had five children together by late 2012. 39 39. Mr. Nunoo and Dawn Nunoo divorced in October 2012.40

40. Mr. Nunoo married Ms. Lamptey in December 2012.41 41. Dawn Nunoo passed away in 2019.42 Services denies Mr. Nunoo’s naturalization applications. 42. Mr. Nunoo first applied for naturalization (an “N-400” application) in 2013.43 43. Services denied Mr. Nunoo’s first N-400 application in 2016.44 44. Mr. Nunoo filed a second N-400 application to naturalize in March 2016.45 45. Mr.

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