Rivera v. Ashcroft

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 2005
Docket03-35548
StatusPublished

This text of Rivera v. Ashcroft (Rivera v. Ashcroft) 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
Rivera v. Ashcroft, (9th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

SALVADOR RIVERA,  No. 03-35548 Plaintiff-Appellant, D.C. No. v. JOHN ASHCROFT, Attorney General;  CV-03-00634-TSZ ORDER AND IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION AMENDED SERVICE, OPINION Defendants-Appellees.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington Thomas S. Zilly, District Judge, Presiding

Submitted June 7, 2004* Seattle, Washington

Filed October 18, 2004 Amended January 7, 2005

Before: Harry Pregerson, Warren J. Ferguson, and Consuelo M. Callahan, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Ferguson; Dissent by Judge Callahan

*This panel unanimously finds this case suitable for decision without oral argument. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(a)(2).

181 184 RIVERA v. ASHCROFT

COUNSEL

Cheryl M. Nance, Bell, Flegenheimer & Nance, Seattle, Washington; Karen L. Gilbert, for the plaintiff-appellant.

Kirsten M. Schimpff, United States Attorney’s Office, Seattle, Washington, for the defendants-appellees.

ORDER

The opinion filed October 18, 2004, 387 F.3d 835 (9th Cir. 2004), is hereby amended. The amended opinion is filed con- currently with this order.

OPINION

FERGUSON, Circuit Judge:

Salvador Rivera, a.k.a. Salvador Galvan-Gaspar, (hereinaf- ter “Rivera”) appeals the District Court’s denial of his 28 RIVERA v. ASHCROFT 185 U.S.C. § 2241 petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Rivera alleges that he is a United States citizen who was wrongly removed to Mexico, that his Due Process rights were violated during removal proceedings before Immigration Judge Anna Ho, and that he is entitled to a declaration by the District Court that he is a United States citizen. We find that the Dis- trict Court has jurisdiction to hear Rivera’s citizenship claim and remand for further proceedings.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND1

Salvador Rivera was born at University North Hospital in Portland, Oregon, on January 20, 1979, to Logino Rivera and Eloisa Gaspar (now Eloisa Galvan). Approximately one month after Rivera’s birth, Eloisa obtained a certified copy of her son’s birth certificate. When Rivera was approximately three months old, Eloisa and Logino were having “personal problems,” so Eloisa took Rivera with her to Mexico. Eloisa and Rivera returned to the United States with Eloisa’s new husband in November 1989 when Rivera was nearly eleven years old. A few years later, Eloisa left Rivera in the United States with her brother and returned to Mexico. She left Rive- ra’s personal documents, including those relating to his birth, with him in the United States.

INS documents indicate that on November 26, 1991, one Jorge Amaro-Gallardo and his mother, Maria De Jesus, were apprehended in a vehicle in El Centro, California. When ques- tioned about his immigration status, Jorge gave INS agents a birth certificate that was not his own. The birth certificate instead belonged to Salvador Rivera, born to Eloisa Gaspar and Logino Rivera on January 20, 1979, at University Hospi- tal North in Portland, Oregon. The birth certificate had been issued on February 23, 1979. Jorge Amaro-Gallardo told INS officials that the birth certificate had been “loaned” to him by 1 What follows is the story to which Rivera and his mother testified before the Immigration Judge, unless otherwise noted. 186 RIVERA v. ASHCROFT an “Arturo Galvan-Aguirre.” Following this incident, the INS kept the birth certificate on file. When shown the birth certifi- cate, Eloisa testified that it was the birth certificate that she had obtained shortly after her son’s birth and had left with Rivera when she left him with her brother and went to Mex- ico. She did not know why another person might have had the birth certificate. Rivera also did not know.

By the time Rivera was eighteen years old, a number of warrants existed for his arrest, so he decided to develop an alias. On a visit to his grandmother in Mexico that year, Rivera paid an unknown individual for a Mexican birth certif- icate. Rivera used the Mexican birth certificate to apply for a Washington driver’s license and state ID card under the name “Salvador Galvan-Gaspar.”

On January 15, 1998, Rivera was arrested by a Border Patrol agent. Rivera believed that, due to his outstanding war- rants, he would face jail or imprisonment if he gave the agent his real name. Instead, he presented himself as a Mexican citi- zen and underwent voluntary deportation, and then returned to the United States via Mexicali. Over a year and a half later, a Border Patrol agent interviewed Rivera at Skagit County jail in Washington. Salvador told the agent that he had previously been deported under the name Salvador Galvan-Gaspar, but that he was actually a U.S. citizen.

On December 12, 2000, Rivera was arrested by Border Patrol agents when he appeared for a parole hearing with the Washington State Department of Corrections. Rivera told the agents that he was a U.S. citizen, and that he had purchased a birth certificate in Mexico in the name of “Salvador Galvan- Gaspar.” Rivera initially agreed to give a sworn statement to the agents as to his identity, but then refused after reading the list of questions that he was to answer. That same day, the INS issued a “Notice to Appear” alleging that Rivera was not a U.S. citizen. RIVERA v. ASHCROFT 187 PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A. Immigration Court

On January 2, 2001, Rivera appeared before Immigration Judge Anna Ho. The Immigration Judge (IJ) informed Rivera that he had the right to an attorney, and asked if he needed time to find one. Rivera responded that, in 1998, he “had a lawyer, and we already fixed this matter about me being a U.S.A. citizen.” When the IJ asked Rivera whether he needed time to contact his attorney, Rivera responded, “the thing that I don’t understand is why I am here if we already—,” at which point the IJ cut him off. Rivera presented a birth certifi- cate indicating that he was born in Oregon on January 20, 1979, to the IJ. She informed the government lawyer that “this is obviously a true birth certificate of the respondent,” and continued the case to allow the INS time to verify Rivera’s identity. The INS lawyer said that the INS would “resolve whether we think he’s a citizen” before the case resumed.

The INS, however, did not resolve its position. When the parties reappeared before IJ Ho six days later, the INS lawyer told the IJ, “I don’t know whether or not that birth certificate relates to him or not. I think it’s a question of fact for the Court.” The INS lawyer further stated that if Rivera “is a citi- zen, he is, of course, not removable from the United States. But he has created this situation by assuming a false identity as an illegal alien and taking a removal order or voluntary departure once before.” The IJ then told Rivera that his case would be set over to January 30, 2001, and that he “may have your family come in and testify and bring in all the proof to state that you are a U.S. citizen.” The IJ also told Rivera, “You need to bring in people that knew you were born and knew your name.”

At the January 30 hearing, the government’s position was that Rivera had agreed to “removal to Mexico under one name and now asserts to be a citizen and produces a birth certificate 188 RIVERA v. ASHCROFT which may or may not be his, may or may not relate to him. But we do know that there was another instance that some person . . . has used it also.” The INS presented testimony from two Border Control agents, who said that Rivera told them that he had undergone voluntary removal to Mexico before but that he was actually a U.S. citizen.

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