SEAN B. v. MCALEENAN

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 3, 2019
Docket2:19-cv-10529
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
SEAN B. v. MCALEENAN, (D.N.J. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY

SEAN B., : Petitioner, : Civ. No, 19-10529 (KM) ene MCALEENAN et al., OPINION Respondents.

KEVIN MCNULTY, U.S.D.J.: I. INTRODUCTION Petitioner, Sean B.,! is an immigration detainee, held at the Hudson County Corrections Facility, in Kearny, New Jersey. He is proceeding by way of counsel with a petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2241. The government has answered the habeas petition, arguing that it must be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. This Court’s jurisprudence has been guided by the principle that the courts must be afforded the opportunity to adjudicate litigants’ rights in an orderly manner, and that the parties cannot, by unilateral action, interfere with that essential function of the courts. To vindicate that principle, I have in the past construed liberally the court’s power to enter a limited stay in an immigration case, even where, in the end, I ruled in favor of the opponent of the stay. See, e.g., Ragbir v. United States, No. 17-1256, 2018 WL 1446407 (D.N.J. Mar. 23, 2018) (ICE case, granting petitioner’s application for stay but ultimately ruling in government’s favor). Here that concern has particular poignance, because it has a particular constitutional dimension. The very reason that the immigration authorities may act without court intervention—

1 Consistent with guidance regarding privacy concerns in social security and immigration cases by the Committee on Court Administration and Case Management of the Judicial Conference of the United States, Petitioner is identified herein only by his first name and last initial.

i.e., the reason that the court may permissibly be stripped of habeas jurisdiction—is the existence of an alternative remedy, namely a process of administrative review culminating in review by the Court of Appeals. Here, however, the immigration authorities have acted in such a manner (I do not say with the intention) that the effectiveness of Court of Appeals review is compromised. Under the peculiar circumstances of this case, the Suspension Clause of the U.S. Constitution requires that this Court retain a minimal level of residual habeas jurisdiction. For clarity, and to assist in review, I offer a schematic view of the logic that leads me to that result: 1. A petitioner seeking to reopen removal proceedings will seek such relief from an immigration judge (IJ) and can administratively appeal an adverse result to the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA).? 2. While the matter is pending in the agency, the petitioner may seek a stay of removal from the IJ or the BIA. If such an administrative stay is denied, a petitioner may be removed from the country before his petition is adjudicated by the agency. That result, while sometimes harsh, is ordinarily permissible; the Supreme Court has held that the petitioner may be required to pursue his application from abroad, subject to repatriation should the application ultimately be granted.3 3. If a petitioner files an appeal from a final decision of the BIA, jurisdiction lodges in the relevant U.S. Court of Appeals. It is only at that point that the Court of Appeals is empowered to enter its own stay of removal pending appeal.4 As noted in paragraph 2, however, a

2 In this petitioner’s case, those administrative proceedings are occurring in New York. He is, however, confined in New Jersey, so this habeas proceeding is venued here. 3 While this may have occurred, I have not been directed to any example. 4 Again, because administrative proceedings are ongoing in New York, any such appeal would go to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second, not the Third, Circuit. Once an appeal is filed, stays pending appeal are fairly common. Both sides assume that the Court of Appeals would lack jurisdiction to issue a stay in connection with

petitioner denied an administrative stay may already have been deported. 4. The Real ID Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1252(g), strips the U.S. courts of habeas (or any other) jurisdiction to interfere with the agency’s execution ofa removal order. 50 while immigration proceedings are pending, the statute bars a district court from granting a stay of removal. 5. The jurisdiction-stripping effect of § 1252(g) is subject to one Constitutional limitation, however. It may not rise to the level of a suspension of the writ of habeas corpus. U.S. Const., art. I, § 9, cl.2. 6. An impermissible suspension of habeas corpus will not be found so long as there is an adequate alternative remedy available. Cases upholding the review scheme summarized above as adequate have relied on the ultimate availability of review in the Court of Appeals. In the vast majority of cases, the § 1252(g) removal of habeas jurisdiction has been found constitutionally valid. 7. Under limited circumstances, however, cases have held that the available alternatives to district court habeas review are not adequate (or not available at all). Under such circumstances, the district court has been found to retain limited habeas jurisdiction, as a constitutional necessity. 8. 1 find that this is such a case. Petitioner’s order of removal was entered in 2009, but he then pled guilty to drug-trafficking charges and became a cooperating witness in the criminal prosecution ofa prominent Jamaican drug kingpin. In 2013, the government released him and withheld execution of the order of removal. In January 2019, however, he was placed in custody by ICE for the purpose of executing the 10-year-old order of removal to Jamaica.

pending administrative proceedings, whether by mandamus or otherwise. See nn. 6 & 7, and cases cited.

9, Petitioner’s primary motivation for reopening removal proceedings is that, since his order of removal, his cooperation has exposed him toa realistic threat of being killed if he is returned to Jamaica. The person against whom he testified wielded great influence there.5 Since Petitioner’s testimony, his sister’s house was burned down, the house of his children’s mother was bombed, six of his cousins have been murdered, and his father was forced to flee the country. He claims that during his recent enforced sojourn in Jamaica, before the court ordered his return, his safety was threatened. The government does not factually rebut these allegations, which I therefore take at face value for present purposes. 10. The IJ denied Petitioner’s application to reopen removal proceedings. His appeal to the BIA is still pending. Both the IJ and BIA denied motions to stay. There is no final order, so the Court of Appeals does not yet have jurisdiction. Absent a court order, then, Petitioner may be removed, even though his matter remains pending. In short, he is to be removed to a country where he says he is likely to be killed while the propriety of removing him to such a place is being decided. 11. Under these unusual circumstances, the “adequate alternative” to habeas relief—review by the BIA and appeal to the Court of Appeals— is not an effective alternative, unless supplemented by a stay of removal. To deny habeas relief under such circumstances would amount to a suspension of the writ. I find, therefore, that I have limited jurisdiction to enter a stay.

5 As background, | take notice that Mr. Coke was the head of an extremely violent drug gang active in Jamaica, the United States, and elsewhere. Efforts to extradite him sparked what amounted to an armed insurrection that cost 70 lives. A sample of news coverage of his conviction and sentence may be found at https: / /www.nytimes.com/topic/person/christopher-coke. The Immigration Judge opined that the threat was stale, but the criminal organization involved, the Jamaican Shower Posse, apparenily remains active.

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SEAN B. v. MCALEENAN, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sean-b-v-mcaleenan-njd-2019.