SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD BRIDGE

16 I. & N. Dec. 209
CourtBoard of Immigration Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1977
DocketID 2583
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 I. & N. Dec. 209 (SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD BRIDGE) 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
SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD BRIDGE, 16 I. & N. Dec. 209 (bia 1977).

Opinion

Interim Decision #2583

MATTER OF SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD BRIDGE

In Fine Proceedings

ELP 10/2.52

Decided by Board May 18, 1977

(1) This case involves fine proceedings instituted against the Southern Pacific Railroad under section 271(a) of the Immigration and Nationality Act for permitting the entry without inspection of five aliens into the United States via their railroad bridge near El Paso, Texas. (2)On April 12, 1973, the Service and Southern Pacific Railroad entered into an agreement under which the Southern Pacific would permit the Service, at its own expense, to install, maintain and operate a gate on the bridge for the purpose of enforcing the immigration laws. Both the Service and the railroad recognized that aliens were using the bridge to enter the United States illegally. Subsequently, the Service requested the railroad to install certain planking on the bridge to provide safer access to the gate by Service officers. The railroad refused repeated Service requests to install this planking for cost considerations and because they claimed it would be a fire hazard. After repeated requests, the Service advised that if the planking were not installed, fine proceedings would be instituted against the railroad under section 271(a) of the Act. (3) Southern Pacific is liable for the fines under section 271(a) of the Act because its railroad bridge is an international bridge which provided a means for, and which was used by, Mexican aliens to enter the United States without inspection by Immigration authorities. Lack of knowledge by Southern Pacific that the aliens had entered the United States does not shield the railroad from liability. Liability under section 271(a) of the Act is absolute. (4) Prior to these proceedings, no fine proceedings had been instituted against the Southern Pacific at El Paso. Since institution of these proceedings, the railroad has begun to guard the gate with its own personnel and improved the gate. Southern Pacific in El Paso has had a lone history of cooperation with the Service, is active in the apprehension of alien trespassers, and continues to cooperate with the Service. In view of Southern Pacific's past record of cooperation with the Service, and current efforts to carry out its responsibilities under section 271(a) of the Act, the fines imposed will be remitted. In re: SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD BRIDGE, a railroad bridge crossing the Rio Grande River between El Paso, Texas and Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico. Aliens involved: Mario Romero-Leon, Manuel Godines, Rogelio Amaya- Quintana, Jesus Duenez-Baiez and Ernesto Villegas-Quintana Basis for Fines: Act of 1952—Section 271(a) [8 U.S.C. 1321(a)]

209 Interim Decision #2583

ON BEHALF OF CARRIER: ON BEHALF OF SERVICE: Wyndham K. White, Esquire Mary Jo Grotenrath Kemp, Smith, White, Duncan and Appellate Trial Attorney Hammond E. M. Trominski P.O. Drawer 2800 Trial Attorney El Paso, Texas 79999 BY: Milhollan, Chairman; Wilson and Maniatis, Board Members.

In a decision' dated April 27, 1976, the District Director determined that the Southern Pacific Transportation Company (herein identified as Southern Pacific) had incurred liability to administrative penalties total- ing $5,000, $1,000 as to each of the aliens named above, for failure to prevent their unauthorized landing in the United States as provided in section 271(a) of the Immigration and Nationality Act. The District Director found factors present which merited mitigation of the fines in the amount of $200 for each violation or a total of $1,000. Thus, fines totaling $4,000 were imposed against Southern Pacific. The respondent has appealed. The appeal will be dismissed in part. and sustained in part and the fines remitted. The record contains a memorandum report (dated December 17, 1975) issued by the Acting Chief Border Patrol Agent of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, El Paso, Texas to the District Director of the Service located in El Paso. In that document it is reported that on December 16, 1975, five aliens entered the United States without in- spection via the Southern Pacific railroad bridge in El Paso. The location of the bridge was described as east of and near the Paso Del Norte Port of Entry in El Paso, Texas. It was also reported that the aliens were apprehended by agents of the border patrol; and that they made sworn statements following their arrest. The report indicates that in the sworn statements, the aliens admitted that they entered the United States without inspection; that they were not in possession of immigration documents when they entered; and that they were neither United States citizens nor lawful permanent resident aliens at the time of their entry. The aliens stated that no railroad guards or other employees were on or near the Southern Pacific railroad bridge when they crossed it. The Border Patrol report indicated that Southern Pacific or its employees did not inform the Service of the entry by the five aliens across its bridge and that the company did not assist the Border Patrol

n Southern Pacific and the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company (partial owner of another railroad bridge in El Paso, Texas) were separately fined under section 2711(a) of the Act in a consolidated decision of the District Director dated April 27. 1976. In vie--w of factual differences in each case and in the interest of orderly procedure, we shall treat these eases independently and issue separate orders.

210 Interim Decision #2583

in the apprehension of the aliens. The record also includes the sworn statements of the five aliens who were apprehended by the Border Patrol. A Notice of Intention to Fine under the Immigration and Nationality Act was issued by the District Director to Southern Pacific on January 2, 1976. In that notice, a summary of the aforementioned facts was alleged and the company was notified that the imposition of fines pur- suant to section 271(a) of the Act was indicated. Southern Pacific was given 30 days to file a written defense to the allegations contained in the notice. Southern Pacific responded to the notice in a letter to the District Director dated January 27, 1976. In that letter, it denied knowledge of or responsibility for the landing of the five aliens via the Southern Pacific railroad bridge on December 16, 1975.. Southern Pacific con- tended that section 271(a) of the Act is not applicable to it; and that the company's police force is employed only to protect railroad property and has no authority to apprehend aliens entering the United States unlaw- fully. Southern Pacific submitted that the responsibility for enforcing the immigration laws lies with the Service. The company alluded to an agreement between it and the Service, in which the Service agreed to construct, maintain and operate a gate on the bridge at no cost to Southern Pacific; and that the Service has the only key to the gate lock and that, therefore, it has exclusive control over opening and closing the gate. Southern Pacific farther stated that the imposition of fines against it was an act of coercion because Southern Pacific refused to comply with a Service request that it plank the bridge at the railroad company's expense. Southern Pacific requested termination of these proceedings; or, alternatively, requested mitigation or remission of the fines. A hearing was conducted before the District Director on March 2, 1976, in order to afford Southern Pacific an opportunity to present evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
16 I. & N. Dec. 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-pacific-railroad-bridge-bia-1977.