Terezov, Borislav B. v. Gonzales, Alberto R.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 15, 2007
Docket06-2101
StatusPublished

This text of Terezov, Borislav B. v. Gonzales, Alberto R. (Terezov, Borislav B. v. Gonzales, Alberto R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Terezov, Borislav B. v. Gonzales, Alberto R., (7th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 06-2101 BORISLAV B. TEREZOV Petitioner, v.

ALBERTO R. GONZALES, Respondent. ____________ Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals. A97 355 235. ____________ ARGUED JANUARY 24, 2007—DECIDED MARCH 15, 2007 ____________

Before RIPPLE, ROVNER, and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges. PER CURIAM. Borislav Terezov, a national of Bulgaria, was ordered removed in absentia when he failed to ap- pear at his removal hearing. He moved to reopen the proceedings because, he claims, he never received the hearing notice, which was sent to an address at which he no longer lived. The Immigration Judge (“IJ”) and the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) found that the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) had mailed the notice to the last address provided by Terezov. Terezov has filed a petition for review, which we grant. There are significant, unexplained gaps in the administrative rec- ord compiled by the Executive Office for Immigration Review, and given the state of the record, we are com- 2 No. 06-2101

pelled to conclude that the decision of the IJ, as supple- mented by the opinion of the BIA, is not supported by substantial evidence.

I. In September 2003, just two months after he entered the United States without inspection through Piedras Negras, Mexico, Terezov applied for asylum. He claimed that he endured multiple interrogations and beatings at the hands of the police in Bulgaria due primarily to his Rom ethnicity and his political support for the Roma minority in Bulgaria. On his asylum application Terezov gave his address as 1313 West Taylor in Phoenix, Arizona. In October 2003, the United States Citizenship and Immi- gration Services (“USCIS”), the successor to the Immigra- tion and Naturalization Service, wrote Terezov from its Los Angeles Asylum Office (which is actually located in Anaheim, California), requesting additional proof that he resided within its jurisdiction, which includes Phoenix. Terezov’s reply is not in the administrative record. As far as that record shows, Terezov’s next written communication with the Los Angeles Asylum Office was a letter advising that he had moved to a new address in Carmel, Indiana. That handwritten letter, which bears at the top a stamped date of January 23, 2004, conveys the new address but nothing more. Terezov did not ask that his file be transferred to the Chicago Asylum Office or to any other office, and nothing in the administrative record discloses what, if anything, the Los Angeles Asylum Office did in response. What the record does show is that in June 2004 the USCIS received from Terezov an ap- plication for employment authorization at the agency’s California Service Center in Laguna Niguel. In this application, which Terezov based on his pending asylum application, he listed a new Phoenix address: 12825 North No. 06-2101 3

42nd Street, Apartment 1047. The USCIS corresponded with Terezov at this new address regarding the applica- tion for employment authorization, and when the agency denied that application in July 2004, it sent the written decision to Terezov at the new address. That document states explicitly that Terezov’s asylum application was “currently at the Asylum Office in Los Angeles” and directed him to contact that office if he had “any questions about [his] application.” What happened in the following months is impossible to glean from the sparse administrative record. It appears that at some point Terezov’s file was transferred to the Chicago Asylum Office, though when this occurred is unclear. All that we are able to piece together is that an asylum interview was scheduled, but Terezov did not attend. There is no documentation in the record showing how, or even if, Terezov was told about this asylum interview, nor does the record disclose when this inter- view was ordered or when precisely it was to take place. All the administrative record discloses is that on February 15, 2005, an asylum officer based in Chicago referred the matter to the immigration court in Chicago due to Terezov’s absence from the asylum interview. That same date the Chicago Asylum Office mailed a Notice to Ap- pear directing Terezov to attend a removal hearing before an IJ in April 2005. The Notice to Appear was sent by regular mail to the Indiana address given by Terezov a year earlier, but there is no evidence in the record that he actually received it. Terezov did not appear, and the IJ immediately ordered him removed in absentia. The immigration court also sent the order of removal to the Indiana address, but it was returned with the notation: “not deliverable as addressed, unable to forward.” One month later Terezov filed pro se a motion to reopen the removal proceedings. He did not say how he learned about the in absentia order of removal, but he expressed 4 No. 06-2101

surprise that it had issued. Terezov explained that he was living in Indiana looking for work from November 2003 until late February 2004, but was not living there when the Notice to Appear was mailed in February 2005. He denied ever receiving that notice. Terezov added that he submitted his asylum application to the “California District Office,” and had never tried to transfer it else- where. He also insisted that he notified the Los Angeles Asylum Office after he moved back from Indiana to Phoenix, where he lived first at 12825 North 42nd Street, Apartment 1047 and later at 4704 East Paradise Village Parkway North, Apartment 139. Terezov attached to his motion copies of two certified-mail return receipts that he characterized as “confirmation from the Postal services for on time filing Change of Address Form.” Both return receipts were stamped “received” by the Los Angeles Asylum Office, the first in April 2004 and the second in August 2004, and both were returned to Terezov at his apartment on North 42nd Street. Terezov also submitted copies of the USCIS communications he received at this Phoenix address regarding his application for employment authorization, including the adverse deci- sion in July 2004 that told Terezov his asylum application was then located at the Los Angeles Asylum Office. In opposing the motion to reopen, the government sim- ply represented to the IJ that its review of the admin- istrative file showed that Terezov “sent only one change of address to the Department [of Homeland Security].” The government explained that it failed to locate any “change of address notices or letter from the respondent in the administrative file” except for the handwritten change of address that “is date stamped January 23, 2004.” Arguing that the Notice to Appear had been properly sent to the last address provided by Terezov, the govern- ment contended that Terezov failed to meet his burden for reopening. The IJ agreed, reasoning that “there is No. 06-2101 5

nothing in the record to reflect that he ever provided no- tice to the Asylum Office of his return to Phoenix.” The IJ further remarked that there was no indication in the record that the Notice to Appear was returned as undeliv- erable, and concluded that Terezov had failed to pro- vide “credible evidence,” such as “affidavits or other evidentiary material,” to prove he never received it. Terezov then retained counsel and appealed the IJ’s decision to the BIA. In that appeal, counsel acknowl- edged that Terezov had changed his address to Carmel, Indiana, in January 2004 while he was in the Chicago area seeking employment, but reiterated Terezov’s prior representation the he notified the Los Angeles Asylum Office in April 2004 about his return to Phoenix. Counsel argued that “DHS and the Asylum Office were on Notice since April 2004 of Borislav Terezov’s new/correct ad- dress,” ten months before the Notice to Appear was mailed to the outdated Indiana address.

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