United States v. Buenaventura Castillo-Basa

483 F.3d 890, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 9291, 2007 WL 1192000
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 24, 2007
Docket05-50768
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 483 F.3d 890 (United States v. Buenaventura Castillo-Basa) 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
United States v. Buenaventura Castillo-Basa, 483 F.3d 890, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 9291, 2007 WL 1192000 (9th Cir. 2007).

Opinions

ORDER AMENDING OPINION AND AMENDED OPINION

REINHARDT, Circuit Judge.

ORDER

The opinion filed February 26, 2007, is hereby amended. The following sentence at 478 F.3d 1033 is deleted:

To prove previous deportation — the third element and the only one in dispute at Castillo-Basa’s trial — the government must establish, as the district [893]*893court instructed the jury, “[(1)] that a deportation proceeding occurred as to [the] defendant and as a result, [(2)] a warrant of deportation was issued and [(3)] executed by the removal of the defendant from the United States.”

The following sentence is substituted therefor:

To prove previous deportation — the third element and the only one in dispute at Castillo-Basa’s trial — the district court instructed the jury that the government must establish “[(1)] that a deportation proceeding occurred as to [the] defendant and as a result, [(2)] a warrant of deportation was issued and [(3)] executed by the removal of the defendant from the United States.”

With this amendment, Judges Reinhardt and Wardlaw vote to deny the petition for rehearing; Judge Trott votes to grant the petition for rehearing. General order 5.4(b) now applies.

OPINION

I

This case presents an important question that cuts to the heart of the Double Jeopardy Clause. It involves the right of a defendant to be free from repeated prosecutions in which the government retries him until it obtains a guilty verdict. The government was unable to convict Castillo-Basa the first time it tried him, for illegal reentry, in large part because its counsel failed to locate and present a crucial tape recording that was within its possession. To its surprise, the jury acquitted him. Now, having “found” the tape, the government seeks to prosecute Castillo-Basa again, this time for perjury committed in connection with the illegal reentry trial. The central issue at the second trial would be the same as it was at the first: was Castillo-Basa afforded a deportation hearing at which he was present?

The Double Jeopardy Clause requires the government to put on its strongest ease the first time; it forbids it to conduct a series of prosecutions, involving the same fundamental issues, in which it presents additional arguments and evidence at each iteration. Here, the government has already had its chance to prove that Castillo-Basa had a deportation hearing and that his testimony to the contrary was false. It failed, largely because it didn’t introduce the evidence that it had in its possession. Under the Double Jeopardy Clause, the government may not take a mulligan.

The outcome in this case follows directly from basic principles of collateral estoppel that are inherent in the Double Jeopardy Clause. See Ashe v. Swenson, 397 U.S. 436, 90 S.Ct. 1189, 25 L.Ed.2d 469 (1970). The only issue in dispute during Castillo-Basa’s trial for illegal reentry was whether he had been brought before an immigration judge and afforded a deportation hearing prior to his deportation. The ultimate question at issue in the second prosecution — for perjury — would be whether he testified falsely at the previous trial that he had not been present at a deportation hearing. When the jury acquitted Castillo-Basa of the illegal reentry offense, it decided, as the government acknowledged below, that a deportation hearing had not been held and, thus, that he had not been brought before an immigration judge for such a hearing. Accordingly, in rendering its verdict, the jury necessarily decided that Castillo-Basa’s testimony on the critical question of the deportation hearing was not false. The Double Jeopardy Clause bars the government from trying a second time to attempt to show that Castillo-Basa was afforded the hearing in question and that his testimony to the contrary was untruthful.

[894]*894II

On June 16, 2004, Buenaventura Castillo-Basa1 was indicted for being a previously deported alien found in the United States in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326 (2000). Castillo-Basa’s counsel filed several pretrial motions, including a discovery motion requesting production of “all discovery listed below that is in the custody, control, care, or knowledge of any government agency.” The government informed the district court that an audio tape recording of Castillo-Basa’s deportation hearing existed but asserted that it could not locate the recording. The district court granted Castillo-Basa’s motion to compel discovery, specifically ordering the government to produce the tape recording of his deportation hearing. At another hearing some three months later, defense counsel stated that it was his understanding that there had not been a deportation hearing and reported that he had not received a tape of any hearing. He also suggested that Castillo-Basa may have been deported “in absentia,” without ever being brought before an immigration judge. The court again ordered the government to produce the tape recording, but the government failed to do so.

On November 23, 2004, defense counsel filed motions in limine, including a motion to “dismiss the indictment because there was no prior deportation.” On the day of the motions hearing, the defense filed a sworn declaration by Castillo-Basa stating that “[p]rior to May 2, 1996, I never appeared before an immigration judge” and “[pjrior to May 2, 1996, I was never given an immigration hearing.”

Castillo-Basa’s jury trial on the illegal reentry charge began on January 4, 2005. The government argued in its trial memorandum that a tape recording of the deportation was not required to prove the prior deportation. At trial, the government presented four witnesses: Border Patrol Agent Alberto Vallina, who testified that he found Castillo-Basa on June 4; Border Patrol Agent Dwain Holmes, who testified as custodian of Castillo-Basa’s “A” — or alien — file and through whom the government introduced the deportation order dated April 30, 1996, and the Warrant of Deportation; John Torres, a fingerprint expert who testified that the fingerprints of the person arrested on June 4, 2004 matched the fingerprints on the Warrant of Deportation dated May 2, 1996; and Immigration Enforcement Agent Eddie Jackson, whose signature appears on Castillo-Basa’s Warrant of Removal and who testified that he does not sign such a warrant until he observes an alien physically depart from the country. Castillo-Basa testified at trial that he was supposed to appear before an immigration judge on April 30, but that on the date of the hearing, no one came to get him out of his cell. He further testified that he had never come before an immigration judge and that he did not see any representative of the INS until May 2, when the agents took him from his cell to the Mexican border.2

The defense theory throughout trial was that in order to be deported, an alien must be brought before an immigration judge, and that Castillo-Basa was never placed in front of a judge. In this vein, the defense requested a proposed “theory of the defense” instruction, which stated that in [895]

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Bluebook (online)
483 F.3d 890, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 9291, 2007 WL 1192000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-buenaventura-castillo-basa-ca9-2007.