United States v. Dekelaita

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 22, 2022
Docket1:18-cv-06682
StatusUnknown

This text of United States v. Dekelaita (United States v. Dekelaita) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Dekelaita, (N.D. Ill. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) ) Plaintiff-Respondent, ) ) vs. ) Case No. 18 C 6682 ) ROBERT DEKELAITA, ) ) Defendant-Movant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

MATTHEW F. KENNELLY, District Judge: In May 2016, a jury convicted Robert Dekelaita on a charge of conspiracy to commit asylum fraud and on three charges involving false statements in connection with a particular asylum application. After trial, the Court entered a judgment of acquittal on the three substantive charges but upheld Dekelaita's conviction on the conspiracy charge. The Court imposed a fifteen-month prison sentence. In November 2017, the court of appeals affirmed Dekelaita's conviction and sentence (the government did not appeal the post-trial judgment of acquittal on the other charges). See United States v. Dekelaita, 875 F.3d 855 (7th Cir. 2017). Dekelaita was an attorney who specialized in immigration law. The evidence offered against him at trial included testimony by a number of his former clients that he had counseled or assisted them in submitting fraudulent applications seeking asylum in the United States. The fraud largely involved exaggeration or fabrication of claims they had been persecuted in their countries of origin; some of it involved concealing that the applicant had already obtained refuge in another country, which would have disqualified the applicant from obtaining asylum in the U.S. Each of the client-witnesses admitted knowingly seeking and/or obtaining asylum by fraud. As a result of the client-witnesses' admissions to investigators and in their

testimony, they were all subject to deportation—"removal," in immigration lingo. During Dekelaita's trial, each of them testified that they had been offered no promises or assurances regarding their future immigration status or their ability to remain in the U.S. In closing argument, the government cited the client-witnesses' admissions—and, implicitly, the absence of any promises about their future—as buttressing their credibility: There has been lots of talk about incentives in this case. Do you know what the easiest way if you're a citizen of the United States based on asylum to keep your asylum status? How about not admit that you committed fraud? That would be a good guess. Do you know what the easiest way to lose it is? Admit that you committed a crime. Right?

United States v. Dekelaita, No. 14 C 497, trial tr. 1873-74. In October 2019, Dekelaita filed a motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 asking the Court to vacate his conviction and sentence. He cited several grounds. Only one survived the government's request for dismissal. Dekelaita contends that the client- witnesses were given express or tacit assurances that they would not be deported or, to put it another way, that they would be able to remain in the U.S. As evidence Dekelaita cited, among other things, the fact that no steps had been taken since the trial to deport any of the client-witnesses despite their sworn public admissions of immigration fraud. Dekelaita argued that any such assurances had not been disclosed to him prior to or during the trial, in violation of the government's disclosure obligations under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), and its progeny, and that the witnesses' trial testimony about this was false. The Court ordered a hearing on this claim. An evidentiary hearing was held in December 2020. It included testimony by approximately twenty witnesses as well as the submission of deposition testimony. The

hearing took seven days, not including the time needed to review the deposition transcripts. The witnesses at the hearing included a number of the client-witnesses and others related to them, the government's case agents, and several officers and officials with the Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The government's case agents—the agents who conducted and supervised the investigation and dealt with most of the government witnesses—were Tony Chesla and Tyler Shoudy. Both were special agents of DHS's Office of Inspector General, which the Court will refer to as OIG. Chesla was still an OIG special agent as of the date of the evidentiary hearing; Shoudy had recently retired. Both testified at the hearing,

Chesla at great length. After the evidentiary hearing, the parties filed post-hearing briefs. Briefing was completed around the end of March 2021. This decision constitutes the Court's findings of fact and conclusions of law. The Court apologizes for its delay in issuing its decision. Facts Dekelaita contends that express or tacit assurances of future benefits were made to the client-witnesses before his trial but were not disclosed as required under Brady. He also contends that the government presented false testimony from the witnesses on this point. At various junctures during the hearing and since, Dekelaita has also referenced other information (regarding various matters that he potentially could have used to cross-examine certain of the client-witnesses) that he contends was not disclosed to him. The latter contentions were not part of Dekelaita's section 2255 motion, and thus a claim based on these contentions is not properly before the Court.

That aside, none of that particular allegedly undisclosed information was material, even when viewed collectively. The evidence concerning the client-witnesses falls into four baskets. First, none of them have been deported, nor have immigration authorities taken any steps in that direction regarding any of them. Second, there is evidence tending to show that OIG agent Chesla did certain things that helped forestall or delay adverse action against the client-witnesses. Third, after the trial, the OIG case agents offered assistance to the client-witnesses on immigration-related matters when the witnesses reached out to them, and in a couple instances without being asked to do so. Finally, there is evidence concerning an apparent post-trial immigration fraud by one of the client-witnesses that

was known to the OIG agents—at least agent Chesla—but that he did not report and, arguably, facilitated. The Court has considered all of the evidence and has made determinations regarding the credibility of the witnesses. It finds as follows. 1. Non-deportation of client-witnesses As of March 2021, nearly five years after Dekelaita's trial, all of the client- witnesses—Rafida Jabo-Cordova, Rawa Jibrail, Raman Esho, Saad Salman, Salman Salman, Hilal Albqal, Nahail Najam, Saba Mosa, Mosa's wife Ikhlas Zaiya, and Louay Kouza—were still in the United States with legal status despite their admitted immigration fraud.1 The first and most obvious question is, why? For two of the witnesses (Esho and Salman Salman), both of whom were naturalized citizens, immigration authorities made an affirmative decision post-trial not to seek denaturalization. The Court will address

Esho and Salman momentarily. With regard to the other client-witnesses, the evidence, from a big-picture standpoint, does not support a finding that any affirmative decision was made not to institute removal proceedings against the client-witnesses. Rather, the reason for the government's inaction appears to be much more mundane: a combination of inertia and bureaucratic decisions. That said, in some instances, as the Court will discuss, agent Chesla did things that had the effect of forestalling the institution of removal proceedings against certain client-witnesses.

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Bluebook (online)
United States v. Dekelaita, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-dekelaita-ilnd-2022.