United States v. Gaspar-Miguel
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Opinion
ROBERT C. BRACK, SENIOR U.S. DISTRICT JUDGE
This matter is before the Court on Defendant Petrona Gaspar-Miguel's appeal from the judgment and conviction entered by Magistrate Judge Gregory B. Wormuth on August 27, 2018. (Doc. 35.) Defendant was found guilty of illegal entry without inspection in violation of
Having reviewed the parties' arguments, the history of the doctrine, and all relevant case law, the Court finds that continuous surveillance by law enforcement during the crossing of an international border does not constitute constructive official restraint. Thus, the judgment of the United States Magistrate Judge finding Defendant guilty of entry without inspection in violation of
I. Background1
A. Facts Preceding the Charge
Defendant Petrona Gaspar-Miguel is a citizen of Guatemala. (Id. at 96.) On June 17, 2018, Defendant was arrested after crossing the international boundary line between the United States and Mexico. (Id. at 44-45.) That afternoon, Border Patrol Agent Stephen Salcido was on "line watch duty" in Sunland Park, New Mexico, monitoring the area for illegal entries. (Id. at 14.) At approximately 12:20 p.m., Agent Salcido was watching the border area through binoculars when he "observed some movement moving northbound from the international boundary line." (Id. at 15.) Agent Salcido referred to the area he was observing as "the end of the fence." (Id. ) The fence runs along the international border in Sunland Park but ends near Mount Cristo Rey because the terrain in that area prevents the fence from continuing up the mountain. (Id. ) Agent Salcido "observed the tail-end of some movement coming across the end of the fence." (Id. at 19.) He then "relayed that to [his] partners in the field and they responded and encountered some individuals." (Id. ) When asked to clarify, Agent Salcido reiterated that he saw the movement "coming around the end of the fence there and moving in a northbound direction." (Id. ) On direct examination, when asked if "it [would] be fair to say that [he] maintained constant surveillance on the individuals[,]" Agent Salcido responded, "yes." (Id. at 21.)
After Agent Salcido alerted other agents by radio that several individuals had crossed the international border, Border Patrol Agent Roberto Tellez responded to the location and apprehended three individuals, including Defendant and her son. (Id. at 29.) Through his binoculars, Agent Salcido observed Agent Tellez drive up to the individuals. (Id. at 25.) A "[c]ouple of minutes" elapsed between Agent Tellez receiving the radio message and reaching the individuals who were, by that time, in the United States and approximately 50-75 yards north of the border. (Id. at 30.) The individuals did not run from Agent Tellez or attempt to escape. (Id. at 24-25.) Each of the three individuals told Agent Tellez that they were citizens of Guatemala, did not have documents to stay in the United States legally, and had just crossed the border illegally. (Id. at 31-32.) Border Patrol Agent Victor Ramirez then responded to the scene in a transport van and transported the individuals to the Santa Teresa Border Patrol Station. (Id. at 44-47.)
*1108At the station, Agent Ramirez began processing Defendant, which included collecting and recording her biographical information. (Id. at 47-48.) Agent Ramirez determined that she had never been deported nor did she have any other immigration or criminal history in the United States. (Id. at 77-79.) The next day, Border Patrol Agent Robert De Anda finished processing Defendant at the station. (Id. at 60-64.) Based on their conversation, Agent De Anda "stamped 'credible fear claim' on her paperwork." (Id. at 80.) This indicated that, following the conclusion of any criminal proceedings against Defendant, she would be interviewed by an asylum officer regarding her claim of credible fear in Guatemala. (Id. at 82-83.)
Defendant testified that she feared for her life in Guatemala because she had a child with a married man and the man's wife threatened her and her son. (Id. at 91.) Defendant also testified that the man's wife had paid someone to sexually assault her. (Id. ) Defendant paid an individual to guide her and her son to the U.S.-Mexico border. (Id. at 96.) "My goal was to enter the United States and ask for help.... [S]ince I didn't know where one enters, that's why I entered like that during the day, so that they could find me." (Id. at 92-93.) Defendant testified that she did not try to elude agents at the border: "I didn't try to hide. I crossed in broad the [sic] daylight and I did not hide and I did not run. I thought, thank God that they're here, they found me." (Id. at 93.) Defendant's brother is a United States citizen who lives in Kentucky, and she stated that if she were permitted to remain in the United States she would like to live and work in Kentucky. (Id. at 95.)
B. Bench Trial
Defendant was charged with improper entry without inspection, in violation of
Defendant asserted that because the agents had kept her under constant surveillance while she crossed the border, she was under constructive official restraint the entire time and thus had not "entered" the United States. (Id. ) "[T]he Government [ ] failed to prove Ms.
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ROBERT C. BRACK, SENIOR U.S. DISTRICT JUDGE
This matter is before the Court on Defendant Petrona Gaspar-Miguel's appeal from the judgment and conviction entered by Magistrate Judge Gregory B. Wormuth on August 27, 2018. (Doc. 35.) Defendant was found guilty of illegal entry without inspection in violation of
Having reviewed the parties' arguments, the history of the doctrine, and all relevant case law, the Court finds that continuous surveillance by law enforcement during the crossing of an international border does not constitute constructive official restraint. Thus, the judgment of the United States Magistrate Judge finding Defendant guilty of entry without inspection in violation of
I. Background1
A. Facts Preceding the Charge
Defendant Petrona Gaspar-Miguel is a citizen of Guatemala. (Id. at 96.) On June 17, 2018, Defendant was arrested after crossing the international boundary line between the United States and Mexico. (Id. at 44-45.) That afternoon, Border Patrol Agent Stephen Salcido was on "line watch duty" in Sunland Park, New Mexico, monitoring the area for illegal entries. (Id. at 14.) At approximately 12:20 p.m., Agent Salcido was watching the border area through binoculars when he "observed some movement moving northbound from the international boundary line." (Id. at 15.) Agent Salcido referred to the area he was observing as "the end of the fence." (Id. ) The fence runs along the international border in Sunland Park but ends near Mount Cristo Rey because the terrain in that area prevents the fence from continuing up the mountain. (Id. ) Agent Salcido "observed the tail-end of some movement coming across the end of the fence." (Id. at 19.) He then "relayed that to [his] partners in the field and they responded and encountered some individuals." (Id. ) When asked to clarify, Agent Salcido reiterated that he saw the movement "coming around the end of the fence there and moving in a northbound direction." (Id. ) On direct examination, when asked if "it [would] be fair to say that [he] maintained constant surveillance on the individuals[,]" Agent Salcido responded, "yes." (Id. at 21.)
After Agent Salcido alerted other agents by radio that several individuals had crossed the international border, Border Patrol Agent Roberto Tellez responded to the location and apprehended three individuals, including Defendant and her son. (Id. at 29.) Through his binoculars, Agent Salcido observed Agent Tellez drive up to the individuals. (Id. at 25.) A "[c]ouple of minutes" elapsed between Agent Tellez receiving the radio message and reaching the individuals who were, by that time, in the United States and approximately 50-75 yards north of the border. (Id. at 30.) The individuals did not run from Agent Tellez or attempt to escape. (Id. at 24-25.) Each of the three individuals told Agent Tellez that they were citizens of Guatemala, did not have documents to stay in the United States legally, and had just crossed the border illegally. (Id. at 31-32.) Border Patrol Agent Victor Ramirez then responded to the scene in a transport van and transported the individuals to the Santa Teresa Border Patrol Station. (Id. at 44-47.)
*1108At the station, Agent Ramirez began processing Defendant, which included collecting and recording her biographical information. (Id. at 47-48.) Agent Ramirez determined that she had never been deported nor did she have any other immigration or criminal history in the United States. (Id. at 77-79.) The next day, Border Patrol Agent Robert De Anda finished processing Defendant at the station. (Id. at 60-64.) Based on their conversation, Agent De Anda "stamped 'credible fear claim' on her paperwork." (Id. at 80.) This indicated that, following the conclusion of any criminal proceedings against Defendant, she would be interviewed by an asylum officer regarding her claim of credible fear in Guatemala. (Id. at 82-83.)
Defendant testified that she feared for her life in Guatemala because she had a child with a married man and the man's wife threatened her and her son. (Id. at 91.) Defendant also testified that the man's wife had paid someone to sexually assault her. (Id. ) Defendant paid an individual to guide her and her son to the U.S.-Mexico border. (Id. at 96.) "My goal was to enter the United States and ask for help.... [S]ince I didn't know where one enters, that's why I entered like that during the day, so that they could find me." (Id. at 92-93.) Defendant testified that she did not try to elude agents at the border: "I didn't try to hide. I crossed in broad the [sic] daylight and I did not hide and I did not run. I thought, thank God that they're here, they found me." (Id. at 93.) Defendant's brother is a United States citizen who lives in Kentucky, and she stated that if she were permitted to remain in the United States she would like to live and work in Kentucky. (Id. at 95.)
B. Bench Trial
Defendant was charged with improper entry without inspection, in violation of
Defendant asserted that because the agents had kept her under constant surveillance while she crossed the border, she was under constructive official restraint the entire time and thus had not "entered" the United States. (Id. ) "[T]he Government [ ] failed to prove Ms. Gaspar was guilty of entry into the United States without inspection and the proper charge was attempted entry without inspection." (Doc. 40 at 6; see also Doc. 37 at 98-99.) Defendant next argued that attempted improper entry is a specific intent crime, and thus the Government had not met its evidentiary burden for that charge either because the evidence showed that she had the specific intent to seek asylum, not the specific intent to enter the United States illegally and evade law enforcement.2 (Docs. 37 at 98-99; 40 at 6.)
*1109The Government disputed the application of the official restraint doctrine in the Tenth Circuit and argued that the evidence proved beyond a reasonable doubt that Defendant met the three elements necessary for a conviction under
Both parties noted that, the week before, United States Magistrate Judge Stephen R. Vidmar acquitted a defendant charged with entry without inspection on the theory that the defendant had been under Border Patrol surveillance the entire time he crossed the international border. (Id. at 100-01); see also United States v. Akana-By Komlan Adjeodar , 2:18-po-02620-CG, Tr. Bench Trial at 6:3-12:19 (Aug. 24, 2018). In that case, Judge Vidmar opined that the Tenth Circuit would likely adopt the doctrine of official restraint. Adjeodar , 2:18-po-02620-CG, Tr. Bench Trial at 6:3-9:20. At the close of Defendant's bench trial, however, Judge Wormuth rejected the idea of surveillance as official restraint, explaining that he was "not persuaded in any fashion that surveillance, particularly surveillance unknown to an individual, can constitute official restraint within any meaning of that word." (Doc. 37 at 117.) He held that, as a result, the undisputed evidence proved beyond a reasonable doubt that Defendant's actions met all three required elements of the crime of entry without inspection in violation of
C. The Appeal
Defendant filed a timely notice of appeal on September 6, 2018. (Doc. 35 at 1.) Defendant argues that, if the official restraint doctrine is properly applied, she is not guilty of violating
First, she did not "enter" the United States within the meaning of § 1325(a) because she was under official restraint from the time of her entry until her arrest. Second, she did not "attempt" to enter the United States because she did not have the specific intent to enter the United States free of official restraint.
(Doc. 40 at 10.) As previously stated, only the first theory-that Defendant did not "enter" the United States-is properly before the Court on appeal.
Defendant argues that "[f]or immigration purposes, 'entry' is a term of art requiring not only physical presence in the United States but also freedom from official restraint." (Id. at 10-11 (citing United States v. Argueta-Rosales ,
*1110Defendant also argues that "[t]he law is well-settled that surveillance, whether known or unknown to the defendant, is sufficient to constitute official restraint that prevents an 'entry' within the meaning of the immigration laws." (Id. at 12.) For this proposition, Defendant cites various civil immigration decisions (see id. (collecting cases) ), as well as United States v. Gonzalez-Torres ,
The Government argues in response that the Tenth Circuit has declined to adopt the doctrine of official restraint and associated concept of surveillance as constructive official restraint, and should not do so now. (Doc. 44 at 7.) The Government makes five distinct arguments against application of the official restraint doctrine in this case. (See
Fourth, the Government argues that the Tenth Circuit and federal courts in the District of New Mexico have "declined to apply" the doctrine of official restraint and constructive surveillance in criminal entry and reentry cases. (See
This appeal requires the Court to answer two questions: (1) does the definition of "entry" for purposes of
II. Standard of Review
The Court has jurisdiction in this matter under
*1111United States v. Morrison ,
III. Discussion
A. Freedom from official restraint is a required element of "entry" in the immigration context.
i. The History of the Official Restraint Doctrine
The first federal appellate court to explicitly utilize "freedom from official restraint" as a term of art in an immigration matter was the Third Circuit in United States v. Vasilatos ,
There was no formal definition of "entry" in the relevant statute at that time, so the court explained that when individuals present themselves at a port of entry seeking admission to the United States, they "have not been viewed by the courts as accomplishing an 'entry' by crossing the national boundary in transit or even by arrival at a port so long as they are detained there pending formal disposition of their requests for admission."
Congress enacted the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) in 1952. Pub. L. No. 82-414,
Title II, "Immigration," included numerous chapters governing both civil and criminal aspects of immigration law. See
Chapter Eight, "General Penalty Provisions," laid out criminal penalties for prohibited acts including unlawful entry and reentry.
Even after passage of the INA, however, courts continued to consider "freedom from official restraint" a common-law element of "entry" for immigration law purposes-despite the fact that the INA had statutorily defined "entry" broadly as "any coming of an alien into the United States, from a foreign port or place or from an outlying possession...." See
The next year, in In re Pierre ,
The courts have found it necessary to interpret the term "entry," which is now defined in section 101(a)(13) of the Act as "... any coming of an alien into the United States, from a foreign port or place or from an outlying possession...." A survey of the many cases which have treated this subject over the years leads to the following conclusion: An "entry" involves (1) a crossing into the territorial limits of the United States, i.e. physical presence; plus (2) inspection and admission by an immigration officer; or (3) actual and intentional evasion of inspection at the nearest inspection point; coupled with (4) freedom from restraint.
In the years following Pierre , numerous federal courts across circuits adopted the *1113Board of Immigration Appeals' definition of "entry" in civil immigration proceedings. See, e.g., Correa v. Thornburgh ,
So too did several Circuit Courts of Appeal adopt a definition of "entry" including freedom from official restraint in criminal immigration proceedings even after the INA defined "entry" broadly. See, e.g., United States v. Oscar ,
The proposition that individuals have not effectively "entered" the United States for immigration purposes if they are under the clear control of law enforcement from the moment they first set foot on American soil until their apprehension is not inherently problematic. Indeed, the Second Circuit's decision in United States v. Macias ,
*1114The defendant had indeed "reentered" the United States in the sense that he physically passed from the Canadian side of the border into the United States.
Similarly, individuals who first physically cross into the United States at a port of entry where they are under official control, and are subsequently apprehended there, have not successfully entered the country in violation of the law because they were never truly free to leave and move throughout the country as if they had been lawfully admitted. See, e.g., Correa ,
Indeed, no federal appellate court has suggested that the doctrine of official restraint, when properly defined, should be eliminated entirely from the definition of "entry." Even the Fifth Circuit, which has expressed the most concern over the doctrine, has only directly questioned its applicability in cases that require a more tenuous inferential step, like considering surveillance or parole forms of official restraint that can completely negate an individual's "entry" even after they physically crossed the border. See United States v. Palomares-Villamar ,
When it comes to the basic idea of official restraint, however, even the Fifth Circuit's currently operative Pattern Criminal Jury Instructions note that "[a]ctual reentry requires physical presence in the United States and freedom from official restraint, while attempted reentry only requires that a previously deported alien approach a port of entry and make a false claim of citizenship or non-resident alien status." Pattern Crim. Jury Instr. 5th Cir. 2.03, Note (2015) (citing United States v. Morales-Palacios ,
The Tenth Circuit has also never explicitly adopted the doctrine of freedom from official restraint as an element of "entry," but has not rejected the concept either. In United States v. Encinas-Rodriguez , the defendant was convicted on a charge of attempted reentry after he drove to a port of entry and lied about his citizenship.
*1115
ii. The Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA)
The Government's argument in this appeal rests in large part on the idea that "freedom from official restraint" was only ever meant to be considered an element of "entry" in civil immigration proceedings. (See Doc. 44 at 7-13, 18-19.) This argument has been advanced by other opponents of the official restraint doctrine, including Judge Bybee of the Ninth Circuit in his dissent in United States v. Argueta-Rosales . See
In 1996, Congress enacted the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA). Pub. L. No. 104-208,
The IIRIRA sought, among its various aims, to terminate future litigation over entry as the lynchpin for determining the procedural due process rights of aliens. The House Judiciary Committee, in its report on the bill, explicitly stated as much, reporting that it "intended to replace certain aspects of the current 'entry doctrine,' under which illegal aliens who have entered the United States without inspection gain equities and privileges in immigration proceedings that are not available to aliens who present themselves for inspection at a port of entry." H.R. REP. 104-469, pt. 1 at 225. To that end, the committee sought to convert the "pivotal factor in determining an alien's status" to a determination of "whether or not the alien has been lawfully admitted." Id.
(Id. ) The Government asserts that this legislative history demonstrates that Congress intended to eliminate the "entry *1116fiction" in all respects. (See id. at 15.) However, the language it relies on actually indicates that the House Judiciary Committee sought to eliminate only "certain aspects of the current 'entry doctrine' "-the aspects in which the distinction had been used in civil proceedings "in determining an alien's status." (See id. (quoting H.R. REP. 104-469, pt. 1 at 225).)
The Court agrees with the Government and Congress that the manner in which the "entry doctrine" evolved had created manifest unfairness in civil removal proceedings prior to 1996. Aliens who successfully completed an unlawful entry by evading law enforcement were afforded the full panoply of procedural due process rights under the INA, while those who either failed to evade inspection or never attempted to evade law enforcement in the first place were more quickly deported without due process protections. In the criminal context, however, as the Government helpfully points out, the issue of due process protections was never the purpose of defining "entry." (See id. at 12 ("In criminal proceedings, that distinction is mere chimera, as aliens receive the same panoply of constitutional due process protections as any U.S. citizen.").)
Instead, the need to define the term "entry" in the criminal context arises not when determining what procedural rights to provide defendants, but in determining when and how to charge individuals accused of violating the law. In cases where an individual physically crossed onto American soil at an official port, checkpoint, or the like, but is apprehended before having the chance to continue on into the country at large, the official restraint doctrine logically dictates that they have not unlawfully "entered" the United States in violation of our nation's criminal immigration statutes but may still have attempted "entry." See Macias ,
The Court is not persuaded that the IIRIRA sought to remove the element of "freedom from official restraint" from the longstanding definition of "entry" under the INA, for the term "entry" still appears frequently in the INA even after the IIRIRA removed it from certain sections. See, e.g. ,
B. Continuous surveillance does not constitute official restraint.
Having determined that official restraint is a required element of successful "entry" for purposes of the INA, we reach the second question presented in this appeal-whether continuous surveillance qualifies as official restraint. The Ninth Circuit is the only circuit that has expressly applied constructive restraint through surveillance to unlawful entry and reentry cases under
The concept of surveillance as official restraint originated in 1908 in Ex Parte Chow Chok and was expressly articulated for the first time decades later by the Board of Immigration Appeals in Pierre. See Ex Parte Chow Chok ,
The Court acknowledges that, since Pierre , courts across circuits have indeed adopted surveillance as constructive restraint in various civil immigration contexts. See, e.g., Zhang v. Slattery ,
Though this appeal presents only the question of whether surveillance amounts to constructive official restraint in defining "entry" under
[T]here are at least two ways in which the government might restrain an individual. It could stop the individual physically at the border[,] ... [o]r it could monitor the individual as he crosses the border by conducting surveillance of him. The government may have good reasons for allowing an alien to cross the border, only to arrest him later in time and miles from the border. The government, for example, might wish to see if the alien leads them to a safe house or joins up with other individuals who have crossed the border illegally.
The Fifth Circuit, after appearing to endorse surveillance as constructive restraint in a criminal case that did not turn on the issue, see United States v. Villanueva ,
Finally, we turn to the Tenth Circuit. Like the Fifth, the Tenth Circuit has never explicitly adopted or rejected the concept of surveillance as constructive official restraint.4 In United States v. Franco-Lopez , the Tenth Circuit upheld the defendant's conviction for transporting aliens in violation of
However, both the district court and the Tenth Circuit in Franco-Lopez went on to hold that § 1324 allows for conviction for transporting an alien who has "has come to, entered, or remains in " the United States, and neither having "come to" nor "remaining in" the United States require proving entry and freedom from official restraint.
The Government's final argument against adopting the doctrine-that it will lead to absurd results-is perhaps the most compelling. (See Doc. 44 at 21.) The Court finds it unlikely that Border Patrol agents, having learned of the doctrine of constructive official restraint, would cease vigilantly patrolling the border simply to ensure that individuals crossing illegally could be charged with unlawful entry rather than attempted unlawful entry. However, adopting this doctrine would certainly provide agents a perverse incentive to conduct surveillance at points where the actual border itself is not visible, to allow aliens to spend more time in the United States before apprehending them, or even to be less than truthful about the extent of their surveillance efforts leading up to an apprehension.
Prosecutors too could adapt to the doctrine by simply charging individuals who remain under surveillance while crossing the border with attempted unlawful entry-an offense under the same statutory provision that carries the same penalty as unlawful entry. However, it seems incongruous *1120at best to base a criminal charging decision on an in-depth analysis of the arresting agent's actions leading up to the apprehension, rather than the actions of the potential defendant. It would also undoubtedly mean, as the Government points out, that courts in the Tenth Circuit would suddenly, and in perpetuity, be faced with an influx of cases requiring them to determine which specific factual scenarios constitute constructive official restraint. (See Doc. 44 at 22.)
This much is clear from the myriad Ninth Circuit decisions making hair splitting determinations about whether a unique set of facts constitutes official restraint through surveillance. Compare, e.g., Gonzalez-Torres ,
Proponents of the doctrine will argue that if an alien who is surveilled while crossing the border truly has the intent to unlawfully enter and evade law enforcement, she will be found guilty under § 1325 if properly charged with attempted entry and will then face the same consequences as if she had been convicted of entry. Only if an alien apprehended under official restraint could prove she did not commit the crime of attempted entry would she be acquitted. This is the crux of Defendant's argument on appeal: she did not actually enter the United States, so she should have had an opportunity to rebut the correct charge of attempted entry by proving that she had the specific intent to seek out law enforcement and ask for asylum, not the specific intent to unlawfully enter the United States and evade law enforcement.
It is certainly possible that, had the Government charged Defendant with attempt or had the Magistrate Judge entertained those arguments, she would still have been convicted of violating § 1325. Still, as Judge Bybee laments in his analysis of the state of affairs in the Ninth Circuit, "this novel and unduly expansive definition of 'official restraint' makes no sense and creates a puzzling loophole in the law of attempted illegal [ ]entry." Argueta-Rosales ,
Here, as Agent De Anda stamped "credible fear" on Defendant's processing paperwork and acknowledged that she claimed fear of violence as her reason for leaving Guatemala, Defendant will have the opportunity to make her claim for asylum before an immigration judge in a completely separate legal proceeding from the one now before the Court. (See Doc. 37 at 82-83.) Whether or not she crossed the border free from official restraint will not factor into any determination of what procedural and due process protections she is afforded during this *1121civil proceeding, nor will it affect the merits of her asylum claim. The only issue before the Court in this appeal is whether Defendant violated a criminal immigration law-improper entry without inspection in violation of
The law is full of difficult and often imperfectly drawn lines, and there is no better example of this than the doctrine of official restraint. This doctrine carries a tortured history-having evolved haphazardly from use in civil immigration proceedings to deny aliens due process, to use in criminal immigration proceedings, and culminating in an absurdly broad definition of "official restraint" in some circuits that includes surveillance. The Ninth Circuit's application of the doctrine has led to a tortured result-case upon case requiring courts to determine just which types of sophisticated surveillance technology constitute official restraint. If Congress sees fit to clean up this issue by more fully and clearly amending the INA and the definition of "entry" in its various provisions, it can and will do so. But unless Congress prescribes otherwise, the Court will not extend this tortured result to the Tenth Circuit by adopting the position that continuous surveillance amounts to official government restraint negating "entry" in criminal immigration proceedings.
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons described above, the Court finds that freedom from official restraint is a required element of "entry" in the immigration context, but that continuous surveillance by law enforcement does not qualify as "official restraint" for purposes of
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