United States v. Ziyaya Mtola

598 F. App'x 416
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 30, 2015
Docket14-3262
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 598 F. App'x 416 (United States v. Ziyaya Mtola) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Ziyaya Mtola, 598 F. App'x 416 (6th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

SILER, Circuit Judge.

A jury convicted Ziyaya Mtola of two counts of failure to depart,' in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1253(a)(1)(C) and two counts of assaulting, resisting or impeding a federal officer, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 111(a)(1). Mtola appeals his judgment of conviction and sentence. We AFFIRM.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A. Factual Background

Mtola, a native of South Africa, entered the United States from England on a J-l nonimmigrant visa in 2001. He was authorized to stay for four months. Mtola did not leave when required and remains in the United States today.

After marrying a United States citizen, Mtola filed forms 1-485 and 1-130 to remain in the United States. In 2010 and again in'2011, the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (“USCIS”) sent Mtola notices of intent to deny his application based on the lack of evidence to substantiate that the marriage was genuine. The USCIS initiated removal proceedings. Mtola failed to appear at his removal hearing, and the immigration judge (“IJ”) entered a removal order.

Mtola filed a motion pro se to reopen his case, which was denied in 2012. In February 2013, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”) agents arrested Mtola pursuant to the removal order. ICE agents transported Mtola to the Geauga County jail in Chardon, Ohio, where he was scheduled to remain until his removal. Mtola then hired an attorney to file a second motion to reopen.

On March 29, 2013, ICE agents initiated Mtola’s first deportation effort. Mtola was scheduled to fly unaccompanied to Johannesburg, South Africa, by way of Atlanta, Georgia. ICE arranged for two agents to escort Mtola to the airport and ensure that he was on the flight when it took off.

Agent Robert Feick met with Mtola at the jail on the morning of March 29, 2013, and he informed Mtola that he was going to be removed that day. Mtola told Agent Feick about his pending motion and that he did not believe he should be removed. Agent Feick explained that he was ordered to transport Mtola to the Cleveland suboff-ice and that he would look into the situation. After speaking with Agent Roby, the case officer responsible for Mtola’s removal, Agent Feick informed Mtola that his pending motion did not entitle him to stay in the United States. Upon arriving at the Cleveland suboffice, Mtola was presented with paperwork, which indicated he would be removed to South Africa that day. *418 Mtola was kept in a holding cell at the suboffice.

Mtola asked to contact his attorney. Agents Feick and Saher Abouhmoud allowed Mtola to make three phone calls to his attorney’s office, and each time he spoke with someone. Mtola’s attorney informed him that the second motion was still pending. By that time, Agents Feick and Abouhmoud determined that they had to leave for the airport or Mtola would miss his flight. Mtola refused to get out of his chair so the ICE agents stood him up and placed him in restraints for transport. While escorting Mtola from the holding cell toward the transport vehicle, Mtola began shouting and became aggressive. Mtola refused to cooperate or to walk to the transport vehicle. The agents continued to inform Mtola that they needed to hurry so that he would not miss his flight. Mtola said he did not care if he missed his flight, he did not want to go and Agent Abouhmoud should just shoot him. Based on his conduct and comments, Agents Feick and Abouhmoud decided Mtola was too aggressive and hostile for non-supervised transport. As a result, they returned Mtola to a holding cell in the Cleveland suboffice.

Prior to the second attempted removal, scheduled for April 22, 2013, several events occurred. Agent Roby met with Mtola to discuss the first deportation effort and to explain to him that ICE was required to remove him pursuant to the IJ’s order even though his motion to reopen remained pending. Agent Roby provided Mtola with paper work, which he refused to sign. He also advised Mtola that the next attempted removal would be by escort. Agents Shawn Mohr and Michael Pinson were assigned to escort Mtola to South Africa. After Agent Roby met with Mtola and prior to the second removal attempt, Mtola’s second motion to reopen was denied.

On April 22, 2013, Agents Mohr and Pinson met Mtola in the booking area of the jail. Two other ICE agents, George Roberts and Seth Bereznay, were present to assist with escorting Mtola from the booking area to the transport van and to the airport if necessary. In the booking area, Agents Mohr and Pinson explained to Mtola that his motion to reopen was denied, and they explained to him the consequences if he refused to leave the United States. Mtola was initially calm, but later became agitated. Agents Mohr and Pin-son spent over ten minutes explaining to Mtola what would happen, but he refused to listen and stated that he would not go. Agent Roberts testified that he “approached Mr. Mtola from behind and asked him to place his hands behind his back. He refused. And then we started to struggle.” Then, the four ICE agents and several officers from the jail tried to place Mtola in handcuffs. They told Mtola to remain calm, but he continued to resist. The agents put Mtola on the ground in order to gain control and to place him in the handcuffs. Once handcuffed, the agents placed Mtola in leg restraints.

After restraining Mtola, Agents Roberts and Pinson carried Mtola from the booking area to the transport van because he refused to walk. Following another struggle, they were able to put him into the van. Agent Mohr contacted Mtola’s attorney with the hope that he could calm Mtola down. Agent Mohr told Mtola that his attorney was on the phone, and Mohr held the speaker phone up to the van window. Mtola refused to speak with his attorney and kept screaming. Mtola broke free from the restraints and the seatbelt, and he opened the door and tried to flee from the van. While lying on his back, Mtola started kicking at the officers, and Agent Rob *419 erts testified that Mtola kicked him several times in the forearm. After the officers were able to force him back into the van, Agents Mohr and Pinson entered the van. Agent Mohr put the vehicle in reverse, but Mtola began kicking the ceiling of the van and banging his head against the metal grate of the door before the van departed the sally port. Agents Mohr and Pinson called off the deportation effort because they concluded Mtola was too aggressive to fly on an aircraft.

The agents then advised Mtola that he was not going to be removed that day. Because he was uncooperative and would not walk on his own, the agents physically removed Mtola from the van. Mtola tensed up and resisted while numerous agents attempted to remove Mtola’s handcuffs and shackles in order to place him in a restraint chair. At that time, the officers noticed that Agent Pinson had a laceration on his hand, which was bleeding. Agent Pinson received medical attention at the scene, and he also was treated at a local hospital later that day. Prior to speaking to Mtola in the booking area, Agent Pinson did not have the laceration.

B. Procedural History

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Bluebook (online)
598 F. App'x 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-ziyaya-mtola-ca6-2015.