Valentin Valenzuela v. Eric Holder, Jr.

540 F. App'x 270
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 13, 2013
Docket12-60612
StatusUnpublished

This text of 540 F. App'x 270 (Valentin Valenzuela v. Eric Holder, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valentin Valenzuela v. Eric Holder, Jr., 540 F. App'x 270 (5th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Valentin Jose Valenzuela petitions from a Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) determination that he abandoned his status as a lawful permanent resident and was not entitled to a post-conclusion voluntary departure. For the following reasons, we DENY in part, and DISMISS in part, the petition for review.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Valentin Jose Valenzuela (“Valenzuela”), a native and citizen of Mexico, was admitted to the United States as a lawful permanent resident (“LPR”) on December 1, 1990. He has a wife, a job, and three U.S. citizen children (ages 13, 9, and 7). He also has a criminal record. Valenzuela was convicted in 1996 in the Western District of Texas of aiding and abetting an alien in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1325 and 18 U.S.C. § 2(a), and was sentenced to sixty days in prison and five years of probation. Later in 1996 he was arrested in Missouri and charged with possession and attempted trafficking of a controlled substance after the car he was driving was found to contain sixty to seventy pounds of marijuana; he was released on bond. After he failed to appear at a scheduled hearing in September 1997, his bond was forfeited. 1 Valenzuela also was arrested in 2001 for driving under the influence in Texas; he was placed in a pretrial diversion program in 2003, and successfully served one year probation.

The Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) began removal proceedings in 2006 under 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(l)(E)(i) against Valenzuela for aiding and abetting an alien in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1325 and 18 U.S.C. § 2(a) within five years of adjusting status. In the removal proceedings, Valenzuela conceded removability, and instead filed a request for either a waiver of inadmissability or a post-conclusion voluntary departure.

Though he did not appear to disclose the fact on at least one of his applications for relief, during the course of the removal *272 proceedings it came out that Valenzuela spent from roughly July 1997 to September 1999 in Mexico. Valenzuela claimed that he traveled to Mexico in July 1997 to marry his Mexican citizen wife in a religious ceremony. Valenzuela further claimed that he always intended to return to the United States after the wedding ceremony, but was forced to remain in Mexico to care for his sick father and work on the family farm. Valenzuela stated that he finally returned to the United States in September 1999 when one of his brothers was able to take over the care of his father. Valenzuela also cited the desire to earn money to support his pregnant wife as a reason he returned to the United States. The Immigration Judge (“IJ”) declined Valenzuela’s requests for either a waiver of inadmissability or a post-conclusion voluntary departure.

The IJ denied the waiver of inadmissa-bility on two independent grounds. First, the IJ found that Valenzuela voluntarily abandoned his LPR status due to his long stay in Mexico. As evidence of Valenzuela’s objective intent to abandon his status, the IJ highlighted that Valenzuela left for Mexico shortly after being released on bond for drug trafficking charges, married a Mexican citizen, remained in Mexico uninterrupted for over two years, maintained no residence or bank account in the United States, worked in Mexico, and had contact with the United States only through occasional phone calls to family and friends. The IJ found that “it is very informative and not coincidental that [Valenzuela] was released on bond on incredibly serious drug charges, then fled the United States and remained gone for a period of two and a half years during the pendency of his drug trafficking charges.” Second, in the alternative, the IJ entered an adverse credibility finding against Valenzuela, and determined that Valenzuela had failed to establish his eligibility for relief. The IJ pointed to Valenzuela’s failure to disclose fully his departure from the United States, a potential lack of candor about criminal arrests, and other inconsistencies in Valenzuela’s account of events as justifying the adverse credibility finding.

With respect to Valenzuela’s request for a post-conclusion voluntary departure, the IJ relied on the adverse credibility finding to deny relief. The IJ reasoned that Valenzuela’s lack of candor made Valenzuela undeserving of a favorable exercise of discretion.

Valenzuela timely appealed to the BIA, and the BIA dismissed the appeal in a written opinion. The BIA determined that the IJ applied the proper totality-of-the-circumstances test when determining Valenzuela’s intent in leaving the United States, and that the IJ properly placed the burden on DHS to demonstrate that Valenzuela abandoned his LPR status. The BIA found no clear error in the IJ’s factual findings, or in the IJ’s ultimate determination that Valenzuela abandoned his status as a lawful permanent resident of the United States. In response to Valenzuela’s claims that he always intended to return to the United States but was forced to remain in Mexico to care for his father, the BIA noted the lack of any corroborating documentation or detailed testimony to support Valenzuela’s claims that his father needed medical care, as well as the fact that Valenzuela’s departure from the United States “coincided with the institution of criminal charges against him for drug trafficking in Missouri.”

Because the BIA affirmed the IJ’s determination that Valenzuela abandoned his status, the BIA found it unnecessary to resolve the IJ’s adverse credibility findings against Valenzuela. To determine whether Valenzuela was entitled to a post-conclusion voluntary departure, the BIA bal *273 anced the positive and negative equities in the case. After noting numerous factors favoring a positive exercise of discretion— Valenzuela’s lengthy residence in the United States, his relatives and children in the United States, his history of employment, and his regular payment of income taxes in the United States — the BIA concluded that those factors were outweighed by Valenzuela’s criminal convictions and “his general disrespect of the law of this country in evading criminal proceedings over an extended period of time,” and denied a post-conclusion voluntary departure.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

When considering a petition for review, this court reviews only the BIA’s decision, and not the IJ’s decision, unless the IJ’s decision has some impact on the BIA’s decision. Mikhael v. INS, 115 F.3d 299, 302 (5th Cir.1997). This court must affirm the BIA’s decision if there is no error of law and if reasonable, substantial, and probative evidence on the record, considered as a whole, supports the decision’s factual findings. Moin v. Ashcroft, 335 F.3d 415

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Related

Eyoum v. INS
125 F.3d 889 (Fifth Circuit, 1997)
Moin v. Ashcroft
335 F.3d 415 (Fifth Circuit, 2003)
Matadin v. Mukasey
546 F.3d 85 (Second Circuit, 2008)
Singh v. Reno
113 F.3d 1512 (Ninth Circuit, 1997)

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