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BIA: Accumulation of continuous presence for cancellation of removal not interrupted by brief departure and unsuccessful attempt to reenter at border, absent a formal removal or voluntary departure

Immigrants' Rights Update, Vol. 19, Issue 5, October 5, 2005


     The Board of Immigration Appeals has issued a precedent decision concerning the requirement of ten years' continuous physical presence for the relief of cancellation of removal for non-lawful permanent residents.  The BIA previously has found that a voluntary departure under the threat of deportation or removal proceedings ends the accumulation of continuous physical presence. Matter of Romales, 23 I. & N. Dec. 423 (BIA 2002).  The new decision is important because it limits the application of the Romales ruling.

     The respondent in this case, Guadalupe Avilez-Nava, is a Mexican national who first entered the U.S. in 1986 and has two U.S. citizen children, ages 12 and 2.  She was placed in removal proceedings in 2001 and applied for non-LPR cancellation of removal.  At her hearing, she testified that in Jan. 1993 she had returned to Mexico to help her mother after the death of her grandmother.  Two weeks after that departure, she attempted to reenter the U.S. at the San Ysidro port of entry.  She was stopped and questioned by immigration authorities and admitted that she did not have entry documents.  She testified that the authorities told her that she could not enter the U.S. and that they escorted her to a door through which she was returned to Mexico.  She reentered the U.S. two days later, without inspection.  The Dept. of Homeland Security (DHS) did not offer any evidence to indicate that Avilez-Nava had been formally excluded, allowed to withdraw an application for admission, granted voluntary departure in lieu of deportation proceedings, or otherwise subjected to any formal, documented process for determining her inadmissibility to the U.S.  The immigration judge found that Avilez-Nava did not meet the continuous physical presence requirement, and she appealed the IJ's ruling.

     In sustaining the appeal, the BIA first summarized the relevant law.  To be eligible for the relief of cancellation of removal, a non-U.S. citizen who is not an LPR must establish, among other requirements, that he or she has continuously resided in the U.S. for at least ten years prior to applying for the relief.  The statute provides that the accrual of continuous presence ends when the noncitizen is served with a notice to appear for removal proceedings or commits an offense that makes the individual inadmissible or removable. Sec. 240A(d)(1) of the Immigration and Nationality Act.  The statute also provides that a departure for a period in excess of 90 days, or a series of departures for an aggregate period exceeding 180 days, ends the accrual of continuous physical presence. INA sec. 240A(d)(2).  And in Romales, the BIA concluded that even where a noncitizen's departure is within the above-described time limits, the accrual of continuous physical presence ends when the individual is compelled to depart the U.S. under a grant of voluntary departure where otherwise he or she would face deportation or removal proceedings. 

     The BIA noted that its ruling in Romales has been upheld in the Fifth, Eighth, and Ninth Circuit Courts of Appeal.  However, the BIA also noted that several appellate rulings have found that the accrual of continuous presence is not ended by departures effected by immigration authorities in some circumstances, citing Ortiz-Cornejo v. Gonzalez, 400 F.3d 610 (8th Cir. 2005) (holding that the record was insufficient to conclude that departures were under the threat of deportation where the alien was stopped and returned to Mexico two times by immigration officials); Reyes-Vasquez v. Ashcroft, 395 F.3d 903, 908 (8th Cir. 2005) (finding that an apprehension and return by the Border Patrol was not a "presence-breaking voluntary departure" where there was no evidence the respondent was informed of and accepted the terms); Morales-Morales v. Ashcroft, 384 F.3d 418 (7th Cir. 2004) (finding Romales not applicable in the absence of evidence that the respondent knew she was departing in lieu of being placed in proceedings).

     Turning to the case before it, the BIA noted that its prior precedent decisions do not address the treatment of a departure at a port of entry that is neither an exclusion nor a withdrawal of an application for admission, but simply a departure from a port of entry.  The BIA concluded that this situation is similar to the circumstances of the cases where courts of appeal have declined to apply Romales.  The BIA noted that in this case "the respondent was not made aware of the opportunity for exclusion proceedings," and there was "no evidence that she left the port of entry under a threat of exclusion, that she withdrew an application for admission, or that she was fingerprinted, photographed, or otherwise detained."  In conclusion, the BIA held "that an immigration official's refusal to admit an alien at a land border port of entry will not constitute a break in the alien's continuous physical presence, unless there is evidence that the alien was formally excluded or made subject to an order of expedited removal, was offered and accepted the opportunity to withdraw his or her application for admission, or was subjected to any other formal, documented process pursuant to which the alien was determined to be inadmissible to the United States."

     The ruling is particularly likely to be relevant in cases of noncitizens who were stopped and removed from the country prior to the enactment of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996.  As the BIA noted, since the enactment of the IIRIRA, procedures at the border have changed and there is "a greater likelihood that refusals of admission will be better documented than in the past."

In re Avilez-Nava, 23 I. & N. Dec. 799, Int. Dec. 3517 (BIA 2005).

—By Linton Joaquin, NILC executive director

 

 

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