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Sixth Circuit Reverses Dismissal of Appeal for Failure to File Brief with the Same Attorney Address as Notice of Appearance

The Sixth Circuit has reversed the denial of an appeal for failure to file a brief, when the non-citizen did timely file a brief, but it contained an address for her attorney that was different than was provided on the Notice of Appearance. “[N]othing in the BIA Practice Manual, notice of appeal form, or regulations say that this address needed to match the address provided on the attorney’s notice of appearance or that failing to do so might result in rejection of the brief.”

The full text of Pineda-Guerra v. Bondi can be found here: https://www.opn.ca6.uscourts.gov/opinions.pdf/25a0329p-06.pdf

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Sixth Circuit Finds Age of Child Should be Ascertained at time of IJ's Decision on Cancellation of Removal

The Sixth Circuit has determined that when a child is under 21 at the time an Immigration Judge grants cancellation of removal for nonlawful permanent residents, but ages out during the pendency on appeal filed by DHS, the child’s age remains the same as it was on the date of the judge’s decision. It appears this applicant was detained at the time of the cancellation grant, and thus, was not subject to the visa backlog for most cancellation applicants. As such, it is unclear what would happen if the child was under 21 on the day of the merits hearing, and the judge put the applicant in the queue for a cancellation number, and the child aged out before the number was issued.

The full text of Perez-Perez v. Bondi can be found here:

https://www.opn.ca6.uscourts.gov/opinions.pdf/25a0315p-06.pdf

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Fifth Circuit Permits Admission of Uncertified Criminal Records, Finds Texas Conviction for Indecency with a Child to be Deportable Offense

The Fifth Circuit has concluded that the certification requirements in 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(c)(3)(C) are not mandatory and has also determined that a Texas Conviction for indecency with a child - sexual contact is a crime of child abuse.

The full text of Campuzano v. Bondi can be found here: https://www.ca5.uscourts.gov/opinions/pub/24/24-60575-CV0.pdf

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BIA Finds Administrative Closure was Inappropriate for SIJS Petitioner

The Board of Immigration Appeals has determined that an Immigration Judge erred by granting administrative closure to an applicant for Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS) who did not provide prima facie evidence of eligibility. “Submitting the juvenile court order is particularly important to establishing prima facie eligibility because we otherwise have no way of knowing whether the respondent is subject to a juvenile court order that satisfies the regulatory requirements at 8 C.F.R. § 204.11(c)(1) and (d)(3) and whether a competent court or agency made the best-interest determination required by 8 C.F.R. § 204.11(c)(2)(i).”

“Moreover, even if the respondent had established eligibility for special immigrant juvenile classification, the indeterminate and likely lengthy period of time until he would be eligible to adjust status if his petition were ultimately approved by USCIS also strongly militates against administrative closure.3 The priority date for the respondent’s visa petition is April 23, 2025. As explained above, visas for special immigrant juveniles are only currently available to aliens who filed their petitions prior to July 1, 2020. Considering the extensive, nearly 5-year gap between the currently eligible priority date and the respondent’s priority date, it is not realistic to expect the respondent to become eligible for relief from removal based on his special immigrant juvenile petition within a ‘reasonably short period of time.’ Thus, we conclude that administrative closure based on the respondent’s potential eligibility for adjustment of status at some remote time in the future is inappropriate.”

The full text of Matter of Cahuec Tzalam can be found here:

https://www.justice.gov/eoir/media/1417396/dl?inline

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2 Comments

BIA Limits IJ Review of Asylum Cooperative Agreement

The Board of Immigration Appeals has limited an Immigration Judge’s review of the applicability of an asylum cooperative agreement (ACA). Under the regulation, an Immigration Judge is required to “determine whether under the relevant [ACA] agreement the alien should be removed to the third country, or whether the alien should be permitted to pursue asylum or other protection claims in the United States.” 8 C.F.R. § 1240.11(h)(1). If an alien is “subject to the terms of” one or more ACAs and has not demonstrated that the safe third country bar does not apply, the Immigration Judge shall order the alien “removed to the relevant third country in which the alien will be able to pursue his or her claims for asylum or protection against persecution or torture under the laws of that country.” 8 C.F.R. § 1240.11(h)(4).

“In applying the safe third country bar, the authority delegated to Immigration Judges by the regulation is limited to determining whether any of the conditions discussed in 8 C.F.R. § 1240.11(h)(2) apply so as to render the relevant ACA inapplicable to the particular respondent. Immigration Judges do not have authority to make the determination required under section 208(a)(2)(A) of the INA as to whether ‘the alien would have access to a full and fair procedure’ in the third country because the Attorney General has expressly reserved that statutory authority. Similarly, Immigration Judges lack authority to determine whether it is in the public interest for an alien subject to an ACA to pursue asylum in the United States because section 208(a)(2)(A) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. § 1158(a)(2)(A), ‘reserves to the Secretary [of Homeland Security] or [her] delegates the determination whether it is in the public interest for the alien to receive asylum in the United States.’” “Immigration Judges may not require DHS to demonstrate that an ACA country of removal is willing to accept a respondent who is subject to the terms of an ACA.”

“[I]f a respondent subject to an ACA claims a fear of persecution or torture in a relevant third country, but has no substantial connection to that country, an Immigration Judge should typically be able to resolve the applicability of the safe third country bar without conducting a full evidentiary hearing.”

What the Board didn’t discuss is the fact that Honduras has only agreed to accept 10 people per month under the ACA. https://www.state.gov/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/25-625-Honduras-Migration-and-Refugees-JIP.pdf. Thus, requiring IJs to order asylum applicants removed to Honduras without any proof that they will be accepted by Honduras, effectively reads the right to apply for asylum out of the statute.

The full text of Matter of C-I-M-G- & L-V-S-G- can be found here:

https://www.justice.gov/eoir/media/1416811/dl?inline

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Eleventh Circuit Addresses FL Child Neglect Statute on Remand from SCOTUS

On remand from the Supreme Court, a panel of Eleventh Circuit judges has determined that a Florida conviction prohibiting “willfully or by culpable negligence neglect[ing] a child without causing great bodily harm, permanent disability, or permanent disfigurement to the child.” The three judges - each issuing their own opinion - agreed on little other than that the appeal should be denied.

The first judge believed that the panel remained bound by its prior decision in Pierre v. Attorney General, because when “the Supreme Court said it meant to preserve the ‘holdings’ of Chevron-era cases, it was referring not, as Bastias seems to suggest, only to a court’s case-specific application of a judicially approved agency interpretation to a particular set of facts, but rather, and more broadly, to that court’s antecedent determination that the agency’s reading of the governing statute was ‘lawful.’” Nonetheless, the judge favored rehearing this case en banc, for two reasons. “First, the Board’s definition of ‘crime of child abuse,’ which we approved in Pierre, is exceedingly broad—it arguably sweeps in all manner of conduct that might not square with the ordinary understanding of that phrase. At the very least, I think that Bastias has presented substantial arguments that the Board’s reading of § 1227(a)(2)(E)(i) isn’t the best one. Which leads me to the second, and more fundamental, reason that I favor en banc rehearing: It would permit the full Court to carefully consider and decide (1) how Loper Bright’s recognition of “statutory stare decisis” principles interacts—if at all—with our own prior-panel-precedent rule, (2) how we ought to deal with Chevron-era precedents on a goingforward basis, and (3) whether (depending on the answers to those questions) we should continue to consider ourselves bound by Pierre.”

The second judge concluded that they were not bound by our decision in Pierre, but rather were required to analyze de novo the basic substantive question at issue -- whether Bastias’s state crime conviction for child neglect qualifies as a crime under Section 237(a)(2)(E)(i) of the INA. “Pierre was tasked with matching the federal crime of child abuse in the INA with a different state crime -- battery of a child involving bodily fluids. As I see it, nothing in its holding, nothing in its reasoning, and nothing necessary to reaching its holding answers the basic question we face today.” Turning to the question of what caselaw survives the demise of Chevron, the judge indicated that “[t]o the extent, then, that a Chevron-era decision found an agency’s definition to be reasonable, and to the extent that finding was necessary to resolve the case, that finding is part of the holding and remains good law.” As to the extend of deportable offenses under the statute, the opinion noted that “although a definition of a ‘crime of child abuse’ might encompass the crime of child neglect and more, we have no occasion to make that comparison because in this case, we find the same words enumerating the same crime -- the crime of child neglect -- on both sides of the ledger.” “In short, the generic federal crime of child neglect requires a mens rea of recklessness and conduct creating a risk of harm to a child, which matches the mens rea and conduct needed for the “least culpable conduct” criminalized under Bastias’s Florida statute of conviction.”

The third judge concluded that “no matter how we might classify ‘culpable negligence’ within the traditional hierarchy of culpable mental states, we must conclude that as used in Florida law, culpable negligence captures a category of conduct that is so egregious as to raise a presumption of conscious indifference, which rises to a level of seriousness matching those acts of abuse, neglect, and abandonment Congress meant to render deportable in 1996.” “Having established that the generic federal offense of child abuse is not confined to injurious conduct, embraces culpably negligent acts, and may extend to those who are not parents nor guardians of the victim, it is a fairly straightforward matter to conclude Florida Statute § 827.03(2) is a categorical fit. Under Florida Statute § 827.03(2), the least culpable conduct criminalizes ‘neglect’ by a caregiver, taken either willfully or with culpable negligence—even if said neglect does not result in injury.”

The full text of Bastias v. Attorney General can be found here: https://media.ca11.uscourts.gov/opinions/pub/files/202111416.rem.pdf

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Eleventh Circuit Construes Florida Drug Statute

The Eleventh Circuit has determined that the identity of the substance is an element of a Florida drug statute, making it divisible among the various substances. The Court then moved on to comparing Florida’s definition of cocaine to the definition in the federal controlled substance schedules.

“If we compare the definitions of cocaine in place in February and March 2017, when Miller committed the state offenses, there is a mismatch because the federal schedules no longer treated ioflupane as a type of cocaine, while Florida law did. But if we take the district court’s approach and compare the definitions of cocaine in place when Miller was convicted of the state offenses, August 2017, there is no mismatch because both federal law and Florida law no longer treated ioflupane as cocaine.”

“Under the categorical approach, we conclude that there was a mismatch between Florida’s definition of cocaine, which treated ioflupane as a form of cocaine, and the federal schedules, which did not. Because Miller’s offense of conviction was broader than federal law, we hold that his Florida convictions do not qualify as serious drug offenses under ACCA.”

The full text of United States v. Miller can be found here:

https://media.ca11.uscourts.gov/opinions/pub/files/202313069.pdf

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Ninth Circuit Panel Berates Court's Stay Procedures

A three-panel judge of the Ninth Circuit has written a scathing criticism of the court’s internal policy of often delaying the assignment of an opposed motion for a stay of removal until the briefing on the merits of the case is complete.

“Here, the extended stay that Petitioners have already obtained flagrantly violates these principles. Once the stay motion in this case was fully briefed in February 2025, “the court [was] equipped to rule,” and “its obligation to apply the Nken factors [was] triggered.” Id. But rather than present Petitioners’ stay motion to the next available motions panel for decision, the Clerk’s Office (consistent with our general internal practices) held the motion until it could be presented to a merits panel together with the fully completed merits briefing. As a result, by the time that the stay motion was presented to us for decision, the ostensible “administrative stay ha[d] effectively become a stay pending appeal,” but without any consideration of the Nken factors. Id. at 800. Indeed, the 10-month stay that Petitioners obtained with their barebones motion was accomplished without any involvement of an Article III judge.

It is manifestly unlawful to allow a temporary administrative stay to be continued for such an undue length of time after an opposed stay motion has been fully briefed, much less to do so without any case-specific judicial involvement. See Nken, 556 U.S. at 433–34 (holding that granting an opposed stay motion requires application of the traditional stay factors in “an exercise of judicial discretion” (emphasis added)); Doe #1, 944 F.3d at 1223 (holding that a temporary administrative stay “is only intended to preserve the status quo until the substantive motion for a stay pending appeal can be considered on the merits” (emphasis added)); cf. United States v. Johnson, 48 F.3d 806, 809 (4th Cir. 1995) (noting that the settled principle that substantive judicial functions “cannot be delegated to nonjudicial officers for resolution” does not “prohibit courts from using nonjudicial officers to support judicial functions, as long as a judicial officer retains and exercises ultimate responsibility”). Moreover, the practice of generally holding stay motions until they can be presented to the merits panel together with the completed merits briefing squarely violates Nken’s instruction that courts may not “reflexively hold[] a final order in abeyance pending review.” 556 U.S. at 427. Under these principles, once the opposed stay motion in this case was fully briefed, it should have been presented by the Clerk’s Office to the next available motions panel. And, going forward, that is the practice that must be followed in disposing of fully briefed opposed stay motions.”

The panel decision in Rojas-Espinoza v. Bondi can be found here:

https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2025/10/24/24-7536.pdf

The panel agreed to stay its decision pending a vote on whether to rehear this case en banc and consideration of supplemental briefing from the parties:

https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2025/11/10/24-7536.pdf

An edited version of the panel decision can be found here - this amended opinion does ot affect the stay of the decision: https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2025/11/25/24-7536.pdf

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Fifth Circuit Measures Diligence from When Non-citizen Learned of Post-Conviction Relief

The Fifth Circuit, in evaluating whether a non-citizen exercised due diligence in moving to reopen his proceedings, has indicated the importance of the date he learned of the availability of post-conviction relief. The Court rejected the argument that diligence should be measured from when the post-conviction order was granted.

The full text of Arevalo v. Bondi can be found here:

www.ca5.uscourts.gov/opinions/pub/24/24-60349-CV0.pdf

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