Case Law United States v. Martinez-Mendoza

United States v. Martinez-Mendoza

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UNPUBLISHED

Argued: May 7, 2021

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Richmond. Henry E. Hudson, Senior District Judge. (3:17-cr-00164-HEH-1)

ARGUED:

Caroline Swift Platt, Assistant Federal Public Defender OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER, Alexandria, Virginia for Appellant.

Daniel Taylor Young, Assistant United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellee.

ON BRIEF:

Geremy C. Kamens, Federal Public Defender, Joseph S. Camden, Assistant Federal Public Defender, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER, Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellant.

G. Zachary Terwilliger, United States Attorney, Alexandria, Virginia, S. David Schiller, Assistant United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellee.

Before AGEE, HARRIS, and RUSHING, Circuit Judges.

Affirmed by unpublished opinion. Judge Harris wrote the opinion, in which Judge Agee and Judge Rushing joined.

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

PAMELA HARRIS, CIRCUIT JUDGE

In 1997, Rodrigo Martinez-Mendoza was ordered deported in absentia, after he failed to attend his deportation hearing. Twenty years later, based on that order, he was charged with illegal entry under 8 U.S.C. § 1326. During his criminal proceedings, he sought to challenge the 1997 order collaterally, arguing that its entry in absentia violated his due process rights.

The district court denied Martinez-Mendoza's motions to dismiss the indictment against him, finding that he could not establish the factual predicates for his collateral challenge, and Martinez-Mendoza was convicted. Because the district court's factual findings were not clearly erroneous, we uphold the court's denial of Martinez-Mendoza's motions to dismiss and affirm the court's judgment.

I.
A.

We begin with the facts surrounding the 1997 deportation order entered against Martinez-Mendoza, the subject of the collateral attack now before us. Martinez-Mendoza, a Mexican citizen who had entered the United States without inspection, was served personally with an Order to Show Cause on November 10, 1996. That Order initiated deportation proceedings against Martinez-Mendoza. It also told him that there would be a hearing before an immigration judge ("IJ") on a date yet to be determined, and that notice of the hearing date would be mailed to his home address, which Martinez-Mendoza provided on the form. Martinez-Mendoza was warned that a deportation order would be entered in his absence if he failed to attend the hearing, and informed of his right to challenge such an order.

Whether the Immigration and Naturalization Service ("INS") properly served the notice of a hearing date that was supposed to follow - officially, a "Notice of Hearing" - is one of the disputes at the heart of this case. No certified mail return receipt was recorded or placed in Martinez-Mendoza's file. The IJ later would determine, however, that the Notice of Hearing indeed had been sent by certified mail to Martinez-Mendoza's home address in Houston, Texas, notwithstanding the missing return receipt.

On April 9, 1997 - before the scheduled hearing - INS officers stopped Martinez-Mendoza during a workplace raid in Galveston, Texas. Officer Ray Lamb of the INS filled out an I-213 form memorializing his interview with Martinez-Mendoza, on which he indicated that Martinez-Mendoza had a deportation hearing scheduled for May 1997. At the same time, Lamb noted that Martinez-Mendoza was "VR'd" to Mexico on his own request. J.A. 114. As subsequent testimony would make clear, "VR" refers to voluntary return, a process by which Mexican nationals were permitted to return to Mexico without entry of a formal removal order against them.

It is undisputed that Martinez-Mendoza in fact returned to Mexico in April 1997. The parties do dispute, however - in the second factual dispute relevant here - whether he was voluntarily returned by the INS or went to Mexico on his own. Either way, Martinez-Mendoza was in Mexico on May 6, 1997, the day of his deportation hearing.

At the hearing, the IJ addressed the notice issue disputed here, stating orally that notice had been sent to Martinez-Mendoza's home address and entering what appears to have been a copy of that notice as "Exhibit number 1." J.A. 436. Because Martinez-Mendoza did not attend the hearing, the IJ ordered him removed in absentia. In his written order, the IJ indicated both that Martinez-Mendoza had been served with notice by certified mail and the absence of a return receipt. Notice of the in absentia deportation order was mailed to Martinez-Mendoza's address in Houston. Martinez-Mendoza did not challenge the order then or at any time until the current criminal case.

B.

We turn now to the criminal proceedings before us on appeal. In December 2017, Martinez-Mendoza was charged with illegal reentry under 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a) and (b)(1), based on the in absentia deportation order entered against him in 1997. [*] Martinez-Mendoza moved to dismiss the indictment under § 1326(d), challenging the validity of the 1997 order.

In his motion, Martinez-Mendoza made two key claims: first, that he was not properly served with a notice of his hearing date, given the absence of a certified mail return receipt; and second, that he had been voluntarily returned to Mexico by the INS prior to his hearing date, making it impossible for him to attend. For both reasons, Martinez-Mendoza argued, entry of an in absentia order after his hearing was fundamentally unfair under § 1326(d). See 8 U.S.C. § 1326(d)(3) (allowing collateral attacks only where, inter alia, entry of deportation order was "fundamentally unfair"). And, he finished, because those same procedural flaws also prevented him from seeking review of his deportation order when it was entered in 1997, he was now entitled to attack that order collaterally in his criminal proceeding. See id. § 1326(d)(2) (allowing collateral attacks where, inter alia, deportation proceedings "improperly deprived" defendant of judicial review); United States v. El Shami, 434 F.3d 659, 663-64 (4th Cir. 2005).

After holding two evidentiary hearings, the district court rejected Martinez-Mendoza's collateral challenge, denying his motion to dismiss the indictment and then, in an oral ruling, his renewed motion to dismiss. See United States v. Martinez-Mendoza, No. 3:17-CR-164-HEH, 2019 WL 1293340, at *6 (E.D. Va. Mar. 20, 2019); J.A. 322-23. The court's rulings were based on two critical factual findings. First, the district court found that Martinez-Mendoza had received actual notice of his deportation hearing. Martinez-Mendoza, 2019 WL 1293340, at *5. The IJ, the court explained, had indicated that notice had been sent by certified mail to Martinez-Mendoza's home address. Id. Moreover, the "reasonable inference" was that the notice had been received: The notes taken by Officer Lamb in Galveston listed a May 1997 hearing date, suggesting that Martinez-Mendoza had informed Lamb of his May 6, 1997, deportation hearing. Id. And finally, the court noted, Martinez-Mendoza had neither testified that he did not receive notice nor provided any other evidence to that effect. Id.

The district court also found insufficient evidence to support Martinez-Mendoza's allegation that he had been voluntarily returned to Mexico by the INS before his hearing date. Id. at *6. The court acknowledged that the "VR" notation on the April 1997 I-213 form filled out by Officer Lamb could refer to voluntary return. Id. But the court credited the testimony of Lamb and a DHS officer currently assigned to Martinez-Mendoza's case that voluntary return was only a "remote possibility" in this case, given the absence in Martinez-Mendoza's file of other documents that should accompany a voluntary return, local policies that would have precluded Martinez-Mendoza's voluntary return at the time, and the possibility that Lamb had incorrectly noted a "VR" on the form. J.A. 322; see Martinez-Mendoza, 2019 WL 1293340, at *6.

Because Martinez-Mendoza had actual notice of his hearing and had not been voluntarily returned to Mexico by the INS, the district court concluded, he could not meet the requirements for a collateral challenge to a deportation order under § 1326(d). See Martinez-Mendoza, 2019 WL 1293340, at *5-6; J.A. 322-23. In particular, the court held, he could not establish that some procedural defect made it impossible for him to challenge his 1997 order directly and at the time of entry, by exhausting his administrative remedies or seeking judicial review. Martinez-Mendoza, 2019 WL 1293340, at *5-6; J.A. 323.

After the district court denied his motions to dismiss the indictment, Martinez-Mendoza proceeded to a bench trial and was convicted of illegal reentry, based on the 1997 deportation order. The district court sentenced him to 72 months' imprisonment, varying upward from the Guidelines sentencing range.

Martinez-Mendoza filed this timely appeal, challenging only the district court's denial of his motions to dismiss.

II.

On appeal of the denial of a motion to dismiss an indictment under § 1326(d), we review the district court's legal conclusions de novo and its factual findings for clear error. United States v. Lopez-Collazo, 824 F.3d 453 460 (4th Cir. 2016) (citation omitted). Here, the district court's decision rested on two factual findings to which we owe substantial deference. See United States v. Shea, 989 F.3d 271, 277 (4th Cir. 2021) (citations...

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