Matter of Compean

Board of Immigration AppealsJun 3, 2009
25 I&N Dec. 1 (B.I.A. 2009)

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File A078 566 977, A078 555 848.Houston, Texas

Decided by Attorney General June 3, 2009.

FOR RESPONDENT COMPEAN: Cyril Chuckwurah, Esquire, Houston, Texas

FOR RESPONDENT BANGALY: Isuf Kola, Esquire, Glen Ellyn, Illinois

FOR RESPONDENT J-E-C-, et al: Robert J. Jacobs, Esquire, Gainesville, Florida

AMICI CURIAE: American Immigration Law Foundation, and other organizations

FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY: David A. Martin, Acting General Counsel; David A. Landau, Chief Appellate Counsel

BEFORE THE ATTORNEY GENERAL


The Attorney General vacated the decision in Matter of Compean, Bangaly J-E-C-, 24 IN Dec. 710 (A.G. 2009), and pending the outcome of a rulemaking process, directed the Board of Immigration Appeals and the Immigration Judges to continue to apply the previously established standards for reviewing motions to reopen based on claims of ineffective assistance of counsel.


On January 7, 2009, Attorney General Mukasey overruled in part the decisions of the Board of Immigration Appeals ("Board") mMatter ofLozada, 19 IN Dec. 637 (BIA 1988), and Matter ofAssaad, 23 IN Dec. 553 (BIA 2003), and affirmed the Board's orders denying reopening in Matter of Compean, A078 566 977 (BIA May 20, 2008), Matter of Bangaly, A078 555 848 (BIA Mar. 7, 2008), mid Matter of J-E-C-(BIA Apr. 8, 2008). See Matter of Compean, Bangaly J-E-C-, 24 IN Dec. 710 (A.G. 2009) " Compean"). In Lozada, the Board established the procedural requirements for filing a motion to reopen deportation (now removal) proceedings based upon a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel and required the alien to show that he was prejudiced by the action or inaction of his counsel. Lozada, 19 IN Dec. at 639-40. The Compean decision acknowledged that the Lozada framework had "largely stood the test of time," having been expressly reaffirmed by the Board 15 years after its initial adoption. Compean, 24 IN Dec. at 731; see also Assaad, 23 IN Dec. at 556-57 (affirming the application of Lozada to removal proceedings). Nonetheless, Compean both rejected Lozada's constitutional reasoning and ordered the Board not to rely upon the Lozada framework, even as a discretionary matter. Instead, Compean set forth, as an exercise of the Attorney General's administrative discretion, anew substantive and procedural framework for reviewing all such claims and a formulation of the prejudice showing different from that followed by many courts, despite the limited discussion of the Lozada framework in the briefs submitted in Compean by the parties and amici curiae. Compean further provided that this new administrative framework should apply "henceforth," even though the decision acknowledged it might conflict with the Lozada-based approach taken by a number of Federal Courts of Appeals. See Compean, 24 IN Dec. at 730 n. 8.

For the reasons stated herein, I have determined that it is appropriate to reconsider the January 7, 2009 decision.

Establishing an appropriate framework for reviewing motions to reopen immigration proceedings based on claims of ineffective assistance of counsel is a matter of great importance. I do not believe that the process used in Compean resulted in a thorough consideration of the issues involved, particularly for a decision that implemented a new, complex framework in place of a well-established and longstanding practice that had been reaffirmed by the Board in 2003 after careful consideration. The preferable administrative process for reforming the Lozada framework is one that affords all interested parties a full and fair opportunity to participate and ensures that the relevant facts and analysis are collected and evaluated.

Accordingly, I direct the Acting Director of the Executive Office for Immigration Review to initiate rulemaking procedures as soon as practicable to evaluate the Lozada framework and to determine what modifications should be proposed for public consideration. After soliciting information and public comment, through publication of a proposed rule in the Federal Register, from all interested persons on a revised framework for reviewing claims of ineffective assistance of counsel in immigration proceedings, the Department of Justice may, if appropriate, proceed with the publication of a final rule.

In Compean, the introduction of a new procedural framework depended in part on Attorney General Mukasey's conclusion that there is no constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel in removal proceedings. Because that conclusion is not necessary either to decide these cases under pre- Compean standards or to initiate a rulemaking process, this Order vacates Compean in its entirety. To ensure that there is an established framework in place pending the issuance of a final rule, the Board and Immigration Judges should apply the pre- Compean standards to all pending and future motions to reopen based upon ineffective assistance of counsel, regardless of when such motions were filed. The litigating positions of the Department of Justice will remain unaffected by this Order. Finally, prior to Compean, the Board itself had not resolved whether its discretion to reopen removal proceedings includes the power to consider claims of ineffective assistance of counsel based on conduct of counsel that occurred after a final order of removal had been entered. Given the absence of a pre- Compean standard of the Board to apply pending issuance of a final rule, I resolve the question in the interim by concluding that the Board does have this discretion, and I leave it to the Board to determine the scope of such discretion.

Turning to the merits of the particular cases at issue, I find that, for the reasons stated by the Board, its orders denying reopening of the three matters reviewed in Compean were appropriate under the Lozada framework and standards as established by the Board before Compean. On that basis, I concur with Attorney General Mukasey's decision to affirm the Board's decisions denying reopening of these matters. Compean, 24 IN Dec. at 743.