Doroteo Sicajau Cotzojay v. Holder , 725 F.3d 172 ( 2013 )


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  •      11-4916-ag
    Doroteo Sicajau Cotzojay v. Holder
    1
    2                    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    3
    4                         FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    5
    6
    7
    8                            August Term, 2012
    9
    10        (Argued: March 14, 2013              Decided: July 31, 2013)
    11
    12                          Docket No. 11-4916-ag
    13
    14
    15                       DOROTEO SICAJAU COTZOJAY,
    16
    17                               Petitioner,
    18
    19                                        v.
    20
    21                         ERIC H. HOLDER, JR.,
    22                   UNITED STATES ATTORNEY GENERAL,
    23
    24                               Respondent.
    25
    26
    27
    28
    29   Before:
    30
    31       WESLEY, DRONEY, Circuit Judges, NATHAN, District Judge.*
    32
    33        Petitioner Doroteo Sicajau Cotzojay (“Sicajau”) appeals
    34   from the October 31, 2011 decision of the Board of
    35   Immigration Appeals (the “BIA”) dismissing Sicajau’s appeal
    36   from the Immigration Judge’s (the “IJ”) July 17, 2009 order
    37   of removal and the IJ’s April 21, 2009 oral decision denying
    *
    The Honorable Alison J. Nathan, of the United States
    District Court for the Southern District of New York, sitting by
    designation.
    1   Sicajau’s motion to suppress the Government’s evidence of
    2   alienage. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”)
    3   officers obtained this evidence during an April 2007
    4   nighttime, warrantless raid on Sicajau’s home. The IJ
    5   denied Sicajau’s motion to suppress after finding that
    6   Sicajau had not shown that ICE officers entered his home
    7   without consent and that, regardless, the ICE officers’
    8   conduct was not sufficiently “shocking” to qualify as
    9   egregious and require application of the exclusionary rule
    10   in this civil removal proceeding. The BIA affirmed the
    11   denial of Sicajau’s motion to suppress and the subsequent
    12   order of removal. Because we find that the IJ erroneously
    13   interpreted our case law to require physical threat or harm
    14   before a Fourth Amendment violation becomes sufficiently
    15   egregious to require suppression, and thus erred by refusing
    16   to shift the burden of proof to show consent to the
    17   Government, we VACATE and REMAND the BIA’s decision
    18   affirming the IJ’s denial of Sicajau’s motion to suppress
    19   and order of removal.
    20       VACATED AND REMANDED.
    21
    22
    23            HEATHER Y. AXFORD (Anne Pilsbury, Alexandra
    24                 Goncalves-Peña, on the brief), Central
    25                 American Legal Assistance, Brooklyn, NY, for
    26                 Petitioner.
    27
    28            NICOLE THOMAS-DORRIS, Trial Attorney, Office of
    29                 Immigration Litigation, Civil Division (Stuart
    30                 F. Delery, Acting Assistant Attorney General,
    31                 Civil Division, Mary Jane Candaux, Assistant
    32                 Director, on the brief), United States
    33                 Department of Justice, Washington, DC, for
    34                 Respondent.
    35
    36            Nancy Morawetz, Nikki Reisch, Legal Intern,
    37                 Washington Square Legal Services, Immigrant
    38                 Rights Clinic, New York, NY, for Amici Curiae
    39                 Lutheran Social Services of New York, Families
    40                 for Freedom, New Sanctuary Coalition of New
    41                 York City.
    42
    2
    1   WESLEY, Circuit Judge:
    2        On April 16, 2007, at approximately 4:00 a.m.,
    3   Petitioner Doroteo Sicajau Cotzojay (“Sicajau”)1 awoke to
    4   hear people knocking on windows and doors at the duplex that
    5   he shared with approximately twenty people in Riverhead, New
    6   York.2     The individuals surrounding Sicajau’s home
    7   identified themselves as police or probation officers and
    8   asked to speak with a man named Jose Cojon (“Cojon”).            The
    9   “officers” were Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”)
    10   officers.      Sicajau observed Cojon (who lived in the next
    11   room) leave the house with his passport.          The door to the
    12   house then closed behind him.          Sicajau remained in his
    13   bedroom on the first floor of the house with his door
    14   locked.     He heard steps on the first floor and then heard
    15   people pounding on his bedroom door.          Fearing that officers
    16   would force their way into his room, Sicajau opened the
    17   door.     Armed ICE officers entered the room, placed Sicajau
    18
    1
    Petitioner’s attorney refers to him as “Sicajau.”
    2
    The factual record in this case is limited to Sicajau’s
    affidavit and testimony before the IJ and the testimony of one of
    his neighbors, Jose Anibal Ochoa. The Government did not submit
    any affidavits or witnesses directly addressing the circumstances
    of Petitioner’s arrest.
    3
    1   in handcuffs and took him to the living room, where he was
    2   searched and instructed to remain on the floor.
    3       The officers asked Sicajau for identification and
    4   rejected his high school identification card – Sicajau had
    5   recently turned twenty years old.     They then took him back
    6   to his bedroom and searched through the contents of his
    7   drawers until they located his Guatemalan passport.     ICE
    8   officers loaded Sicajau and the majority of the people who
    9   lived at the duplex into a van.     The officers drove the van
    10   to another house where they arrested several more people
    11   before proceeding to a McDonald’s, where the officers had
    12   breakfast; the officers told Sicajau and the detainees in
    13   the van they could relieve themselves in the restaurant
    14   parking lot if the need arose.
    15       ICE officers took Sicajau to 26 Federal Plaza in New
    16   York City and placed him in a cell.     He was given a sandwich
    17   and a bottle of water.   Subsequently, officers took
    18   Sicajau’s photograph and his fingerprints before questioning
    19   him in English (which he does not speak well) about his
    20   immigration status and asking him to sign numerous
    21   documents.   Sicajau was told he “could be in even bigger
    22   problems” if he didn’t sign the documents.     Joint App’x 149-
    4
    1   50.   After Sicajau complied and officers completed a Form I-
    2   213, the Record of Deportable/Inadmissible Alien, ICE
    3   officers informed Sicajau that he had the right to an
    4   attorney.     Sicajau was released at approximately 10:00 p.m.
    5   that evening.
    6   Prior Proceedings
    7         After the Government instituted removal proceedings,
    8   Sicajau filed a motion to suppress the Government’s evidence
    9   of alienage, specifically, Sicajau’s Guatemalan passport,
    10   the I-213 and the statements memorialized therein, and any
    11   other documents seized by, or statements made to, ICE
    12   officers.     Sicajau argued that ICE officers obtained this
    13   evidence in violation of his Fourth and Fifth Amendment
    14   rights.     Sicajau contended that ICE officers had “forcibly
    15   gained entrance” to his home and arrested him without a
    16   warrant or probable cause.     Id. at 250.   In support of his
    17   motion to suppress, Sicajau submitted a sworn statement.
    18   His affidavit asserted that he was “asleep in [his] bedroom”
    19   when he was “suddenly awoken at 4 A.M.” by knocking at his
    20   window and voice yelling “‘Police!     Open up.’”   Id. at 252.
    21   Regarding the officers’ initial entry and exit from his
    22   home, Sicajau averred that he
    5
    1             opened [his] bedroom door to see what was
    2             going on when [he] saw Jose Cojon leaving
    3             with a group of armed officers through
    4             the main door. After this [Sicajau’s]
    5             sister in law closed and locked the front
    6             door. [Sicajau] returned to [his]
    7             bedroom.
    8
    9   Id.   Sicajau’s affidavit does not explain when or how the
    10   officers re-entered the home because he had “decided to stay
    11   in [his] room.”   Id.
    12         In April 2009, Immigration Judge Robert D. Weisel (the
    13   “IJ”) held a suppression hearing based on a “preliminary
    14   ruling that [Sicajau’s] affidavit alone constituted prima
    15   facie evidence” sufficient to entitle Sicajau to a hearing.
    16   Id. at 100.   However, the IJ was of the view that Sicajau’s
    17   affidavit was “not in and of itself sufficient to establish
    18   that the right was violated.”       Id.   The IJ viewed “the
    19   purpose of [the] hearing” as “provid[ing] [Sicajau] with the
    20   opportunity to testify.   He has the burden to establish that
    21   there was a violation under the Constitution.”        Id. at 130.
    22         During the hearing, Sicajau admitted that he “didn’t
    23   see how [the officers] came in” when they returned, because
    24   he was in his bedroom, but he “heard the steps . . . how
    25   they were knocking and trying to get in.”        Id. at 151.
    26   Sicajau was able to testify to the fact that after Cojon
    6
    1   left the house, one of Sicajau’s friends “closed the door
    2   . . . he locked it and closed it with some force.”       Id. at
    3   139.    During cross-examination, the attorney representing
    4   the Government inquired about the distinction between
    5   Sicajau’s affidavit, in which he stated that his sister-in-
    6   law closed the door behind the officers, and his testimony,
    7   during which he said that a friend had shut the door.       Id.
    8   at 154.    Sicajau confirmed that he “saw [his] sister-in-law
    9   close the door, [he had] always said [his] sister-in-law and
    10   not [his] friends,” but that his brother’s subsequent
    11   deportation and the resulting estrangement between his
    12   brother and sister-in-law had left him concerned she would
    13   not testify on his behalf.    Id. at 155, 159-61.
    14          Following Sicajau’s testimony, his attorney called
    15   another resident of the house, Jose Anibal Ochoa (“Ochoa”),
    16   to testify.    Ochoa corroborated Sicajau’s statements
    17   regarding what time officers arrived at the house.       At the
    18   time of the raid, Ochoa lived on the second floor of the
    19   residence.    He described the layout of the duplex and
    20   explained that each floor has its own entrance.     Although
    21   his testimony was not a model of clarity, the IJ and the
    22   parties agreed that Ochoa said that the home has an exterior
    7
    1   door that led to two doors, one opening onto the first floor
    2   and one at the top of a set of interior stairs opening onto
    3   the second floor.   Ochoa testified that the officers forced
    4   open the exterior door to gain access to the house.        Ochoa
    5   based this belief on the “banging” he heard and the fact
    6   that “no one opened the door for them.”      Id. at 190.    Ochoa
    7   did not see the officers enter the home.
    8        The Government produced no witnesses.     Instead, the
    9   Government rested on an affidavit submitted by Darren
    10   Williams (“Williams”), a Supervisory Detention and
    11   Deportation Officer with the ICE New York City Fugitive
    12   Operations Team.    Williams did not participate in the raid
    13   on Sicajau’s home; his affidavit offered nothing as to the
    14   acts of officers who did.     Instead, he explained the purpose
    15   of two Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) programs:
    16   Operation Return to Sender (“apprehending immigration
    17   absconders at large”) and Operation Cross Check (finding and
    18   securing “aliens illegally in the United States, fugitive
    19   aliens, aliens with criminal records, or aliens posing a
    20   threat to the community”).3    Id. at 229.   Williams confirmed
    3
    Sicajau was arrested during a raid performed as part of
    Operation Cross Check. The Petitioners in the companion case we
    decide today were seized as part of Operation Return to Sender.
    See Jose Pretzantzin, et al. v. Holder, No. 11-2867-ag, – F.3d –,
    8
    1   that operations were routinely scheduled to begin in the
    2   early morning – but never before 5:30 a.m. – and that
    3   officers were “explicitly trained that voluntary consent
    4   must be obtained from the occupant of the residence prior to
    5   making entry.”      Id. at 230-31.   Williams stated that
    6   officers could question and, if warranted, detain non-target
    7   individuals who were encountered during an operation.
    8        The IJ denied Sicajau’s motion to suppress in an oral
    9   decision.     The IJ recognized that this Court considers
    10   exclusion to be appropriate if an “an egregious violation
    11   occurred that was fundamentally unfair or [if] the
    12   violation, regardless of its egregiousness or fairness,
    13   undermined the reliability of the evidence in dispute.”      Id.
    14   at 109 (citing Almeida-Amaral v. Gonzalez, 
    461 F.3d 231
     (2d
    15   Cir. 2006)).     The IJ accurately described the testimony
    16   given by Sicajau and Ochoa.      However, the IJ concluded that
    17   although the ICE officers’ conduct was “not courteous, and
    18   was imperfect, and was disrespectful,” id. at 211, Sicajau
    19   had not shown that it constituted an egregious Fourth
    20   Amendment violation that mandated suppression of alienage
    21   evidence obtained during the raid and at 26 Federal Plaza,
    22   id. at 110.
    – (2d Cir. 2013).
    9
    1        The IJ determined that Sicajau had failed to “offer
    2   sufficient facts to establish that the residence was
    3   searched without valid consent,” because “[n]either
    4   [Sicajau] nor [Ochoa] observed any official enter the
    5   dwelling.”   Id. at 108.   The IJ further noted that Sicajau’s
    6   testimony at the hearing varied somewhat from the statements
    7   in his affidavit, but the IJ did not appear to give much
    8   weight to the discrepancy regarding whether it was Sicajau’s
    9   sister-in-law or his friend who closed the door behind Jose
    10   Cojon.4   The IJ did not make an explicit finding as to
    11   whether he found Sicajau or Ochoa to be credible.
    12   Regardless, the IJ determined that even if ICE officers had
    13   entered Sicajau’s home without a warrant and without
    4
    The IJ seemed more concerned with Sicajau’s description of
    when and how the door to the home was initially opened and
    closed. In Sicajau’s affidavit, he stated that he opened his
    bedroom door to see what was happening; he observed Cojon leave
    the home. “After this [his] sister in law closed and locked the
    front door.” Joint App’x 252. During the hearing, Sicajau
    testified that he left his bedroom for a moment and, through a
    window, observed Cojon leaving the house. The attorney
    representing the Government asked Sicajau whether, when he was
    out of his room, he saw any doors standing open. Id. at 154.
    Sicajau responded that the doors were closed. Id. The
    Government’s attorney then asked Sicajau how he knew that his
    sister-in-law had closed the door if he never saw it open. Id.
    at 155. Sicajau clarified that he had seen the door open before
    his sister-in-law closed it. Id. Although the IJ apparently
    viewed Sicajau’s statements as containing a “marked contrast,”
    id. at 108, whether Sicajau actually observed the exterior door
    standing open before his sister-in-law closed it or whether he
    merely presumed it had been open because he had just seen Cojon
    depart is not crucial given that Sicajau maintained that the
    doors were closed after Cojon left the house.
    10
    1   consent, that fact alone did not yield an egregious Fourth
    2   Amendment violation.   Because Sicajau was not subjected to
    3   physical brutality and was not threatened in a way that
    4   “would give him the impression that if he did not comply or
    5   obey [the officers’] requests, that he would be in some way
    6   severely mistreated, mishandled or punished,” the IJ
    7   reasoned that the ICE officers’ conduct was not sufficiently
    8   egregious to warrant application of the exclusionary rule in
    9   a civil removal hearing.   Id. at 110-11.   As a result, the
    10   IJ refused to suppress any of the evidence or statements
    11   obtained by the Government.   In July 2009, the IJ ordered
    12   Sicajau removed from the United States.
    13         The Board of Immigration Appeals (the “BIA”) affirmed.
    14   In re Sicajau Cotzojay, No. A097 535 383 (B.I.A. Oct. 31,
    15   2011).   The BIA determined that the IJ was not required to
    16   suppress the Government’s evidence of Sicajau’s alienage
    17   because “the ‘egregiousness’ standard ha[d] not been met.”
    18   Id.   The BIA reasoned that “[t]he facts as alleged by
    19   [Sicajau] [we]re insufficient to show that the immigration
    20   officers entered his living space without consent”; the BIA
    21   emphasized Sicajau’s failure to produce a witness who saw
    22   the officers enter the building.   Id.    The BIA approved of
    23   the IJ’s “observations that [Sicajau] did not show that he
    11
    1   was physically mishandled or threatened with harm,” and it
    2   found that any Fourth Amendment violation was insufficiently
    3   severe to require application of the exclusionary rule.       Id.
    4   The BIA also rejected Sicajau’s arguments regarding alleged
    5   violations of his Fifth Amendment rights and of DHS
    6   regulations.   Id.
    7       Petitioner timely petitioned for review of the BIA’s
    8   decision.
    9
    10                             Discussion5
    11       The IJ provided two bases for his decision that the
    12   evidence at issue was not suppressible: first, Petitioner
    13   failed to establish a lack of consent; and second, even if
    14   the raid was non-consensual, Petitioner failed to establish
    15   an egregious violation of his Fourth Amendment rights.     The
    16   BIA affirmed both of the IJ’s decisions.    For the reasons
    17   discussed below, the Court concludes that the IJ erred on
    5
    The standard of review is neither contested nor
    determinative. “When the BIA does not expressly ‘adopt’ the IJ’s
    decision, but ‘its brief opinion closely tracks the IJ’s
    reasoning,’ this Court may consider both the IJ’s and the BIA’s
    opinions ‘for the sake of completeness.’” Zaman v. Mukasey, 
    514 F.3d 233
    , 237 (2d Cir. 2008) (quoting Wangchuck v. DHS, 
    448 F.3d 524
    , 528 (2d Cir. 2006)). We review the agency’s factual
    findings for substantial evidence, 
    id.,
     and questions of law de
    novo, Diallo v. INS, 
    232 F.3d 279
    , 287 (2d Cir. 2000).
    12
    1   both levels.   It was error to find that Sicajau’s
    2   submissions were insufficient to shift the burden to the
    3   Government to establish consent.     It was also error to
    4   conclude that the facts alleged, even accepted as true, were
    5   insufficient to yield an egregious Fourth Amendment
    6   violation requiring suppression.
    7   Burden of Proof
    8       The IJ first found that the evidence was not subject to
    9   exclusion because Sicajau failed to establish that the
    10   residence was searched without valid consent.     This was
    11   error; Sicajau adequately established a prima facie case for
    12   suppression, at which point it became the Government’s
    13   burden to establish that its agents secured consent prior to
    14   conducting the search.    Pursuant to BIA precedent, a
    15   petitioner raising a question about the admissibility of
    16   evidence “must come forward with proof establishing a prima
    17   facie case before the [Government] will be called on to
    18   assume the burden of justifying the manner in which it
    19   obtained the evidence.”    Matter of Barcenas, 19 I. & N.
    20   Dec. 609, 611 (B.I.A. 1988) (quoting Matter of Burgos, 15 I.
    21   & N. Dec. 278, 279 (B.I.A. 1975)).    Under this burden-
    22   shifting framework, if the petitioner offers an affidavit
    23   that “could support a basis for excluding the evidence in
    13
    1   question,” it must then be supported by testimony.      
    Id.
         If
    2   the petitioner establishes a prima facie case, the burden of
    3   proof shifts to the Government to show why the evidence in
    4   question should be admitted.
    5       The BIA developed this burden-shifting framework in
    6   Matter of Tang, 
    13 I. & N. Dec. 691
    , 692 (B.I.A. 1971), a
    7   case in which the respondent challenged the Government’s use
    8   of documents that his attorney claimed had been taken in
    9   violation of his constitutional rights.      Tang’s attorney did
    10   not provide any specifications regarding this assertion; he
    11   argued that “since he raised a question as to the legality
    12   of the evidence, the burden is upon the [Government] to come
    13   forward with proof establishing that the documents” were
    14   legally obtained.   
    Id.
       The BIA disagreed, finding that
    15   “[o]ne who raises the claim must come forward with proof
    16   establishing a prima facie case before the [Government] will
    17   be called upon to assume the burden of justifying the manner
    18   in which it obtained its evidence.”    
    Id.
    19       The BIA explained that the “reason for [its] rule” was
    20   that an “‘attorney demanding suppression merely upon his own
    21   say-so often discovers only at the hearing that he has been
    22   misled by unsworn representations of his clients,’”
    23   resulting in protracted and unnecessary proceedings.      
    Id.
    14
    1   (quoting United States v. Garcia, 
    272 F. Supp. 286
    , 290
    2   (S.D.N.Y. 1967)).    Thus, a “respondent’s offer of proof” in
    3   support of a motion for suppression that is merely “a mixed
    4   legal and factual declaration by counsel, not based on
    5   counsel’s personal knowledge and never corroborated
    6   personally by the respondent” does not constitute a prima
    7   facie showing.     Matter of Ramirez-Sanchez, 
    17 I. & N. Dec. 8
       503, 505-06 (B.I.A. 1980).    But the requisite “personal
    9   knowledge” refers to information possessed by the respondent
    10   who was subject to the alleged constitutional violation; it
    11   cannot extend to information the respondent does not have.
    12       Here, the IJ erred by failing to shift the burden to
    13   show consent from Sicajau to the Government once Sicajau
    14   offered an affidavit and supporting testimony based on
    15   personal knowledge sufficient to make out a prima facie case
    16   for suppression.    Sicajau presented facts that, “if true,
    17   could support a basis for excluding the evidence in
    18   question.”   Barcenas, 19 I. & N. Dec. at 611.    Although
    19   neither Sicajau nor Ochoa personally observed ICE officers
    20   enter their home, each man testified to the full extent
    21   permitted by his “personal knowledge.”    Despite this, the IJ
    22   found that Sicajau “d[id] not offer sufficient facts to
    23   establish that the residence was searched without valid
    15
    1   consent,” because neither he nor his witness had “observed
    2   any official enter the dwelling.”     Joint App’x 108.    The BIA
    3   affirmed this conclusion, finding that “[t]he facts as
    4   alleged by [Sicajau] are insufficient to show that
    5   immigration officers entered his living space without
    6   consent.”   In re Sicajau Cotzojay, No. A097 535 383 (B.I.A.
    7   Oct. 31, 2011).
    8       This was error.   Sicajau presented facts that, taken as
    9   true, showed that ICE officers entered his home without
    10   consent and in violation of the Fourth Amendment.        See
    11   Almeida-Amaral v. Gonzalez, 
    461 F.3d 231
    , 237 (2d Cir. 2006)
    12   (noting that we must “tak[e] the evidence most favorably to
    13   petitioner” at this stage).    At this point, the burden to
    14   establish that the officers obtained voluntary consent
    15   before invading Sicajau’s home and bedroom should have
    16   shifted to the Government.    However, the IJ believed that
    17   even if Sicajau had made a prima facie case for an ordinary
    18   Fourth Amendment violation (by establishing a non-consensual
    19   entry), he had not made a prima facie showing for
    20   suppression because the facts alleged could not yield a
    21   violation “so shocking to the conscience that it would rise
    22   to the level of egregiousness.”     Joint App’x 110.
    23
    16
    1   “Egregious” Fourth Amendment Violations
    2        The IJ also found, and the BIA affirmed, that the
    3   evidence was not subject to exclusion because Sicajau could
    4   not show an egregious Fourth Amendment violation requiring
    5   suppression.   Specifically, the IJ found that even if
    6   Sicajau had demonstrated an ordinary Fourth Amendment
    7   violation, because he did not claim that ICE officers
    8   physically threatened or harmed him in the course of the
    9   nighttime, warrantless raid, it did not amount to an
    10   egregious violation.     The IJ’s determination, and the BIA’s
    11   affirmation, rested on an erroneous view of what government
    12   conduct is required before a Fourth Amendment violation may
    13   be classified as egregious.
    14        In INS v. Lopez-Mendoza, 
    468 U.S. 1032
     (1984), the
    15   Supreme Court balanced the “likely social benefits of
    16   excluding unlawfully seized evidence against the likely
    17   costs,” 
    id. at 1041
    , and determined that a Fourth Amendment
    18   violation, standing alone, does not justify applying the
    19   exclusionary rule in civil deportation hearings, 
    id.
     at
    20   1041-50.   However, a plurality of the Court included two
    21   caveats to this rule.6    First, Justice O’Connor, who
    6
    Cf. Oliva-Ramos v. Att. Gen. of U.S., 
    694 F.3d 259
    , 271
    (3d Cir. 2012) (“[T]hough technically correct to characterize the
    17
    1   authored the majority opinion, recognized that the need for
    2   the exclusionary rule’s use “might change, if there
    3   developed good reason to believe that Fourth Amendment
    4   violations by [immigration] officers were widespread.”       
    Id.
    5   at 1050.   Second, Justice O’Connor limited the majority
    6   holding by exempting from it any “egregious violations of
    7   Fourth Amendment or other liberties that might transgress
    8   notions of fundamental fairness and undermine the probative
    9   value of the evidence obtained.”     Id. at 1050-51.    Sicajau
    10   focuses his attack here on the second limitation: egregious
    11   Fourth Amendment violations.7
    12        We interpreted this aspect of Lopez-Mendoza as
    13   authorizing the exclusion of evidence obtained in violation
    14   of the Fourth Amendment “if record evidence established
    15   either (a) that an egregious violation that was
    16   fundamentally unfair had occurred, or (b) that the violation
    portion of the majority opinion recognizing a potential exception
    to the Court’s holding as a ‘plurality opinion,’ eight Justices
    agreed that the exclusionary rule should apply in
    deportation/removal proceedings involving egregious or widespread
    Fourth Amendment violations.”).
    7
    We note that recently ICE settled a class action arising
    out of warrantless invasions of (alleged) alien residences in
    conjunction with Operation Return to Sender. Mark Hamblett,
    Settlement Includes Guidelines for ICE Raids, N.Y. LAW JOURNAL,
    Apr. 8, 2013 (discussing settlement reached in Aguilar v.
    Immigration and Customs Enforcement, No. 07 Civ. 8224, before
    Southern District of New York Judge Katherine Forrest).
    18
    1   – regardless of its egregiousness or unfairness – undermined
    2   the reliability of the evidence in dispute.”8
    3   Almeida-Amaral, 
    461 F.3d at 235
    .    In Almeida-Amaral, the
    4   seventeen-year-old petitioner was approached late at night
    5   by a border patrol agent in the parking lot of a gas station
    6   near the Mexican border.   
    Id. at 232
    .     The agent requested
    7   identification; when the petitioner produced his Brazilian
    8   passport, the agent arrested him.    
    Id.
    9       This Court had no “doubts about the veracity of the
    10   evidence obtained as a result of the seizure,” but
    11   questioned whether “the agent’s stop of Almeida-Amaral
    12   transgressed notions of fundamental fairness.”      
    Id.
     at 235
    13   (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted).     Without
    14   providing an exhaustive set of factors, we identified “two
    15   principles that . . . bear on whether petitioner suffered an
    16   egregious violation of his constitutional rights.”      
    Id.
     at
    17   235 & 235 n.1.   First, the “characteristics and severity of
    8
    Almeida-Amaral explained that “Lopez-Mendoza authorizes
    exclusion for violations that are egregious either because the
    violation ‘transgress[ed] notions of fundamental fairness,’ or
    because the violation ‘undermine[d] the probative value of the
    evidence obtained.’” 
    461 F.3d at 234
     (quoting Lopez-Mendoza, 
    468 U.S. at 1050-51
    ) (emphasis in original). This Court viewed
    Lopez-Mendoza’s use of the conjunctive “and” instead of the
    disjunctive “or” as apparently “inadvertent[]”; it was “plainly
    not what the Court intended” to require evidence of fundamental
    unfairness and diminished probative value to justify exclusion.
    See id. at 234-35.
    19
    1   the offending conduct,” in addition to the validity of the
    2   seizure itself, should be considered.         Id. at 235.   Second,
    3   we determined that “even where the seizure is not especially
    4   severe, it may nevertheless qualify as an egregious
    5   violation if the stop was based on race (or some other
    6   grossly improper consideration).”       Id.    Applying these
    7   principles, we found that the agent’s suspicionless stop was
    8   an infringement but was not egregious because the stop was
    9   neither severe nor apparently motivated by impermissible
    10   considerations.   Id. at 237.
    11       What causes a Fourth Amendment violation to qualify as
    12   “egregious” based on severity?       This Court has never found a
    13   violation sufficiently severe, and therefore egregious, to
    14   require suppression in a removal hearing.9        E.g., id.;
    15   Melnitsenko v. Mukasey, 
    517 F.3d 42
    , 47-48 (2d Cir. 2008)
    16   (three-hour stop at a border check point was not
    17   sufficiently severe to be egregious); Pinto-Montoya v.
    18   Mukasey, 
    540 F.3d 126
    , 131-32 (2d Cir. 2008) (per curiam)
    9
    We have suppressed evidence on the basis of its
    unreliability. In Singh v. Mukasey, 
    553 F.3d 207
     (2d Cir. 2009),
    immigration agents questioned the petitioner over several hours
    throughout the night, not about his own immigration status, a
    relatively clear-cut inquiry, but about “more nuanced” issues
    that were “susceptible to corruption during the course of an
    improper interview.” 
    Id. at 214-16
    .
    20
    1   (finding that petitioners were not “seized” for Fourth
    2   Amendment purposes when they answered officials’ questions
    3   at an airport).    Other courts have identified egregious
    4   violations under arguably less severe circumstances.     See,
    5   e.g., Lopez-Rodriguez v. Mukasey, 
    536 F.3d 1012
    , 1018-19
    6   (9th Cir. 2008).    As the Third Circuit has noted, “there is
    7   no one-size-fits-all approach to determining whether a
    8   Fourth Amendment violation is egregious.”     Oliva-Ramos v.
    9   Att. Gen. of U.S., 
    694 F.3d 259
    , 279 (3d Cir. 2012).
    10       In this case, the absence of physical threat or harm to
    11   Sicajau was a key factor in the IJ and BIA decisions finding
    12   the exclusionary rule inapplicable.     Determining whether an
    13   egregious violation must include the threat or realization
    14   of physical violence requires a review of the Supreme
    15   Court’s Fourth Amendment jurisprudence generally, and the
    16   Court’s reference to “egregious” violations in Lopez-Mendoza
    17   specifically.
    18       First, it is uncontroversial that the Fourth Amendment
    19   applies to aliens and citizens alike.     See, e.g., Lopez-
    20   Mendoza, 
    468 U.S. at 1046
     (observing that it is “[i]mportant
    21   . . . to protect the Fourth Amendment rights of all
    22   persons,” despite finding that application of the
    23   exclusionary rule is not necessary in every context).
    21
    1   Second, “in the absence of consent or exigent circumstances
    2   . . . [the Court has] consistently held that the entry into
    3   a home to conduct a search or make an arrest is unreasonable
    4   under the Fourth Amendment unless done pursuant to a
    5   warrant.”     Steagald v. United States, 
    451 U.S. 204
    , 211
    6   (1981).     The Fourth Amendment’s protections apply to
    7   individuals like Sicajau, and these protections should be at
    8   their zenith in the home.     “At the very core of the Fourth
    9   Amendment stands the right of a man to retreat into his own
    10   home and there be free from unreasonable governmental
    11   intrusion.”     Payton v. N.Y., 
    445 U.S. 573
    , 589-90 (1980)
    12   (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted)).
    13       But the applicability of the Fourth Amendment does not
    14   compel the availability of the exclusionary rule in civil
    15   deportation proceedings.     Lopez-Mendoza, 
    468 U.S. at 1050
    .
    16   In support of the plurality’s exception for egregious Fourth
    17   Amendment violations, Justice O’Connor looked to Rochin v.
    18   California, 
    342 U.S. 165
     (1952), and to two BIA cases in
    19   which “fundamentally unfair” evidence was suppressed.
    20   Lopez-Mendoza, 
    468 U.S. at
    1050-51 & 1051 n.5.     In Rochin, a
    21   criminal case, when police officers entered the defendant’s
    22   bedroom he promptly swallowed two unidentified capsules.
    23   
    342 U.S. at 166
    .     In order to recover the capsules, the
    22
    1   officers handcuffed Rochin and took him to the hospital,
    2   where his stomach was forcibly pumped to induce vomiting.
    3   
    Id.
       At Rochin’s trial for possessing a preparation of
    4   morphine, the recovered capsules were the chief evidence
    5   against him.   
    Id.
       After the California Supreme Court
    6   declined to review Rochin’s conviction, the Supreme Court
    7   granted certiorari and reversed because the officers’
    8   conduct “shock[ed] the conscience.”        
    Id. at 209
    .
    9         We do not read the Supreme Court’s citation to Rochin
    10   as an indication that the Court requires equally flagrant
    11   violations before it is willing to label them “egregious.”
    12   As the Third Circuit recently pointed out, the Supreme
    13   Court’s decision in Rochin preceded its incorporation of the
    14   Fourth Amendment against the states via the Fourteenth
    15   Amendment in Mapp v. Ohio, 
    367 U.S. 643
    , 655-57 (1961).
    16   Oliva-Ramos, 694 F.3d at 276.        “‘Consequently, the Court has
    17   not relied on the Rochin shocks the conscience standard but
    18   has instead applied a Fourth Amendment reasonableness
    19   analysis in cases that, like Rochin, involved highly
    20   intrusive searches or seizures.’”        Id. (quoting Lester v.
    21   City of Chicago, 
    830 F.2d 706
    , 711 (7th Cir. 1987)
    22   (additional internal quotation marks omitted)); see also
    23
    1   Maryland v. King, 
    133 S.Ct. 1958
    , 1969 (2013).   Still, if a
    2   Fourth Amendment violation is measured by what is
    3   reasonable, then an egregious violation must surely be
    4   something more than unreasonable.   See Oliva-Ramos, 
    694 F.3d 5
       at 276.
    6       Justice O’Connor does not directly address what
    7   distinguishes an unreasonable violation from one that is
    8   egregious, but cites to two cases in which the BIA concluded
    9   that the constitutional violation at issue was egregious.
    10   One of these cases is directly on point, as it allowed
    11   “suppression of evidence obtained as a result of a night-
    12   time warrantless entry into the aliens’ residence.”    Lopez-
    13   Mendoza, 
    468 U.S. at
    1051 n.5 (citing Matter of Ramira-
    14   Cordova, No. A21 095 659 (Feb. 21, 1980)).   She also cites
    15   to Matter of Garcia, 
    17 I. & N. Dec. 319
    , 321 (BIA 1980), in
    16   which the BIA invoked the “requirements of due process” to
    17   suppress the respondent’s involuntary admission of alienage
    18   after his repeated requests for counsel were denied.     Lopez-
    19   Mendoza, 
    468 U.S. at
    1051 n.5.
    20       Although both Garcia and Ramira-Cordova, like Rochin,
    21   involved some degree of physical threat or forcible contact,
    22   we are unconvinced that the Supreme Court’s citation to
    23   these cases means that physical coercion is a necessary
    24
    1   component of an egregious Fourth Amendment violation.
    2   Ultimately, the plurality’s exemption of egregious
    3   violations rests on the view that evidence obtained in a
    4   “fundamentally unfair” manner should be excluded for due
    5   process reasons.     Lopez-Mendoza, 
    468 U.S. at
    1051 n.5.     We
    6   see no good reason to require that Fourth Amendment
    7   violations must involve some sort of physical threat or
    8   trespass before they “transgress notions of fundamental
    9   fairness.”     
    Id. at 1050-51
     (noting that the evidence at
    10   issue was “gathered in connection with peaceful arrests”).
    11   Breaking into someone’s home at 4:00 a.m. without a warrant
    12   or any legitimate basis need not also include physical
    13   injury or the threat thereof for such conduct to qualify as
    14   egregious.
    15       In Almeida-Amaral, this Court explained that both the
    16   “characteristics and severity of the offending conduct,” in
    17   addition to its validity or invalidity, are relevant.        461
    18   F.3d at 235.     This inquiry is intended to be broad.   As the
    19   Third Circuit has recognized, “a flexible case-by-case
    20   approach” is warranted, under which the threat or use of
    21   physical force is one relevant, but not dispositive,
    22   consideration.     Oliva-Ramos, 694 F.3d at 278-79.   In Oliva-
    23   Ramos, the court vacated and remanded the BIA’s decision
    25
    1   refusing to suppress evidence obtained via a pre-dawn,
    2   warrantless raid conducted as part of Operation Return to
    3   Sender.   Id. at 279, 281 n.27.     The Third Circuit developed
    4   a non-exhaustive list of factors to guide the BIA in its
    5   assessment of the egregiousness of the Fourth Amendment
    6   violation, including: whether the violation was intentional;
    7   whether the seizure was “gross or unreasonable” and without
    8   plausible legal ground; whether the invasion involved
    9   “threats, coercion[, ] physical abuse” or “unreasonable
    10   shows of force”; and whether the seizure or arrest was based
    11   on race or ethnicity.   Id. at 279.
    12        We agree with the Third Circuit that each of these
    13   factors, among others, may be useful for determining whether
    14   a Fourth Amendment violation is sufficiently egregious to
    15   require application of the exclusionary rule.      No single
    16   aspect of a constitutional violation elevates its status
    17   from merely unreasonable to egregious.10     Thus, although an
    10
    The Ninth Circuit’s view that “[a] Fourth Amendment
    violation is ‘egregious’ if ‘evidence is obtained by deliberate
    violations of the [F]ourth [A]mendment, or by conduct a
    reasonable officer should [have known] is in violation of the
    Constitution’” goes too far. Lopez-Rodriguez v. Mukasey, 
    536 F.3d 1012
    , 1018 (9th Cir. 2008) (quoting Gonzalez-Rivera v. INS,
    
    22 F.3d 1441
    , 1449 (9th Cir. 1994) (emphasis omitted)). This
    qualified immunity-type inquiry yields an exception that is
    “frankly, rather broad,” id. at 1019 (Bybee, J., concurring),
    and places too much emphasis on the good or bad faith of
    government agents.
    26
    1   unlawful search does not “become[] an egregious search
    2   merely because it invades the privacy of the home,” Martinez
    3   Carcamo v. Holder, 
    713 F.3d 916
    , 923 (8th Cir. 2013), that
    4   government agents intrude into one’s home (versus a
    5   workplace or vehicle, for example) is an important factor in
    6   assessing the egregiousness of a Fourth Amendment violation
    7   because the home is where its protections should be at their
    8   peak.   As in this case, the deliberate, nighttime,
    9   warrantless entry into an individual’s home, without consent
    10   and in the absence of exigent circumstances, may constitute
    11   an egregious Fourth Amendment violation regardless of
    12   whether government agents physically threaten or harm
    13   residents.
    14       We are persuaded that the facts as alleged by Sicajau
    15   portray an egregious Fourth Amendment violation requiring
    16   application of the exclusionary rule.   We reject the IJ’s
    17   determination that Sicajau’s failure to personally observe
    18   the officers’ entry of the home rendered him incapable of
    19   establishing a prima facie case for suppression.      As
    20   discussed, Sicajau’s affidavit and supporting testimony
    21   describing the circumstances of the raid were sufficient to
    22   carry this burden.   Thus, assuming that ICE officers did not
    23   secure voluntary consent to enter the home – thereby
    24   effecting the basic Fourth Amendment violation that must
    27
    1   underlie any egregious violation – certain aspects of the
    2   raid as alleged by Sicajau transform the constitutional
    3   transgression depicted here into an egregious Fourth
    4   Amendment violation.
    5        Initially, we note that ICE officers purposely arrived
    6   at Sicajau’s home in the pre-dawn hours, presumably for the
    7   purpose of startling the sleeping residents, and, perhaps,
    8   with the aim of coercing confused consent.11    In addition,
    9   although the officers apparently secured their target,
    10   Cojon, they returned to the home without a warrant and
    11   without reasonable suspicion that additional illegal aliens
    12   remained behind the home’s locked doors.     The Government
    13   failed to offer any evidence showing that its officers
    14   obtained voluntary consent to enter the home; the only
    15   record of the raid that we have comes from Sicajau and
    16   Ochoa.    In the absence of evidence to the contrary, their
    17   statements support finding that ICE officers entered the
    18
    19
    20
    11
    According to Supervisory Detention and Deportation Officer
    Williams, ICE officers aim to arrive at residences between 5:30
    a.m. and 6:00 a.m. “to ensure that target aliens would be
    present.” Joint App’x 231. But the record in this case (and in
    the companion case argued in tandem with the case at bar) belies
    Williams’ assertion that ICE officers never conduct raids
    starting before 5:30 a.m.
    28
    1   home without consent in egregious violation of the Fourth
    2   Amendment.12
    3        We conclude that the best course is to remand for
    4   further proceedings to give the Government a meaningful
    5   opportunity to show that its officers obtained consent to
    6   enter Sicajau’s home.   We note that although Government
    7   proof of voluntary consent to enter Sicajau’s home and
    8   bedroom would negate his Fourth Amendment claim, he has
    9   raised separate arguments regarding the admissibility of the
    10   evidence under the Fifth Amendment and DHS regulations.      In
    11   light of our decision to remand, we decline to reach those
    12   arguments here.   Finally, if, on remand, Sicajau’s motion to
    13   suppress evidence of alienage is granted, we direct the IJ
    14   and the BIA to our opinion issued in a companion case also
    15   decided today for guidance with respect to what types of
    16   “identity” evidence are subject to exclusion.     See Jose
    17
    12
    We believe that ICE officers’ conduct throughout the raid
    lends support to our conclusion that the Fourth Amendment
    violation depicted here was egregious – the officers’ actions
    were more than merely “disrespectful” with regard to the
    residents’ constitutional rights. Specifically, ICE officers
    pounded on Sicajau’s bedroom door, corralled Sicajau and other
    handcuffed residents in the living room, searched Sicajau’s room
    for desirable identification documents, informed arrestees that
    they could relieve themselves in a restaurant parking lot while
    officers ate breakfast, and, in total, detained Sicajau for
    approximately eighteen hours.
    29
    1   Pretzantzin, et al. v. Holder, No. 11-2867-ag, – F.3d –, –
    2   (2d Cir. 2013).
    3
    4                            Conclusion
    5       For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the Board of
    6   Immigration Appeals is hereby VACATED and REMANDED.   On
    7   remand, the Government bears the burden of proof to show
    8   that ICE officers obtained voluntary consent to enter the
    9   home and Sicajau’s bedroom.
    30