Kristen Colindres v. DOS ( 2023 )


Menu:
  •  United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
    Argued March 17, 2023                  Decided June 23, 2023
    No. 22-5009
    KRISTEN H. COLINDRES AND EDVIN A. COLINDRES JUAREZ,
    APPELLANTS
    v.
    UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF STATE, ET AL.,
    APPELLEES
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Columbia
    (No. 1:21-cv-00348)
    Christopher W. Dempsey argued the cause and filed the
    briefs for appellants.
    Catherine M. Reno, Trial Attorney, U.S. Department of
    Justice, argued the cause for appellees. With her on the brief
    were Brian M. Boynton, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney
    General, and T. Monique Peoples, Senior Litigation Counsel.
    Before: SRINIVASAN, Chief Judge, WALKER, Circuit
    Judge, and RANDOLPH, Senior Circuit Judge.
    Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WALKER.
    2
    Opinion concurring in part and concurring in the judgment
    filed by Chief Judge SRINIVASAN.
    WALKER, Circuit Judge: Edvin Colindres Juarez applied
    for a visa to enter the United States. But the Government de-
    nied his application, fearing that he was part of a criminal or-
    ganization.
    Mr. Colindres and his wife — who is an American citi-
    zen — filed this suit to challenge that decision. But their suit
    faced an uphill struggle: With narrow exceptions, a court may
    not review the government’s decision to deny a visa.
    To show that their suit fits within an exception, the Colin-
    dreses point to a rule allowing American citizens to challenge
    visa denials that burden their constitutional rights. Mrs. Colin-
    dres says the rule applies here because denying her husband a
    visa interfered with her constitutional right to marriage.
    The district court rejected that argument and dismissed.
    We affirm. Though marriage is a fundamental right, it does not
    include the right to live in America with one’s spouse. So the
    right is not burdened when the government denies a spouse’s
    visa application.
    Plus, even if the exception applied, allowing us to review
    the Government’s visa denial, Mrs. Colindres’s challenge
    would fail on the merits. To survive judicial review, the Gov-
    ernment need only cite a statute listing a factual basis for deny-
    ing a visa. It did that here.
    3
    I. Background
    Mr. Colindres was born and raised in Guatemala. He en-
    tered the United States “without inspection” when he was four-
    teen. Colindres v. United States Department of State, 
    575 F.Supp.3d 121
    , 127 (D.D.C. 2021). For more than twenty
    years, he made his life in America — he got a job working for
    a pool company, married an American citizen named Kristen,
    and had a daughter.
    But for all that time, Mr. Colindres did not have permission
    to live or work in the United States. So in 2015, he decided to
    fix his immigration status.
    To do that, he first filed an Application for Provisional Un-
    lawful Presence Waiver. Aliens like Mr. Colindres who are
    “unlawfully present” in the United States for more than six
    months are “ineligible to receive visas and ineligible to be ad-
    mitted to the United States.” 
    8 U.S.C. § 1182
    (a), (a)(9)(B)(i).
    An Unlawful Presence Waiver allows the Attorney General to
    remove that obstacle. 
    Id.
     § 1182(a)(9)(B)(v). Here, the Attor-
    ney General granted Mr. Colindres’s waiver application.
    Even so, the waiver did not give Mr. Colindres permission
    to live in the United States. To get permission, he had to suc-
    cessfully apply for a visa. Id. §§ 1181(a); 1182(a)(7).
    Visa applications are adjudicated by consular officers. Id.
    §§ 1201 (authority to issue visas); 1361 (burden of proof to
    show visa eligibility on the alien). So in July 2019, Mr. Colin-
    dres travelled to the U.S. embassy in Guatemala for a visa in-
    terview with a consular officer.
    The officer did not resolve Mr. Colindres’s application at
    that interview. Instead, the officer asked Mr. Colindres to
    4
    submit his Guatemalan criminal record. Though his record
    came back clean, the officer scheduled a second interview.
    Nearly a year later, the officer denied Mr. Colindres’s visa ap-
    plication, finding him ineligible because “there [was] reason to
    believe” that he was “a member of a known criminal organiza-
    tion.” JA 242-43 (citing 
    8 U.S.C. § 1182
    (a)(3)(A)(ii)). That
    decision meant he could not return to the United States.
    Mr. Colindres asked the embassy to reconsider. The em-
    bassy’s Immigrant Visa Chief “reviewed the evidence” and
    “reconsider[ed]” the consular officer’s decision. JA 248. But
    “he did not find any compelling new information” to justify a
    departure from the officer’s determination. 
    Id.
    Unwilling to accept the embassy’s decision, Mr. Colindres
    and his wife sued the Department of State. They asked the dis-
    trict court to “[d]eclare” that Mr. Colindres’s visa denial was
    “contrary to law” and to issue an injunction directing the Gov-
    ernment to issue him a visa. JA 257.
    The district court dismissed. Though it did “not take
    lightly” the “hardship” that the embassy’s decision had caused
    the Colindreses, it held that judicial review was unavailable.
    Colindres, 575 F.Supp.3d at 126. The “doctrine of consular
    non-reviewability” bars judicial review of most visa denials.
    Id. at 140. And though there are narrow exceptions to the doc-
    trine, none allowed the Colindreses’ suit to proceed here. Id.
    The Colindreses appealed. We review the district court’s
    decision to dismiss de novo. Sanchez v. Office of State Super-
    intendent of Education, 
    45 F.4th 388
    , 395 (D.C. Cir. 2022).
    Taking as true the factual allegations in the Colindreses’ com-
    plaint, we agree with the district court that they failed to state a
    claim. Id. at 393. We thus affirm.
    5
    II. Analysis
    Deciding who is allowed into the United States and who is
    not can involve hard policy choices. Denying a visa may “im-
    plicate” America’s relationship with “foreign powers” or re-
    quire evaluating “changing political and economic circum-
    stances.” Trump v. Hawaii, 
    138 S. Ct. 2392
    , 2418-19 (2018)
    (cleaned up). For that reason, “the power to exclude aliens” is
    “a power to be exercised exclusively by the political branches,”
    with limited judicial review. Kiyemba v. Obama, 
    555 F.3d 1022
    , 1025 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (cleaned up).
    Reflecting the limited role of the judiciary, the consular-
    non-reviewability doctrine “shields a consular official’s deci-
    sion to issue or withhold a visa from judicial review,” with two
    narrow exceptions. Baan Rao Thai Restaurant v. Pompeo, 
    985 F.3d 1020
    , 1024-25 (D.C. Cir. 2021). The first exception ap-
    plies when “a statute expressly authorizes judicial review.” Id.
    at 1025 (cleaned up). That exception is not at issue here be-
    cause the Colindreses have pointed to no statute that allows re-
    view. The second exception lets “an American citizen . . . chal-
    lenge the exclusion of a noncitizen if it burdens the citizen’s
    constitutional rights.” Id. at 1024.
    Even if an exception applies, judicial review is narrow. It
    is limited to whether the officer gave a “facially legitimate and
    bona fide reason” for denying a visa. Kleindienst v. Mandel,
    
    408 U.S. 753
    , 770 (1972).
    Here, the Colindreses claim that the constitutional-rights
    exception lets them bring this challenge. First, because Mrs.
    Colindres is a citizen, they argue that the Government’s visa
    denial burdened her “fundamental . . . marital right to live to-
    gether” with her husband. JA 2. Second, they argue that, if the
    exception applies, they should prevail on the merits because the
    6
    Government did not give sufficient reasons for denying Mr.
    Colindres’s visa.
    We disagree with both arguments.
    A. The Visa Denial Did Not Burden Mrs. Colindres’s
    Constitutional Right To Marriage
    “[M]arriage is a fundamental right.” Obergefell v.
    Hodges, 
    576 U.S. 644
    , 673 (2015). But a citizen’s right to
    marry is not impermissibly burdened when the government re-
    fuses her spouse a visa.
    The right to marriage is the right to enter a legal union. See
    
    id. at 680-81
    . It does not include the right to live in America
    with one’s spouse. Thus, in Swartz v. Rogers, a wife chal-
    lenged her husband’s deportation because it burdened her
    “right, upon marriage, to establish a home, create a family,
    [and] have the society and devotion of her husband.” 
    254 F.2d 338
    , 339 (D.C. Cir. 1958). This court rejected that argument
    because “deportation would not in any way destroy the legal
    union which the marriage created. The physical conditions of
    the marriage may change, but the marriage continues.” Id.; see
    also Rohrbaugh v. Pompeo, 
    2020 WL 2610600
     (D.C. Cir. May
    15, 2020) (relying on Swartz to reject a husband’s claim that
    denying his wife a visa burdened his right to marriage).
    True, the Supreme Court has said “the right to marry, es-
    tablish a home and bring up children is a central part of the
    liberty protected by the Due Process Clause.” 1 Zablocki v.
    1
    Though the Supreme Court has repeatedly held that the Fourteenth
    Amendment’s Due Process Clause (which applies to the states) pro-
    tects the right to marriage, it has not squarely held that the Fifth
    7
    Redhail, 
    434 U.S. 374
    , 384 (1978) (cleaned up). But “consti-
    tutional protection” is not triggered “whenever a regulation in
    any way touches upon an aspect of the marital relationship.”
    Kerry v. Din, 
    576 U.S. 86
    , 95 (2015) (plurality op.).
    Instead, constitutional protection kicks in only when “this
    Nation’s history and practice” show that a government regula-
    tion is incompatible with a fundamental liberty interest. 
    Id.
    (cleaned up); see also Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Or-
    ganization, 
    142 S. Ct. 2228
    , 2248 (2022) (courts must be
    “guided by . . . history and tradition” when asking what liberty
    interests are protected by the Fourteenth Amendment).
    Amendment’s Due Process Clause (which applies to the federal gov-
    ernment) also protects that right. Cf. Abigail Alliance for Better Ac-
    cess to Developmental Drugs v. von Eschenbach, 
    495 F.3d 695
    , 702
    (D.C. Cir. 2007) (noting in dicta that the Fifth Amendment protects
    the right to marriage but citing only a case discussing the Fourteenth
    Amendment); Kerry v. Din, 
    576 U.S. 86
    , 108 (2015) (Breyer, J., dis-
    senting) (arguing that the Fifth Amendment protects the right to mar-
    riage, but citing no case finding such a right under the Fifth Amend-
    ment); see also Lewis v. Mutond, 
    62 F.4th 587
    , 596 (D.C. Cir. 2023)
    (Rao, J., concurring) (“there are reasons to reconsider whether the
    personal jurisdiction limits required by the Due Process Clause of the
    Fifth Amendment are identical to those of the Fourteenth”).
    Because the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments — enacted sev-
    enty-seven years apart — could have been subject to different “pub-
    lic understanding[s]” at their respective moments of ratification, they
    may protect different unenumerated rights. See New York State Rifle
    & Pistol Association, Inc. v. Bruen, 
    142 S. Ct. 2111
    , 2137 (2022).
    Here, the parties did not address whether the Fifth Amendment pro-
    tects marriage to the same extent as the Fourteenth Amendment. So
    we assume without deciding that it does. We thus rely on the Su-
    preme Court’s Fourteenth Amendment caselaw here, even though
    Mrs. Colindres’s claim arises under the Fifth Amendment.
    8
    Here, history and practice cut against Mrs. Colindres’s
    claim that she has a “marital right” to live in America with her
    husband. JA 2. To paraphrase Justice Scalia’s plurality opin-
    ion in Kerry v. Din, “a long practice of regulating spousal im-
    migration precludes [Mrs. Colindres’s] claim that the denial of
    [Mr. Colindres’s] visa application has deprived her of a funda-
    mental liberty interest.” 
    576 U.S. at 95
    .
    From the Founding, the government has had discretion to
    control entry into the United States. Consider the debates
    around the Alien Act of 1798. The Act gave the President un-
    fettered discretion to remove “all such aliens as he shall judge
    dangerous to the peace and safety of the United States.” Ch.
    58, 
    1 Stat. 570
     (1798).
    Though the Act’s constitutionality was vigorously de-
    bated, its supporters and detractors agreed that the government
    had discretion to control aliens’ entry into the United
    States — even though they disagreed about which government
    should wield that power. Supporters argued that the immigra-
    tion power was federal. George Keith Taylor thus cited Black-
    stone to show that “by the law of nations, it is left in the power
    of all states to take such measures about the admission of
    strangers as they think convenient.” Debate on the Virginia
    Resolutions, reprinted in The Virginia Report of 1799-1800, at
    31 (1850). For their part, opponents contended that “the power
    to admit, or to exclude alien[s]” was left “to each individual
    state.” 8 Annals of Cong. 1955 (1798) (Statement of Rep. A.
    Gallatin). But even James Madison — one of the Act’s strong-
    est critics — recognized that some government must have the
    power to control entry into the United States. James Madison,
    Report of 1800 (Jan. 7, 1800). He “allow[ed] the truth” of the
    notion that the “discretionary power” to admit aliens “into the
    country [is] of favor [and] not of right.” 
    Id.
    9
    Of course, the Supreme Court eventually held that the
    power to control immigration was federal. See Head Money
    Cases, 
    112 U.S. 580
     (1884). And when Congress enacted im-
    migration legislation, it generally did not carve out exceptions
    for spouses.
    For example, the Page Act of 1875 gave “consol[s]” at
    ports in Asia discretion to deny permission to come to the
    United States to any immigrant who “ha[d] entered into a con-
    tract or agreement for a term of service within the United
    States[ ] for lewd and immoral purposes.” Ch. 141 § 1, 
    18 Stat. 477
    , 477-78. Though the Act was designed to stop prostitutes
    emigrating, consuls unfortunately treated it as a “general re-
    striction of Chinese female immigration.” George Anthony
    Peffer, Forbidden Families: Emigration Experiences of Chi-
    nese Women Under the Page Law, 1875-1882, 6 J. Am. Ethnic
    Hist. 28, 42 (1986). As a result, the Act “made the immigration
    of Chinese wives extremely difficult.” 
    Id.
     Our point is not to
    endorse the Act’s policy or application, but simply to note that
    the Act did not include an exception for spouses and made no
    provision for judicial review of consuls’ decisions. Ch. 141
    § 1, 
    18 Stat. 477
    , 477-78.
    Immigration statutes passed in the decades following the
    Page Act likewise limited spousal immigration. Take the Im-
    migration Act of 1882. It required the Treasury Secretary to
    “examine” aliens arriving at United States ports and to deny
    “permi[ssion] to land” to “any convict, lunatic, idiot, or any
    person unable to take care of himself or herself without becom-
    ing a public charge.” Ch. 376 § 2, 
    22 Stat. 214
    . And the Act
    contained no exceptions for citizens’ spouses. See also Immi-
    gration Act of 1891, Ch. 551 § 1, 
    26 Stat. 1084
     (expanding
    grounds of inadmissibility and allowing only administrative re-
    view).
    10
    Similarly, when Congress started to impose numerical lim-
    its on immigration in 1921, those limits applied to citizens’
    spouses. The Emergency Quota Act of 1921 put a cap on the
    number of immigrants who could come to the United States
    each year. Ch. 8 § 2, 
    42 Stat. 5
    , 6. Though it gave preferred
    status to citizens’ wives (but not husbands), it did not guarantee
    them a quota spot. 
    Id.
     “In other words, a citizen could move
    his spouse forward in the line, but once all the quota spots were
    filled for the year, the spouse was barred without exception.”
    Din, 
    576 U.S. at 97
    .
    To sum up, from early federal immigration legislation to
    today, Congress has sometimes limited spousal immigration.
    To be sure, on other occasions, Congress has facilitated citizens
    bringing their spouses to America. See, e.g., War Brides Act
    of 1945, 
    59 Stat. 659
    . But Congress’s “long practice of regu-
    lating spousal immigration” confirms that citizens have no fun-
    damental right to live in America with their spouses. Din, 
    576 U.S. at 95
    .
    Because the Colindreses cannot show that the Govern-
    ment’s visa denial burdened Mrs. Colindres’s fundamental
    rights, their suit does not fall within the constitutional-rights
    exception to the consular-non-reviewability doctrine. See
    Baan Rao Thai Restaurant, 985 F.3d at 1024-25. 2
    2
    Our conclusion is consistent with Kleindienst v. Mandel, 
    408 U.S. 753
     (1972). Cf. Concurring Op. 1-2. There, the Supreme Court said
    that an American professor’s First Amendment “right to receive in-
    formation” was “implicated” when the government denied a visa to
    a Marxist who was due to speak at the professor’s university. Man-
    del, 
    408 U.S. at 764-65
    . But because the government had adequately
    explained its visa denial, the Court expressly refused to decide what
    the First Amendment requires in that context. 
    Id. at 770
     (“What First
    Amendment or other grounds may be available for attacking exercise
    11
    B. Even If The Visa Denial Is Reviewable, The
    Government Met Its Burden
    Even if the Colindreses could get judicial review, their
    claim would fail on the merits.
    When the constitutional-rights exception to the consular-
    non-reviewability doctrine applies, judicial review is “deferen-
    tial.” Trump v. Hawaii, 
    138 S. Ct. 2392
    , 2419 (2018). Courts
    ask only whether the government has given “a facially legiti-
    mate and bona fide reason” for denying a visa. Mandel, 
    408 U.S. at 770
    .
    That requirement is easy to satisfy. It “mean[s] that the
    [g]overnment need provide only a statutory citation to explain
    a visa denial.” Hawaii, 
    138 S. Ct. at 2419
    . Citing a statutory
    provision that “specifies discrete factual predicates the consu-
    lar officer must find to exist before denying a visa” is enough.
    Din, 
    576 U.S. at 105
     (Kennedy, J. concurring). And even if the
    government fails to cite such a statute, it may still meet its bur-
    den by “disclos[ing] the facts motivating [its] decision.” Id.;
    see also Mandel, 
    408 U.S. at 769
    .
    of discretion for which no justification whatsoever is advanced is a
    question we neither address nor decide in this case.”). So it may be
    that the government does not violate the First Amendment when it
    denies a visa for no reason at all. That is important because the first
    step in the consular-non-reviewability doctrine is satisfied only if a
    citizen’s rights are “burden[ed].” Baan Rao Thai Restaurant, 985
    F.3d at 1024-25. Regardless, we need not tackle that question today
    because the Colindreses do not argue that Mrs. Colindres’s First
    Amendment right to “sustained, face-to-face interaction” with her
    husband is implicated by the government’s visa denial. Concurring
    Op. 2.
    12
    Here, the consular officer’s decision to deny Mr. Colin-
    dres’s visa satisfies that standard. The officer refused Mr.
    Colindres’s     visa     application     under      
    8 U.S.C. § 1182
    (a)(3)(A)(ii). That provision specifies a factual predi-
    cate for denying a visa: The alien must “seek[ ] to enter the
    United States to engage . . . [in] unlawful activity.” 
    8 U.S.C. § 1182
    (a)(3)(A)(ii). And the officer explained why that provi-
    sion was satisfied here: There was “reason to believe [Mr.
    Colindres] is a member of a known criminal organization.” JA
    7-8. That was all the officer was required to do.
    To be sure, § 1182(a)(3)(A)(ii) “does not specify the type
    of lawbreaking that will trigger a visa denial.” Munoz v. De-
    partment of State, 
    50 F.4th 906
    , 917 (9th Cir. 2022) (holding
    that § 1182 does not contain discrete factual predicates). But
    that level of specificity is not required. In Din, Justice Kennedy
    said that a provision making terrorists inadmissible was de-
    tailed enough. Din, 
    576 U.S. at 105
     (Kennedy, J., concurring)
    (citing § 1182(a)(3)(B)). And that provision is written in the
    same general terms as the provision at issue here. Compare
    § 1182(a)(3)(B)(i)(II) (an alien is inadmissible if “a consular
    officer . . . has reasonable ground to believe” that the alien “is
    engaged in or is likely to engage after entry in any terrorist ac-
    tivity”), with § 1182(a)(3)(A)(ii) (an alien is inadmissible if “a
    consular officer . . . has reasonable ground to believe[ ] [that
    the alien] seeks to enter the United States to engage . . . [in]
    unlawful activity”).
    Thus, here, as in Din, the Government’s statutory “cita-
    tion . . . indicates it relied upon a bona fide factual basis for
    denying” Mr. Colindres’s request for a visa. Din, 
    576 U.S. at 105
     (Kennedy, J., concurring).
    As a fallback, the Colindreses assert that the Government’s
    visa denial was in “bad faith” because its stated reasons for
    13
    denying the visa were “pretextual” and “not based on the . . .
    merits.” Colindres Br. 51-53. True, an “affirmative showing
    of bad faith on the part of the consular officer” can demonstrate
    the government failed to give a “bona fide” reason for its ac-
    tions. Din, 
    576 U.S. at 105-106
     (Kennedy, J. concurring). But
    because courts “presume” that “public officers” have “properly
    discharged their official duties,” a litigant must provide “clear
    evidence” of bad faith. United States v. Chemical Foundation,
    Inc., 
    272 U.S. 1
    , 14-15 (1926).
    The Colindreses do not do that here. Instead, they point to
    evidence in the record — Mr. Colindres’s clean criminal his-
    tory and his lack of gang tattoos, for example — that they say
    undercuts the Government’s decision. Colindres Br. 51-52.
    But disagreeing with the Government’s decision to discount
    that evidence falls well short of the kind of clear showing nec-
    essary to establish bad faith. Cf. NRDC. v. SEC, 
    606 F.2d 1031
    ,
    1049 n.23 (D.C. Cir. 1979) (giving examples of evidence suf-
    ficient to rebut the presumption of agency regularity); Hartman
    v. Moore, 
    547 U.S. 250
    , 264 (2006) (the similar presumption
    of prosecutorial regularity can be rebutted when a prosecutor
    admits to improper “retaliatory thinking” or “rubber
    stamp[ing]” decisions).
    The Colindreses’ challenge thus fails on the merits. The
    Government met its burden by giving a facially legitimate and
    bona fide reason for denying Mr. Colindres a visa.
    C. The Colindreses’ Other Arguments Are Not Properly
    Before The Court
    The Colindreses raise two other arguments to challenge the
    Government’s visa denial, but neither is properly before us.
    14
    First, the Colindreses assert that the statute under which
    Mr. Colindres was denied a visa is unconstitutionally vague.
    See 
    8 U.S.C. § 1182
    (a)(3)(A)(ii); Colindres Br. 36. But the dis-
    trict court held that they forfeited that argument by “failing to
    address it” in their opposition to the Government’s motion to
    dismiss. Colindres v. United States, 
    575 F.Supp.3d 121
    , 130
    (D.D.C. 2021). Because the district court did not abuse its dis-
    cretion by finding forfeiture, we may not address the Colin-
    dreses’ vagueness argument now. See Texas v. United States,
    
    798 F.3d 1108
    , 1110, 1114-15 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (this Court has
    “yet to find” that a district court’s application of the failure-to-
    respond forfeiture rule was an abuse of discretion (cleaned
    up)).
    Second, the Colindreses contend that the visa denial vio-
    lated the Equal Protection Clause. But they forfeited that argu-
    ment by raising it in a single-sentence footnote of their appel-
    late brief. Colindres Br. 47, n.5; see also CTS Corp. v. EPA,
    
    759 F.3d 52
    , 64 (D.C. Cir. 2014) (“hiding an argument” in a
    footnote “and then articulating it in only a conclusory fashion”
    is “forfeiture”).
    *    *    *
    To get judicial review, the Colindreses must show that the
    Government’s decision to deny Mr. Colindres a visa burdened
    Mrs. Colindres’s constitutional rights. They cannot do that
    here.
    And even if they could, the Government would win on the
    merits. To survive judicial review, it need only cite a statute
    listing a factual basis for denying a visa. It did that here.
    SRINIVASAN, Chief Judge, concurring in part and
    concurring in the judgment: The court today affirms the
    dismissal of the Colindreses’ complaint, and I agree with that
    ultimate disposition. I also join Part II.C of the court’s opinion,
    which concludes that the Colindreses’ unconstitutional
    vagueness and equal protection challenges are not properly
    before us. And I join the portion of Part II.B of the opinion that
    rejects the Colindreses’ claim that the government acted in bad
    faith in denying Mr. Colindres Juarez a visa. See Maj. Op. 12.
    Respectfully, however, I do not join the remainder of Part II.B
    or Part II.A of the court’s opinion, which address the
    Colindreses’ procedural due process challenge.
    In Part II.A, my colleagues hold that a person’s
    fundamental constitutional right to marriage does not include
    any protected liberty interest in living in the United States with
    her spouse. And because there is no protected interest to which
    due process protections apply, there is no need to apply any due
    process scrutiny, even a relaxed form of review. On that view,
    the government could deny an American citizen’s spouse a visa
    to reenter the country—thus depriving the citizen of the
    company of her spouse in the country ever again—without any
    explanation and for a wholly arbitrary reason, and that result
    would not implicate the fundamental right to marriage so as to
    trigger due process scrutiny. To be sure, as my colleagues note,
    our court issued a decision 65 years ago holding that the
    deportation of a citizen’s spouse did not violate the citizen’s
    right to marriage. Swartz v. Rogers, 
    254 F.2d 338
    , 339 (D.C.
    Cir. 1958). But insofar as that decision rested on the notion
    that the right to marriage does not include any protected interest
    in living in the country with one’s spouse, we have had no
    occasion to reassess the issue afresh in the intervening decades.
    The Supreme Court has since “acknowledged,” though,
    that when a foreign scholar is denied admission into the country
    to speak at a conference, an American professor’s
    constitutional “right to receive information” is “implicated,”
    2
    such that some form of constitutional scrutiny applies. Trump
    v. Hawaii, 
    138 S. Ct. 2392
    , 2419 (2018) (quotation marks
    omitted) (quoting and discussing Kleindienst v. Mandel, 
    408 U.S. 753
    , 764–65 (1972)). (To the extent my colleagues mean
    to question whether any scrutiny in fact applies on those facts,
    i.e., the facts of Mandel (Maj. Op. 10 n.2), I understand Trump
    v. Hawaii to confirm that “limited” scrutiny does apply in that
    situation, 
    138 S. Ct. at
    2419—after all, presumably some
    manner of constitutional scrutiny applies when a constitutional
    right is “implicated,” id.) In the Court’s view, American
    professors have a cognizable right-to-information interest in a
    foreign scholar’s “physical presence” in the country to enable
    “sustained, face-to-face” interaction with the scholar. Mandel,
    
    408 U.S. at 765
    . My colleagues conclude today, however, that
    an American citizen has no cognizable right-to-marriage
    interest in her husband’s physical presence in the country to
    enable sustained, face-to-face interaction with her husband.
    The upshot is that, whereas the denial of a visa to a foreign
    scholar triggers at least some due process scrutiny because of
    an American scholar’s right to receive information, the denial
    of a visa to a foreign spouse triggers no due process scrutiny at
    all despite the American spouse’s right to marriage.
    Notably, when the Supreme Court recently considered the
    same issue in Kerry v. Din, 
    576 U.S. 86
     (2015), a majority of
    the Court either assumed or concluded that the right to marriage
    includes a protected interest in living with one’s spouse in the
    country. Id. at 102 (Kennedy, J., joined by Alito, J., concurring
    in the judgment); id. at 107–10 (Breyer, J., joined by Ginsburg,
    Sotomayor & Kagan, JJ., dissenting). In deciding to the
    contrary, my colleagues rely on the plurality opinion in Din
    joined by three Justices. See id. at 88–101 (plurality opinion).
    But the remaining six Justices expressly declined to join the
    plurality’s resolution of the issue. Id. at 102 (Kennedy, J.,
    concurring in the judgment); id. at 107 (Breyer, J., dissenting).
    3
    And in fact, of the Justices who reached the merits of the
    question, more concluded that an American citizen possesses a
    cognizable liberty interest in her spouse’s physical presence in
    the country than concluded otherwise. Compare id. at 107
    (Breyer, J., dissenting), with id. at 88 (plurality opinion). The
    issue then remains an unsettled one in the Supreme Court.
    There is no need for us to take up the merits of that
    constitutional question anew in this case, and I would refrain
    from doing so. Rather, we can rest our decision solely on the
    ground my colleagues address in Part II.B of the court’s
    opinion—i.e., that even assuming Mrs. Colindres’s
    fundamental right to marriage includes a protected interest in
    living in the country with her husband, such that at least some
    form of due process scrutiny applies, the government’s denial
    of a visa to him afforded her adequate process. That is
    precisely how the controlling opinion in Din resolved that case.
    Id. at 102 (Kennedy, J., concurring in the judgment). I would
    follow the same course here.
    That brings me to Part II.B of the court’s opinion. While
    I agree with my colleagues’ conclusion in that Part that the
    government provided whatever process may have been due in
    this case, my route for reaching that conclusion differs in part.
    As my colleagues explain (Maj. Op. 10), the question is
    whether the government gave “a facially legitimate and bona
    fide reason” for denying Mr. Colindres Juarez a visa. Mandel,
    
    408 U.S. at 770
    ; see Din, 
    576 U.S. at
    103–04 (Kennedy, J.,
    concurring in the judgment). The government’s citation of an
    applicable admissibility statute as its basis for denying a visa
    establishes that the reason for its denial is “facially legitimate,”
    as it “show[s] that the denial rested on a determination that [the
    applicant] did not satisfy the statute’s requirements.” Din, 
    576 U.S. at
    104–05 (Kennedy, J., concurring in the judgment).
    Such a statutory reference can also show that the government
    4
    “relied upon a bona fide” reason, if the statute “specifies
    discrete factual predicates the consular officer must find to
    exist before denying a visa.” Id. at 105.
    In the event the statute speaks in sufficiently broad terms
    that it does not itself “specif[y] discrete factual predicates” for
    denying a visa, the government can still satisfy due process by
    “disclos[ing] the facts motivating [its] decision to deny” the
    visa under the statute. Id. In Mandel, for instance, the relevant
    statute was framed in highly general terms that “granted the
    Attorney General nearly unbridled discretion,” but the
    government’s disclosure of the underlying “facts motivating
    [its] decision” under the statute—viz., “Mandel’s abuse of past
    visas”—satisfied due process. Id. at 103, 105. Disclosure of
    such facts shows a “bona fide” basis for denying a visa by
    conveying why the government believes a broadly framed
    statute applies in a particular case. See id. at 105.
    In this case, the statute under which the government denied
    Mr. Colindres Juarez a visa is 
    8 U.S.C. § 1182
    (a)(3)(A)(ii),
    which renders inadmissible “[a]ny alien who a consular officer
    or the Attorney General knows, or has reasonable ground to
    believe, seeks to enter the United States to engage solely,
    principally, or incidentally in . . . unlawful activity.” My
    colleagues believe that statute specifies a sufficiently discrete
    factual predicate such that citation of that statute alone is
    enough to satisfy due process. The Ninth Circuit has held to
    the contrary, concluding that, when the government denies a
    visa under that provision, it must disclose a more discrete
    factual predicate conveying why the government believes the
    statute applies in the specific case. See Muñoz v. U.S. Dep’t of
    State, 
    50 F.4th 906
    , 917–18 & n.27 (9th Cir. 2022).
    I might well side with my colleagues if it were necessary
    to decide the issue, but we generally “avoid creating circuit
    5
    splits when possible.” United States v. Philip Morris USA Inc.,
    
    396 F.3d 1190
    , 1201 (D.C. Cir. 2005). And here, the
    government did more than just cite section 1182(a)(3)(A)(ii) in
    explaining the basis for its visa denial. It also related why it
    was denying a visa under that section: because it had “reason
    to believe [Mr. Colindres Juarez] is a member of a known
    criminal organization.” Compl. ¶ 37, J.A. 242–43. Under Din
    and Mandel, disclosure of that discrete factual predicate,
    together with citing the statute, shows a bona fide basis for the
    denial so as to satisfy due process. I would affirm the dismissal
    of the Colindreses’ due process claim on that ground.