Oliva-Ramos v. Attorney General of the United States , 694 F.3d 259 ( 2012 )


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  •                                          PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    No. 10-3849
    _____________
    ERICK RODOLFO OLIVA-RAMOS,
    Petitioner
    v.
    ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES,
    Respondent.
    _____________
    On Petition for Review of a Final Order
    of the Board of Immigration Appeals
    Immigration Judge: The Honorable Linda S. Wendtland
    (No. A088-231-019)
    _____________
    Argued
    November 16, 2011
    Before: McKEE, Chief Judge, RENDELL and AMBRO,
    Circuit Judges
    (Opinion filed: September 13, 2012)
    Nancy Morawetz, Esquire
    Alina Das, Esquire
    Nikki R. Reisch, Law Student (argued)
    Stephen Kang, Law Student
    Ruben Loyo, Law Student
    Nancy Steffan, Law Student
    Washington Square Legal Services, Inc.
    245 Sullivan St., 5th Floor
    New York, NY 10012
    Counsel for Petitioner
    Allen W. Hausman, Esquire (Argued)
    Andrew J. Oliveira, Esq.
    United States Department of Justice
    Office of Immigration Litigation, Civil Division
    P.O. Box 878
    Ben Franklin Station
    Washington, DC 20044
    Counsel for Respondent
    Timothy E. Hoeffner, Esq.
    DLA Piper
    1650 Market Street
    One Liberty Place, Suite 4900
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION
    Amicus Appellant
    __________________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    __________________
    McKEE, Chief Judge.
    Erick Oliva-Ramos petitions for review of an order of
    the Board of Immigration Appeals affirming an Immigration
    Judge‘s order removing him to Guatemala. He also seeks
    review of the BIA‘s denial of his motion to supplement the
    record and to reopen his removal proceeding before an
    Immigration Judge.1 We must decide whether the BIA erred
    in refusing to apply the exclusionary rule in a removal
    proceeding under the circumstances in this case. A related
    question that we must address is whether the BIA abused its
    1
    We consolidated the petition for review of the BIA‘s denial
    of his motion to reopen with our review of the underlying
    removal order pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(6).
    2
    discretion in not reopening this case to allow Oliva-Ramos to
    supplement the administrative record with evidence of
    widespread and/or egregious conduct by Immigration and
    Customs Enforcement (―ICE‖) officials. Finally, we must
    determine if alleged violations of regulations entitle Oliva-
    Ramos to relief. For the reasons explained below, we will
    grant the petitions, vacate the BIA‘s order of removal, and
    remand to the BIA for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.2
    I. Factual Background
    At 4:30 a.m. on March 26, 2007, a team of armed,
    uniformed ICE officers repeatedly rang the entrance ―buzzer‖
    to the Englewood, New Jersey apartment where Erick Oliva-
    Ramos lived. Oliva-Ramos shared the home with his three
    sisters (Clara, Wendy, and Maria), his nephew (Wagner), and
    his brother-in-law (Marvin). Two visiting family friends
    were also in the apartment. Of those present, only Clara
    could prove that she was legally in the United States.
    According to the affidavit that was introduced at
    Oliva-Ramos‘s removal hearing, Clara heard the incessant
    buzzing, but could not tell who was ringing the bell because
    the intercom was broken.3 Since it was 4:30 a.m., she
    2
    The BIA granted Oliva-Ramos‘s request for voluntary
    departure but that order automatically terminated upon the
    filing of the motion to reopen and the petition for review, and
    the alternate order of removal immediately took effect.
    Sandie v. Att’y Gen., 
    562 F.3d 246
    , 255 n.5 (3d Cir. 2009)
    (citing 8 C.F.R. § 1240.26(f)).
    3
    The IJ noted that although Oliva-Ramos submitted affidavits
    from Clara, Marvin, and Wagner, those family members were
    ―not present in court and unavailable for cross-examination
    by the Department of Homeland Security.‖ The IJ ―weighed
    [these] document[s] accordingly.‖ The IJ considered the
    affidavit of Clara Oliva to the extent that it corroborated the
    testimony of the Government‘s witness on consent to enter
    the home, but did not explicitly state additional credibility
    determinations as to the weight of affidavits from family
    members not present at the suppression hearing.
    3
    remotely opened the building‘s entry door because she feared
    that the repeated buzzing signaled an emergency. While in
    her pajamas, she stepped onto the landing outside her
    apartment as she held her apartment door open with her foot
    and saw five or six ICE officers coming up the stairs.
    As the officers approached the front door of the
    apartment, they waived an administrative warrant for Oliva-
    Ramos‘s other sister, Maria. Clara later stated that she
    realized that the people coming up the stairs were ICE agents
    when they said they had an order to arrest Maria. The
    officers had no information about the identity or legal status
    of any of the other occupants of the apartment. Before
    entering the apartment, the officers asked Clara for her name
    and immigration status, and she informed them that she was a
    legal permanent resident. The officers then asked if Clara
    lived in the apartment and asked permission to enter. In her
    affidavit, Clara explained that she did not deny entry even
    though Maria was not there because she (Clara) believed that
    she could not refuse and that the order to arrest Maria gave
    the officers the right to enter even in Maria‘s absence.
    At some point during the exchange with the officers,
    Clara lost her foothold on the open door and it slammed shut,
    leaving her outside the apartment. Her son let her in,
    however, after she banged on the door. As she entered, the
    officers lined up behind her and followed her inside. Once
    inside, they began waking the occupants and ordering them
    into the living room while another agent blocked the door so
    that no one could leave.
    According to Oliva-Ramos‘s affidavit and testimony
    before the IJ, Clara knocked on his bedroom door and told
    him that immigration officers were there. Oliva-Ramos
    shared his bedroom with his sister, Wendy, and her husband.
    Oliva-Ramos was sleeping, but Wendy opened the bedroom
    door.4
    4
    Since it was before dawn, the bedroom lights were turned
    off.
    4
    An armed officer in a green ICE uniform shone a
    flashlight into the room and ordered everyone to move to the
    living room. Oliva-Ramos was in his pajamas but was
    permitted to get dressed under the supervision of an ICE
    officer. He testified that ―there was no way [he] could have
    left‖ the presence of the officers.
    The officer then directed Oliva-Ramos to the living
    room and told him to sit down. In addition, Oliva-Ramos
    testified that the officer did not identify himself, show him a
    badge or identification, or tell him why he (the officer) was in
    the apartment. During the removal hearing, Oliva-Ramos
    also testified that he was not told that he could refuse to go
    with the officer.5
    After everyone was escorted to the living room, five
    or six armed ICE officers began questioning everyone about
    Maria. During that questioning, the officers blocked each
    entrance to the living room. Oliva-Ramos testified that he
    heard an officer tell Clara to sit down when she tried to stand.
    He also said he heard the officer tell her that if she did not sit,
    she could be arrested. The officers asked about the identities
    and nationalities of all of the apartment occupants. Clara‘s
    son, Wagner, initially refused to answer questions, but
    relented when the officers ordered him to speak and told him
    he could not refuse to answer them.
    The officers did not ask Oliva-Ramos any questions in
    the living room but ordered him back to his bedroom to
    retrieve his identification documents. An officer followed
    Oliva-Ramos to the bedroom as he retrieved his identification
    and escorted him back to the living room. Oliva-Ramos
    stated that he went to retrieve his documents because he
    thought that, if he did not go, he could be arrested because he
    did not have papers. He also thought that if he showed his
    Guatemalan identification to the officer, nothing would
    happen. The documents he retrieved revealed that he is a
    citizen of Guatemala; he was unable to produce any
    5
    Oliva-Ramos testified that he was nervous and that an
    officer followed him from the bedroom to the living room.
    5
    documentation demonstrating that he was lawfully present in
    the United States.
    The encounter lasted approximately forty-five minutes.
    During that time, Oliva-Ramos and his family were prevented
    from eating, drinking, or speaking out of turn. According to
    Clara‘s affidavit, her sister (Wendy) began menstruating
    while the family was in the living room, but Clara was not
    allowed to get any feminine hygiene products for her.
    According to Oliva-Ramos‘s affidavit, although Wendy and
    Oliva-Ramos were eventually allowed to use the bathroom,
    they had to leave the door open while an ICE officer stood
    outside the door, thus denying them the most rudimentary
    considerations of privacy.
    Clara was able to document that she was legally in the
    United States. All others were eventually handcuffed, placed
    in an ICE van and driven around while the officers made
    several more raids. At each stop, the agents followed a
    similar pattern of knocking on doors and making general
    inquiries about the legal status of all of the occupants in a
    residence. These stops resulted in two more individuals being
    placed in the van.
    At around 7:00 a.m., Oliva-Ramos and his family
    arrived at the ICE office, where they were placed in a
    detention room containing an open toilet. Oliva-Ramos
    testified that there he was told to fill out papers written in
    Spanish, and he was given the option of signing them. He
    had to wait until the afternoon before he was questioned.6 He
    claims that neither he nor his relatives were given food nor
    water in the interim. The ICE officers who conducted the
    raid eventually interviewed the detainees. Oliva-Ramos was
    interviewed by ICE Officer Marlene Belluardo. After being
    interviewed, Oliva-Ramos was charged with being removable
    and was taken to a detention facility. While there, he was
    informed of his right to a lawyer and given a list of free legal
    service providers. Between 6:00 and 7:00 p.m., he was
    finally given the first food that he had been allowed to eat
    during his 15-hour ordeal.
    6
    He stated that he was not told that he had a right to remain
    silent or that his answers could be used against him in a court
    of law.
    6
    A. Immigration Court Proceedings
    During the ensuing removal proceedings, Oliva-Ramos
    testified on his own behalf with the assistance of a Spanish
    interpreter. He was cross-examined about the raid, his arrest,
    and his examination at the ICE office. He also presented the
    supporting affidavits of Clara, Wagner, and Marvin, although
    they were not present in court to testify.
    The Government presented only one witness, the
    arresting and interviewing ICE officer, Marlene Belluardo.
    Officer Belluardo testified that she had taken part in
    ―hundreds‖ of home raids since participating in the raid at
    Oliva-Ramos‘s apartment on March 26, 2007, but had no
    independent recollection of the raid that led to Oliva-Ramos‘s
    detention. Officer Belluardo stated that she does not
    remember anything about the apprehension, but
    acknowledged her participation based upon having filled out
    Form I-213, the Record of Deportable/Inadmissible Alien,
    which listed her as an arresting officer.7 She testified about
    the general procedures used in ICE field operations, but her
    only knowledge of Oliva-Ramos came from the I-213 form.
    Officer Belluardo recognized him from the picture contained
    on the I-213 form. She testified that she received three
    months‘ training on how to conduct investigative work, how
    to look for subjects with warrants, and about the confines of
    the Fourth Amendment.
    Belluardo also testified about the standard protocol for
    fugitive operations. She said that when she goes to a home
    with a warrant, it is a ―knock warrant,‖ which is an
    administrative warrant. Someone has to respond to her knock
    on the door and grant permission to enter, as an officer is only
    permitted to enter with permission. Officer Belluardo
    confirmed that there was no warrant for Oliva-Ramos but
    only a deportation warrant for Maria. Belluardo testified that
    it is standard protocol to get everyone in the house to a central
    location so that the officers can identify the subject and
    anyone else in the house. In addition, she testified that
    everyone is brought into the living room as a central area of
    safety for everyone in the house. Each person is asked his or
    7
    Three officers were listed as arresting officers.
    7
    her identity, and any person found to be in the United States
    without documents or with questionable documents is taken
    into custody. Finally, Officer Belluardo testified that, when
    apprehending a suspect, questions asked are usually just to
    identify the person and that no other questions are asked until
    they are taken into custody and transported to the processing
    area.
    The Government also presented the following four
    documents to support its charge of removability: Form I-213,
    the Record of Deportable/Inadmissible Alien; Form I-215B,
    the affidavit of Erick Oliva-Ramos; the face page of a
    Guatemalan passport; and a Guatemalan consular
    identification card. Oliva-Ramos objected to that evidence
    and moved to preclude consideration of all of the
    Government‘s evidence obtained during the raid of his
    apartment and his subsequent arrest. He argued that the
    evidence had been obtained by exploiting violations of the
    Fourth Amendment that were both egregious and widespread,
    and thus the exclusionary rule should apply. He also moved
    to terminate the proceedings, and requested an evidentiary
    hearing on his suppression motion.
    The Immigration Judge denied the motion to suppress
    and the motion to terminate the proceedings. As a threshold
    matter, the IJ noted that the Government did not dispute that
    Oliva-Ramos had been detained without a warrant. However,
    the IJ cited to BIA authority that had relied on INS v. Lopez-
    Mendoza, 
    468 U.S. 1032
    (1984), wherein the BIA had stated:
    ―[E]ven assuming a warrantless arrest, the exclusionary rule,
    which requires a court to suppress evidence that is the fruit of
    an unlawful arrest or of other official conduct that violates the
    [F]ourth [A]mendment, does not apply in deportation
    proceedings.‖      The IJ concluded that ―[i]n removal
    proceedings . . . an alien cannot generally suppress evidence
    asserted to be procured in violation of the Fourth Amendment
    unless the alleged violation(s) are so egregious as to
    ‗transgress notions of fundamental fairness.‘‖ (citing Lopez-
    
    Mendoza, 468 U.S. at 1050-51
    ).
    In rejecting Oliva-Ramos‘s argument that the
    Government had entered his home without valid consent in
    violation of 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(f)(2) (2008), the IJ relied on the
    8
    Government‘s assertion that ―consent was obtained prior to
    immigration officers entering the Respondent‘s residence
    from a ‗person in control of the site to be inspected,‘ namely,
    the Respondent‘s sister, Clara Oliva.‖8 The IJ explained:
    ―[T]he I-213 clearly indicates that consent to enter the
    residence was obtained from Clara Oliva, and that ICE had a
    warrant for Maria Oliva at that address.‖ In weighing the
    testimony, the IJ noted that ―Ms. Belluardo testified that she
    ha[d] no independent recollection of the specific events of
    Respondent‘s detention, and her testimony is based on the
    facts as documented in the I-213 which she prepared in the
    ordinary course of business immediately following the
    Respondent‘s detention.‖ The IJ also relied on Officer
    Belluardo‘s testimony that ―obtaining consent prior to entry is
    consistent with training ICE officers, including her, receive in
    the course of employment with DHS.‖ In addition, the IJ
    stated that Oliva-Ramos‘s testimony, and his sister Clara
    Oliva‘s affidavit, were consistent with the testimony of
    Officer Belluardo and the I-213. Thus, the IJ found that
    ―consent to enter the residence at 97A Palisade Avenue was
    properly obtained prior to ICE officers‘ entry into the
    8
    8 C.F.R. § 287.8(f)(2) states in relevant part: ―An
    immigration officer may not enter into the non-public areas of
    a . . . residence including the curtilage of such residence, . . .
    except as provided in section 287(a)(3) of the Act, for the
    purpose of questioning the occupants . . . concerning their
    right to be . . . in the United States unless the officer has
    either a warrant or the consent of the owner or other person in
    control of the site to be inspected.‖
    The referenced exception found in Section 287(a)(3) of the
    Immigration and Nationality Act relates to border searches. 8
    U.S.C. § 1357(a)(3), 66 Stat. 233, INA § 287(a)(3) (2006)
    (―Any officer or employee of the Service authorized under
    regulations prescribed by the Attorney General shall have
    power without warrant-- . . . within a reasonable distance
    from any external boundary of the United States, to board and
    search for aliens any vessel within the territorial waters of the
    United States and any railway car, aircraft, conveyance, or
    vehicle, and within a distance of twenty-five miles from any
    such external boundary to have access to private lands, but
    not dwellings, for the purpose of patrolling the border to
    prevent the illegal entry of aliens into the United States.‖).
    9
    residence.‖ The IJ did not, however, evaluate any of the
    evidence relevant to whether circumstances might have
    existed to invalidate the alleged ―consent‖ or to determine if
    the circumstances here implicated the exception to the
    nonapplication of the exclusionary rule in removal
    proceedings under Lopez-Mendoza that we discuss in detail
    below.
    Moreover, the IJ ruled that the documents Oliva-
    Ramos sought to suppress were contained in what is known
    as an ―A‖ file. The IJ relied upon United States v. Herrera-
    Ochoa, 
    245 F.3d 495
    , 498 (5th Cir. 2001), in asserting that an
    alien maintains no legitimate expectation of privacy in that
    file, and therefore lacks standing to challenge its introduction
    into evidence.
    Oliva-Ramos also sought to subpoena testimony of the
    additional ICE officers who were involved in his seizure as
    well as certain documents that the Government had not
    produced pursuant to Oliva-Ramos‘s Freedom of Information
    Act request (―FOIA‖).9 Specifically, Oliva-Ramos sought the
    production of documents related to the search and seizure of
    his home and arrest, training manuals and documentation of
    the ICE Fugitive Operation Task Force, relevant ICE policy
    and procedures, and records related to the ICE officers who
    arrested him. In addition, Oliva-Ramos moved to subpoena
    the ICE officers who participated in his arrest. Although the
    IJ indicated that she wanted to address the subpoenas at an
    individual merits hearing, she never ruled on the motion to
    subpoena the additional documents and witnesses.
    At a later hearing on removability, the IJ found Oliva-
    Ramos removable as charged but granted his request for
    voluntary departure. Oliva-Ramos then appealed to the Board
    of Immigration Appeals.
    B. Board of Immigration Appeals Proceedings
    The BIA first considered Oliva-Ramos‘s Fourth
    Amendment claim that the Government had obtained
    evidence of alienage without proper consent through coercion
    9
    See 5 U.S.C. § 552 (1982).
    10
    and duress during the raid of his home. The BIA declined to
    address the claim as presented and cited to Lopez-Mendoza,
    explaining that ―the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule is
    generally not applicable in civil removal proceedings.‖ In a
    lengthy footnote, the BIA acknowledged the following
    language in Lopez-Mendoza on which Oliva-Ramos based his
    Fourth Amendment claim:
    We are mindful that [in Lopez-Mendoza] a
    plurality of the United States Supreme Court
    opined that, in removal proceedings, ―egregious
    violations of the Fourth Amendment or other
    liberties that might transgress notions of
    fundamental fairness and undermine the
    probative value of the evidence‖ might
    potentially warrant a reconsideration of the
    exclusionary rule‘s role in civil removal
    proceedings. INS v. 
    Lopez-Mendoza, supra, at 1050-51
    . . . . Further, as the respondent makes
    the argument that the DHS engages in
    ―widespread‖ violations of the Fourth
    Amendment (Respondent‘s Br. at 42), we
    acknowledge that the Supreme Court provided
    for the prospective contingency that its
    ―conclusions concerning the exclusionary rule‘s
    value might change, if there developed good
    reason to believe that Fourth Amendment
    violations by INS officers were widespread.‖
    
    Id. at 1050. (citation
    omitted). However, first,
    these comments from a plurality of the Supreme
    Court are obiter dictum; second, no such ―good
    reason to believe‖ has yet arisen in the eyes of
    the Supreme Court; and, third, our own
    precedents, by which we are bound, recognize
    no such exception to the inapplicability of the
    exclusionary rule premised on widespread
    Fourth Amendment violations . . . .
    The BIA also acknowledged that its precedential decisions
    ―have provided for the exclusion of evidence against an alien
    in ‗fundamentally unfair‘ circumstances.‖ The Board then
    noted that ―this principle of fundamental fairness is rooted in
    notions of due process of law, not in the Fourth Amendment
    11
    exclusionary rule.‖ Thus, to the extent that the Board
    considered Oliva-Ramos‘s argument at all, it did so ―in terms
    of due process requirements.‖
    The BIA found that the Government had satisfied its
    initial burden of establishing alienage through the evidence
    that Oliva-Ramos sought to suppress, including the Form I-
    213 and Form I-215B, as well as his Guatemalan passport and
    identification card. The BIA also concluded that Oliva-
    Ramos had not rebutted that evidence prior to receiving a
    grant of voluntary departure. The BIA did not believe that
    any regulatory violations altered the outcome because the
    documents the Government presented ―[were] inherently
    reliable and were not shown to have been created under
    impermissible coercion and duress.‖
    The BIA then considered Oliva-Ramos‘s challenges to
    certain administrative regulations governing ICE conduct.
    First, it considered Oliva-Ramos‘s coercion claim that the
    Government impermissibly threatened and coerced him when
    it inspected the non-public, interior areas of his residence, in
    violation of 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(f)(2).10 The BIA cited to the
    IJ‘s finding ―that the DHS first obtained the consent of one of
    the respondent‘s familial cohabitants before entering the
    premises.‖ Since the BIA did not believe that the conclusion
    was clearly erroneous, the BIA relied upon that finding when
    considering all of Oliva-Ramos‘s claims.11
    10
    The BIA relied on Leslie v. Att’y Gen., 
    611 F.3d 171
    , 180
    (3d Cir. 2010), for the principle that ―when an agency
    promulgates a regulation protecting fundamental statutory or
    constitutional rights of parties appearing before it, the agency
    must comply with that regulation. Failure to comply will
    merit invalidation of the challenged agency action without
    regard to whether the alleged violation has substantially
    prejudiced the complaining party.‖
    11
    The BIA also stated that it independently ―considered the
    respondent‘s asserted bases for contending that the consent to
    the officers‘ entry was coerced (or otherwise invalid) but
    [was] not persuaded by them.‖
    12
    Second, Oliva-Ramos claimed that the Government
    had violated 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(b)(1) by impermissibly
    restraining his freedom through threats and coercion during
    the inspection and investigation of his home. However, the
    BIA reasoned that INA § 287(a)(1), the statute under which §
    287.8(b)(1) was         promulgated, permits warrantless
    interrogation if ICE officers reasonably believe that a person
    may be unlawfully in the United States. The BIA concluded
    that requirement was satisfied once Oliva-Ramos presented
    his Guatemalan passport and identification. The BIA also
    relied on Oliva-Ramos‘s own testimony before the IJ that he
    had no intention of leaving the apartment because he ―didn‘t
    commit any crime.‖ During the hearing before the IJ, he had
    been asked: ―[W]hat would have happened if you‘d asked the
    officers to leave?‖ He responded, ―I couldn‘t tell the officers
    to leave because it‘s the law and I didn‘t have anything to tell
    them.‖
    Third, Oliva-Ramos argued that the Government
    violated 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)(i) when it arrested him
    without first obtaining a warrant. The BIA rejected that claim
    because INA § 287(a)(2) specifically authorizes warrantless
    arrests where ICE officers have reason to believe that
    someone is here in the United States illegally and poses a risk
    of flight if not detained. See also 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)(ii).
    The I-213 stated: ―A field interview revealed that the subject
    was an alien unlawfully present in the United States and he
    was arrested without a warrant in that he appeared to be a
    flight risk.‖
    The BIA also rejected Oliva-Ramos‘s claims that
    regulatory violations that did not implicate the Fourth
    Amendment entitled him to relief. The BIA did not believe
    that Oliva-Ramos had established a violation of 8 C.F.R. §§
    287.3(c) or 292.5(b) because he had been properly advised as
    required before formal removal proceedings were initiated.12
    12
    8 C.F.R. § 287.3(c) provides in relevant part:
    [A]n alien arrested without warrant and placed
    in formal proceedings . . . will be advised of the
    reasons for his or her arrest and the right to be
    represented at no expense to the Government.
    The examining officer will provide the alien
    13
    The BIA also rejected Oliva-Ramos‘s argument that his
    examination by the same DHS officer who had arrested him
    in violation of 8 C.F.R. § 287.3(a) entitled him to relief. That
    regulation provides that ―[a]n alien arrested without a warrant
    . . . will be examined by an officer other than the arresting
    officer.‖13
    The BIA similarly rejected Oliva-Ramos‘s final
    regulatory claim that DHS had violated 8 C.F.R. §
    287.8(d)(1) when it left him and his fellow detainees locked
    and unattended in a van several times during a two-hour
    with a list of the available free legal services
    provided by organizations and attorneys
    qualified . . . that are located in the district
    where the hearing will be held. The examining
    officer shall note on Form I–862 that such a list
    was provided to the alien. The officer will also
    advise the alien that any statement made may be
    used against him or her in a subsequent
    proceeding.
    8. C.F.R. § 292.5(b) provides in relevant part: ―Whenever an
    examination is provided for in this chapter, the person
    involved shall have the right to be represented by an attorney
    or representative who shall be permitted to examine or cross-
    examine such person and witnesses, to introduce evidence, to
    make objections . . . and to submit briefs.‖
    13
    The BIA held that this particular section requires a
    demonstration of prejudice, unlike several of the other
    regulatory provisions that do not require a showing of
    prejudice under Leslie. The BIA did not reach the question of
    prejudice. It concluded that Oliva-Ramos had not testified
    that he was arrested by the same agent who examined him
    after the arrest because he could not remember Officer
    Belluardo being present during the raid. As discussed above,
    Officer Belluardo had no independent recollection of this
    particular home raid but conceded that she was likely present
    since she filled out the Form I-213 for the investigation of
    Oliva-Ramos‘s home.
    14
    period while transporting them to the detention facility.14 The
    BIA rejected that contention because Oliva-Ramos had not
    established a regulatory violation. He had not testified before
    the IJ about any periods of time when he was left in the van.
    The BIA noted that Oliva-Ramos had merely directed the IJ‘s
    attention to an affidavit drafted before the suppression
    hearing.15
    The BIA then turned its attention to two allegations of
    misconduct by the IJ. First, it considered Oliva-Ramos‘s
    allegation that a translator had improperly translated the
    Spanish word ―arma‖ into the English word ―arm‖ in the
    sense of a body part as opposed to an armament or firearm.
    The BIA found no due process violation because it concluded
    that ―the word was conscientiously translated and . . . all the
    parties present understood the respondent.‖ Second, Oliva-
    Ramos alleged that the Immigration Judge demonstrated
    improper bias but the BIA found that the transcript of the
    hearing before the IJ reflected ―that the Immigration Judge
    conducted the sometimes contentious and inherently difficult
    proceedings fairly.‖ Thus, the BIA found no due process
    violations with respect to the IJ‘s conduct of the removal
    proceedings.
    Finally, the BIA considered a motion to remand the
    proceedings to the Immigration Judge to consider new
    evidence that was not presented to the IJ. On February 18,
    2009, while his appeal was pending before the BIA, Oliva-
    Ramos moved to present previously unavailable evidence of
    alleged widespread Fourth Amendment violations by ICE
    14
    8 C.F.R. § 287.8(d)(1) provides in relevant part: ―All
    persons will be transported in a manner that ensures the safety
    of the persons being transported. . . . The person being
    transported shall not be left unattended during transport
    unless the immigration officer needs to perform a law
    enforcement function.‖
    15
    It appears that the BIA also required prejudice because it
    found that this alleged regulatory violation did not ―implicate
    fundamental statutory or constitutional rights at play in the
    respondent’s removal proceeding.‖
    15
    officials.16 He stated that on October 4, 2007, he had
    requested many documents relating to the procedures
    employed by the Fugitive Operations Teams that conducted
    the raid of his home. The Government had denied his FOIA
    request for these documents, citing FOIA Exemptions 2 and
    7(E).17     Oliva-Ramos only obtained that documentary
    evidence after proceedings before the Immigration Judge
    were finished. The documents were finally obtained through
    a FOIA request and not made available until after the April
    suppression hearing and his initial appeal to the BIA.18 Those
    16
    In addition, Oliva-Ramos also sought to present additional
    evidence relating to the translator‘s interpretation of the word
    ―arma‖ discussed above.
    17
    In denying his FOIA request, the Government explained:
    FOIA Exemption 2(high) protects information
    applicable to internal administrative and
    personnel matters, such as operating rules,
    guidelines, and manual of procedures of
    examiners or adjudicators, to the extent that
    disclosure would risk circumvention of an
    agency regulation or statute, impede the
    effectiveness of an agency‘s activities, or reveal
    sensitive information that may put the security
    and safety of an agency activity or employee at
    risk. Whether there is any public interest in
    disclosure is legally irrelevant. Rather, the
    concern under high 2 is that a FOIA disclosure
    should not benefit those attempting to violate
    the law and avoid detection.
    ICE Response to Oliva-Ramos‘s FOIA request, definition of
    FOIA Exemption 2 (high) (Feb. 19, 2008)). The Government
    further explained that ―FOIA Exemption 7(E) protects records
    compiled for law enforcement purposes, the release of which
    could disclose techniques and/or procedures for law
    enforcement investigations or prosecutions, or could
    reasonably be expected to risk circumventions of the law.‖
    
    Id. (citing ICE Response
    to FOIA Request, definition of
    FOIA Exemption 7(E) (Feb. 19, 2008)).
    16
    documents were attached as an exhibit to the motion to
    remand. The motion included ICE memoranda regarding the
    Fugitive Operations Teams and ICE statistics on arrests.
    The ICE memorandum dated September 29, 2006
    changed the agency‘s policy with respect to achieving an
    arrest target of 1,000 ―fugitive aliens‖ per Fugitive Operations
    Team (―FOT‖) as previously established in an ICE
    memorandum dated January 31, 2006.                 The January
    memorandum had specified that ―collateral arrests‖ would not
    be counted toward the goal of 1,000 arrests. The September
    memorandum changed the policy to permit up to fifty percent
    of each team‘s arrest goal to be satisfied by counting
    ―collateral arrests.‖ These are arrests of persons who were
    not themselves the targets of the FOT and had not missed
    removal hearings or departure deadlines, but were discovered
    during ICE operations. In the following fiscal year, when
    Oliva-Ramos was detained by a FOT that was after someone
    else, collateral arrests comprised forty percent of the total
    number of ICE arrests by FOTs. Collateral arrests accounted
    for nearly twenty-five percent of all FOTs arrests in fiscal
    year 2007. Oliva-Ramos argued that he was detained
    pursuant to this policy, and that the policy both encouraged
    and resulted in widespread violations of the Fourth
    Amendment.
    However, the Board reasoned that remand was
    unwarranted because the BIA was not bound by the Lopez-
    Mendoza plurality opinion. As noted above, in Lopez-
    Mendoza, the Court had recognized the possibility of the
    exclusionary rule applying to civil deportation proceedings
    based on widespread or egregious violations of the Fourth
    Amendment.
    Thus, the BIA dismissed the appeal, denied Oliva-
    Ramos‘s motion to remand, and this petition for review
    followed.
    II. Standard of Review
    18
    He obtained the documents after the evidence was released
    to the public as a result of FOIA litigation by a professor at
    the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law.
    17
    The BIA issued its own opinion. We therefore review
    its decision rather than that of the IJ. Li v. Att’y. Gen., 
    400 F.3d 157
    , 162 (3d Cir. 2005). Where the ―BIA‘s opinion
    directly states that the BIA is deferring to the IJ, or invokes
    specific aspects of the IJ‘s analysis and factfinding in support
    of the BIA‘s conclusions,‖ we review both the BIA and IJ
    decisions. Voci v. Gonzales, 
    409 F.3d 607
    , 613 (3d Cir.
    2005).
    We review the BIA‘s denial of a motion to reopen for
    abuse of discretion. Luntungan v. Att’y Gen., 
    449 F.3d 551
    ,
    555 (3d Cir. 2006). ―Under the abuse of discretion standard,
    the Board‘s decision must be reversed if it is arbitrary,
    irrational, or contrary to law.‖ Sevoian v. Ashcroft, 
    290 F.3d 166
    , 174 (3d Cir. 2002) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    We review the BIA‘s conclusions of law such as ―whether the
    BIA applied the correct legal standard in considering the
    motion to reopen‖ and the underlying constitutional claims de
    novo. Fadiga v. Att’y Gen., 
    488 F.3d 142
    , 153-54 (3d Cir.
    2007).
    III. Discussion
    We begin our analysis with a discussion of INS v.
    Lopez-Mendoza, as that case is central to our disposition of
    these petitions. We then proceed to consider, in turn, Oliva-
    Ramos‘s due process claims, Fourth Amendment claims, and
    claims predicated on various regulatory violations.
    A. Lopez-Mendoza
    In INS v. Lopez-Mendoza, 
    468 U.S. 1032
    (1984), the
    Supreme Court held that the exclusionary rule generally does
    not apply to removal proceedings. The Court reached that
    conclusion after balancing the deterrent effect of the
    exclusionary rule against the social cost of extending its
    application to civil removal proceedings.        However, a
    plurality of the Justices was careful to add the following
    qualifier to their discussion of that balancing:
    Our conclusions concerning the exclusionary
    rule‘s value might change, if there developed
    18
    good reason to believe that Fourth Amendment
    violations by INS officers were widespread.
    Finally, we do not deal here with egregious
    violations of Fourth Amendment or other
    liberties that might transgress notions of
    fundamental fairness and undermine the
    probative value of the evidence obtained. At
    issue here is the exclusion of credible evidence
    gathered in connection with peaceful arrests by
    INS officers. We hold that evidence derived
    from such arrests need not be suppressed in an
    INS civil deportation hearing.
    Lopez-
    Mendoza, 468 U.S. at 1050-51
    (footnote omitted)
    (internal citations omitted).
    In Lopez-Mendoza, two citizens of Mexico were
    ordered deported after separate immigration proceedings.
    INS agents arrested Lopez-Mendoza at his job without a
    warrant to search the jobsite or a warrant to arrest anyone
    there. After the shop owner refused to permit the agents to
    speak with his employees during work hours, they devised a
    scheme to distract the shop owner so that they could question
    his employees. While he was being questioned, Lopez-
    Mendoza told the agents that he was a citizen of Mexico, and
    that he had entered the United States without inspection by
    immigration authorities.
    In the proceedings that followed, Lopez-Mendoza
    argued that statements he made pursuant to his warrantless
    arrest should not have been admitted in his deportation
    proceedings. The Court reasoned that officers who violated
    an arrestee‘s rights were already subject to civil liability, and
    that in civil deportation proceedings the exclusionary rule ―‗is
    unlikely to provide significant, much less substantial,
    additional deterrence.‘‖ 
    Id. at 1046 (quoting
    United States v.
    Janis, 
    428 U.S. 433
    , 458 (1976)).
    Nevertheless, as we quoted above, a plurality of the
    Court allowed for the possibility of suppression in the case of
    19
    widespread or egregious violations of constitutional rights.19
    Four Justices dissented. Each dissenting Justice believed that
    the exclusionary rule should generally apply in deportation
    proceedings. Justice White disagreed with the result of the
    majority‘s balancing of the costs and benefits of applying the
    exclusionary rule in removal proceedings. He would have
    applied the rule without the limitation imposed by the
    majority decision. 
    See 468 U.S. at 1052
    (White, J.,
    dissenting) (―I believe that the conclusion of the majority is
    based upon an incorrect assessment of the costs and benefits
    of applying the rule in [civil removal proceedings].‖). Justice
    Brennan agreed, stating that ―I fully agree with Justice White
    that . . . the exclusionary rule must apply in civil deportation
    proceedings‖ not because it is a deterrent but because ―of the
    Fourth Amendment itself.‖          
    Id. at 1051 (Brennan,
    J.,
    dissenting). Justice Marshall also ―agree[d] with Justice
    White that . . . [precedent] compels the conclusion that the
    exclusionary rule should apply in civil deportation
    proceedings.‖ 
    Id. at 1060 (Marshall,
    J., dissenting). And,
    finally, Justice Stevens joined all of Justice White‘s dissent
    except for the latter‘s conclusion that the good faith exception
    to the exclusionary rule should apply with equal force to
    warrantless immigration searches because the Court had yet
    to conclude that the good faith exception applied to
    warrantless searches generally. 
    Id. at 1061 (Stevens,
    J.,
    dissenting). Thus, though technically correct to characterize
    the 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. Thus, where an
    alien can establish either of those two circumstances, the
    plurality opinion can only be read as affirming that the
    remedy of suppression justifies the social cost.20
    19
    While Chief Justice Rehnquist joined the portion of the
    opinion holding that the exclusionary rule generally did not
    apply in deportation proceedings, he did not join in the part of
    the opinion recognizing that egregious or widespread Fourth
    Amendment violations might warrant application of the
    exclusionary rule.
    20
    This is not surprising since, as Justice Brennan had
    explained, lawless disregard by police for the privacy
    20
    Thus, Lopez-Mendoza sanctions the application of the
    exclusionary rule in cases where constitutional violations by
    immigration officers are ―widespread‖ or evidence has been
    obtained as a result of ―egregious violations of Fourth
    Amendment or other liberties that might transgress notions of
    fundamental fairness and undermine the probative value of
    the evidence obtained.‖ 
    Lopez-Mendoza, 468 U.S. at 1050-
    51. With this rule in mind, we proceed to consider Oliva-
    Ramos‘s claims.
    B. Due Process Claims
    We first consider Oliva-Ramos‘s claims that the IJ
    violated his right to due process by failing to rule on his
    pending motions to subpoena witnesses and documents and
    by declining to correct translation errors. Oliva-Ramos also
    claims that the BIA denied him due process by declining to
    remand his case to the IJ to consider newly available evidence
    of egregious and/or widespread abuses.
    We are, of course, aware of the very valid concern
    expressed in Lopez-Mendoza that ―a deportation hearing is
    intended to provide a streamlined determination of eligibility
    to remain in this country. . . .‖ 
    Id. at 1039. Nevertheless,
    removal proceedings must comport with basic notions of due
    process. Kamara v. Att’y Gen., 
    420 F.3d 202
    , 211 (3d Cir.
    2005). Accordingly, concerns for brevity, efficiency and
    expedience must not be used to justify denying an alien the
    right to produce witnesses where that request is appropriate
    and the witnesses‘ presence appears necessary to satisfy basic
    notions of due process. That is particularly true where the
    IJ‘s refusal to issue or enforce subpoenas is contrary to the
    very regulatory scheme governing the removal process.
    interests protected by the Fourth Amendment creates
    significant social costs that cannot be ignored. See Stone v.
    Powell, 
    428 U.S. 465
    , 524 (1976) (Brennan, J., dissenting)
    (―To sanction disrespect and disregard for the Constitution in
    the name of protecting society from law-breakers is to make
    the government itself lawless and to subvert those values
    upon which our ultimate freedom and liberty depend.‖)
    (footnote omitted).
    21
    Here, the IJ‘s refusal to grant the subpoenas is contrary
    to 8 C.F.R. § 1003.35(b). Under that regulation, ―[a]n
    Immigration Judge may issue a subpoena upon his or her own
    volition or upon application of the Service or the alien.‖ 
    Id. at § 1003.35(b)(1).
    When a party applies for a subpoena, the
    movant must ―state in writing or at the proceeding . . . what
    he or she expects to prove by such witnesses or documentary
    evidence, and . . . show affirmatively that he or she has made
    diligent effort, without success to produce the same.‖ 
    Id. at § 1003.35(b)(2).
         Although the regulation provides some
    discretion to an IJ, ―[u]pon being satisfied that a witness will
    not appear and testify or produce documentary evidence and
    that the witness‘ evidence is essential, the Immigration Judge
    shall issue a subpoena.‖ 
    Id. at § 1003.35(b)(3)
    (emphasis
    added). Given the circumstances here, we believe that the IJ
    abused her discretion in determining that the witnesses and
    documents were not essential. Cf. Cuadras v. INS, 
    910 F.2d 572
    , 573 (9th Cir. 1990) (―[T]he IJ is not required to issue the
    subpoena unless she is satisfied that the evidence is
    ‗essential.‘ 8 C.F.R. 287.4(a)(2)(ii)(C). Since the IJ did not
    rely on the BHRHA report, he did not abuse his discretion in
    determining that the witnesses and documents were not
    essential.‖).
    As we explained above, during the removal
    proceedings before the IJ, Oliva-Ramos moved to subpoena
    documents related to the search and seizure of his home and
    arrest, documents relevant to the underlying policy for
    conducting such searches and seizures, including training
    manuals and documentation of ICE Fugitive Operation Task
    Force policy and procedures, and records related to the ICE
    officers who arrested him. He also attempted to subpoena the
    other ICE officers who participated in his arrest.
    Oliva-Ramos satisfied both requirements of the
    regulation. The requested witnesses and documents were
    essential to Oliva-Ramos‘s claim of egregious or widespread
    violations and alleged constitutional violations by the
    Government. ICE policy and practice manuals on search and
    seizure practices and its practices with respect to consent and
    entry of dwellings could have shed light on the contested
    nature of Clara Oliva‘s consent, as well as whether Oliva-
    22
    Ramos was improperly seized. In addition, the testimony of
    additional officers who were present during the investigation
    and arrest of Oliva-Ramos could have been used to impeach
    the testimony of the Government‘s sole witness during the
    suppression hearing or to adduce additional facts that may
    have altered the analysis of alleged constitutional violations,
    including the nature of Clara‘s alleged consent. Not allowing
    Oliva-Ramos to introduce this testimony is particularly
    problematic here because the only witness who testified for
    the Government could not recall Oliva-Ramos‘s seizure or
    any facts related to it. Since the Government forced Oliva
    Ramos to litigate his FOIA request, it should have been clear
    to the IJ that, even though Oliva-Ramos had exercised
    diligence, he was not able to effectively present his case and
    that he was not attempting to delay or obfuscate the
    proceedings.
    We recognize that ―[o]ne who raises the claim
    questioning the legality of the evidence must come forward
    with proof establishing a prima facie case before the Service
    will be called on to assume the burden of justifying the
    manner in which it obtained the evidence.‖ Matter of
    Barcenas, 19 I. & N. Dec. 609, 611 (1988). Oliva-Ramos
    attempted to meet his burden, but was thwarted by his
    inability to obtain the evidence and witnesses necessary to do
    so.     Only after the briefing before the BIA did the
    Government turn over the documents that Oliva-Ramos had
    tried to subpoena.
    As noted above, the Government had previously
    resisted that subpoena, and Oliva-Ramos appeared before the
    IJ without the benefit of those documents or the witnesses he
    had tried to subpoena. He was finally able to obtain the
    documentary evidence only after members of a clinical
    program at the Cardozo School of Law initiated FOIA
    litigation. The documents thus obtained were attached to his
    motion to reopen and were clearly relevant to his burden of
    establishing whether any abuses were widespread and/or
    egregious. Rather than tender a timely disclosure of such
    documents pursuant to the subpoena, the Government forced
    Oliva-Ramos to rely on a FOIA request to obtain documents
    that were in the exclusive custody and control of the
    Government and were clearly germane to his legal claims.
    23
    We do not suggest that the documents would have
    satisfied Oliva-Ramos‘s burden had the IJ or BIA reviewed
    them. We only note that the documents certainly appeared
    relevant to Oliva-Ramos‘s legal claims, and there is nothing
    to suggest that they were sought in bad faith or to delay the
    proceedings.
    Because the Immigration Judge never ruled on Oliva-
    Ramos‘s motion to subpoena witnesses and documents, the
    BIA had no underlying order to review. Thus, we will grant
    Oliva-Ramos‘s motion to reopen the proceedings in order to
    permit him to subpoena the additional witnesses and to
    introduce newly available documents, and will instruct the
    BIA to remand to the Immigration Judge in the event that
    additional evidentiary proceedings are appropriate.
    We will, however, affirm the BIA‘s ruling that errors
    in the transcript and related questioning did not deny Oliva-
    Ramos the due process of law. Any such errors were clarified
    and the record demonstrates that Olivia-Ramos fully
    understood the questions asked of him during his interview
    with Officer Belluardo.
    Inasmuch as we conclude the BIA abused its discretion
    in denying Oliva-Ramos‘s motion to reopen, we need not
    reach Oliva-Ramos‘s additional due process claims based on
    the conduct of the removal hearings.
    C. The Exclusionary Rule
    We now address the heart of Oliva-Ramos‘s petition.
    Oliva-Ramos argues that the BIA misapplied Fourth
    Amendment law when evaluating his various Fourth
    Amendment claims. He claimed that the ICE agents failed to
    obtain proper consent to enter the apartment, that they
    arrested him without a warrant and without probable cause,
    and that they seized him without reasonable suspicion.
    Relying on Lopez-Mendoza, Oliva-Ramos contends that
    Fourth Amendment law provides for the suppression of
    evidence obtained as a result of these violations because they
    were egregious and/or widespread. According to Oliva-
    Ramos, the BIA erred in categorically rejecting all of Oliva-
    24
    Ramos‘s Fourth Amendment arguments on the ground that
    the exclusionary rule does not apply in deportation
    proceedings, and thereby erred in failing to evaluate, first,
    whether ICE agents violated Oliva-Ramos‘s Fourth
    Amendment rights, and, second, whether those violations
    were egregious or widespread. We agree.
    The BIA rejected Oliva-Ramos‘s reliance on Lopez-
    Mendoza because it regarded the ―comments from a plurality
    of the Supreme Court [to be] obiter dictum.‖ The BIA
    explained that the Court had not yet found circumstances
    sufficient to apply the exclusionary rule in removal
    proceedings, and the Board‘s ―own precedents . . . recognize
    no such exception to the inapplicability of the exclusionary
    rule premised on widespread Fourth Amendment violations.‖
    There are several flaws in the BIA‘s approach.
    The BIA leapfrogged over the serious concerns it
    should have addressed under Lopez-Mendoza about the
    manner in which the evidence was obtained here. See
    Almeida-Amaral v. Gonzales, 
    461 F.3d 231
    , 234-35 (2d Cir.
    2006); United States v. Navarro-Diaz, 
    420 F.3d 581
    , 587 (6th
    Cir. 2005); Orhorhaghe v. INS, 
    38 F.3d 488
    , 493 (9th Cir.
    1994); cf. United States v. Stabile, 
    633 F.3d 219
    , 243 (3d Cir.
    2011) (―Typically, the exclusionary rule requires that we
    suppress evidence obtained as a result of an illegal search.‖).
    We must reject the BIA‘s reading of Lopez-Mendoza
    that would only permit suppression of evidence based on
    ―fundamentally unfair‖ circumstances in violation of the due
    process clause of the Fifth Amendment. The BIA‘s analysis
    of Lopez-Mendoza views that opinion only as a plurality. In
    doing so, the BIA ignored the fact that almost all of the
    Justices on the Court agreed that the exclusionary rule should
    apply to some extent in removal hearings. As we explained
    above, eight of the nine Justices agreed with that proposition.
    Four would have limited the rule to instances of widespread
    or egregious violations of law by Government officials, and
    four others would apply the rule without that condition. See
    Puc-Ruiz v. Holder, 
    629 F.3d 771
    , 778 n.2 (8th Cir. 2010)
    (citing 
    Lopez-Mendoza, 468 U.S. at 1051-61
    (Brennan,
    White, Marshall, and Stevens, JJ., dissenting)); see also
    Gonzalez-Rivera v. INS, 
    22 F.3d 1441
    , 1448 n.2 (9th Cir.
    25
    1994) (same).
    Moreover, even if the pronouncement in Lopez-
    Mendoza was dicta as the BIA labeled it, Supreme Court dicta
    should not be so cavalierly cast aside. See Official Committee
    of Unsecured Creditors v. Chinery, 
    330 F.3d 548
    , 561 (3d
    Cir. 2003) ( ―[W]e should not idly ignore considered
    statements the Supreme Court makes in dicta‖); see also
    Wroblewska v. Holder, 
    656 F.3d 473
    , 478 (7th Cir. 2011)
    (―The Supreme Court has required a showing of ‗egregious
    violations of Fourth Amendment or other liberties that might
    transgress notions of fundamental fairness‘ before the
    exclusionary rule will apply in immigration proceedings.
    Lopez-
    Mendoza, 468 U.S. at 1050-51
    . It makes no difference
    that Wroblewska‘s argument is styled as a due-process
    argument rather than one based on the Fourth Amendment.‖).
    ―Accordingly, it is reasonable to read Lopez-Mendoza as
    showing that eight Justices would have applied the
    exclusionary rule in circumstances where evidence was
    obtained through an ‗egregious‘ Fourth Amendment
    violation.‖ 
    Puc-Ruiz, 629 F.3d at 778
    n.2. The fact that the
    Court has not yet applied the rule in a deportation proceeding
    cannot undermine the fact that the Court has allowed for that
    possibility. The fact that the BIA believed its own precedents
    did not recognize the exception set out in Lopez-Mendoza can
    neither negate nor minimize the fact that the exception has
    been recognized by the Supreme Court.
    Accordingly, we reiterate today that the exclusionary
    rule may apply in removal proceedings where an alien shows
    ―egregious violations of Fourth Amendment or other liberties
    that might transgress notions of fundamental fairness and
    undermine the probative value of the evidence obtained.‖
    
    Lopez-Mendoza, 468 U.S. at 1051
    ; see also United States v.
    Bowley, 
    435 F.3d 426
    , 430 (3d Cir. 2006) (―The Court in
    Lopez-Mendoza was careful to qualify its broad statement by
    noting that it was not considering ‗egregious violations of
    Fourth Amendment or other liberties that might transgress
    notions of fundamental fairness and undermine the probative
    value of the evidence obtained.‘‖).
    The BIA therefore erred in concluding that the
    discussion in Lopez-Mendoza lacked the force of law, and the
    26
    Board clearly failed to conduct the proper analysis to
    determine whether any such egregious violations occurred.
    The IJ and the Board should have, but did not, first determine
    whether agents violated Oliva-Ramos‘s Fourth Amendment
    rights and second, whether any such violations implicated the
    Lopez-Mendoza exception for being widespread or egregious.
    We will briefly note the possible merits of each prong of this
    argument against the circumstances here.
    1. Egregious Violations of the Fourth Amendment
    We have not had occasion to consider when conduct
    by ICE officials (or anyone acting in a similar role) would
    constitute the kind of egregious violations that could trigger
    the protections endemic in the exclusionary rule and justify
    applying the rule in the civil arena. We now take this
    opportunity to more precisely define the standard that should
    be used in determining whether unlawful conduct by
    governmental officers rises to the level of an ―egregious‖
    violation of the Fourth Amendment.
    In Lopez-Mendoza, the Supreme Court cited Rochin v.
    California, 
    342 U.S. 165
    (1952), as an example of ―egregious
    violations of Fourth Amendment or other liberties that might
    transgress notions of fundamental fairness and undermine the
    probative value of the evidence obtained.‖ Lopez-
    Mendoza, 468 U.S. at 1050-51
    . In Rochin, three deputy sheriffs forcibly
    entered a home and saw Rochin swallow some capsules
    which were believed to be a controlled substance. In order to
    recover that evidence, Rochin was taken to a hospital where a
    doctor induced vomiting at the direction of one of the officers
    by inserting a tube into Rochin‘s stomach and pumping a
    chemical into him. The Supreme Court found that such
    conduct offended even ―hardened sensibilities.‖ 
    Rochin, 342 U.S. at 172
    . It ―shock[ed] the conscience‖ and violated
    Rochin‘s right to due process under the Constitution. 
    Id. Rochin was decided
    before the Fourth Amendment
    was applied to the states through incorporation by the
    Fourteenth Amendment. See Mapp v. Ohio, 
    367 U.S. 643
    (1961). ―Consequently, the Court has not relied on the
    Rochin ‗shocks the conscience‘ standard but has instead
    applied a Fourth Amendment reasonableness analysis in cases
    that, like Rochin, involved highly intrusive searches or
    27
    seizures.‖ Lester v. City of Chicago, 
    830 F.2d 706
    , 711 (7th
    Cir. 1987). Moreover, the Supreme Court has rejected the use
    of the Fourteenth Amendment‘s ―shocks the conscience‖
    standard in Section 1983 claims involving excessive force
    under the Fourth Amendment. See Graham v. Connor, 
    490 U.S. 386
    , 394-95 (1989). ―Because different standards attach
    to the various rights, identifying the proper constitutional
    approach is essential.‖ Gottlieb ex rel. Calabria v. Laurel
    Highlands School Dist., 
    272 F.3d 168
    , 171 (3d Cir. 2001).
    Thus, ―the difference between reviewing [the Government‘s]
    actions under the reasonableness standard of the Fourth
    Amendment or the shocks the conscience standard of the
    Fourteenth Amendment may be determinative.‖ 
    Id. The jurisprudence that
    has developed for ―ordinary‖
    Fourth Amendment violations—where the test is
    ―reasonableness‖—is critical to determining whether Fourth
    Amendment violations occurred in the first instance.
    However, a violation must be more than ―unreasonable‖ for it
    to satisfy the higher threshold of an ―egregious‖ Fourth
    Amendment violation under Lopez-Mendoza. See Gonzalez-
    Rivera v. 
    INS, 22 F.3d at 1448
    (―We cannot determine
    whether the IJ properly excluded the I-213 Form based solely
    on our conclusion that the officers‘ conduct was
    unreasonable.‖); 
    Puc-Ruiz, 629 F.3d at 778
    (―Lopez-Mendoza
    requires more than a violation to justify exclusion.‖). The
    gap between reasonableness and egregious violations has led
    to our sister courts of appeals employing varying approaches
    to determining whether a Fourth Amendment violation is
    egregious. We consider some of those approaches here.
    The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has adopted
    a test resembling the qualified immunity inquiry into whether
    a constitutional violation was the result of bad faith.
    
    Orhorhaghe, 38 F.3d at 493
    . After establishing that a Fourth
    Amendment violation has occurred, the Ninth Circuit
    considers ―whether the agents committed the violations
    deliberately or by conduct a reasonable officer should have
    known would violate the Constitution.‖ 
    Id. The test was
    developed in Adamson v. C.I.R., 
    745 F.2d 541
    , 545 (9th Cir.
    1984), after analyzing the Janis decision, 
    428 U.S. 433
    (1976), that the Supreme Court relied on for the weighing of
    interests analysis in Lopez-Mendoza. The Adamson court
    28
    determined from ―language in Lopez-Mendoza that deterrence
    is not the only consideration‖ underlying the exclusionary
    
    rule. 745 F.2d at 545
    . ―[I]n addition to deterrence, the
    exclusionary rule serves the vital function of preserving
    judicial integrity.‖ 
    Id. The Ninth Circuit
    concluded that if
    ―police unreasonably violated the defendant‘s fourth
    amendment rights, the integrity of the courts would be
    implicated.‖ 
    Id. at 546. Oliva-Ramos‘s
    petition, however, demonstrates the
    difficulty courts and agencies face in adopting a test that is
    perched on the fulcrum of the good faith of the police. Oliva-
    Ramos has alleged that it was ICE‘s policy to detain
    individuals without reasonable suspicion and to enter homes
    during pre-dawn raids without consent. He also alleges that
    the officers who carry out these pre-dawn raids are acting
    under the guidance of ICE policy. Thus, focusing only on
    their good faith would permit conduct that may be objectively
    reasonable based on directives of the Department of
    Homeland Security, but nevertheless result in routine
    invasions of the constitutionally protected privacy rights of
    individuals.21
    In Almeida-Amaral v. Gonzales, 
    461 F.3d 231
    (2d Cir.
    2006), the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit also
    addressed this issue. There, Almeida-Amaral, who was 17
    years old, walked into a parking lot that was adjacent to a gas
    station in southern Texas. He was approached by a
    uniformed border patrol agent who stopped him and asked for
    identification.   Almeida-Amaral was arrested when he
    produced a Brazilian passport and made subsequent
    21
    This analysis must, by its very nature, differ from an
    inquiry into an officer‘s good faith that allows evidence to be
    used at a trial even though it was seized by an overly broad
    warrant if the Government can establish the good faith of the
    officers who relied on the defective warrant. See Mass. v.
    Sheppard, 
    468 U.S. 981
    , 985-87 (1984); United States v.
    Ninety-Two Thousand Four Hundred Twenty-Two Dollars
    and Fifty-Seven Cents, 
    307 F.3d 137
    , 151 (3d Cir. 2002). The
    egregious inquiry under Lopez-Mendoza cannot be sanitized
    by the underlying agency policy even if the good faith of the
    immigration officer is established.
    29
    statements that formed the basis of an I-213 Form and an
    order of deportation. When removal proceedings were
    instituted against him, Almeida-Amaral argued that his
    passport and statements to the police should not be considered
    because they were obtained upon a warrantless seizure and
    arrest in violation of the Fourth Amendment.22
    The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit began its
    discussion by explicitly adopting the Lopez-Mendoza
    exception applying the exclusionary rule in civil removal
    proceedings. See 
    id. at 234 (―[W]e
    now apply it as the law of
    the circuit.‖). It then held that ―exclusion of evidence is
    appropriate under the rule of Lopez-Mendoza if record
    evidence established either (a) that an egregious violation that
    was fundamentally unfair had occurred, or (b) that the
    violation—regardless of its egregiousness or unfairness—
    undermined the reliability of the evidence in dispute.‖ 
    Id. at 235. We
    accept the test adopted by the Second Circuit with
    slight modification.
    The Second Circuit made clear that the probative value
    of the evidence obtained is irrelevant to the inquiry. We
    agree that the probative value of the evidence obtained cannot
    be part of the calculus. In Rochin, the capsules that were
    forcibly removed from the defendant‘s stomach were highly
    probative and extraordinarily reliable evidence that he had
    consumed a controlled substance. Yet, the Supreme Court
    had no problem holding that the evidence must be suppressed
    because of the tactics the police used to extract it. See
    
    Gonzalez-Rivera, 22 F.3d at 1451
    . ―Indeed, Rochin stated in
    no uncertain terms that reliability cannot be the sole
    touchstone of the Fourth Amendment.‖ 
    Almeida-Amaral, 461 F.3d at 235
    (citing 
    Rochin, 342 U.S. at 173
    ). However, we
    think it is circular to refer to an ―egregious violation that was
    fundamentally unfair,‖ or one that undermines the reliability
    or the probative value of the evidence ―regardless of its
    egregiousness or unfairness,‖ because the inquiry must
    determine whether an egregious violation has occurred. We
    therefore conclude that evidence will be the result of an
    22
    He also argued that since he was an unaccompanied minor,
    his statement was obtained in violation of applicable
    regulations. The court did not focus on that claim.
    30
    egregious violation within the meaning of Lopez-Mendoza, if
    the record evidence established either (a) that a constitutional
    violation that was fundamentally unfair had occurred, or (b)
    that the violation—regardless of its unfairness—undermined
    the reliability of the evidence in dispute. With that alteration,
    we adopt the reasoning of the Court of Appeals for the
    Second Circuit. See 
    id. at 235. The
    Second Circuit did not discuss further the contours
    of the second prong of its approach—―that the violation-
    regardless of its egregiousness or unfairness-undermined the
    reliability of the evidence in dispute‖—because the facts of
    the case did not raise ―doubts about the veracity of the
    evidence obtained as a result of the seizure.‖ 
    Id. at 235. Rather,
    the court focused on when a Fourth Amendment
    violation may be ―fundamentally unfair.‖ First, the court
    emphasized that whether a violation is fundamentally unfair
    depends heavily upon the facts of each case.23 In Almeida-
    Amaral‘s case, the court found that ―two principles . . . bear
    on whether petitioner suffered an egregious violation of his
    constitutional rights.‖ 
    Id. The court explained:
    First, the egregiousness of a constitutional
    violation cannot be gauged solely on the basis
    of the validity (or invalidity) of the stop, but
    must also be based on the characteristics and
    severity of the offending conduct. Thus, if an
    individual is subjected to a seizure for no reason
    at all, that by itself may constitute an egregious
    violation, but only if the seizure is sufficiently
    severe. Second, even where the seizure is not
    especially severe, it may nevertheless qualify as
    an egregious violation if the stop was based on
    race (or some other grossly improper
    consideration).
    23
    The court explained in a footnote that ―we do not intend to
    give an exhaustive list of what might constitute an egregious
    violation of an individual‘s rights. We emphasize these
    principles only because they are especially germane to the
    facts and circumstances of the case before us.‖ Almeida-
    
    Amaral, 461 F.3d at 235
    n.1.
    31
    
    Id. It added that
    ―exclusion may well be proper where the
    seizure itself is gross or unreasonable in addition to being
    without a plausible legal ground, e.g., when the initial illegal
    stop is particularly lengthy, there is a show or use of force,
    etc.‖ 
    Id. at 236. And
    second, where ―there is evidence that
    the stop was based on race, the violation would be egregious,
    and the exclusionary rule would apply.‖ 
    Id. at 237. We
    discern a few guiding principles from Almeida-
    Amaral. First, and most importantly, courts and agencies
    must adopt a flexible case-by-case approach for evaluating
    egregiousness, based on a general set of background
    principles which fulfill the two-part Lopez-Mendoza test. See
    
    id. at 235 n.1
    (―[W]e do not intend to give an exhaustive list
    of what might constitute an egregious violation of an
    individual‘s rights.‖).       Second, those evaluating the
    egregiousness of the violation should pay close attention to
    the ―characteristics and severity of the offending conduct.‖
    
    Id. at 235. As
    the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
    noted, ―evidence of any government misconduct by threats,
    coercion or physical abuse‖ might be important
    considerations in evaluating egregiousness. Kandamar v.
    Gonzales, 
    464 F.3d 65
    , 71 (1st Cir. 2006). And the Court of
    Appeals for the Eighth Circuit found evidence of ―physical
    brutality‖ and an ―unreasonable show or use of force‖
    relevant to the egregiousness inquiry. 
    Puc-Ruiz, 629 F.3d at 778
    -79. In rejecting the petitioner‘s egregiousness claim, that
    court also noted it was not dealing with ―a case in which
    police officers invaded private property and detained
    individuals with no articulable suspicion whatsoever.‖ 
    Id. at 779 (emphasis
    in original).
    These cases demonstrate that there is no one-size-fits-
    all approach to determining whether a Fourth Amendment
    violation is egregious. Indeed, the exceptions announced in
    Lopez-Mendoza do not suggest or imply that any strict test-
    based approach is appropriate or warranted. Using this
    formulation of the rule as its guide, on remand, the BIA‘s
    inquiry should include such factors as: whether Oliva-Ramos
    can establish intentional violations of the Fourth Amendment,
    whether the seizure itself was so gross or unreasonable in
    addition to being without a plausible legal ground, (e.g., when
    the initial illegal stop is particularly lengthy, there is an
    32
    unnecessary and menacing show or use of force, etc.),
    whether improper seizures, illegal entry of homes, or arrests
    occurred under threats, coercion or physical abuse, the extent
    to which the agents reported to unreasonable shows of force,
    and finally, whether any seizures or arrests were based on
    race or perceived ethnicity. These factors are illustrative of
    the inquiry and not intended as an exhaustive list of factors
    that should always be considered, nor is any one factor
    necessarily determinative of the outcome in every case.
    Rather, the familiar totality of the circumstances must guide
    the inquiry and determine its outcome. Thus, on remand, the
    BIA (and perhaps the IJ) must meaningfully examine the
    particular facts and circumstances of the ICE agents‘ conduct.
    To the extent that the factors discussed above are relevant,
    they should consider them.24 However, the analysis should
    not be limited to these factors, and Oliva-Ramos is free on
    remand to emphasize any particular characteristics of Clara‘s
    alleged consent, and his seizure and arrest that he believes
    renders the ICE agents‘ conduct egregious. In turn, the BIA
    (and perhaps, the IJ) must consider both whether the ICE
    agents violated Oliva-Ramos‘s Fourth Amendment rights and
    whether those violations were egregious.
    2. Widespread Violations of the Fourth
    Amendment
    To our knowledge, no court has explicitly adopted or
    applied the portion of the Lopez-Mendoza pronouncement
    that ―conclusions concerning the exclusionary rule‘s value
    might change, if there developed good reason to believe that
    Fourth Amendment violations by INS officers were
    
    widespread.‖ 468 U.S. at 1050
    . Yet it is as much a part of
    the Lopez-Mendoza discussion as ―egregious‖ violations, and
    we cannot ignore it simply because we are forced to write on
    the proverbial ―blank slate.‖ Rather, determining when
    widespread violations of the Fourth Amendment may serve as
    an independent rationale for applying the exclusionary rule in
    24
    However, it is important to note—as explained above—the
    inquiry does not turn on the good/bad faith of the agents
    involved. Rather, this is but one of many circumstances that
    may be relevant in a particular case.
    33
    civil removal proceedings is simply a matter of first
    impression for us.25 Given the discussion in Lopez-Mendoza,
    we think that most constitutional violations that are part of a
    pattern of widespread violations of the Fourth Amendment
    would also satisfy the test for an egregious violation, as
    discussed above.
    On other occasions, in a concurring opinion, Justice
    Kennedy has acknowledged that evidence of widespread
    Fourth Amendment violations would raise serious concerns.
    In his concurring opinion in Hudson v. Michigan, 
    547 U.S. 586
    (2006), Justice Kennedy explained:
    Today‘s decision does not address any
    demonstrated pattern of knock-and-announce
    violations. If a widespread pattern of violations
    25
    Allegations of widespread violations of the Fourth
    Amendment have been presented previously before this Court
    in a different context. See Argueta v. United States
    Immigration & Customs Enforcement, 
    643 F.3d 60
    (3d Cir.
    2011). There, the plaintiffs brought a Bivens action (allowing
    for damages remedies for constitutional violations by federal
    agents) against various federal and local immigration
    officials, as well as officers who actually participated in raids
    that led to the plaintiffs‘ arrest. The plaintiffs alleged that
    Operation Return to Sender was being conducted by
    inadequately trained officers who relied on an ‗―outdated and
    inaccurate [database] in up to 50% of cases,‘‖ 
    id. at 64, and
    who engaged in a ‗―practice‘ of unlawful and abusive raids
    [that] flourished as a predictable consequence of the
    ‗arbitrary‘ and ‗exponentially-increased quotas‘‖ that drove
    the programmatic abuses. 
    Id. The plaintiffs further
    alleged
    that the predictable ―collateral arrests‖ of persons not targeted
    by the raids were allowed to count toward the inflated quotas
    of arrests that officers were expected to meet and that this
    resulted in a pattern of constitutional abuses that continued
    once the officers ―actually entered the home.‖ 
    Id. at 64-65. We
    did not address the merits of the alleged constitutional
    torts because the only issues before us involved the
    defendants‘ qualified immunity.
    34
    were shown, and particularly if those violations
    were committed against persons who lacked the
    means or voice to mount an effective protest,
    there would be reason for grave concern. Even
    then, however, the Court would have to
    acknowledge that extending the remedy of
    exclusion to all the evidence seized following a
    knock-and-announce violation would mean
    revising the requirement of causation that limits
    our discretion in applying the exclusionary rule.
    
    Id. at 604 (Kennedy,
    J., concurring).
    Similarly, in United States v. Navarro-Diaz, 
    420 F.3d 581
    (6th Cir. 2005), the court expressed the following view:
    The Supreme Court‘s language in Lopez-
    Mendoza—that ―[t]he ‗body‘ or identity of a
    defendant or respondent in a criminal or civil
    proceeding is never itself suppressible as a fruit
    of an unlawful arrest‖—when taken out of
    context, could be read to suggest that random,
    widespread detentions and questioning of
    suspected aliens would not implicate Fourth
    Amendment 
    rights. 468 U.S. at 1039
    , 104 S.
    Ct. 3479. We do not believe, however, that
    Lopez-Mendoza sanctions such a result. The
    Supreme Court qualified its holding when it
    stated in the last paragraph of Lopez-Mendoza
    that ―we do not deal here with egregious
    violations of Fourth Amendment or other
    liberties that might transgress notions of
    fundamental fairness.‖
    
    Navarro-Diaz, 420 F.3d at 587
    .
    Oliva-Ramos alleges that the ICE officers‘ conduct
    here is both egregious and widespread. If true, the allegations
    here may well illustrate the precise situation that was
    anticipated in Lopez-Mendoza. Clearly, a single Fourth
    Amendment violation is not sufficient to extend the
    exclusionary rule to civil removal proceedings unless it is also
    egregious. Not every illegal entry into a home will rise to that
    35
    level. But Oliva-Ramos has alleged much more than the
    forcible warrantless entry into a single home.
    It is uncontested that Oliva-Ramos was taken into custody
    during the course of a pre-dawn raid. Such raids of homes
    have traditionally been viewed with particular opprobrium
    unless the timing is justified by the particular circumstances.
    See Fed. R. Crim. P. 41(e)(2)(A) (―The warrant must
    command the officer to: (ii) execute the warrant during
    daytime [defined as ―the hours between 6:00 a.m. and 10:00
    p.m. . . . ,‖ Fed R. Crim. P. 41(a)(2)(B)], unless the judge for
    good cause expressly authorizes execution at another time . . .
    ;‖ see also United States ex rel. Boyance v. Myers, 
    398 F.2d 896
    , 897 (3d Cir. 1968) (―The time of a police search of an
    occupied family home may be a significant factor in
    determining whether, in a Fourth Amendment sense, the
    search is ‗unreasonable.‘‖).
    Oliva-Ramos has attempted to introduce evidence of a
    consistent pattern of conducting these raids during
    unreasonable hours, such as the 4:30 a.m. raid that occurred
    here. Oliva-Ramos is trying to support these allegations by
    resorting to documents that were not available when he had
    his hearing before the IJ, but were presented to the BIA for its
    consideration on appeal.         This evidence included ICE
    Memoranda regarding the Fugitive Operations Teams and
    ICE arrest statistics. It appears from this record the
    documents were not available for the IJ to consider initially
    because they were produced only after Oliva-Ramos litigated
    their disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act. In his
    FOIA request dated October 4, 2007, Oliva-Ramos requested
    ―ICE policies, directives, and memoranda regarding collateral
    arrests made at the suspected locations of individuals targeted
    by ICE.‖ 
    Id. The Government refused
    to release these
    documents, citing FOIA exemptions. 
    Id. As Oliva-Ramos notes,
    the Government‘s withholding of these documents
    impeded Oliva-Ramos‘s ability to present evidence before the
    IJ in the first instance prior to his April 23, 2008 suppression
    hearing.
    Oliva-Ramos argues that ICE conceded that it has a
    policy of rounding up everyone in a home, without any
    particularized suspicion, in order to question all of the
    36
    occupants about their immigration status.26 The BIA‘s refusal
    to even consider that evidence was contrary to Lopez-
    Mendoza. By turning a blind eye to that evidence, the BIA
    prevented Oliva-Ramos from potentially demonstrating that
    the circumstances of his seizure fit within the narrow
    exception left open in Lopez-Mendoza.27
    26
    In Argueta, the petitioners alleged that the unconstitutional
    pre-dawn raids continued ―until the agents‘ van was 
    filled.‖ 643 F.3d at 65
    .
    27
    The Government acknowledges that Oliva-Ramos was
    detained as the result of ―Operation Return to Sender.‖ In
    May 2006, the Government launched this nationwide
    program to capture fugitive aliens using dragnet-like home
    and office raids. 
    Argueta, 643 F.3d at 63-67
    . In a 2009
    report prepared under the guidance of an advisory panel of
    law enforcement professionals, a Cardozo law school clinic
    issued a public study purporting to document ―a suspiciously
    uniform pattern of constitutional violations during ICE
    [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] home raids. Bess
    Chiu et al., Cardozo Immigration Justice Clinic, Constitution
    on ICE: A Report on Immigration Home Raid Operations 9
    (2009). Available at
    http://www.cardozo.yu.edu/uploadedFiles/Cardozo/Profiles/i
    mmigrationlaw-741/IJC_ICE-Home-Raid-
    Report%20Updated.pdf. The report attempted to detail
    ―[t]actical pre-dawn or nighttime home entries, conducted by
    heavily armed seven member teams, with residents who often
    do not speak English . . . .‖ 
    Id. at 29. Individuals
    purportedly
    involved in one such raid alleged routine constitutional
    violations by government officials, which led one
    commentator to state: ―While any law enforcement entry into
    the home is likely to seem threatening to residents, the
    accounts of ICE enforcement operations indicate that the
    agency uses excessive displays of force. . . . Evidence now
    abounds that officers frequently enter without consent—that
    they threaten or intimidate residents, make misrepresentations
    of authority, push their way through open doors, or simply
    enter without waiting to speak to a resident at all. With no
    valid warrants, no exigent circumstances, and often no valid
    consent, one major plank of ICE‘s interior enforcement
    efforts depends on routine violations of a core constitutional
    37
    In attempting to supplement the record and have the
    BIA remand to the IJ for additional proceedings where the
    newly obtained records could be considered, Oliva-Ramos is
    merely asking for an opportunity to present evidence that the
    raid leading to his apprehension falls within the narrow
    exception recognized in Lopez-Mendoza, and that it was
    therefore error to categorically refuse the remedy of
    suppression without affording him an opportunity to establish
    that the Government was engaging in the kind of egregious or
    widespread abuses that justifies suppression under Lopez-
    Mendoza. We do not suggest that these allegations are
    established fact, nor that they would necessarily satisfy Oliva-
    Ramos‘s burden under Lopez-Mendoza even if proven. That
    is for the IJ and BIA to determine in the first instance.
    However, these allegations are woven into the fabric of the
    central issue before us, and cannot properly be resolved
    absent the materials Oliva-Ramos sought to present in the
    removal proceedings.
    We believe the BIA erred in not allowing Oliva-
    Ramos an opportunity to support his Fourth Amendment
    claim. We take no position, however, on the underlying
    question of whether the circumstances here are so egregious
    or widespread as to justify a suppression order. We merely
    conclude that Oliva-Ramos must be permitted to present
    evidence to support his contention that the Government‘s
    conduct here falls within the exception the Supreme Court
    was careful to allow in Lopez-Mendoza.
    D. Regulatory Violations
    1. 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(f)(2) (consent to enter)
    As we summarized above, the IJ and BIA dismissed
    Oliva-Ramos‘s claims because they concluded that Clara
    consented to entry and that Oliva-Ramos could not, therefore,
    establish any Fourth Amendment violation. However, we
    guarantee.‖ Nathan Treadwell, Fugitive Operations & the
    Fourth Amendment: Representing Immigrants Arrested in
    Warrantless Home Raids, 
    89 N.C. L
    . Rev. 507, 516-18 (2011)
    (footnotes omitted).
    38
    agree that the BIA failed to apply the proper Fourth
    Amendment inquiry.
    The BIA considered the question in the context of 8
    C.F.R. § 287.8(f)(2) which provides:
    An immigration officer may not enter into the
    non-public areas of a business, a residence
    including the curtilage of such residence, or a
    farm or other outdoor agricultural operation,
    except as provided in section 287(a)(3) of the
    Act, for the purpose of questioning the
    occupants or employees concerning their right
    to be or remain in the United States unless the
    officer has either a warrant or the consent of the
    owner or other person in control of the site to be
    inspected. When consent to enter is given, the
    immigration officer must note on the officer‘s
    report that consent was given and, if possible,
    by whom consent was given. If the immigration
    officer is denied access to conduct a site
    inspection, a warrant may be obtained.
    In affirming the IJ‘s decision that no Fourth
    Amendment violation occurred because the entry was
    consensual, the BIA stated that ―we have considered the
    respondent‘s asserted bases for contending that the consent to
    the officers‘ entry was coerced (or otherwise invalid) but we
    are not persuaded by them.‖ ―Although the BIA ‗is not
    required to ‗write an exegesis‘ on every contention,‘ the
    ‗analysis‘ offered here is simply inadequate to afford the
    meaningful review that both‖ Oliva-Ramos and the
    Government deserve. Zubeda v. Ashcroft, 
    333 F.3d 463
    , 477
    (3d Cir. 2003) (quoting Mansour v. INS, 
    230 F.3d 902
    , 908
    (7th Cir. 2000)).
    The Supreme Court has made clear that ―[c]onsent
    must be given voluntarily.‖ 
    Stabile, 633 F.3d at 230
    (citing
    Bumper v. North Carolina, 
    391 U.S. 543
    , 548 (1968)). Thus,
    the Court requires a careful examination of the totality of the
    circumstances surrounding how that consent was obtained.
    See United States v. Drayton, 
    536 U.S. 194
    , 206-07 (2002).
    The appropriate inquiry into the voluntariness of a purported
    39
    consent would include, without limitation: ―the age,
    education, and intelligence of the subject; whether the subject
    was advised of his or her constitutional rights; the length of
    the encounter; the repetition or duration of the questioning;
    and the use of physical punishment.‖ United States v. Price,
    
    558 F.3d 270
    , 278 (3d Cir. 2009). We have also ―identified
    as relevant ‗the setting in which the consent was obtained
    [and] the parties‘ verbal and non-verbal actions.‘‖ 
    Id. In addition, the
    number of officers and displays of force are
    important factors. See United States v. Kim, 
    27 F.3d 947
    , 954
    (3d Cir. 1994). This kind of particularized scrutiny was not
    applied to the evidence here because it was assumed that the
    Fourth Amendment remedy of suppression did not apply.
    Rather, the Form I-213 that was relied on to establish a
    consensual entry indicated that ―[c]onsent to enter the
    premises was provided by Clara Oliva.‖ That appears to have
    largely been the beginning and the end of the inquiry. As
    noted above, however, Officer Belluardo did not recall the
    specifics of the entry; she merely testified based upon what
    she said was normal procedure.
    The BIA, therefore, erred in finding valid consent
    without analyzing the totality of the circumstances under the
    Fourth Amendment. Again, we take no position on what the
    outcome of that inquiry should be here. We only hold that the
    inquiry that appears on this record is not sufficient given the
    nature of Oliva-Ramos‘s claims.
    2. 8 C.F.R. §§ 287.8(b)(1) (seizure)
    The BIA correctly noted that 8 U.S.C. 1357(a)(1)
    permits an ICE agent, without a warrant, to ―interrogate any
    alien or person believed to be an alien as to his right to be or
    to remain in the United States.‖ 8 U.S.C. § 1357(a)(1). We
    have made clear, however, that the ―authority under Section
    1357(a)(1) to interrogate a person believed to be an alien is
    limited by the restrictions of the fourth amendment.‖ Babula
    v. Immigration & Naturalization Service, 
    665 F.2d 293
    , 295
    (3d Cir. 1981) (citation omitted). As we noted in Babula,
    ―[s]ince the same standards govern the validity of a seizure
    under section 1357(a)(1) as under the fourth amendment,
    questioning that is permissible under the fourth amendment is
    also permissible under section 1357(a)(1).‖ 
    Id. 40 8 C.F.R.
    § 287.8 was promulgated pursuant to 8
    U.S.C. § 1357(a)(1). This regulation incorporates the test that
    ―a person has been ‗seized‘ within the meaning of the Fourth
    Amendment only if, in view of all of the circumstances
    surrounding the incident, a reasonable person would have
    believed that he was not free to leave.‖ United States v.
    Mendenhall, 
    446 U.S. 544
    , 554 (1980). Specifically, the
    regulation states: ―An immigration officer, like any other
    person, has the right to ask questions of anyone as long as the
    immigration officer does not restrain the freedom of an
    individual, not under arrest, to walk away.‖ 8 C.F.R. §
    287.8(b)(1) (emphasis added).
    In order to conduct a proper analysis under the Fourth
    Amendment, the BIA should have considered among the non-
    exclusive list of relevant factors, the circumstances that the
    Supreme Court described in Mendenhall. The Mendenhall
    Court explained that ―[e]xamples of circumstances that might
    indicate a seizure, even where the person did not attempt to
    leave, would be the threatening presence of several officers,
    the display of a weapon by an officer, some physical touching
    of the person of the citizen, or the use of language or tone of
    voice indicating that compliance with the officer‘s request
    might be compelled.‖ 
    Mendenhall, 446 U.S. at 554
    .
    Although we do not decide whether those factors in
    fact existed, we discuss by way of example some of the
    considerations that could have influenced the Mendenhall
    analysis. Here, armed ICE officers entered Oliva-Ramos‘s
    room shining flashlights that woke him up at 4:30 in the
    morning. After he got up, he was told to go to the living
    room where officers blocked several exits and detained his
    family members. The record also indicates at least six armed
    uniformed ICE officers were present and that certain family
    members were told to sit down when they tried to stand.
    In concluding that Oliva-Ramos was not improperly
    seized, the BIA relied exclusively on Oliva-Ramos‘s
    testimony during the suppression hearing that he had no
    intention of leaving the premises because he ―didn‘t commit
    any crime.‖ Yet the question of intent to leave is less relevant
    under the Fourth Amendment than whether he felt free to
    leave. See Brendlin v. California, 
    551 U.S. 249
    , 255 (2007)
    41
    (―[T]he Court adopted Justice Stewart‘s touchstone
    [Mendenhall test], but added that when a person ‗has no
    desire to leave‘ for reasons unrelated to the police presence,
    the ‗coercive effect of the encounter‘ can be measured better
    by asking whether ‗a reasonable person would feel free to
    decline the officers‘ requests or otherwise terminate the
    encounter.‘‖) (internal citations omitted).
    Mendenhall makes clear that ―circumstances that
    might indicate a seizure‖ may exist ―even where the person
    did not attempt to leave . . . .‖ 
    Mendenhall, 446 U.S. at 554
    .
    Here, while Oliva-Ramos may not have intended or attempted
    to leave his apartment at 4:30 a.m., the BIA must also inquire
    into whether he felt free to leave. (Question: ―What would
    have happened if you‘d asked the officers to leave?;‖
    Response ―I couldn‘t tell the officers to leave because it‘s the
    law and I didn‘t have anything to tell them.‖). The BIA,
    therefore, erred in rejecting Oliva-Ramos‘s claim of a
    regulatory violation without an adequate inquiry into whether
    Oliva-Ramos was seized before proceeding to find reasonable
    suspicion to detain him.
    We caution, however, that nothing in this opinion is
    intended to undermine the ability of immigration officers to
    ask questions of a person to obtain his or her immigration
    status so long as the inquiry is consistent with the limitations
    imposed by the Fourth Amendment. See Florida v. Bostick,
    
    501 U.S. 429
    , 434-35 (1991). Bostick makes clear that ―even
    when officers have no basis for suspecting a particular
    individual, they may generally ask questions of that
    individual, ask to examine the individual‘s identification, and
    request consent to search . . . as long as the police do not
    convey a message that compliance with their requests is
    required.‖ 
    Id. (internal citations omitted).
    ―So long as a
    reasonable person would feel free ‗to disregard the police and
    go about his business,‘ the encounter is consensual and no
    reasonable suspicion is required.‖ 
    Id. at 434 (internal
    citation
    omitted). But the encounter ―loses its consensual nature‖ and
    a seizure has occurred ―when the officer, by means of
    physical force or show of authority, has in some way
    restrained the liberty of a citizen . . . .‖ 
    Id. 42 Our discussion
    of these principles is not intended to
    resolve the merits of Oliva-Ramos‘s Fourth Amendment
    claims. Rather, we simply explain that the inquiry undertaken
    by the BIA was wrongly guided by its assumption that
    suppression is not permitted in removal proceedings. Cf.
    
    Babula, 665 F.2d at 296
    (finding reasonable suspicion in the
    context of an automobile stop).
    3. 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)(i) (warrantless arrest)
    We must also consider whether the BIA properly
    construed 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)(i), which states that ―[a]n
    arrest shall be made only when the designated immigration
    officer has reason to believe that the person to be arrested has
    committed an offense against the United States or is an alien
    illegally in the United States.‖ 8 C.F.R. § 287.8 (c)(2)(i).
    Section 287.8(c)(2)(i) emanates from INA § 287(a)(2), 8
    U.S.C. § 1357(a)(2). We held in Babula that ―under section
    1357(a)(2) . . . ‗arrest‘ means an arrest upon probable cause,
    and not simply a detention for purposes of 
    interrogation.‖ 665 F.2d at 298
    .
    In Tejeda-Mata v. Immigration & Naturalization
    Service, 
    626 F.2d 721
    (9th Cir. 1980), a case upon which the
    BIA relied in finding that Oliva-Ramos posed a flight risk, the
    Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held that, in addition to
    the background circumstances of the interrogation, an
    uncoerced admission that a petitioner ―came from Mexico . . .
    constitute[d] a clearly sufficient basis for his warrantless
    arrest.‖ 
    Tejeda-Mata, 626 F.2d at 725
    . There, Tejeda-Mata
    drove through a parking lot in Washington when an officer
    ―recognized an alien whom he had previously arrested and
    who had been granted voluntary departure.‖ 
    Id. at 723. After
    the officer parked his car to block Tejeda-Mata, he jumped
    out of the car and asked the officer what was happening. The
    officer asked where he was from and Tejeda-Mata responded
    that he came from Mexico.
    Here, it should be clear from what we have thus far
    explained that we cannot conclude that any statements related
    to Oliva-Ramos being a flight risk were uncoerced, without
    an examination by the BIA or the IJ in the first instance into
    whether Oliva-Ramos was improperly seized during the home
    43
    raid and subsequent arrest. See Wong Sun v. United States,
    
    371 U.S. 471
    , 484 (1963) (stating that if evidence is obtained
    as a result of an unlawful seizure, it is to be excluded as the
    ―‗fruits‘ of the [officer‘s] unlawful action.‖). The BIA relied
    solely on a statement contained in the Form I-213 that Oliva-
    Ramos posed a flight risk, and thus § 287.8(c)(2)(i) permitted
    a warrantless arrest. Whether Oliva-Ramos‘s warrantless
    arrest was valid depends upon whether he was illegally
    seized. Thus, we will vacate the BIA‘s ruling as to regulatory
    violation 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)(i) and remand for further
    consideration in light of the potential illegal seizure of Oliva-
    Ramos.
    4. 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)(vii) (coerced statements)
    8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)(vii) prohibits ―[t]he use of
    threats, coercion, or physical abuse by the designated
    immigration officer to induce a suspect to waive his or her
    rights or to make a statement . . . .‖ 8 C.F.R. §
    287.8(c)(2)(vii). The BIA combined its analysis of this
    regulatory provision with the discussion of an improper
    seizure under 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(b)(1). Based on our
    discussion of the circumstances surrounding the potential
    improper seizure and coercion, we will remand for further
    consideration of 8 C.F.R. § 287.8(c)(2)(vii) and any potential
    violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
    5. 8 C.F.R. § 292.5(b) (right to counsel)
    In addition to the regulatory violations discussed
    above, Oliva-Ramos also claims that ICE agents violated 8
    C.F.R. § 292.5(b). That regulation provides:
    Whenever an examination is provided for in this
    chapter, the person involved shall have the right
    to be represented by an attorney or
    representative who shall be permitted to
    examine or cross-examine such person and
    witnesses, to introduce evidence, to make
    objections which shall be stated succinctly and
    entered on the record, and to submit briefs.
    Provided, that nothing in this paragraph shall be
    construed to provide any applicant for
    admission in either primary or secondary
    44
    inspection the right to representation, unless the
    applicant for admission has become the focus of
    a criminal investigation and has been taken into
    custody.
    8 C.F.R. § 292.5. The BIA rejected Oliva-Ramos‘s challenge
    to this provision, concluding that the Government is only
    required to inform an alien of his right to legal representation
    after he is placed into formal proceedings. See Samayoa-
    Martinez v. Holder, 
    558 F.3d 897
    , 901-02 (9th Cir. 2009)).
    We agree with the Board‘s interpretation of § 292.5. Formal
    removal proceedings begin only after the Government has
    filed a Notice to Appear in immigration court. See 8 C.F.R. §
    1239.1(a) (―Every removal proceeding conducted under
    section 240 of the Act (8 U.S.C. § 1229a) to determine the
    deportability or inadmissibility of an alien is commenced by
    the filing of a notice to appear with the immigration court.‖).
    Here, although the Government issued its Notice to Appear
    for Oliva-Ramos on March 26, 2007, the notice was not filed
    with the Immigration Court—thus initiating formal
    proceedings—until March 29, 2007. That Notice to Appear
    also provided a statement informing Oliva-Ramos of his right
    to representation. Thus we will affirm the BIA as to its ruling
    on § 292.5 because we conclude that Oliva-Ramos was
    notified of his right to counsel before he was placed in formal
    proceedings.28
    Conclusion
    For the reasons discussed above, we will vacate in part
    and will affirm in part, the BIA‘s August 31, 2010 order, and
    we will remand to the BIA with instructions that it grant the
    motion to reopen the proceedings and that it conduct further
    28
    We need not consider additional regulatory violations
    reached by the BIA as Oliva-Ramos has not appealed the
    BIA‘s decision as to 8 C.F.R. § 287.3 (failure to provide
    ―timely‖ advice of rights), 8 C.F.R. § 287.3(a) (examination
    by same officer who arrested respondent), and 8 C.F.R. §
    287.8(d)(1) (conditions of prolonged detention in a van).
    45
    proceedings (which may include a remand to the IJ)
    consistent with this opinion.29
    29
    The panel notes that Ms. Nikki Reisch argued on behalf of
    Petitioner as an eligible law student pursuant to Local
    Appellate Rule 46.3. The Court commends her exceptional
    oral advocacy and expresses its gratitude to her and to the
    New York University School of Law and the Washington
    Square Legal Services, Inc. for the pro bono representation
    provided for the Petitioner in this matter.
    46
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 10-3849

Citation Numbers: 694 F.3d 259

Judges: Ambro, McKEE, Rendell

Filed Date: 9/13/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/5/2023

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