DAVID SAM, Senior District Judge.
Sarbjit Singh has filed a Petition for Review of Denial of Application for Naturalization under 8 U.S.C. § 1421(c).
Mr. Singh requests that the Court remand this matter to USCIS and order it to process his naturalization application without regard to whether his admission to permanent residence was lawful at the time. Alternatively, he request that the Court: (1) find that he meets the requirements of naturalization, (2) approve his naturalization, (3) administer the oath, and/or (4) order Respondents to schedule an oath ceremony within thirty days, and issue him a naturalization certificate.
Respondents move to dismiss the Petition for a number of reasons, including jurisdictional mootness. For the reasons that follow, Respondents' Motion to Dismiss is granted for lack of jurisdiction.
Mr. Singh is a native and citizen of India. He entered the United States at El Paso, Texas on May 27, 1996. On March 3, 1997 he applied for asylum which later was denied because his claims about persecution in India were found not credible. While in immigration proceedings, Mr. Singh met and married Diana Ramirez. They were married on January 22, 2001. On February 28, 2001, Diana Ramirez, a U.S. Citizen, filed an I-130 alien relative petition with the USCIS on Petitioner's behalf. Petitioner concurrently filed a Form I-485 application to register permanent residence or adjust status. The parties submitted with those filings a death certificate for Mr. Singh's former spouse in India, Sukhwinder Kaur, to establish his legal ability to marry his current spouse Diana Ramirez, and Mr. Singh's Indian birth certificate.
The USCIS granted the I-130 petition for alien relative on December 28, 2005. On February 10, 2006, the immigration judge in Mr. Singh's immigration proceedings granted his I-485 application to register permanent residence or adjust status.
On March 1, 2006. fewer than 30 days later, Mr. Singh filed for divorce. The divorce became final on January 19, 2007. And on February 25, 2007, Mr. Singh married his third wife, Kiran. He filed an I-130 petition for alien relative on behalf of his new wife Kiran, along with a copy of her birth certificate. In connection with that filing, USCIS renewed its attempts to authenticate all documentation submitted by Mr. Singh. In a letter dated July 28, 2008, the Indian government responded that Mr. Singh's birth certificate was fraudulent. And on August 11, 2011, USCIS was informed by the Indian government that the death certificate provided for Mr. Singh's former spouse also was fraudulent.
The USCIS subsequently determined the Mr. Singh had procured his I-130 petition for alien relative, filed by Diana Ramirez, through fraud, and that because he was never lawfully adjusted to permanent resident status due to fraud, he was statutorily ineligible to naturalize.
On October 8, 2015, the USCIS formally denied Mr. Singh's naturalization application, and reaffirmed its denial on September 15, 2016.
Mr. Singh filed his Petition in this court on January 12, 2017. And on June 13, 2017, the USCIS placed him in removal proceedings based on its finding that he procured his admission through fraud.
Resolution of this matter requires an examination of the interplay among three statutory provisions, 8 U.S.C. §§ 1421(a) & (c) and 1429. Section 1421(a) confers upon the Attorney General, now USCIS
After examining the pleadings and the relevant case authority, the Court is persuaded by an unpublished decision by the Tenth Circuit that this matter must be dismissed because it does not satisfy the jurisdictional requirements of Article III of the Constitution. See Awe v. Napolitano, 494 Fed. Appx. 860 (10th Cir. 2012) (dismissing for lack of Article III jurisdiction plaintiff's challenge to the denial of his naturalization application because the district court could no longer grant effective relief under 8 U.S.C. § 1429).
In Awe, petitioner, a lawful permanent resident, filed a naturalization application which was denied by the USCIS. Mr. Awe filed a petition for review in the district court under § 1421(c) and was subsequently placed in removal proceedings. On appeal the Tenth Circuit agreed with the district court that it had statutory jurisdiction and that § 1429 precludes any effective judicial relief. However, it affirmed the district court's dismissal on the alternate ground of constitutional mootness, rather than for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. The judgment of the district court was vacated and the matter remanded with instructions to dismiss without prejudice for lack of jurisdiction.
This Court adopts the analysis of the Awe Court which, after surveying the state of relevant law, opined as follows.
Awe v. Napolitano, 494 Fed. Appx. at 865-867 (emphasis added).
As noted, Mr. Singh requests that the Court remand this matter to USCIS and order it to process his naturalization application without regard to whether his admission to permanent residence was lawful at the time. Because removal proceedings have commenced, USCIS cannot grant Petitioner the specific relief he seeks due to the statutory bar of § 1429. Consequently, any such order by this Court would be ineffective and, therefore, renders his request moot.
Petitioner, in the alternative, requests that the Court: (1) find that he meets the requirements of naturalization, (2) approve his naturalization, (3) administer the oath, and naturalize him, and/or (4) order Respondents to schedule an oath ceremony within thirty days, and issue him a naturalization certificate. Mr. Singh's alternative request for declaratory relief is similarly moot. The sole authority to naturalize persons as citizens lies with USCIS. 8 U.S.C. § 1421(a).
And just as was observed in Awe, none of the exceptions to mootness apply here
The Court having considered Respondents' Motion to Dismiss (ECF No. 18) and good cause appearing, the Motion is granted. Accordingly, Mr. Singh's Petition for Review of Denial of Application for Naturalization is dismissed without prejudice for lack of jurisdiction.
IT IS SO ORDERED.