WILLIAM W. CALDWELL, District Judge.
Pursuant to the December 23, 2016 memorandum opinion and order (Docs. 45, 46), this court held an individualized bond hearing for Rafael Ignacio Guerrero Sanchez ("Petitioner") on February 9, 2017. The extensive procedural history of Petitioner's case was fully set forth in the December 23, 2016 opinion, (
In
When a section 1226 detainee is due a bond hearing, that hearing must be "individualized."
Furthermore, the assessment of a section 1226 detainee's dangerousness and risk of flight must be made on a current basis. In
When assessing danger to the community, the extensiveness, recency, and severity of a detainee's past criminal activity must be considered.
Finally, although the Third Circuit has not yet addressed the issue, this court has found that the appropriate level of proof required from the government in these bond determinations is clear and convincing evidence of risk of flight or danger to the community.
Respondents contend that bond should be denied because Petitioner is both a danger to the community and a flight risk. Respondents mainly rely on Petitioner's previous drug conspiracy conviction and his unlawful immigration status to support their contentions. They maintain that because drug trafficking is an inherently violent criminal activity, and because Petitioner was detained during the criminal proceedings prior to pleading guilty, Petitioner is presently a danger to the community. They further maintain that Petitioner's illegal entrance into the United States in 1998 with false documents and his ongoing removal proceedings indicate that he is a current flight risk as well.
Petitioner counters Respondents' claims with a host of evidence including, but not limited to, (1) a court order and an executed limited power of attorney to corroborate his mother's motor vehicle injury and her need for prescription medication, which was the purported reason Petitioner left the United States and traveled to Mexico in 1998; (2) IRS Form 1040s for 1999 to 2002 and 2004 to 2011 evidencing Petitioner's filing of federal income tax returns and payment of income tax; (3) Petitioner's May 19, 2015 notice of release and arrival indicating his "good conduct time release" from federal incarceration into ICE custody; (4) multiple notarized letters from Petitioner's co-workers and employers averring to his good character and plumbing expertise, as well as indicating that they would consider hiring Petitioner for plumbing work if he were released from detention; (5) Petitioner's wife's June 21, 2016 notice of approval of relative immigrant visa petition; (6) a January 26, 2015 letter from the correctional center chaplain explaining that Petitioner, since the summer of 2013, had consistently attended Catholic Mass, participated as a musician for Catholic Mass, and acted as the music overseer and equipment trainer for the Mass programming; (7) a February 3, 2015 letter from the prison vocational coordinator explaining that Petitioner had been working since December 2013 for the vocational education department instructing other inmates in plumbing and HVAC in both English and Spanish, and that Petitioner also had worked on projects in the prison itself alongside the maintenance crew; (8) Petitioner's November 26, 2014 certificate of completion of "Choice and Change Drug Abuse Education Program"; (9) a copy of Petitioner's Nevada marriage certificate; (10) Petitioner's résumé outlining his extensive residential and commercial plumbing experience, licensing, and employment history; (11) copies of Petitioner's numerous plumbing and fire safety certificates and licenses; (12) a September 27, 2016 letter from one of Petitioner's three daughters, Jocelyn Guerrero, directed to the Immigration Court, highlighting the difficulty of not having Petitioner to support the family and requesting an affordable bail determination; and (13) a September 28, 2016 letter from another one of Petitioner's daughters, Sandra Guerrero, directed to the Immigration Court, highlighting Petitioner's good character, explaining the strain of losing Petitioner's financial and familial support, and requesting an affordable bail determination. (Doc. 39-1).
Petitioner also provided relevant documents from his ongoing claim for withholding of removal under the Convention Against Torture ("CAT"). Most recently, the Third Circuit granted his petition for review based on his application for protection under the CAT, vacated the prior order of the BIA, and remanded the matter to the BIA for further proceedings.
In addition, the Presentence Investigation Report ("PSR"), (Doc. 41), for Petitioner's years-old drug conspiracy conviction shows that Petitioner has no criminal history. (Doc. 41 at 25). The PSR further indicates that Petitioner accepted responsibility for his actions. (
Finally, Petitioner has provided evidence of his marriage to United States citizen Sandra Guerrero, as well as the birth of his three citizen daughters to this marriage. (Doc. 52-1 at 3-7). Petitioner's wife and eldest daughter flew from Las Vegas, Nevada to attend the instant bond hearing, and his wife testified on Petitioner's behalf and also volunteered to be his custodian if he were released. Petitioner's wife testified that she has lived in Las Vegas, Nevada for over twenty years, and that Petitioner has not returned to Mexico since his 1998 trip. She further testified that when federal authorities came to arrest Petitioner for the prior drug crime, she called Petitioner and told him that law enforcement was present, and he immediately returned home and turned himself over rather than trying to flee.
After conducting the instant bond hearing and thoroughly reviewing the record evidence proffered by the parties, the court finds that Respondents have failed to carry their burden. That is, Respondents have not shown by clear and convincing evidence, or even a preponderance of the evidence, that Petitioner's continued detention is necessary to facilitate the goals of the detention statute.
The court finds that the overwhelming majority of record evidence indicates that Petitioner is not a current flight risk—i.e., that he is likely to attend removal proceedings. First, Petitioner has a wife and three daughters living in Las Vegas, Nevada—all of whom are United States citizens. Petitioner's wife testified that he could reside with his family if he were released, and that she would act as his custodian. These substantial familial ties cut strongly in favor of finding that Petitioner is not a current flight risk.
Equally persuasive is Petitioner's ongoing withholding of removal claim, which clearly has merit and may yet provide relief from his final order of removal. Petitioner has every reason to attend future immigration proceedings, not the least of which is his credible fear of being returned to Mexico and facing members of the Sinaloa cartel, who have physically injured his brother and threatened Petitioner's life. Petitioner's wife confirmed this fear during her testimony at the bond hearing.
Finally, there are conditions of release that will further assure Petitioner's appearance at future immigration proceedings. Such conditions include contacting immigration officials before a change of residence or telephone number, having Petitioner's wife act as a custodian who will agree to supervise Petitioner and ensure his appearance at immigration proceedings, and restricting Petitioner's travel radius.
The great weight of record evidence also indicates that Petitioner is not a present danger to the community. To be sure, Petitioner committed a serious crime. As the Third Circuit has admonished, it is not that past "convictions are no longer relevant. [But d]ue process is not satisfied . . . by rubberstamp denials based on temporally distant offenses. The process due even to . . . aliens requires an opportunity for an evaluation of the individual's current threat to the community[.]"
Here, Petitioner has provided substantial evidence that he is not a present danger to the community.
Respondents, meanwhile, have attempted to carry their burden by relying almost exclusively on Petitioner's years-old drug conspiracy conviction and generalities regarding the violent nature of the drug trade. But such generalities, by their nature, are not "individualized" considerations of Petitioner's danger to the community, as the law requires.
Rafael Ignacio Guerrero Sanchez has now been detained for more than one year and eight months beyond the thirty-seven months' incarceration he served for his underlying criminal conviction. Today, the court finds that Petitioner is neither a current flight risk nor a danger to the community. Therefore, his continued detention is not necessary to fulfill the purposes of the detention statute. Accordingly, an order releasing Petitioner from detention and setting forth appropriate conditions of release will follow.