[00:00:01] Speaker 05: Let me start by saying thank you, by the way, for your service in this case. [00:00:04] Speaker 01: Thank you, Your Honor. [00:00:06] Speaker 00: And I join Judge Noyne. [00:00:08] Speaker 01: I echo that. [00:00:10] Speaker 01: Thank you so much. [00:00:12] Speaker 01: Good morning, Your Honors, and may it please the court, Lavi Bendor for Petitioner, Soi Mansar. [00:00:16] Speaker 01: I'd like to reserve three minutes for a bottle. [00:00:18] Speaker 05: All right. [00:00:18] Speaker 05: I'll try to help you out, but keep your eye on the clock as well. [00:00:21] Speaker 01: Thank you. [00:00:23] Speaker 01: In applying the particularly serious crime bar, this court and the BIA for decades have recognized that the essential key [00:00:29] Speaker 01: to determining if a crime is particularly serious is whether the nature and circumstances of the crime as well as the sentence justify a presumption that the person is a danger to the community. [00:00:41] Speaker 01: That follows naturally from the statutory text which asks whether the person having been convicted by a final judgment of a particularly serious crime is a danger to the community of the United States. [00:00:51] Speaker 01: And so this court has repeatedly vacated BIA decisions that fail adequately to consider whether the person is a danger. [00:00:58] Speaker 01: And yet here, the BIA failed to undertake that essential statutory inquiry, the sine qua non, of the particularly serious crime bar, in denying Mr. Saar relief. [00:01:07] Speaker 01: That was legal error that requires vacancy. [00:01:09] Speaker 00: So, counsel, you're obviously familiar with Park v. Garland. [00:01:14] Speaker 00: Right. [00:01:14] Speaker 00: So, given the statement in Loper-Brite that we are not [00:01:22] Speaker 00: Getting rid of cases necessarily getting rid of decisions that have stood for a long time and can be backed up by stare decisis How can we as a three-judge panel? [00:01:34] Speaker 01: essentially overrule Park V Garland so two points your honor, I think that [00:01:45] Speaker 01: Our frontline position is that our arguments are entirely consistent with this court's precedents. [00:01:50] Speaker 01: And this court's recognition that dangerousness is the lodestar, the sine qua non of the particular serious crime bar, can be reconciled with cases like Miguel Miguel and Park applying the YL standard. [00:02:04] Speaker 01: Because all Miguel Miguel uphold in the cases since it, all they have said is that the recognition of a strong presumption is a permissible exercise of the attorney general's discretion. [00:02:15] Speaker 01: i.e. [00:02:15] Speaker 00: the attorney general is permitted to load the dice, so to speak, in favor of finding particularly serious... Yeah, but General Garland talked about how it needed a minimum showing of a very small quantity of controlled substances, a very modest amount of money paid for the drugs, and merely peripheral involvement by the alien in the criminal activity. [00:02:39] Speaker 00: And at least as I read the facts, none of those three are satisfied here. [00:02:43] Speaker 01: So we're not disputing the facts that the agency found, in part because under the jurisdictional restrictions in the IANA, we're not permitted to challenge facts. [00:02:53] Speaker 01: We're only permitted to raise legal challenges. [00:02:55] Speaker 01: But Park and Miguel Miguel speak only to the creation of the strong presumption. [00:03:02] Speaker 01: They do not purport to excuse or automatically deem satisfied the requirement in the statute [00:03:08] Speaker 01: that the Attorney General considered dangerousness. [00:03:09] Speaker 01: And if you look at YL, right, the decision that's being applied in Miguel Miguel in Park, the Attorney General there sets out the presumption, sets out the factors he deems necessary to rebut the presumption, but then in applying that standard to the individual persons there, [00:03:29] Speaker 01: He considers, for example, the dangers associated with a person's role in the drug conspiracy. [00:03:35] Speaker 00: He considers... I guess I read at a minimum as setting a floor. [00:03:41] Speaker 01: Right, but our view is that the presumption has to be applied in a way that takes dangerousness into account. [00:03:47] Speaker 01: So we're not disputing that the factors are what guides the presumption, but those factors have to be analyzed [00:03:53] Speaker 01: through the lens of dangerousness. [00:03:54] Speaker 01: So it's not sufficient just to do a mechanical box-checking exercise of considering was the amount of drugs small or not, was the involvement peripheral. [00:04:03] Speaker 01: You have to apply those with an eye to is this a person a danger to the community. [00:04:08] Speaker 05: So in the... But it seems like you're calling for us to do the statutory interpretation in the first instance and even if we agree with you that that's a better reading of the statutory text, we still run into our own precedent, right? [00:04:23] Speaker 01: So our frontline position is that what we're asking for is consistent with this court's precedent. [00:04:29] Speaker 01: So neither Miguel Miguel nor Park purport to excuse the requirement to consider dangerousness, in part because the issue, as we understand it, was not raised in those cases, the specific argument. [00:04:40] Speaker 01: But the First Circuit actually looked at YL. [00:04:43] Speaker 01: It looked at the presumption and recognized that YL on its face doesn't purport [00:04:48] Speaker 01: to take dangerousness into account. [00:04:49] Speaker 01: So the fact that this court's precedents have repeatedly upheld Y.L. [00:04:54] Speaker 01: as an appropriate exercise of the Attorney General's discretion doesn't erase the fact that there's this separate factor that has to drive the understanding of the statute that is dangerousness. [00:05:06] Speaker 01: And Y.L. [00:05:07] Speaker 01: on its face doesn't purport to skip that statutory step. [00:05:11] Speaker 01: It doesn't purport to find it automatically satisfied in every case, which the Attorney General recognized [00:05:17] Speaker 01: he couldn't do, given this court's precedence, that the attorney general cannot create per se rules. [00:05:22] Speaker 01: YL and this court's cases upholding it under Chevron do not purport to skip the key statutory inquiry of dangerousness. [00:05:33] Speaker 01: And so what we're asking for, at least as a frontline matter, can be squared with YL because what Miguel Miguel and Park had before them was YL as it was written. [00:05:45] Speaker 01: The court looked at it, and it said the statute neither permits nor precludes the creation of presumptions. [00:05:51] Speaker 01: And we're not disputing any of that. [00:05:52] Speaker 01: We accept that as the court's holding, at least as a frontline matter. [00:05:56] Speaker 01: But the point is, those cases do not purport to address or consider the requirement of the statute that has been a consistent through line in the BIAs and this court's decisions for decades, that dangerousness has to drive the inquiry. [00:06:10] Speaker 01: And so I think the best way to reconcile this court's cases [00:06:13] Speaker 01: and read all of them in harmony is to understand YL as not skipping over the dangerousness requirement and to understand this court's cases as not doing that either. [00:06:23] Speaker 01: But even if you disagree with us and you think that Miguel Miguel and Park resolved the question of dangerousness, we think that under Loper-Bright this court is required under its own precedent, Miller v. Gammie, [00:06:40] Speaker 01: to give effect to Loper-Bright, which is the most recent pronouncement on statutory interpretation. [00:06:48] Speaker 01: So Loper-Bright, in that passage that Judge Bennett, you referenced, is talking about statutory stare decisis, which is a specific term for how the Supreme Court thinks about its own precedents. [00:07:02] Speaker 01: So the Supreme Court has a rule that you need a special justification to overcome a statutory precedent. [00:07:07] Speaker 01: And the Supreme Court in Loper-Bright says, [00:07:09] Speaker 01: The mere overruling of Chevron is not the sort of special justification that we think is necessary to override our own precedents. [00:07:16] Speaker 01: But here in this court, as in other lower courts, the relevant question isn't, what does the Supreme Court do with its own precedents? [00:07:23] Speaker 01: The question is, what does this court do when the Supreme Court comes in and sets out a new rule that is inconsistent with this court's precedent? [00:07:31] Speaker 04: But then what about Murillo Chavez? [00:07:33] Speaker 04: No, no, go ahead. [00:07:33] Speaker 04: Sorry. [00:07:34] Speaker 04: What about Murillo Chavez? [00:07:36] Speaker 01: So Murillo Chavez, we believe, is dicta, that discussion, because if you look at Murillo Chavez, the only thing that was in front of the court there was an agency interpretation that had never been interpreted under Chevron. [00:07:48] Speaker 01: So the only question there was, under Loper Bright, what do we think the best reading of the statute is, given this agency interpretation that we haven't evaluated before? [00:07:58] Speaker 01: And so the court, we recognize, had some discussion about Loper Bright and how the court understood it, but that wasn't necessary to the decision. [00:08:05] Speaker 01: because the court there wasn't faced with a case like here where there was a previous precedent of the court that extended Chevron deference. [00:08:15] Speaker 01: And the proper framework here is not, you know, statutory star decisis of the Supreme Court. [00:08:23] Speaker 01: It's this court's own rules of decision. [00:08:25] Speaker 01: And this court, you know, I think it's undisputed that this court has the power to apply its own rules of decision. [00:08:32] Speaker 01: This court has a rule that even dicta in en banc decisions is given precedential effect, which not all courts apply the same. [00:08:40] Speaker 01: The point is each court sets its own rules of decision for how it treats its own precedents. [00:08:45] Speaker 01: And the binding rule here is the Miller v. Gambytest, which asks, is the reasoning or theory of a Ninth Circuit decision, the mode of logic, as I think it quoted Justice Scalia saying, is that inconsistent with the reasoning or theory of an intervening Supreme Court decision? [00:08:59] Speaker 00: Council, let me again ask a too long question. [00:09:03] Speaker 00: So you don't challenge the factual findings, right? [00:09:06] Speaker 01: No, we can't challenge that. [00:09:08] Speaker 00: Yes. [00:09:08] Speaker 00: So the BIA and what I think its final decision said, over a course of four months, the respondent took delivery, your client took delivery of meth on multiple occasions before providing it to another individual to sell. [00:09:24] Speaker 00: The largest shipment was over 200 grams, which was not a small amount. [00:09:30] Speaker 00: So we have those facts, right? [00:09:33] Speaker 00: Yeah, we're not. [00:09:34] Speaker 00: I understand. [00:09:35] Speaker 00: So essentially what you're asking us to do here is overrule our precedent and send it back to the BIA to say, given these facts, was this person dangerous? [00:09:48] Speaker 01: So yeah, we're arguing as a frontline matter. [00:09:53] Speaker 01: We think you can reconcile it with your precedents. [00:09:56] Speaker 01: If not, then we've called the entire presumption into question. [00:10:00] Speaker 01: Our frontline position is you send this back and you say the factors can't be mechanically checked off the way the BIA did here. [00:10:07] Speaker 01: They have to be applied the way the attorney general applied them in YL, which is does the amount of drugs, does the person's role support an inference that he's a danger to the community? [00:10:18] Speaker 00: OK. [00:10:19] Speaker 01: That's sort of our frontline position. [00:10:21] Speaker 01: But we think even if you don't buy that what we're asking for can be reconciled with Miguel Miguel, [00:10:29] Speaker 01: If you look at how Miguel Miguel has operated in practice, or excuse me, the YL presumptions operated in practice, what the BIA applied here wasn't what the court was looking at in Miguel Miguel and Park. [00:10:40] Speaker 01: In Miguel Miguel, the court expressly pointed out that what it had before it was the attorney general's assurance this was a rebuttable presumption. [00:10:49] Speaker 01: That this would be something where persons would have a meaningful opportunity to contest that. [00:10:53] Speaker 01: But if you look at the way the YL presumption is operated in practice, [00:10:56] Speaker 01: We have now over 20 years of precedent. [00:10:59] Speaker 01: And still, the government can only come up with a single case where the agency determined that the presumptions were budded. [00:11:06] Speaker 01: Now, the government nods in a footnote to a secret list of other decisions. [00:11:10] Speaker 01: But it's given this court no indication of how big that list is or what it looks like. [00:11:14] Speaker 01: And so the facts that are available to the court on the public record demonstrate that really what's before you is not YL. [00:11:22] Speaker 01: It's something different, which is this presumption that is all but effective. [00:11:26] Speaker 01: all but entirely irrebuttable. [00:11:29] Speaker 01: And so this court wouldn't even need to overrule Miguel Miguel or to depart from those cases because the court doesn't have in front of it the same presumption that was before the court in Miguel Miguel, which was designed and the attorney general gave his assurances that it would be irrebuttable. [00:11:48] Speaker 01: So even if this court [00:11:50] Speaker 01: used YL and Miguel Miguel's foreclosing our position, the fact that the presumption is not operating that way in practice means even without overruling precedent, the court can conclude that the presumption that what the government did here was not a YL inquiry. [00:12:07] Speaker 01: And so unless the court has further questions, I'd like to save the rest of my time for rebuttal. [00:12:12] Speaker 01: We ask that the court vacate the BIA's decision in full. [00:12:14] Speaker 01: Thank you. [00:12:15] Speaker 05: Thank you, counsel. [00:12:34] Speaker 02: Good morning. [00:12:35] Speaker 02: May it please the court. [00:12:36] Speaker 02: My name is Craig Newell. [00:12:37] Speaker 02: I'm here on behalf of the Attorney General. [00:12:40] Speaker 02: The main issue in this case is the continuing viability of the Attorney General's matter of why-out decision that established a strong, rebuttable presumption that drug trafficking and aggravated felonies like Mr. Sars are particularly serious crimes. [00:12:55] Speaker 02: And the Loper-Bright decision itself explains that Miguel Miguel [00:13:04] Speaker 02: remains controlling where this court deferred to the matter of YL decision. [00:13:10] Speaker 05: Can you address counsel's argument that even assuming that Miguel is still good law, this case proceeded in a different fashion than how YL is applied in practice? [00:13:24] Speaker 05: It's hard because we're not sitting hearing direct immigration matters, so we don't have a good sense of how it applies in practice, but counsel said that if it had [00:13:34] Speaker 05: had operated as it did in this case on a routine basis that the government would have told us so. [00:13:41] Speaker 02: This matter of YL, strong presumption, operated as it was set forth that this court approved of in Miguel Miguel. [00:13:55] Speaker 02: While it is a strong presumption, there are these mitigating factors that [00:13:59] Speaker 02: make the agency adjudicators look towards the particular facts of the individual's case, and that's what occurred here. [00:14:08] Speaker 02: What Mr. Saar seems to... But is it virtually irrebuttable? [00:14:14] Speaker 02: No. [00:14:15] Speaker 02: I mean, it's a strong presumption, but it is not. [00:14:20] Speaker 02: The matter of why I'll present the application of it answers this dangerousness question that he is trying to [00:14:28] Speaker 02: add on to that he says the board failed to do. [00:14:32] Speaker 02: The substance of the matter, the Attorney General established this strong presumption because drug trafficking is an inherently dangerous act. [00:14:42] Speaker 02: And so the presumption is that it's inherently dangerous. [00:14:46] Speaker 02: But then you look to these six mitigating factors. [00:14:49] Speaker 02: Every single one of them goes to the question of whether or not the crime at hand [00:14:54] Speaker 02: was dangerous, if you have a low amount of drugs or a low amount of money, if no violence was involved, no drug gang or criminal organization was involved. [00:15:05] Speaker 02: And here, by applying the matter of YL presumption, which the immigration judge and the board did, they are answering that question. [00:15:16] Speaker 02: And they have provided the answer that, yes, this was a dangerous crime. [00:15:23] Speaker 02: And on top of this is, besides the continuing binding nature of Miguel Miguel and Park, is the Ramirez-Ramos decision, which is court deferred to the board's interpretation of the particular serious crime statute [00:15:44] Speaker 02: as not requiring this independent analysis of whether the individual himself is a danger. [00:15:51] Speaker 02: That is what Mr. Starr is asking for. [00:15:54] Speaker 02: And that, again, is precluded by binding precedent. [00:15:59] Speaker 02: If you look at Murillo Chavez and Lopez V. Garland, both of those using this court's Miller-Gammy construct of when it [00:16:13] Speaker 02: what is binding precedent said that Loper-Bright is not clearly irreconcilable with these decisions because of the Supreme Court's directive that these type of Chevron-Air cases remain given this statutory term. [00:16:32] Speaker 00: of the statute seems to have this dichotomy. [00:16:40] Speaker 00: The alien having been convicted by a final judgment of a particularly serious crime is a danger to the community. [00:16:51] Speaker 00: It seems to the language, if we were just looking at this anew, would require two things, not one. [00:16:58] Speaker 02: Well, Your Honor, the way it was interpreted [00:17:01] Speaker 02: by the board and upheld Ramirez-Ramos, it goes, it's worded that having been convicted of a particular serious crime modifies the noun alien. [00:17:15] Speaker 02: So once that's determined, it's basically [00:17:20] Speaker 02: a proxy for you are a danger of the community. [00:17:24] Speaker 00: But if we were just looking at that de novo, then the is a danger to the community is sort of surplusage, right? [00:17:37] Speaker 02: No, because the particular serious crime analysis answers that question for you. [00:17:42] Speaker 02: And this this court has explained that. [00:17:45] Speaker 05: Well, I mean, I think that the statute [00:17:47] Speaker 05: This language seems to focus not on the particularly serious crime, but really on dangerousness. [00:17:53] Speaker 05: And so what you're saying to me is that in practice, even though there's a presumption, mitigating factors and the facts of each case are still evaluated to determine whether there's dangerousness present. [00:18:10] Speaker 02: That is correct. [00:18:11] Speaker 02: The dangerousness is the [00:18:16] Speaker 02: underlying consideration. [00:18:21] Speaker 02: What Mr. Saar wants is explicit, you know, magic words to be incanted of dangerousness. [00:18:26] Speaker 02: But that is what we're looking at, the crime itself. [00:18:30] Speaker 02: And when we're talking about drug trafficking, aggravated felonies, the Attorney General has established this approach that they're inherently dangerous. [00:18:38] Speaker 02: And so because of [00:18:39] Speaker 02: the case by case consideration is with these mitigating factors. [00:18:43] Speaker 00: But when we look, for example, at Park, didn't we say there [00:18:49] Speaker 00: the agency may not consider the non-listed factors that favor rebutting the presumption before it determines that the alien has satisfied the listed minimum criteria? [00:19:00] Speaker 00: Right, the minimum criteria come first. [00:19:02] Speaker 00: So if under what our interpretation of the statute is that if the alien doesn't satisfy the minimum criteria, there's nothing else that's done, right? [00:19:17] Speaker 02: There is no other, yes. [00:19:19] Speaker 02: Because those minimum factors, if they're not all present, what the attorney general explained in a very well-reasoned decision is that you still have an inherently dangerous drug crime. [00:19:35] Speaker 03: And so that's... Isn't, though, that a separate question than whether the attorney general determines that that alien is a danger to the community? [00:19:44] Speaker 03: I think we agree with you on the presumptive [00:19:48] Speaker 03: serious crime, but there's a clear provision in the statute, as Judge Bennett points out, that states that the attorney general must decide. [00:20:00] Speaker 02: Yes, and he has, that is an express delegation of authority to him and through a matter of YL has decided with respect to this class of cases, drug trafficking, aggravated felonies. [00:20:13] Speaker 02: We're going to use this strong presumption. [00:20:15] Speaker 00: And this is not something... If we were to... No, I'm sorry, counsel. [00:20:18] Speaker 00: If we were to decide that a better reading of the statute was the one your friend argues, can we do anything with that under Miller v. Gammie, or would that be required to go to an in-bank court? [00:20:34] Speaker 00: It would be required to go in-bank. [00:20:37] Speaker 02: What this court has already determined in... [00:20:42] Speaker 02: And Lopez V. Garland and Murillo Chavez, when you have on-point circuit precedent about a statutory interpretation that the court gave deference under Chevron, that precedent remains binding. [00:21:01] Speaker 02: It's not clearly irreconcilable with Loper-Brite, because Loper-Brite says that these Chevron-era precedents retain a statutory stare decisis. [00:21:12] Speaker 02: value so that is that so in that case this court no has would have to go on bond to to change its interpretation and if there are no further questions I think I appreciate your time thank you your honors [00:21:42] Speaker 05: Council, you've got rebuttal time. [00:21:52] Speaker 01: Thank you, Your Honor. [00:21:54] Speaker 01: Just a couple of points. [00:21:55] Speaker 01: First of all, despite you giving my friend the opportunity to discuss how Weil has worked in practice and to give the court any indication that there's a meaningful opportunity to rebut their presumption, I don't hear anything from the government [00:22:10] Speaker 01: suggesting or giving anything for this court, any real evidence for this court to think that while it can be meaningfully rebutted. [00:22:19] Speaker 05: Second, my colleague mentions... Well, if I understand his argument correctly, it's a heavy reliance on the presumption. [00:22:27] Speaker 05: So you look at the facts and you rely very much on the inherent dangerousness, the determination that drug trafficking offenses are inherently dangerous. [00:22:37] Speaker 05: Right, but this... But it doesn't necessarily preclude [00:22:40] Speaker 05: any independent evaluation of the facts of the case. [00:22:44] Speaker 01: Right, but given the public evidence and the lack of anything from the government to the contrary, the way that this is operated in practice is to be that basically in almost every single case, it's not actually possible for the person to rebut the presumption. [00:22:59] Speaker 01: And under decisions from this court, like Blandino Medina, like Beltran Zavala, the government cannot create [00:23:04] Speaker 01: per se rules for anything that's not specifically enumerated in the statute, i.e. [00:23:09] Speaker 01: aggravated felonies with a prison sentence of at least five years. [00:23:13] Speaker 01: My second point is that the government suggests that YL answers the question of dangerousness, but there's nothing in YL that expressly acknowledges the statutory requirement to consider danger and purports to satisfy it. [00:23:31] Speaker 01: And even if you could somehow divine that from YL, [00:23:34] Speaker 01: There's nothing here in the BIA's decision acknowledging and purporting to apply the dangerousness requirement in the statute. [00:23:41] Speaker 01: And we're not asking for a magic words test. [00:23:44] Speaker 01: We're just asking for a minimum degree of clarity, as this court put it in Delgado. [00:23:49] Speaker 01: The decision still has to be clear enough in showing that the government is applying the bases in the statute. [00:23:56] Speaker 00: I mean what Attorney General Garland said was, I do not consider it necessary to exclude entirely the possibility of the very rare case where an alien may be able to demonstrate extraordinary and compelling circumstances that justify treating a particularly drug trafficking crime as falling short of the standard. [00:24:16] Speaker 00: So he laid something out, the courts apply that, he said more, and our precedent has upheld it. [00:24:27] Speaker 01: Right, and we recognize that, and under Miller v. Gammy, [00:24:32] Speaker 01: the fact that this court's precedents have upheld the YL under Chevron, step two, merely as a permissible understanding of the statute, is clearly irreconcilable with the reasoning or theory of Loper-Bright. [00:24:47] Speaker 01: And that language in Loper-Bright that you mentioned earlier, that speaks only to upholding specific government actions that were before the court. [00:24:55] Speaker 01: But what the court had before it was the YL presumption. [00:24:59] Speaker 01: That's not what is operating in practice. [00:25:02] Speaker 01: Either under this court's precedence or under a fresh look, what the government did here is inconsistent with the statute. [00:25:09] Speaker 01: We ask that the court vacate the decision. [00:25:11] Speaker 05: Thank you for your argument this morning. [00:25:14] Speaker 05: The matter submitted. [00:25:15] Speaker 05: Thank you again for taking this case. [00:25:17] Speaker 05: We appreciate it.