[00:00:00] Speaker 03: Good morning, your honors. [00:00:01] Speaker 03: I'd like to reserve three minutes of my ten for rebuttal. [00:00:05] Speaker 03: I have not appeared before any of your honors before, so nice to meet you all. [00:00:10] Speaker 03: Looks like I'll be making up for lost time by returning tomorrow. [00:00:14] Speaker 03: I guess that gives me twice the incentive not to say anything too dumb today. [00:00:19] Speaker 03: So I come to this argument with an unusual degree of optimism for an appellant, and that's for three reasons. [00:00:28] Speaker 03: The first is, [00:00:29] Speaker 03: there was controlling precedent from this circuit and the government, when they argued against the 2255 motion in the district court, argued precisely what was foreclosed by that binding precedent, which is U.S. [00:00:43] Speaker 03: versus Rodriguez Vega. [00:00:46] Speaker 03: In that case, [00:00:47] Speaker 03: the court specifically held that a plea agreement and a plea colloquy cannot substitute for deficient advice and is irrelevant to the deficient performance prong of IAC analysis. [00:01:02] Speaker 03: And the second thing they held was neither could purge prejudice if neither said [00:01:08] Speaker 03: that deportation is virtually certain. [00:01:12] Speaker 03: And that's as clear as can be on the face of Rodriguez Vega. [00:01:15] Speaker 03: And the government comes in and argues the opposite of both. [00:01:18] Speaker 03: They argue that [00:01:19] Speaker 03: It can purge any prejudice, even though it doesn't say deportation is virtually certain, and it is relevant to the deficient performance problem. [00:01:29] Speaker 04: Mr. Council, let me jump ahead a minute. [00:01:32] Speaker 04: I do have significant problems with the beginning part of your argument, given the record here, but let's skip past that for a minute. [00:01:44] Speaker 04: Let's assume for the sake of argument that we were looking at the four part test in United States versus Rodriguez. [00:01:52] Speaker 04: Why don't you explain to me how you would get past part one of the test, how likely the defendant would be to prevail at trial. [00:02:07] Speaker 03: Well, I argued in my brief that we don't have enough information to definitively answer that question. [00:02:15] Speaker 04: Well, why don't you give me the best answer you have? [00:02:18] Speaker 03: The best answer I have is that the standard that applies to that question is very, very lenient for the appellant. [00:02:29] Speaker 03: The government needs to conclusively [00:02:32] Speaker 03: rebut the the the notion that it was rational for the Defendant to go to trial. [00:02:41] Speaker 04: I'm sorry counsel. [00:02:42] Speaker 04: You know I mean we've all Everybody hear you your friend the court. [00:02:48] Speaker 04: We've all been around the block a number of times and it strikes me that [00:02:54] Speaker 04: The evidence against your client was extraordinarily overwhelming. [00:03:00] Speaker 04: The government offered him what looks to be a pretty good plea agreement, including not bringing charges where the evidence was also overwhelming and where your client would have faced [00:03:18] Speaker 04: significantly more time than he got. [00:03:22] Speaker 04: And so I have a lot of trouble seeing how in any rational universe, even if your client was not given correct immigration information, that he would have chosen to go to trial on all the charges the government would have brought. [00:03:38] Speaker 03: Well, all I can really add to my best answer is there's a significant number of cases that say it doesn't have to be the wisest choice he makes. [00:03:49] Speaker 03: It doesn't even have to be the most rational choice. [00:03:53] Speaker 03: If it's more important for him to avoid the lifetime banishment from the country, then it's a significant factor in the analysis. [00:04:04] Speaker 02: Had he gone to trial he would have faced a far more serious sentencing consequence and he absolutely would have been banned. [00:04:13] Speaker 02: So the government in its papers represents that they had very strong evidence and by pleading he was able to save himself from exposure on two other counts. [00:04:25] Speaker 02: There was talk about a possible superseding indictment and ultimately the government also agreed as I recall to [00:04:34] Speaker 02: uh... make a recommendation so how how did he not benefit from the plea? [00:04:41] Speaker 03: Of course he benefited from the plea bargain he accepted but that's certainly not the question that's always the situation in every one of these cases Rodriguez Vega, Bonilla, Padilla. [00:04:51] Speaker 02: But it's a factor right? [00:04:52] Speaker 02: It's one of the factors. [00:04:55] Speaker 04: So I'm looking at the plea colloquy not on the immigration but [00:05:03] Speaker 04: The page at the bottom right is 130. [00:05:06] Speaker 04: I'm not sure I'm sorry if that's the ER page, but the The prosecutor as always goes through their proffer and the total weight of drugs attributed to the defendant for the purpose of determining relevant conduct is at least 3,000 but less than 10,000 kilos of converted drug rate mr. Rodriguez and [00:05:28] Speaker 04: Is that an accurate description of your conduct? [00:05:31] Speaker 04: Yes. [00:05:32] Speaker 04: Do you dispute it in any way? [00:05:33] Speaker 04: No. [00:05:35] Speaker 04: And so no matter how lenient the test is, I just can't see any possibility that this defendant, no matter what he had been told about immigration, would have ever gone to trial given what the government was offering. [00:05:48] Speaker 03: Well, it sounds like the court is making a credibility determination just like the district court did based on this abstract notion [00:05:58] Speaker 03: of what your honors and the district court believe is the most rational course. [00:06:04] Speaker 04: No, I'm asking you to tell me what reason this defendant, given what he was facing, could have chosen to go to trial. [00:06:15] Speaker 04: That's something that makes sense in even a somewhat irrational universe. [00:06:21] Speaker 03: Well, that reason is his [00:06:24] Speaker 03: group great his greatest desire was to remain in the United States as everything we know about his background says and I just would suggest your honors are are [00:06:36] Speaker 03: By concentrating on that point, it seems like it's only one factor and it's mis-framing the inquiry. [00:06:43] Speaker 02: Well, let's talk about the other factor when you balance his interests of remaining in the United States against returning to Mexico. [00:06:51] Speaker 02: Granted, he had his immediate siblings and parents here. [00:06:54] Speaker 02: but all of his children resided in Mexico. [00:06:57] Speaker 02: His romantic partner resided there and he traveled two or three times a year to visit them. [00:07:04] Speaker 02: So on balance, wouldn't you say that it's a wash? [00:07:07] Speaker 03: No, I wouldn't say that, Your Honor, because his whole thing was to support his children by working in the United States. [00:07:16] Speaker 03: I think even the district court mentioned and agreed with the notion that his [00:07:21] Speaker 03: His family was the most important thing to him. [00:07:25] Speaker 03: And even though the children lived in the United States, he lived in Mexico. [00:07:30] Speaker 03: He viewed his remaining in the United States as the best way to support them, which he had been doing for the last, you know, 20 years. [00:07:39] Speaker 03: And so I wouldn't say it's a loss. [00:07:41] Speaker 03: I say that his contacts with this country far outweighed [00:07:46] Speaker 03: the fact that the children and wife was in Mexico, because that had been the case all along, and all of the rest of his relatives were here. [00:07:55] Speaker 03: So I see I've always... I know you wanted to save a couple of minutes. [00:07:58] Speaker 01: I did. [00:07:59] Speaker 01: Thank you. [00:07:59] Speaker 01: Can I ask one more question? [00:08:00] Speaker 01: Oh, of course. [00:08:01] Speaker 01: I'll give you your time back to answer Judge Bennett's question, please. [00:08:05] Speaker 04: If we were to hypothetically... Your client is back in Mexico now, right? [00:08:13] Speaker 04: I've heard that from the government, yes. [00:08:16] Speaker 04: So if we were to hypothetically grant your client the relief your client seeks, which is setting aside the plea, right? [00:08:28] Speaker 04: Would the government be free at that point to reindite your client for all of the charges that it could have brought had there been no plea agreement? [00:08:39] Speaker 04: I don't believe there'd be any need for a re-indictment. [00:08:41] Speaker 04: That's not my question, though. [00:08:43] Speaker 04: Would the government, if we granted the relief, which is set aside the plea agreement, would the government have the right to re-indict your client and bring all of the charges, including the charges that they chose not to bring the first time? [00:08:57] Speaker 03: I guess I don't know the answer about the right to reindite but I would say that if the court did grant that relief we return to square one and the pending indictment would still be enforced and that's what he would be facing. [00:09:08] Speaker 04: So he'd be facing the pending indictment even though he served his time and been deported. [00:09:13] Speaker 04: He'd be facing the pending indictment with the chance that the government could re-bring or could bring the charges in the plea agreement it agreed not to. [00:09:23] Speaker 03: I think that's accurate. [00:09:24] Speaker 03: It could supersede [00:09:26] Speaker 03: It could always do that, of course, yes. [00:09:29] Speaker 03: Thank you, counsel. [00:09:38] Speaker 00: Good morning, and may it please the court, Annie Schaefer, the United States. [00:09:42] Speaker 00: This panel is very familiar with the Strickland standard, and the bar is a high one. [00:09:48] Speaker 00: Mr. Garcia Rodriguez had to show both deficiency and prejudice [00:09:52] Speaker 00: to prevail on his claim that his counsel's advice was constitutionally ineffective, and because he failed to do both, his court should affirm. [00:10:01] Speaker 00: I want to briefly turn to deficiency first, because that seems to be the crux of the appellant's argument, especially in their reply brief. [00:10:07] Speaker 00: I do want to address the appellant's claim that under Ninth Circuit law, an attorney, there's really only one way to give effective advice here, which is to use these strict, magic words that deportation is a virtual certainty. [00:10:20] Speaker 00: That is not true. [00:10:22] Speaker 00: Rodriguez Vega says that a client should be advised that removal or deportation is a virtual certainty or words to that effect. [00:10:32] Speaker 00: So the question here really is whether the advice that was given by Mr. Gold Rosen reaches words to that fact, falls within that wide range of reasonable professional assistance under Strickland. [00:10:43] Speaker 00: And here what the attorney advised was that this conviction will absolutely render you deportable. [00:10:52] Speaker 04: Let me push back on that a little. [00:10:54] Speaker 04: That certainly is what counsel said, but in, for example, his supplemental declaration, the defendant said, it's not true. [00:11:04] Speaker 04: My lawyer told me my conviction would absolutely render me deportable. [00:11:09] Speaker 04: He told me instead that he didn't think I would be deported. [00:11:13] Speaker 04: So certainly, is it Mr. Goldrosan? [00:11:17] Speaker 04: Is that the name of the defense lawyer? [00:11:18] Speaker 04: Yes, Your Honor. [00:11:18] Speaker 04: So it's certainly Mr. Goldrosan said he said what you said, but the defendant said he said something else. [00:11:25] Speaker 04: Yes, Your Honor. [00:11:26] Speaker 04: And there was no evidentiary hearing. [00:11:28] Speaker 00: Yes, Your Honor. [00:11:28] Speaker 00: The defendant actually said a couple different things because he was given the opportunity. [00:11:32] Speaker 00: He did his pro se filings, and then he filed supplemental declarations. [00:11:35] Speaker 00: And so what he characterizes of what happened actually is a bit inconsistent, I think, in the record itself. [00:11:41] Speaker 00: And that's something I think that the court [00:11:42] Speaker 00: the district court took note in making its findings here. [00:11:45] Speaker 02: But didn't his own attorney state that he could be subject to early release programs, he could be part of a drug treatment program while on supervised release? [00:12:00] Speaker 02: So he was making arguments during the sentencing phase that sort of belies this notion that he told them you will absolutely be deported. [00:12:09] Speaker 00: Yes, Your Honor. [00:12:10] Speaker 00: I don't know if the record is totally clear about that, but assuming that is true, I don't think that necessarily directly contradicts anything that Mr. Gold Rosen said. [00:12:20] Speaker 00: I think the immigration advice and eligibility for BOP programs like earlier release are pretty different [00:12:27] Speaker 00: You know, as someone who's practiced for a long time, I'm not fully clear on what all the BOP eligibility requirements are for early release. [00:12:32] Speaker 00: And I don't think that actually really came up explicitly during that sentencing hearing. [00:12:36] Speaker 04: I mean, I think also we've all seen that, I mean, I wasn't on the court in 2015 when the late Judge Reinhart wrote the opinion at issue here. [00:12:49] Speaker 04: There certainly are lots of immigration cases where people have been convicted of serious crimes where they're not deported or not departed for a very long time. [00:12:59] Speaker 04: So, I mean, is it the government's position that just in any case where you've been, it's a serious crime saying you're absolutely going to be deported is just false factual information? [00:13:11] Speaker 00: So I think you've raised a very good point. [00:13:14] Speaker 00: And I think one of the things here is that, first of all, the language from Judge Feinhart in both Bonilla and then Rodriguez Vega comes from Padilla v. Kentucky. [00:13:22] Speaker 00: And I think that is the governing Supreme Court case here. [00:13:25] Speaker 00: If you look at Padilla v. Kentucky, the reason why, first of all, the words virtually certain do not come from Padilla v. Kentucky. [00:13:31] Speaker 00: Padilla v. Kentucky, the Supreme Court said a client must be advised of their risk of deportation. [00:13:36] Speaker 00: and said that it means they're subject to mandatory deportation under the law. [00:13:41] Speaker 00: It was about legal consequences versus practical or prediction of what practical consequences are. [00:13:47] Speaker 00: And I think what you're pointing out, Judge Bennett, is that when you get to it from conviction all the way to deportation, the actual factor or consequence of deportation, it's not automatic as you would think. [00:13:58] Speaker 00: There's actually a process. [00:14:00] Speaker 00: So this is a perfect case that gives that example. [00:14:03] Speaker 00: where he pled guilty and he had a conviction that rendered him deportable under the relevant statute. [00:14:09] Speaker 00: That's what the statute says. [00:14:10] Speaker 00: It says, this conviction will render you deportable. [00:14:13] Speaker 00: Padilla v. Kentucky have pointed out why this is virtually certain or how the Ninth Circuit interprets as virtually certain, because there's no more discretion, really. [00:14:23] Speaker 00: Previously, there was judicial discretion. [00:14:25] Speaker 00: That's gone. [00:14:26] Speaker 00: Congress wrote that out. [00:14:27] Speaker 00: And there's only very slight, very minimal forms of relief, but still there's a process. [00:14:32] Speaker 00: So you're convicted, you still have to be subjected, you're issued an NTA or a notice to appear in immigration court, and then you have immigration proceedings, and then there's an immigration order. [00:14:42] Speaker 00: So this is a case where that happened here in trying to understand what happened on the immigration side when Mr. Garcia Rodriguez was deported. [00:14:52] Speaker 00: The government pulled an immigration record and it shows that when he was released from BOP, he had already been in immigration proceedings via Zoom. [00:15:00] Speaker 00: I guess BOP has a program where they allow you to appear in immigration court via Zoom. [00:15:04] Speaker 00: When he was released, I think it was around April or May of 2024, within two months, [00:15:10] Speaker 00: He, through his attorney, told immigration court, I want to be deported. [00:15:15] Speaker 00: And so their removal order actually shows that, one, he was not deported based off of this particular conviction. [00:15:20] Speaker 00: The removal order deported him based off of not having his paperwork when he was last entered the border. [00:15:26] Speaker 00: And it also showed that he withdrew his pending applications at the time for withdrawal and for asylum, and that he requested the removal order in that case. [00:15:36] Speaker 00: Now that's not specifically in the record, but the PSR does show a lot of the reasons for why that would happen. [00:15:42] Speaker 00: Because I think, as both Judge Matsumoto and Judge Bennett have pointed out, his family, his children, were in Mexico this entire time. [00:15:51] Speaker 00: And he's back there with them right now. [00:15:53] Speaker 00: And that is just another factor to consider for the prejudice analysis. [00:16:01] Speaker 00: I think if there are no further questions from the court, [00:16:04] Speaker 01: Doesn't appear that we have any additional questions. [00:16:06] Speaker 01: Thank you very much, counsel. [00:16:07] Speaker 01: Thank you. [00:16:09] Speaker 01: Let's put two minutes on the clock. [00:16:13] Speaker 03: I would suggest this is a very simple case. [00:16:17] Speaker 03: The holding is the attorney has to advise his client in these circumstances that deportation is a virtual certainty. [00:16:25] Speaker 03: The government submits two declarations from him and he says everything except that under oath. [00:16:30] Speaker 03: He lists all these things he said absolutely rending him deportable. [00:16:34] Speaker 03: The attorney personally believed he was going to be deported. [00:16:37] Speaker 03: He was aware of his professional obligations. [00:16:40] Speaker 03: He says five or six things just like that without saying he advised his client that his deportation was virtually certain. [00:16:47] Speaker 03: And now the government's getting up and introducing all this extra record evidence of what happened in immigration court. [00:16:52] Speaker 03: I have no way of knowing anything about that. [00:16:56] Speaker 03: So that seems completely improper. [00:16:59] Speaker 02: Had you been granted a hearing, what evidence would you have provided to the court, both on the deficient performance and prejudice? [00:17:11] Speaker 03: You mean talking about an evidentiary hearing in the district court? [00:17:14] Speaker 02: Yes, because I think that's one of your contentions. [00:17:15] Speaker 03: Sure. [00:17:15] Speaker 03: The client would have testified, presumably [00:17:19] Speaker 03: you know, repeating what he had said in his declarations, and we'd get to cross-examine the attorney, and I assume he would affirm what he said in the declarations. [00:17:28] Speaker 03: And plus, we'd have an opportunity for, and I mention this in the papers, for discovery about the Northern District's plea practices. [00:17:36] Speaker 03: You know, I submitted some examples just to show it's not a completely nonsensical, crazy idea that they would negotiate a different plea conviction that didn't carry the mandatory immigration. [00:17:49] Speaker 03: consequences. [00:17:49] Speaker 03: Let me just add one point that I didn't stress enough in the papers when I realized when I was preparing for this oral argument, which was the attorney admitted that he gave his client examples of citizens, of non-citizens who weren't deported despite their convictions for aggravated felonies or something like that. [00:18:08] Speaker 03: And merely by giving those examples, he's created uncertainty in the defendant's mind where this is a context where certainty is what's required. [00:18:19] Speaker 03: And so by undermining that certainty and creating this ambiguity, the attorney doesn't even say those are rare cases where they're not deported. [00:18:27] Speaker 03: He just gave those examples. [00:18:28] Speaker 03: And with that- All right. [00:18:30] Speaker 01: Thank you very much, counsel, to both sides for your argument this morning. [00:18:33] Speaker 01: The matter is submitted.