AP (Nevada)
December 12, 2015
Jose
Isabel Esparza laughs at the thought that his wife, a 65-year-old
grandmother living on their meager farm outside Mexico City, might be
smuggling people illegally
into the United States.
But
that's the only reason U.S. immigration officials have provided in
denying her entrance to the country since she acknowledged in 1994 that
one of the three sons listed
on her original visa application was really her grandson.
Esparza,
69, a naturalized U.S. citizen who works as a landscaper in Reno, is
suing the U.S. State Department in search of a better explanation of why
he's been forced
to live apart from his children and wife, Maria, for more than 20
years.
His
lawsuit filed in federal court Nov. 30 challenges the rejection of his
wife's visa "for purportedly having engaged in alien smuggling."
Naming
Secretary of State John Kerry as the lead defendant, the lawsuit says
the government has misapplied the Immigration and Nationality Act.
Because
the law allows no administrative appeal, a court order is necessary for
the Esparzas to be reunited, said Steve Brazelton, the couple's
Reno-based lawyer.
"Most
people don't realize a citizen can be separated from a spouse on a whim
for life," Brazelton said in an interview this week.
The
lawsuit cites a widely divided U.S. Supreme Court ruling issued earlier
this year in Kerry v. Din. The court supported immigration officials
who similarly cited a
section of law under the terrorism category when they refused to allow a
man who worked in the then-Taliban-controlled Afghan government to join
his wife in California.
Courts
long have held that noncitizens have no constitutional right to seek an
explanation under legal doctrine that gives the government broad power
to deny visas. In
the California case, Fauzia Din was trying to get around that legal
barrier by asserting that she deserved to know the specific reason for
the denial based on her marital rights.
The
high court ruled 5-4 that the government satisfied due process when it
notified Din's husband that he was denied under the anti-terrorism ban.
However, the justices
split on what due process required.
Brazelton
believes the ruling is ripe for revisiting given that only two other
justices joined Chief Justice Antonia Scalia's majority opinion in June.
Two signed concurring
opinions that took a different stance on degrees of due process, and
four dissented.
"No
one could argue that Kerry v. Din has left the law clear," said Chuck
Roth, director of litigation for the National Immigrant Justice Center
in Chicago, which filed
a friend-of-the-court brief in the Din case. He said Esparza's claim
points out the need for judicial oversight.
The
Justice Department has no comment on the litigation pending before U.S.
District Judge Robert Jones, said Natalie Collins, spokeswoman for the
U.S. attorney's office
in Nevada.
The government's initial filing is due Feb. 1. No trial date has been set.
Maria
Esparza first submitted a visa application in 1994, accompanied by an
official birth certificate listing her and her husband as the parents of
Yazarit Erefert Esparza,
who now is 22.
In
December of that year, she had a face-to-face interview at the U.S.
Consulate Office in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. She acknowledged that she had
made a mistake in stating
he was their biological son. She explained they had raised Erefert as
their son since he was born to their 18-year-old daughter and a father
who didn't want to assume responsibility.
Immigration
officials denied her visa on that basis, but urged her to obtain a
hardship waiver pardoning the earlier misrepresentation, which she did.
But
in 1995, U.S. officials rejected her again, with the only explanation
being a citation of the federal code section "which punishes alien
smuggling," Brazelton said.
The Esparzas describe themselves as a simple family, farmers who raise corn, beans and chilies on about 17 acres in Cuauhtemoc.
"The
most important thing in life for them is to be together as a family,"
Brazelton said. "They don't have any other aspirations."
Esparza typically returns to Mexico for three winter months when he's not needed at his landscaping job.
"The
hardest part is not being together," he told The Associated Press
through his lawyer during a conference call from Mexico this week.
The family shouldn't be punished for an innocent misstatement, Roth said.
"Even
if it was fraud, which seems itself a little doubtful, it wasn't alien
smuggling in any normal sense of the word," Roth said. "Yet according to
an official at the
U.S. consulate in Mexico, that act bars her forever from coming to the
United States."
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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