Bertos v. Napalitano et al
Filing
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ORDER correcting typographical error in 29 ORDER re: sufficiency of evidence (rmwlc1, COURT STAFF) (Filed on 3/19/2013)
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E-FILED on
3/19/13
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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
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United States District Court
For the Northern District of California
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SAN JOSE DIVISION
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In Re:
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ATINA BERTOS
No. C-12-3531-RMW
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Plaintiff,
ORDER RE: SUFFICIENCY OF
EVIDENCE
v.
JANET NAPOLITANO, et al.,
Defendants.
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Plaintiff Atina Bertos ("Bertos") petitioned the court for review of her application for
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naturalization pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1421(c). Bertos entered the United States in 1994 as a
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temporary visitor, but remained in the United States pursuant to the grant of her father's 1995 I-589
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Application for Asylum and Withholding of Deportation ("Asylum Application"), which included
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her as a derivative beneficiary of her father. Pet. ¶ 12; Asylum Application (Pet. Ex. H, Dkt. No. 1-2
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at 52-54). The United States Citizen and Immigration Services ("CIS") granted Bertos's father
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asylum on the basis that he had established a "well-founded fear of persecution upon returning to
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[his] home county of Iran." Pet. ¶ 12. In 1997, Bertos filed an Application for Adjustment of Status
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to lawful permanent resident ("LPR"). Id. On November 1, 1998, the CIS granted her LPR status
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under section 209(b)(3) of the Immigration and Naturalization Act, codified at 8 U.S.C.
ORDER RE: SUFFICIENCY OF EVIDENCE—No. C-12-3531-RMW
ALG
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§ 1159(b)(3), based on her "derivative asylum status as the . . . child of a person granted asylum."
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Bertos's Form I-485 Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status (Pet., Ex. E, Dkt.
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No. 1-2) ("Form I-485"). Almost ten years later, in February 2007, Bertos applied to naturalize. In
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October 2007, the CIS held a naturalization interview, and recommended Bertos for approval. Over
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three hears later, in November 2010, the CIS reopened Bertos's cases sua sponte, and in a decision
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dated December 17, 2012, denied her application for naturalization ("Naturalization Decision").
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The CIS based its denial of Bertos's naturalization application on a 2006 naturalization
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interview of her father, in which it allegedly discovered that he possessed Greek citizenship—a fact
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which the agency claims it was not aware of when it granted his Asylum Application. The CIS
United States District Court
For the Northern District of California
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wrote:
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When your father applied for asylum on September 18, 2005 [sic],1 he stated on his I589 application for asylum, that his current nationality was "Stateless." However,
during the March 27, 1996 asylum interview, it was confirm [sic] that he was an
Iranian national as he was born in Tehran, Iran and held an Iranian passport. But in a
follow up Naturalization interview held on October 26, 2009, it was established that
your father was also a citizen of Greece as he was in possession of a tautotita or
taftotita, a document that confirms Greek citizenship.
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Attachment to Naturalization Decision, Alien File No. A7341185 ("Form N-335"), Dkt. No. 1-2 at 3.
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If Bertos's father was a citizen of both Iran and Greece at the time of his application for
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asylum, Bertos's father would have been required to prove a well-founded fear of returning to both
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Iran and Greece to obtain asylum in the United States.2 Apparently, however, the agency never
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made any determination of Asylum with respect to Greece:
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The record shows that your father applied for asylum as an Iranian national and only
established a well-founded fear of persecution had he returned to Iran. . . . As a
result, the Asylum officer could not adjudicate whether your father held a wellfounded fear of persecution had he returned to Greece. Consequently, your father did
not lawfully obtain permanent residence status in the United States.
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Bertos's father I-589 application for asylum is dated September 14, 1995. The CIS's references to
September 18, 2005 as the date of Bertos's father's I-589 Asylum Application appear to be in error.
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See 8 U.S.C. § 1158(a)(2)(A) (An alien otherwise eligible for asylum by being physically present
in the United States is not eligible if "the Attorney General determines that the alien may be
removed, pursuant to a bilateral or multilateral agreement, to a country (other than the country of the
alien's nationality or, in the case of an alien having no nationality, the country of the alien's last
habitual residence) in which the alien's life or freedom would not be threatened.").
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ORDER RE: SUFFICIENCY OF EVIDENCE—No. C-12-3531-RMW
ALG
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Attachment to Naturalization Decision, Alien File No. A7341185, Dkt. No. 1-2 at 4 ("Form N-335").
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At the hearing, however, Bertos maintained that there is an issue of fact as to whether
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Bertos's father was, in fact, a citizen of Greece at the time of his application for asylum. Indeed, the
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record implies that he may not have been a citizen of Greece at the time he applied for asylum. In
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his Asylum Application, Bertos's father wrote:
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I was in Greece for three years legally and thereafter declared illegal due to the fact
that my application to be classified as a refugee was denied by the United States. I
can not return to Iran because I will be executed and cannot return to Greece because
they will not permit me to stay legally. I have no where to go and need to protect an
[sic] support my family.
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Asylum Application, Dkt. No. 1-2 at 56 (emphasis added). Moreover, there is nothing in the record
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currently before the court definitively establishing whether Bertos's father actually had a tautotita or
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taftotita, was ever held ineligible to naturalize, or whether his asylum status was ever formally
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declared unlawful based on his alleged Greek citizenship.3 Because Bertos's LPR status derives
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from her father's asylum, it is important for the court to understand whether her father's asylum
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status was, in fact, unlawful before ruling on the pending motions. Although the ultimate burden to
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prove eligibility for naturalization rests with Bertos, once Bertos has made a prima facie showing of
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eligibility based on her LPR status, the government has the evidentiary burden to support its position
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that Bertos's LPR status is unlawful.
United States District Court
For the Northern District of California
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Accordingly, the court orders the government to submit additional evidence with respect to
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Bertos's father's asylum status on or before April 8, 2013. At that time, the court will rule on the
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pending motions.
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DATED: 3/19/13
RONALD M. WHYTE
United States District Judge
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The only reference in the record before the court that Bertos's father had a tautotita or taftotita is
an unsupported statement in an attachment to Bertos's Form N-335, that in an interview held on
October 26, 2009 that "it was established that your father was also a citizen of Greece as he was in
possession of a tautotita or taftotita . . . ." No information is provided about who conducted the
interview and how it was determined that Bertos's father possessed a tautotita or taftotita.
ORDER RE: SUFFICIENCY OF EVIDENCE—No. C-12-3531-RMW
ALG
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