Archive for December, 2010

Hawaii FilAm jailed for not filling blanks in immigration application

Thursday, December 30th, 2010

By Atty. Emmanuel Samonte Tipon

Obama is enjoying Hawaii’s sunny weather playing golf with his Filipino buddy and eating shaved ice. On the other hand his ICE men are busy arresting Filipinos – not for aggravated felonies but simple immigration violations.

Take the case of a do-it-yourself Filipino whose adjustment of status application was rejected by USCIS. Reason? He did not fill in the blank for Alien Number. Instead of hiring a lawyer, his brother brought him to USCIS in Hawaii for advice. “Aha,” the officer must have exclaimed, looking at his I-94, “you should have gone home yesterday.” ICE agents handcuffed him and brought him to the Federal Detention Center, charging him with overstaying. It was only 12 hours. After three weeks in detention, his bond hearing was held. His brother represented him. He was required to put up $1,500. If the family had paid this amount to a competent lawyer in the first place to prepare the adjustment package, he would have avoided all this trouble. His brother was telling others “We do not have a problem with money. We have 8 houses.”

Another ICE victim was an overstaying Filipino student who was jailed for a week and placed in removal proceedings. He had celebrated Halloween with his girl friend and encountered a police roadblock checking for drunken drivers. He was charged with DUI. Since he was foreign born, the police forwarded his rap sheet to ICE, who checked his record and found out that his school adviser had reported him to USCIS for not carrying a full load of subjects. Hawaiian police do not need an Arizona-type law for them to inquire into the immigration status of people arrested. It appears that whenever an arrestee says he/she was born abroad, the police send their rap sheet to ICE. Let ICE do the checking.

Twenty Filipino family members, including wives and young children, were charged with fraud – claiming that their father who petitioned for them was alive although he was dead. Most were caught in a blitzkrieg-like raid. ICE agents simultaneously trooped to their homes, their places of work, and the airport where one was leaving to be with his dying wife and another was arriving after visiting relatives in the Philippines. A Filipino reported them according to ICE.

Another victim was a man undergoing divorce and defending himself from a temporary restraining order sought by his wife. While in court ICE men arrested him and brought him to FDC, charging him with fraud. The Immigration Judge asked if wanted to seek relief. He replied that he would just like to go home. To him, going home to the Philippines would be his relief. The Philippines would be heaven compared to the hell he had been experiencing from his wife who discovered that the reason he frequently went to the Philippines was to see his first wife whom he never divorced. Therefore, his marriage to the second wife who petitioned him was void. As the saying goes: “Hell hath known no fury like the fury of a woman scorned.”

Hawaii’s ICE chief, glancing in my direction during a conference of immigration lawyers, made an unsolicited remark “We are not targeting Filipinos.” I could have shot back: “You got to be kidding”.

“Happy New Year” to all our readers. I’m not kidding.

Avoiding police roadblocks

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

By Atty. Emmanuel Samonte Tipon

It is a holiday week-end. You have spent half the night drinking. As you drive home, you see police cars with flashing lights and a long line of cars. It is a roadblock (checkpoint). You want to avoid it. You turn onto a side road. A police car chases you with lights flashing and sirens screaming. What now?

Here is an actual case. The Police of Maui, Hawaii, established a checkpoint on Mokulele Highway south of the intersection of Mokulele Highway and Mehameha Loop. Raymond was driving on Mokulele Highway. He passed a sign  “INTOXICATION CHECKPOINT”. He turned onto Mehameha Loop, an isolated, dead end road surrounded by sugarcane fields. A police officer stationed as a “chase car” followed. The officer activated his lights and stopped Raymond who was later charged with operating a vehicle under the influence of an intoxicant (OVUII or DUI), Hawaii Revised Statutes § 291E-61(a).

Raymond, with the assistance of a Hawaii criminal lawyer moved to suppress all of the evidence and statements obtained as a result of the stop of his vehicle because (1) the purported investigatory stop of his vehicle violated article 1, section 7 of the Hawaii Constitution since it was not supported by a reasonable and articulable suspicion that defendant was engaged in criminal conduct and (2) the “chase car” police procedure of stopping all vehicles that lawfully turn onto a public way in advance of a checkpoint exceeded that statutorily authorized. The district court denied the motion. Raymond entered a conditional no contest plea. The court sentenced defendant. He appealed.

The Hawaii Supreme Court, in an opinion by Justice Simeon Acoba, a Filipino, held that the district court was wrong in denying defendant’s motion to suppress, vacated the order and remanded the case with instructions to enter an order granting defendant’s motion to suppress and allow defendant to withdraw his conditional no contest plea.  State of Hawaii v. Raymond J. Heapy, 151 P.3d 764 (Hawaii 2007).

Reasonable suspicion to justify a stop must relate to criminal activity. The criminal activity for which defendant was stopped was operating a vehicle under the influence of an intoxicant. However, the officer observed no acts indicating a violation of the statute before the stop. He therefore lacked any objective basis (specific and articulable facts) that defendant was violating the statute so as to justify the stop. Accordingly the officer had no grounds for reasonably believing criminal activity was afoot. In stopping vehicles turning in advance of the checkpoint, the procedure exceeded the authority granted to the police to establish roadblocks under HRS 291E-19 and 20 (Supp 2005). Since the stop was unlawful all evidence derived from the stop must be suppressed.

 The stop violated article 1, section 7 of the Hawaii Constitution which protects the right of the people to be secure in their persons against unreasonable seizures and invasions of privacy. A stop of a vehicle for investigatory purposes constitutes a seizure. A warrantless seizure is presumed invalid unless the prosecution proves the seizure falls within an exception. One exception is where the officer has a reasonable suspicion that the person stopped was engaged in criminal conduct. Defendant was stopped without a reasonable and articulable suspicion that he was operating a vehicle under the influence of alcohol. The only suspicion that the officer had was that defendant was attempting to avoid a roadblock, not that he was driving under the influence of an intoxicant. Mere possibility of criminal activity does not satisfy the constitutional requirement that a stop be based on suspicion that criminal activity is afoot. The fact that the defendant exhibited signs of intoxication after the stop did not retroactively justify the stop. 

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