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SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 18–1432
_________________
NIDAL KHALID NASRALLAH, PETITIONER
v.
WILLIAM P. BARR, ATTORNEY GENERAL
on writ of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the eleventh circuit
[June 1, 2020]
Justice Kavanaugh delivered the opinion of the
Court.
Under federal immigration law, noncitizens who
commit certain crimes are removable from the United States. During
removal proceedings, a noncitizen may raise claims under the
international Convention Against Torture, known as CAT. If the
noncitizen demonstrates that he likely would be tortured if removed
to the designated country of removal, then he is entitled to CAT
relief and may not be removed to that country (although he still
may be removed to other countries).
If the immigration judge orders removal and
denies CAT relief, the noncitizen may appeal to the Board of
Immigration Appeals. If the Board of Immigration Appeals orders
removal and denies CAT relief, the noncitizen may obtain judicial
review in a federal court of appeals of both the final order of
removal and the CAT order.
In the court of appeals, for cases involving
noncitizens who have committed any crime specified in 8
U. S. C. §1252(a)(2)(C), federal law limits the scope of
judicial review. Those noncitizens may obtain judicial review of
constitutional and legal challenges to the final order of removal,
but not of factual challenges to the final order of removal.
Everyone agrees on all of the above. The dispute
here concerns the scope of judicial review of CAT orders for those
noncitizens who have committed crimes specified in §1252(a)(2)(C).
The Government argues that judicial review of a CAT order is
analogous to judicial review of a final order of removal. The
Government contends, in other words, that the court of appeals may
review the noncitizen’s constitutional and legal challenges to a
CAT order, but not the noncitizen’s factual challenges to the CAT
order. Nasrallah responds that the court of appeals may review the
noncitizen’s constitutional, legal,
and factual challenges
to the CAT order, although Nasrallah acknowledges that judicial
review of factual challenges to CAT orders must be highly
deferential.
So the narrow question before the Court is
whether, in a case involving a noncitizen who committed a crime
specified in §1252(a)(2)(C), the court of appeals should review the
noncitizen’s factual challenges to the CAT order (i) not at all or
(ii) deferentially. Based on the text of the statute, we conclude
that the court of appeals should review factual challenges to the
CAT order deferentially. We therefore reverse the judgment of the
U. S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit.
I
Nidal Khalid Nasrallah is a native and citizen
of Lebanon. In 2006, when he was 17 years old, Nasrallah came to
the United States on a tourist visa. In 2007, he became a lawful
permanent resident. In 2013, Nasrallah pled guilty to two counts of
receiving stolen property. The U. S. District Court for the
Western District of North Carolina sentenced Nasrallah to 364 days
in prison.
Based on Nasrallah’s conviction, the Government
initiated deportation proceedings. See 8 U. S. C.
§1227(a)(2)(A)(i). In those proceedings, Nasrallah applied for CAT
relief to prevent his removal to Lebanon. See Convention Against
Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment, Art. 3, Dec. 10, 1984, S. Treaty Doc. No. 100–20, p.
20, 1465 U. N. T. S. 114. Nasrallah alleged that he
was a member of the Druze religion, and that he had been tortured
by Hezbollah before he came to the United States. Nasrallah argued
that he would be tortured again if returned to Lebanon.[
1]
The Immigration Judge determined that Nasrallah
was removable. As to the CAT claim, the Immigration Judge found
that Nasrallah had previously suffered torture at the hands of
Hezbollah. Based on Nasrallah’s past experience and the current
political conditions in Lebanon, the Immigration Judge concluded
that Nasrallah likely would be tortured again if returned to
Lebanon. The Immigration Judge ordered Nasrallah removed, but also
granted CAT relief and thereby blocked Nasrallah’s removal to
Lebanon.
On appeal, the Board of Immigration Appeals
disagreed that Nasrallah likely would be tortured in Lebanon. The
Board therefore vacated the order granting CAT relief and ordered
Nasrallah removed to Lebanon.
Nasrallah filed a petition for review in the
U. S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, claiming
(among other things) that the Board of Immigration Appeals erred in
finding that he would not likely be tortured in Lebanon. Nasrallah
raised factual challenges to the Board’s CAT order. Applying
Circuit precedent, the Eleventh Circuit declined to review
Nasrallah’s factual challenges.
Nasrallah v.
United
States Attorney General, 762 Fed. Appx. 638 (2019). The court
explained that Nasrallah had been convicted of a crime specified in
8 U. S. C. §1252(a)(2)(C). Noncitizens convicted of
§1252(a)(2)(C) crimes may not obtain judicial review of factual
challenges to a “final order of removal.” §§1252(a)(2)(C)–(D).
Under Eleventh Circuit precedent, that statute also precludes
judicial review of factual challenges to the CAT order.[
2]
Nasrallah contends that the Eleventh Circuit
should have reviewed his factual challenges to the CAT order
because the statute bars review only of factual challenges to a
“final order of removal.” According to Nasrallah, a CAT order is
not a “final order of removal” and does not affect the validity of
a final order of removal. Therefore, Nasrallah argues, the statute
by its terms does not bar judicial review of factual challenges to
a CAT order.
The Courts of Appeals are divided over whether
§§1252(a)(2)(C) and (D) preclude judicial review of factual
challenges to a CAT order. Most Courts of Appeals have sided with
the Government; the Seventh and Ninth Circuits have gone the other
way. Compare
Gourdet v.
Holder, 587 F.3d 1, 5 (CA1
2009);
Ortiz-Franco v.
Holder, 782 F.3d 81, 88 (CA2
2015);
Pieschacon-Villegas v.
Attorney General of
U. S., 671 F.3d 303, 309–310 (CA3 2011);
Oxygene v.
Lynch, 813 F.3d 541, 545 (CA4 2016);
Escudero-Arciniega v.
Holder, 702 F.3d 781, 785 (CA5
2012);
Tran v.
Gonzales,
447 F.3d 937, 943 (CA6 2006);
Lovan v.
Holder,
574 F.3d 990, 998 (CA8 2009);
Cole v.
United States
Attorney General, 712 F.3d 517, 532 (CA11 2013), with
Wanjiru v.
Holder, 705 F.3d 258, 264 (CA7 2013);
Vinh Tan Nguyen v.
Holder, 763 F.3d 1022, 1029 (CA9
2014).
In light of the Circuit split on this important
question of federal law, we granted certiorari. 589 U. S. ___
(2019).[
3]
II
When a noncitizen is removable because he
committed a crime specified in §1252(a)(2)(C), immigration law bars
judicial review of the noncitizen’s factual challenges to his final
order of removal. In the Government’s view, the law also bars
judicial review of the noncitizen’s factual challenges to a CAT
order. Nasrallah disagrees. We conclude that Nasrallah has the
better of the statutory argument.
A
We begin by describing the three interlocking
statutes that provide for judicial review of final orders of
removal and CAT orders.
The first relevant statute is the Illegal
Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996. That
Act authorizes noncitizens to obtain direct “review of a final
order of removal” in a court of appeals. 110Stat. 3009–607, 8
U. S. C. §1252(a)(1). As the parties agree, in the
deportation context, a “final order of removal” is a final order
“concluding that the alien is deportable or ordering deportation.”
§1101(a)(47)(A); see §309(d)(2), 110Stat. 3009–627;
Calcano-Martinez v.
INS,
533
U.S. 348, 350, n. 1 (2001). The Act also states that
judicial review “of all questions of law and fact . . .
arising from any action taken or proceeding brought to remove an
alien from the United States under this subchapter shall be
available only in judicial review of a final order under this
section.” 8 U. S. C. §1252(b)(9); see 110Stat. 3009–610.
In other words, a noncitizen’s various challenges arising from the
removal proceeding must be “consolidated in a petition for review
and considered by the courts of appeals.”
INS v.
St.
Cyr,
533 U.S.
289, 313, and n. 37 (2001). By consolidating the issues
arising from a final order of removal, eliminating review in the
district courts, and supplying direct review in the courts of
appeals, the Act expedites judicial review of final orders of
removal.
The second relevant statute is the Foreign
Affairs Reform and Restructuring Act of 1998, known as FARRA. FARRA
implements Article 3 of the international Convention Against
Torture, known as CAT. As relevant here, CAT prohibits removal of a
noncitizen to a country where the noncitizen likely would be
tortured. Importantly for present purposes, §2242(d) of FARRA
provides for judicial review of CAT claims “as part of the review
of a final order of removal pursuant to section 242 of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U. S. C. 1252).”
112Stat. 2681–822, note following 8 U. S. C. §1231.
The third relevant statute is the REAL ID Act of
2005. As relevant here, that Act responded to this Court’s 2001
decision in
St. Cyr. In
St. Cyr, this Court ruled
that the 1996 Act, although purporting to eliminate district court
review of final orders of removal, did not eliminate district court
review
via habeas corpus of constitutional or legal
challenges to final orders of removal. 533 U. S.
, at
312–313. The REAL ID Act clarified that final orders of removal may
not be reviewed in district courts, even via habeas corpus, and may
be reviewed only in the courts of appeals. See 119Stat. 310, 8
U. S. C. §1252(a)(5). The REAL ID Act also provided that
CAT orders likewise may not be reviewed in district courts, even
via habeas corpus, and may be reviewed only in the courts of
appeals. See 119Stat. 310, 8 U. S. C. §1252(a)(4).
B
Those three Acts establish that CAT orders may
be reviewed together with final orders of removal in a court of
appeals. But judicial review of final orders of removal is somewhat
limited in cases (such as Nasrallah’s) involving noncitizens
convicted of crimes specified in §1252(a)(2)(C). In those cases, a
court of appeals may review constitutional or legal challenges to a
final order of removal, but the court of appeals may not review
factual challenges to a final order of removal
.
§§1252(a)(2)(C)–(D); see
Guerrero-Lasprilla v.
Barr,
589 U. S. ___, ___–___ (2020) (slip op., at 11–13).
The question in this case is the following: By
precluding judicial review of factual challenges to final orders of
removal, does the law also preclude judicial review of factual
challenges to CAT orders? We conclude that it does not.
The relevant statutory text precludes judicial
review of factual challenges to final orders of removal—and only to
final orders of removal. In the deportation context, a final “order
of removal” is a final order “concluding that the alien is
deportable or ordering deportation.” §1101(a)(47)(A).[
4]
A CAT order is not itself a final order of
removal because it is not an order “concluding that the alien is
deportable or ordering deportation.” As the Government
acknowledges, a CAT order does not disturb the final order of
removal. Brief for Respondent 26. An order granting CAT relief
means only that, notwithstanding the order of removal, the
noncitizen may not be removed to the designated country of removal,
at least until conditions change in that country. But the
noncitizen still “may be removed at any time to another country
where he or she is not likely to be tortured.” 8 CFR
§§1208.17(b)(2), 1208.16(f ).
Even though CAT orders are not
the same
as final orders of removal, a question remains: Do CAT orders merge
into final orders of removal in the same way as, say, an
immigration judge’s evidentiary rulings merge into final orders of
removal? The answer is no. For purposes of this statute, final
orders of removal encompass only the rulings made by the
immigration judge or Board of Immigration Appeals that affect the
validity of the final order of removal. As this Court phrased it in
INS v.
Chadha, review of a final order of removal
“includes all matters on which the validity of the final order is
contingent.”
462 U.S.
919, 938 (1983) (internal quotation marks omitted). The rulings
that affect the validity of the final order of removal merge into
the final order of removal for purposes of judicial review. But the
immigration judge’s or the Board’s ruling on a CAT claim does not
affect the validity of the final order of removal and therefore
does not merge into the final order of removal.
To be sure, as noted above, FARRA provides that
a CAT order is reviewable “as part of the review of a final order
of removal” under 8 U. S. C. §1252. §2242(d), 112Stat.
2681–822; see also 8 U. S. C. §1252(a)(4). Likewise,
§1252(b)(9) provides that “[j]udicial review of all questions of
law and fact . . . arising from any action taken or proceeding
brought to remove an alien from the United States under this
subchapter shall be available only in judicial review of a final
order under this section.” §1252(b)(9). But FARRA and §1252(b)(9)
simply establish that a CAT order may be reviewed together with the
final order of removal, not that a CAT order is the same as, or
affects the validity of, a final order of removal.
Consider an analogy. Suppose a statute furnishes
appellate review of convictions and sentences in a single appellate
proceeding. Suppose that the statute also precludes appellate
review of certain factual challenges to the sentence. Would that
statute bar appellate review of factual challenges to the
conviction, just because the conviction and sentence are reviewed
together? No. The same is true here. A CAT order may be reviewed
together with the final order of removal. But a CAT order is
distinct from a final order of removal and does not affect the
validity of the final order of removal. The CAT order therefore
does not merge into the final order of removal for purposes of
§§1252(a)(2)(C)–(D)’s limitation on the scope of judicial review.
In short, as a matter of straightforward statutory interpretation,
Congress’s decision to bar judicial review of factual challenges to
final orders of removal does not bar judicial review of factual
challenges to CAT orders.
It would be easy enough for Congress to preclude
judicial review of factual challenges to CAT orders, just as
Congress has precluded judicial review of factual challenges to
certain final orders of removal. But Congress has not done so, and
it is not the proper role of the courts to rewrite the laws passed
by Congress and signed by the President.
C
Although a noncitizen may obtain judicial
review of factual challenges to CAT orders, that review is highly
deferential, as Nasrallah acknowledges. See Reply Brief 19–20; Tr.
of Oral Arg. 5. The standard of review is the substantial-evidence
standard: The agency’s “findings of fact are conclusive unless any
reasonable adjudicator would be compelled to conclude to the
contrary.” §1252(b)(4)(B); see
Kenyeres v.
Ashcroft,
538 U.S. 1301, 1306 (2003) (Kennedy, J., in chambers);
INS
v.
Elias-Zacarias,
502 U.S.
478, 481, n. 1, 483–484 (1992).
But the Government still insists that the
statute supplies no judicial review of factual challenges to CAT
orders. The Government advances a slew of arguments, but none
persuades us.
First, the Government raises an argument
based on precedent. In
Foti v.
INS,
375 U.S.
217 (1963), this Court interpreted the statutory term “final
orders of deportation” in the Immigration and Nationality Act of
1952, as amended in 1961, to encompass “all determinations made
during and incident to the administrative proceeding” on
removability.
Id., at 229. The Government points out
(correctly) that the
Foti definition of a final order—if it
still applied here—would cover CAT orders and therefore would bar
judicial review of factual challenges to CAT orders. But
Foti’s interpretation of the INA as it existed as of 1963 no
longer applies. Since 1996, the INA has defined final “order of
deportation” more narrowly than this Court interpreted the term in
Foti. A final order of deportation is now defined as a final
order “concluding that the alien is deportable or ordering
deportation.” 8 U. S. C. §1101(a)(47)(A); Antiterrorism
and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, 110Stat. 1277; see
§309(d)(2) of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant
Responsibility Act of 1996, 110Stat. 3009–627. And as we have
explained, an order denying CAT relief does not fall within the
statutory definition of an “order of deportation” because it is not
an order “concluding that the alien is deportable or ordering
deportation.” Therefore,
Foti does not control here.
Second, the Government puts forward a
structural argument. As the Government sees it, if a CAT order is
not merged into a final order of removal, then no statute would
authorize a court of appeals to review a CAT order in the first
place. That is because, in the Government’s view, the only statute
that supplies judicial review of CAT claims is the statute that
provides for judicial review of final orders of removal. See
§1252(a)(1). The premise of that argument is incorrect. Section
2242(d) of FARRA, enacted in 1998, expressly provides for judicial
review of CAT claims together with the review of final orders of
removal. Moreover, as a result of the 2005 REAL ID Act, §1252(a)(4)
now provides for direct review of CAT orders in the courts of
appeals. See also 8 U. S. C. §1252(b)(9). In short, our
decision does not affect the authority of the courts of appeals to
review CAT orders.
Third, the Government asserts a
congressional intent argument: Why would Congress bar review of
factual challenges to a removal order, but allow factual challenges
to a CAT order? To begin with, we must adhere to the statutory
text, which differentiates between the two kinds of orders for
those purposes. In any event, Congress had good reason to
distinguish the two. For noncitizens who have committed crimes that
subject them to removal, the facts that rendered the noncitizen
removable are often not in serious dispute. The relevant facts will
usually just be the existence of the noncitizen’s prior criminal
convictions. By barring review of factual challenges to final
orders of removal, Congress prevented further relitigation of the
underlying factual bases for those criminal convictions—a point
that Senator Abraham, a key proponent of the statutory bar to
judicial review, stressed back in 1996. See 142 Cong. Rec.
7348–7350 (1996).
By contrast, the issues related to a CAT order
will not typically have been litigated prior to the alien’s removal
proceedings. Those factual issues may range from the noncitizen’s
past experiences in the designated country of removal, to the
noncitizen’s credibility, to the political or other current
conditions in that country. Because the factual components of CAT
orders will not previously have been litigated in court and because
those factual issues may be critical to determining whether the
noncitizen is likely to be tortured if returned, it makes some
sense that Congress would provide an opportunity for judicial
review, albeit deferential judicial review, of the factual
components of a CAT order.
Fourth, the Government advances a policy
argument—that judicial review of the factual components of a CAT
order would unduly delay removal proceedings. But today’s decision
does not affect
whether the noncitizen is entitled to
judicial review of a CAT order and does not add a new layer of
judicial review. All agree that a noncitizen facing removal under
these provisions may already seek judicial review in a court of
appeals of constitutional and legal claims relating to both the
final order of removal and the CAT order. Our holding today means
only that, in that same case in the court of appeals, the court may
also review the noncitizen’s factual challenges to the CAT order
under the deferential substantial-evidence standard. For many
years, the Seventh and Ninth Circuits have allowed factual
challenges to CAT orders, and the Government has not informed this
Court of any significant problems stemming from review in those
Circuits.
Fifth, what about the slippery slope? If
factual challenges to CAT orders may be reviewed, what other orders
will now be subject to factual challenges in the courts of appeals?
Importantly, another jurisdiction-stripping provision,
§1252(a)(2)(B), states that a noncitizen may not bring a factual
challenge to orders denying discretionary relief, including
cancellation of removal, voluntary departure, adjustment of status,
certain inadmissibility waivers, and other determinations “made
discretionary by statute.”
Kucana v.
Holder,
558 U.S.
233, 248 (2010). Our decision today therefore has no effect on
judicial review of those discretionary determinations.[
5]
The Government suggests that our decision here
might lead to judicial review of factual challenges to statutory
withholding orders. A statutory withholding order prevents the
removal of a noncitizen to a country where the noncitizen’s “life
or freedom would be threatened” because of the noncitizen’s “race,
religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or
political opinion.” 8 U. S. C. §1231(b)(3)(A). That
question is not presented in this case, and we therefore leave its
resolution for another day.
* * *
In cases where a noncitizen has committed a
crime specified in 8 U. S. C. §1252(a)(2)(C),
§§1252(a)(2)(C) and (D) preclude judicial review of the
noncitizen’s factual challenges to a final order of removal. A CAT
order is distinct from a final order of removal and does not affect
the validity of a final order of removal. Therefore,
§§1252(a)(2)(C) and (D) do not preclude judicial review of a
noncitizen’s factual challenges to a CAT order. We reverse the
judgment of the U. S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh
Circuit.
It is so ordered.