What are the facts?
Miguel Barrera-Echavarria was among the Cuban nationals who arrived during the 1980 Mariel boatlift. He was allowed into the United States on immigration parole under 8 U.S.C. § 1182(d)(5)(A), which is a discretionary mechanism that permits temporary entry without an admission in the immigration-law sense. After arrival, his parole was revoked based on criminal conduct and other adverse factors, and the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) initiated exclusion proceedings. An immigration judge ordered him excluded and deported, but Cuba refused to accept his return, and no third country agreed to receive him. As a result, the INS detained him in federal custody for years while periodically reviewing his suitability for parole under the Cuban Review Plan (8 C.F.R. § 212.12), which provided structured, periodic consideration of release for Mariel Cuban detainees. Barrera-Echavarria filed a habeas corpus petition challenging his continued, potentially indefinite, detention as unlawful under the INA and unconstitutional under the Fifth and Eighth Amendments.
What is the legal issue?
Does the Immigration and Nationality Act, consistent with the Constitution, authorize the Attorney General to detain an excludable (inadmissible) alien indefinitely when removal is not reasonably foreseeable and parole has been denied or revoked?
What rule applies?
Under the INA's exclusion and parole provisions, including 8 U.S.C. §§ 1182(d)(5)(A) and 1227 (pre-IIRIRA), the Attorney General possesses broad discretion to detain excludable aliens pending exclusion and removal and to grant, deny, or revoke parole without an implied temporal limitation; excludable aliens are treated as if stopped at the border for constitutional purposes and thus are entitled to only limited due process protections. Consistent with Shaughnessy v. United States ex rel. Mezei, prolonged detention of an excludable alien whose admission has been denied and whose removal is impracticable does not violate the Fifth Amendment or the Eighth Amendment where the detention is civil and subject to periodic parole review.
What did the court hold?
Yes. The Ninth Circuit, sitting en banc, held that the INA authorizes the indefinite detention of an excludable alien whose parole has been revoked and whose deportation is not reasonably foreseeable, and that such detention does not violate the Constitution. The court affirmed the denial of habeas relief.
What is the reasoning?
Statutory authority: The court read the INA's exclusion and parole scheme to vest the Attorney General with continuing custody over excludable aliens pending deportation, without any express time limit. Section 1182(d)(5)(A) authorizes discretionary parole, which may be revoked at any time, and the exclusion provisions require custody pending exclusion and effectuation of deportation. Congress was aware of the difficulty of repatriating certain Mariel Cuban detainees and endorsed executive-branch management through regulations such as the Cuban Review Plan (8 C.F.R. § 212.12), which establishes periodic review for possible parole. The statutory structure therefore permits custody to continue if parole is denied and removal is not feasible. Constitutional analysis: Relying on Mezei and the "entry fiction," the court emphasized that excludable aliens physically present but never admitted are regarded, for constitutional purposes, as if they remain at the threshold. As such, they possess no constitutional right to be at large in the United States and are entitled only to the process Congress and the Executive have provided. The court distinguished cases involving deportable, admitted aliens with greater liberty interests. Because detention here was civil, aimed at prevention and removal rather than punishment, it did not trigger the Eighth Amendment's prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment, nor did it constitute punitive detention under substantive due process. The availability of periodic parole review under the Cuban Review Plan mitigated due process concerns by providing individualized, recurring assessment of dangerousness and flight risk. Equal protection challenges failed under rational basis review given the plenary power of the political branches over immigration and the unique foreign-policy and public-safety issues posed by the Mariel cohort. Precedent and deference: The court aligned with decisions from other circuits permitting prolonged detention of excludable aliens in similar circumstances and underscored the judiciary's limited role in second-guessing executive judgments in immigration enforcement and foreign affairs. In the absence of a statutory time limit—and in light of Mezei's constitutional framework—the court concluded that continued detention was lawful.
Why is this case significant?
Barrera-Echavarria crystalizes the pre-IIRIRA approach to immigration detention for excludable (now inadmissible) aliens, reaffirming the entry fiction and the government's broad discretion to detain where removal is impracticable. For law students, it is essential for understanding the doctrinal divide between excludable and deportable aliens, the intersection of statutory discretion and constitutional limits, and the judiciary's deference to the political branches in immigration policy. Its practical force was later curtailed by Zadvydas v. Davis (2001) and Clark v. Martinez (2005), which construed the post-IIRIRA detention statute (8 U.S.C. § 1231(a)(6)) to contain a presumptive six-month limit on post-removal-order detention, extending that limit to inadmissible aliens. Barrera-Echavarria thus stands as an important historical and analytical waypoint in the evolution of immigration detention law.
How did the court distinguish excludable from deportable aliens?
The court applied the entry fiction: excludable (now called inadmissible) aliens are treated as if they have not entered the United States, even if physically present. As a result, they have more limited constitutional protections regarding admission and custody than deportable (admitted) aliens. This distinction was central to upholding indefinite detention under Mezei, which recognized minimal constitutional constraints at the threshold of entry.
What role did the Cuban Review Plan play in the court's analysis?
The Cuban Review Plan (8 C.F.R. § 212.12) provided periodic, individualized parole reviews for Mariel Cuban detainees, assessing factors like dangerousness and likelihood of absconding. The Ninth Circuit cited the Plan to show that detention decisions were not arbitrary and that detainees had recurring opportunities for release, which helped satisfy due process concerns even in the absence of a statutory time limit on detention.
Did the court find any constitutional limit on the length of detention?
No categorical time limit was imposed. The court held that, under Mezei, prolonged detention of an excludable alien could be constitutionally permissible, particularly where detention is civil and subject to ongoing parole review. The court rejected Eighth Amendment and substantive due process challenges, reasoning that detention served regulatory, not punitive, aims. Later Supreme Court cases—Zadvydas and Clark—introduced statutory, not constitutional, time constraints for post-removal-order detention.
How was Barrera-Echavarria affected by later Supreme Court cases?
Zadvydas v. Davis (2001) interpreted 8 U.S.C. § 1231(a)(6) to limit post-removal-order detention to a period reasonably necessary to effect removal, with a presumptive six-month benchmark for admitted aliens. Clark v. Martinez (2005) extended that reading to inadmissible aliens. These decisions effectively superseded Barrera-Echavarria's statutory holding under the post-IIRIRA framework, though Barrera-Echavarria remains instructive on the entry fiction and pre-IIRIRA doctrine.
What standard of review did the court apply to equal protection claims?
The court applied rational basis review, emphasizing the plenary power of Congress and the Executive over immigration and the foreign policy sensitivities involved. It concluded that differential treatment of the Mariel Cuban cohort and the government's parole criteria were rationally related to legitimate governmental interests, including public safety and immigration control.
Could the detainee secure release absent repatriation to Cuba?
Yes, but only through the Attorney General's discretionary parole. The Cuban Review Plan allowed for periodic reconsideration and possible parole if the detainee no longer posed a danger or flight risk and met other criteria. There was no judicially enforceable right to release based solely on the passage of time under the pre-IIRIRA regime analyzed in Barrera-Echavarria.