Matter of Yam, Interim Decision #2653

Decision Date30 May 1978
Docket NumberInterim Decision #2653,A-15950259
PartiesMATTER OF YAM In Deportation Proceedings
CourtU.S. DOJ Board of Immigration Appeals

This case presents an appeal from a decision of the immigration judge on September 29, 1977, finding the respondent deportable and ordering his deportation to Hong Kong on the charge contained in the Order to Show Cause and the charge contained in the Additional Charges. The appeal will be sustained.

The respondent is a native and citizen of China, who last entered the United States in August 1977, allegedly without inspection by an immigration officer. He had previously been deported from this country in 1965, 1969, and, following denial of his motion to reopen these proceedings in order to apply for withholding of deportation, again in June 1977. He failed to obtain permission from the proper authority last August to reapply for admission to this country after his third deportation two months earlier.

About nine or ten o'clock on the evening of August 23, 1977, two fishermen discovered the respondent floating after dark in the Niagara River, near Lewiston, New York. They pulled him into their boat about 100 feet off the American shoreline. One of the fishermen, Kenneth Dunkin, testified that he did not know the exact location of the International Boundary Line, but that the respondent was then unconscious (Tr. p. 7). The two fishermen radioed ashore for assistance and were met at the dock by the Lewiston Chief of Police, who likewise did not know the exact location of the International Border (Tr. p. 17). The latter testified that the respondent was then semiconscious and being administered oxygen. He followed the ambulance to Mount St. Mary's Hospital, calling en route for a Border Patrol Agent to meet him there because he was suspicious of an illegal entry (Tr. p. 14). The Chief of Police also testified that he took custody of a black garbage bag that the alien had in his possession when rescued (Tr. p. 12). It contained inter alia a Hong Kong passport, driver's licenses from New York and New Jersey, and a "multitude of pictures" (Tr. p. 13). The Police Chief and the Senior Inspector first interviewed the respondent after he had been x-rayed and treated in the hospital's emergency room. The respondent allegedly was given the Miranda warning by the Senior Inspector (Tr. ...

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