Background
Ricardo Rodriguez Sanchez, a native of Panama, overstayed his visa and faced removal proceedings. He sought cancellation of removal based on the hardship his four children would face if he were deported. The immigration judge denied the request, finding that the children would not suffer exceptional and extremely unusual hardship. The Board of Immigration Appeals affirmed the decision without issuing a written opinion.
The court’s reasoning
The court reviewed the denial for substantial evidence, requiring that no reasonable adjudicator would be compelled to conclude otherwise. The court found that the financial support provided by the petitioner was not sufficient to establish exceptional hardship, as financial strains are typical results of removal. Additionally, the petitioner’s children did not have compelling special needs that would justify cancellation. The court also rejected the argument that the Board of Immigration Appeals erred by affirming without a written opinion, noting that the regulations allow for summary affirmance when issues are not novel or substantial.
What it means going forward
The decision reinforces the high bar for proving exceptional and extremely unusual hardship in cancellation of removal cases and confirms the Board of Immigration Appeals’ authority to summarily affirm immigration judges’ decisions in routine cases.