kk405,
Do you mind me asking which District court are you in?
Southern District of New York
kk405,
Do you mind me asking which District court are you in?
Friends,
As promised, I am posting the final version of my appelate brief. Not that I wish somebody else to go thru the appeal process, but I think it has some good points and it can be used for other motions/responses during district court action. And if somebody has to appeal, it will be a good starting point as the brief conforms to the rules of appelate procedure. If you use it, please apply your sound judgment as I do not pretend to be always right.
The best wishes to all of you!
Thanks shvili.... I looked at my case on pacer and there is no other documents after the Judge's Order 2 weeks ago....I am not aware of the Judge giving permission to the AUSA to file a 'reconsideration motion'...However, in the Motion, the AUSA is arguing that " ...in issuing its Order, the Court may have overlooked facts and authorities that, had they been considered, may have influenced, and possibly changed, the Court's decision' and then it goes into details of 'examination' 'lack of jurisdiction',
and this is also very important regarding 'examination': there is a point in the Motion that says the ONLY Court of Appeals to have considered the question of 'examination' was a recent one in the 5th cir. June 19, 2007 Walji vs. Gonzales, where the Plaintiff apparently lost...
I am preparing my motion and as of now, I am calling it ' Plaintiff's Memorandum of Law in Support of Court's Order dated .../.../...'
Thanks shvili.... I looked at my case on pacer and there is no other documents after the Judge's Order 2 weeks ago....I am not aware of the Judge giving permission to the AUSA to file a 'reconsideration motion'...However, in the Motion, the AUSA is arguing that " ...in issuing its Order, the Court may have overlooked facts and authorities that, had they been considered, may have influenced, and possibly changed, the Court's decision' and then it goes into details of 'examination' 'lack of jurisdiction',
and this is also very important regarding 'examination': there is a point in the Motion that says the ONLY Court of Appeals to have considered the question of 'examination' was a recent one in the 5th cir. June 19, 2007 Walji vs. Gonzales, where the Plaintiff apparently lost...
I am preparing my motion and as of now, I am calling it ' Plaintiff's Memorandum of Law in Support of Court's Order dated .../.../...'
Lazycis (or anyone else with experience),
We filed the response to AUSA's MTD last week.
1- What is the benefit of motion for summary judgment? Does it just put somewhat of an extra pressure on the judge to decide in our favor? I have heard/seen in the past those getting denied; if that happens, is it a bad sign?
2- I have been reading stuff about "joint stipulation" to remand the case back to CIS for them to decide in 30 days of whatever. I am assuming it means that plaintiff and AUSA decide together to file this request. Is that correct? Also, is this something that is initiated by the AUSA or is it a good idea for me to do it?
Finally, which of the two should be done first? Or both one after the other?
Thanks
Lazycis,
I read through it and it looks good to me. I hope things go well for you!
Couple questions:
1- Can you do this Pro se, or do you have to do it with an attorney?
2- Are there any resources that can help Pro se people prepare these appeals and so on, and explain the whole procedure of how to go about the appeal procedure?
Thanks shvili.... I looked at my case on pacer and there is no other documents after the Judge's Order 2 weeks ago....I am
I am preparing my motion and as of now, I am calling it ' Plaintiff's Memorandum of Law in Support of Court's Order dated .../.../...'
Hi KK,
Could you tell me the name of AUSA? I filed WOM at the same court.
imhrb,
1. MSJ may lead to a quick resolution of your case (it can go either way). If you file MSJ, opposing party usually files cross-motion for summary judgment. So there are different scenarios (your MSJ granted, their MSJ denied - you won; your MSJ denied, their MSJ granted - you lost; both MSJ denied - the process continues; sometimes MSJ can be granted in part, so there are a few variables).
2. You are correct, it's a mutual motion and can be initiated by either side. It does not hurt to try. It's always good to establish a good working relationship with AUSA. Try to do it first, if it does not work out, you may file for MSJ, but my advice is to wait until MTD is denied.
What is the benefit of joint stipulation? Is it just that the case is NOT dismissed (so the court still has it in active state), and then the CIS has 30 more days? And would the AUSA really go for it if he is focused on getting the case dismissed?
Hi KK,
Do you have the order for dismiss AUSA's MTD in southern district court? Could you post it?
Thanks.
Wait for all return receipts, than fill the second pages using information from the return receipts. Or you can just attach receipt to the second pages of the summons. Then file both pages with the district court. If you do not have a copy of the first page, do not worry, prepare a document titled "Proof of service", state that you are filing this as the proof that you've served the defendants and attach all the return receipts.
The benefit is that both you and AUSA have an opportunity to get rid of the case with minimal effort. So it really depends on AUSA. If AUSA has sympathy to your situation and does not like to work hard to defend a difficult case, s/he may go for it.
Lazycis (or anyone else with experience),
We filed the response to AUSA's MTD last week.
1- What is the benefit of motion for summary judgment? Does it just put somewhat of an extra pressure on the judge to decide in our favor? I have heard/seen in the past those getting denied; if that happens, is it a bad sign?
2- I have been reading stuff about "joint stipulation" to remand the case back to CIS for them to decide in 30 days of whatever. I am assuming it means that plaintiff and AUSA decide together to file this request. Is that correct? Also, is this something that is initiated by the AUSA or is it a good idea for me to do it?
Finally, which of the two should be done first? Or both one after the other?
Thanks
Thanks shvili.... I looked at my case on pacer and there is no other documents after the Judge's Order 2 weeks ago....I am not aware of the Judge giving permission to the AUSA to file a 'reconsideration motion'...However, in the Motion, the AUSA is arguing that " ...in issuing its Order, the Court may have overlooked facts and authorities that, had they been considered, may have influenced, and possibly changed, the Court's decision' and then it goes into details of 'examination' 'lack of jurisdiction',
and this is also very important regarding 'examination': there is a point in the Motion that says the ONLY Court of Appeals to have considered the question of 'examination' was a recent one in the 5th cir. June 19, 2007 Walji vs. Gonzales, where the Plaintiff apparently lost...
I am preparing my motion and as of now, I am calling it ' Plaintiff's Memorandum of Law in Support of Court's Order dated .../.../...'
kk405,
Even though you're not from CA, the laws are federal and the rule for a formal permission from the judge to file motion for reconsideration should apply in your district. Depending on how good a relationship is between your judge and your AUSA, rules are bent oftentimes, but I think the judge should still formally allow it before AUSA can file. Now, since you're not from the 5th district, their recent ruling should not be weighted heavier than an older, but heavily relied upon 9th Cir. ruling in Hovsepian case. Hopefully you can look it up- it's quoted in many posted 1447 decisions. In Hovsepian, even though CIS said they adjudicated plaintiff's petition, the judge threw out that adjudication because it was done AFTER plaintiff filed 1447 law suit which automatically transferred jurisdiction to court. The judge said that under 1447jurisdiction lies in court from the date petition is filed, so CIS had no right to act afterwards. Although I don't remember if that judge specifically argued "examination" as an event not a process (-Danilov's argument). the fact that judge admitted jurisdiction under 1447 implies he agreed with this logic. You should pull up Hovsepian ruling (from members or simply search it on Pacer), and rely on it when you prepare your brief to answer AUSA motion to reconsider. Also, use very good argument in Paz' draft of Opp to MTD on examinationvs investigation (re-posted by him last week, I think), and many rulings on this by district courts.
Again, at this point your judge may not even allow AUSA to file, but it's good you're working on your Memo brief anyway. Also, since you're in NY, you may call NY Pro se Office (I posted their number several times, the last time before July4th) Even if you're from a another NY district, they should hopefully talk to you since they even talked to me (and I said I'm from CA). See if they give any more insight.
I haven't thought about opposing that 5th dist. ruling, but overwhelming number of courts ruled in plaintiffs' favor, and just a handful in defendants'. Even TX dist courts ruled for Plaintiffs on this before. This should be your main line of defense (against AUSA's that judge overlooked "facts and authorities").
But I really think you should still get CIS/FBI approval. Your case is very strong after judge's ruling.
Good luck!
Hello, Guys
I Am Trying To Attached The Sample Of Appeal That I Used To Send To 9th Court Of Appeal So You Guys Can See And Modify It And Use It To Fit Your Case. But Do Not See The Attachment Link Here
Send Me Instruction And I Will Attached The BRIEF OF APPEAL TO THE 9TH CIRCUIT COURT.
Thanks
Hi lazycis, I read in the first topic of this thread when I file the return receipts (from the summons) to the court, I should also send the copy to the US attorney. Is this correct? So basically I should send the exact copy of what I will be filing with the court to the US attorney?
Thanks!