Introduction
Envision a thirty-year-old man who works part time for a shipping company and has been residing in the United States without legal status since 2022.
Now imagine that his boss, knowing that this noncitizen would not risk the potential immigration ramifications of interacting with law enforcement, involves him in a spinoff of the legitimate shipping business: narcotics transport and trafficking. All he does is unpack and repack these shipments to send to their next destination, but he does so knowingly, and this minor action inculpates him in the trade. The DHS, which has increasingly focused efforts on preventing illicit drug trade,
traces a shipment back to him. Brought in for questioning, he immediately shares whatever information he has on his boss’s business, but his knowledge is limited. The U.S. Attorney’s Office, recognizing his complicated situation and minor involvement in the crime during a criminal proffer, decides not to bring charges.
Interaction with federal law enforcement, however, does not end there. Now that DHS has records indicating he is someone who entered the country without legal paperwork, he is at risk of immigration action.
The growing overlap between criminal and immigration law, coined “crimmigration,”
has significant effects on noncitizens in the United States. Immigration law has evolved from merely refusing entry to individuals with preexisting criminal histories to increasingly deporting people who have committed crimes or are “deemed likely to commit” certain crimes.
Currently, individuals residing in the country without legal status who have engaged in criminal activity are eligible to receive immigration protections through S nonimmigrant visas if they sign on to work with government agencies as formal cooperators or informants.
Those protections will not, however, apply in a situation like the hypothetical above. There is no formal immigration protection available for an individual who played such a minor role in a larger criminal scheme. Even if they fully cooperate in a criminal proffer, a law enforcement agency may not value their aid to the same extent as that of a formal cooperator or informant. This structure seemingly contravenes the goals of criminal and immigration law by failing to protect vulnerable accomplices who have not been charged with wrongdoing.
Compared to the typical cooperator who “forces the government to ‘buy’ information that the ‘concerned citizen’ would have freely given,”
noncitizens without legal status may not feel comfortable freely interacting with law enforcement. Their willingness to work openly and truthfully with criminal agencies once discovered thus indicates “a genuine desire to make amends for wrongdoing.”
This is especially the case for the class of individuals addressed by this Note, who were so minorly involved in criminal activity that charges were not brought against them.
This group falls into a quite unfortunate trap—they were not involved enough in criminal activity to gain formal immigration benefits, yet their contact with criminal authorities is likely the reason they are considered priority status for immigration action. Having become subject to government attention, they face a dire need for immigration protection. Whatever prejudice stems from their interaction with the criminal system should thus be expunged by their cooperation.
This Note proposes shielding such susceptible populations by expanding immigration protections. In the criminal sphere, charged individuals who lack the ability to render the substantial assistance needed for formal cooperation can still be eligible for a “safety valve” if, in good faith, they provide details on the activities that they partook in. Recipients of safety-valve protections receive sentences below the defined statutory minimums for the crimes they have committed. The information they provide need not be unknown to the government nor particularly relevant or useful in future trials of higher-ups.
So long as the defendant did not serve as an organizer or leader in the conduct at hand and has provided all the information that they have related to said conduct, they may qualify for safety-valve provisions.
Recipients do not obtain as much of a reduction in sentencing as cooperators or informants do, but they still benefit from engaging honestly with law enforcement.
This Note proposes mirroring such a protection—a lesser version of the S visa modeled after the safety valve—in the immigration context.
The Note proceeds in three Parts. Part I details existing avenues for working with the government to gain nonimmigrant status, which provides temporary legal residence in the United States.
Some of these opportunities have the potential to lead to permanent residency while others do not, depending on the level of assistance an individual provides to government officials. It then lays out current guidelines and immigration priorities for DHS officials. This Part explains why none of the existing immigration protections adequately cover the group addressed in this Note.
Part II focuses on individuals overlooked by the existing system. It highlights the high bar to serving as a cooperator or informant and the many critiques of these roles. As an alternative, this Part explores the requirements and benefits of the criminal safety valve and good-faith cooperation. It then elucidates why the S visa, as it is currently set up, cannot be expanded to include individuals who meet the truthful information-sharing requirements of the criminal safety valve and good-faith cooperation.
Finally, Part III proposes a feasible protection for such individuals based on existing movements in immigration law. Specifically, it advocates for broadened protections coupled with a deferred removal program that does not waive the right to judicial resort. While deferred removal is not the ideal proposal to support migrants, this Part clarifies why such a program is the most feasible option in the current immigration climate. It then highlights systematic issues to address for effective implementation of the proposal.