                 United States Court of Appeals
                             For the Eighth Circuit
                         ___________________________

                                 No. 18-3280
                         ___________________________

                              Nelson Pinos Gonzalez

                             lllllllllllllllllllllPetitioner

                                           v.

              William P. Barr, Attorney General of the United States

                            lllllllllllllllllllllRespondent
                                    ____________

                       Petition for Review of an Order of the
                           Board of Immigration Appeals
                                   ____________

                             Submitted: May 14, 2019
                                Filed: July 5, 2019
                                  ____________

Before BENTON, WOLLMAN, and GRASZ, Circuit Judges.
                         ____________

WOLLMAN, Circuit Judge.

      Nelson Pinos Gonzalez petitions for review of the denial by the Board of
Immigration Appeals (the Board) of his motion to reopen in absentia deportation
proceedings from 1994. He argues that he did not receive adequate notice of the
charges against him. Finding no abuse of discretion in the Board’s determination that
Pinos had failed to establish a case for reopening, we deny the petition.
       Pinos entered the United States without inspection in 1992. After working in
a restaurant in New York for several months, he visited his brother-in-law in
Minneapolis, where he was arrested in an immigration raid. While Pinos was in
custody, immigration officials drafted an Order to Show Cause charging him with
eligibility for deportation. The Order to Show Cause contained notices of rights and
consequences written in both English and Spanish, a copy of Pinos’s fingerprint, and
a declaration signed by an immigration agent that the form had been read to Pinos in
Spanish. The notice of rights and consequences admonished Pinos that he was
required to provide an address where he could be contacted and that he was to
provide written notice of any change in address. Pinos provided a Minneapolis
address and signed the Order to Show Cause. He then signed an Order of Release on
Recognizance form that was written only in English.

       Upon his release, or shortly thereafter, Pinos returned to New York. Notice of
his deportation proceedings was sent to the Minneapolis address that he had provided,
where it was signed for but never forwarded. He was ordered deported in March
1994.

       Pinos later moved to New Haven, Connecticut, where he eventually earned a
full-time job and fathered three U.S. citizen children with his long-term partner. In
2012, an immigration attorney advised him to self-report to Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE), which he did. He continued meeting with his local ICE officers
for approximately five years. In the meantime, Pinos’s attorney tried and failed in
2014 to reopen his deportation proceedings, and his appeal was dismissed by the
Board.

       In October 2017, Pinos’s local ICE branch abruptly informed him that he must
leave the country by November 30. Pinos thereafter filed a motion with ICE for a
discretionary stay of removal, which was denied, and new motions with the Board to
reopen his proceedings and stay his removal, which were also denied. With new

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counsel, he subsequently filed the present motion to reopen. He contends that the full
Order to Show Cause was neither presented to him nor read to him in Spanish.
Accordingly, he claims that he was unaware of the requirement that he apprise
immigration officials of his subsequent change in address, which resulted in his
absence from the hearing.

       A motion to reopen in absentia proceedings based on lack of notice may be
brought at any time. See 8 C.F.R. § 1003.23(b)(4)(iii)(A)(2). “A party seeking to
reopen exclusion proceedings must state the new facts which he intends to establish,
supported by affidavits or other evidentiary material.” Matter of Haim, 19 I. & N.
Dec. 641, 642 (BIA 1988). When the underlying proceeding was held in absentia,
“the alien must establish that he had ‘reasonable cause’ for his absence from the
proceedings.” Id. We review the Board’s refusal to reopen proceedings for abuse of
discretion, and we will affirm unless the decision was “arbitrary, irrational, or
contrary to law.” Carrete-Michel v. INS, 749 F.2d 490, 493 (8th Cir. 1984); see also
INS v. Abudu, 485 U.S. 94, 105 (1988).

       Pinos first argues that the Board failed to address the merits of his case because
it erroneously determined that his motion failed on procedural grounds. The Board’s
order clearly states, however, that Pinos was entitled to bring his motion at any time.
The Board denied Pinos’s motion on the merits, concluding that he had previously
admitted in his first motion to reopen that he had received a “charging document,
although it was referred to as a ‘Notice to Appear’ in the motion.” A Notice to
Appear is the charging document now used in removal proceedings, following the
enactment of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of
1996. As previously stated, however, the charging document prepared for Pinos in
1993 was called an Order to Show Cause.

     Pinos contends that his prior statement constituted a mere error by his former
counsel, as evidenced by the erroneous use of the term “Notice to Appear.” The

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Board held that Pinos was required to establish ineffective assistance of counsel to
negate the admission, but that he had raised no such argument. See Matter of Lozada,
19 I. & N. Dec. 637, 639 (BIA 1988) (“Litigants are generally bound by the conduct
of their attorneys, absent egregious circumstances.”). We have held that “judicial
admissions are binding for the purpose of the case in which the admissions are made
including appeals.” State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Worthington, 405 F.2d 683,
686 (8th Cir. 1968); see also Lopez-Reyes v. INS, 694 F.2d 332, 334 (5th Cir. 1982)
(applying the judicial admissions doctrine to an admission made in an immigration
administrative hearing). The Board did not err in binding Pinos by his prior
admission, absent a showing of ineffective assistance of counsel. See Martinez v.
Bally’s La., Inc., 244 F.3d 474, 477 (5th Cir. 2001) (“A judicial admission is
conclusive, unless the court allows it to be withdrawn.” (quoting Keller v. United
States, 58 F.3d 1194, 1198 n.8 (7th Cir. 1995))); Lozada, 19 I. & N. Dec. at 639
(holding that absent a showing of “egregious circumstances,” a litigant must establish
ineffective assistance of counsel to negate counsel’s binding act). Pinos does not
claim ineffective assistance of counsel in this appeal.

       Even setting Pinos’s admission aside, his allegations are contradicted by his
prior affidavits and the physical evidence. In his first affidavit, from 2014, Pinos
stated:

      I told the officials my intention was to go to New York, they never told
      me or gave me any paper to change my address. I did not hear anything
      and I thought the court was finished. I never got mail from the address
      in Minnesota.

      I never received any mail and I only received from the officials at the
      jail a letter in [E]nglish. My friend told me it sa[id] a date would be
      coming for court, but he could not explain when or if it would be in New
      York.




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In his second affidavit, from 2017, however, Pinos said, “I don’t remember exactly
what the officer told me or gave me. I can’t remember if the officer spoke to me in
English or Spanish or told me to go to court. I remember an officer took my
fingerprints, but that is pretty much all.” Finally, in his current affidavit, Pinos
describes the events as follows:

      They called our names one by one and proceeded to take us to a desk
      where an officer would ask us questions . . . . After a long wait, they
      called my name. The officer started asking me questions. After he was
      done with the questions, he asked me to put my fingers on an ink pad
      and made me press my fingers against a sheet of paper.

      At one point, we also signed some documents. I do not know what
      documents we signed, I figured it was just documents that they use to
      process people. The documents were not read to me in English or
      Spanish and the officer never clearly explained to me what I was
      signing.

      . . . [Recently] I recalled an immigration agent telling us in Spanish that
      we should wait for the documents that explain the next steps in the mail.
      I don’t recall being told what were the consequences if I didn’t follow
      through. All I knew was that something may arrive in the mail.

      . . . I did not leave the detention facility with any document in hand.

In addition to his own prior statements—which are inconsistent and contradictory
regarding which forms he was given and how much he can remember—Pinos’s
current assertions are also contradicted by the physical evidence. A special agent
certified that the Order to Show Cause had been read in Spanish and personally
served upon Pinos. Pinos then signed the line marked in both English and Spanish
“acknowledgment/receipt of this form.” In light of this evidence, the Board did not
abuse its discretion in concluding that Pinos had failed to establish reasonable cause
for his absence from his deportation proceedings based on lack of notice.


                                         -5-
       Finally, we lack jurisdiction to review the Board’s refusal to sua sponte reopen
the proceedings, see Tamenut v. Mukasey, 521 F.3d 1000, 1004-05 (8th Cir. 2008)
(en banc), and we conclude that the Board did not err in declining to rule on Pinos’s
alternative motion to remand the case to the immigration court, see In re L-V-K-, 22
I. & N. Dec. 976, 978 (BIA 1999) (holding that a motion for remand is the functional
equivalent of a motion to reopen).

      The petition for review is denied.
                       ______________________________




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