[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 8, Volume 1]
[Revised as of January 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 8CFR3.46]

[Page 43-44]
 
                     TITLE 8--ALIENS AND NATIONALITY
 
CHAPTER I--IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
 
PART 3--EXECUTIVE OFFICE FOR IMMIGRATION REVIEW--Table of Contents
 
            Subpart C--Immigration Court--Rules of Procedure
 
Sec. 3.46  Protective orders, sealed submissions in Immigration Courts.

    (a) Authority. In any immigration or bond proceeding, Immigration 
Judges may, upon a showing by the Service of a substantial likelihood 
that specific information submitted under seal or to be submitted under 
seal will, if disclosed, harm the national security (as defined in 
section 219(c)(2) of the Act) or law enforcement interests of the United 
States, issue a protective order barring disclosure of such information.
    (b) Motion by the service. The Service may at any time after filing 
a Notice to Appear, or other charging document, file with the 
Immigration Judge, and serve upon the respondent, a motion for an order 
to protect specific information it intends to submit or is submitting 
under seal. The motion shall describe, to the extent practical, the 
information that the Service seeks to protect from disclosure. The 
motion shall specify the relief requested in the protective order. The 
respondent may file a response to the motion within ten days after the 
motion is served.
    (c) Sealed annex to motion. In the Service's discretion, the Service 
may file the specific information as a sealed annex to the motion, which 
shall not be served upon the respondent. If the Service files a sealed 
annex, or the Immigration Judge, in his or her discretion, instructs 
that the information be filed as a sealed annex in order to determine 
whether to grant or deny the motion, the Immigration Judge shall 
consider the information only for the purpose of determining whether to 
grant or deny the motion.
    (d) Due deference. The Immigration Judge shall give appropriate 
deference to the expertise of senior officials in law enforcement and 
national security agencies in any averments in any submitted affidavit 
in determining whether the disclosure of information will harm the 
national security or law enforcement interests of the United States.
    (e) Denied motions. If the motion is denied, any sealed annex shall 
be returned to the Service, and the Immigration Judge shall give no 
weight to such information. The Service may immediately appeal denial of 
the motion to the Board, which shall have jurisdiction to hear the 
appeal, by filing a Notice of Appeal and the sealed annex with the 
Board. The Immigration Judge shall hold any further proceedings in 
abeyance pending resolution of the appeal by the Board.
    (f) Granted motions. If the motion is granted, the Immigration Judge 
shall issue an appropriate protective order.
    (1) The Immigration Judge shall ensure that the protective order 
encompasses such witnesses as the respondent demonstrates are reasonably 
necessary to the presentation of his case. If necessary, the Immigration 
Judge may impose the requirements of the protective order on any witness 
before the Immigration Judge to whom such information may be disclosed.
    (2) The protective order may require that the respondent, and his or 
her attorney or accredited representative, if any:
    (i) Not divulge any of the information submitted under the 
protective order, or any information derived therefrom, to any person or 
entity, other than authorized personnel of the Executive Office for 
Immigration Review, the Service, or such other persons approved by the 
Service or the Immigration Judge;
    (ii) When transmitting any information under a protective order, or 
any information derived therefrom, to the

[[Page 44]]

Executive Office for Immigration Review or the Service, include a cover 
sheet identifying the contents of the submission as containing 
information subject to a protective order under this section;
    (iii) Store any information under a protective order, or any 
information derived therefrom, in a reasonably secure manner, and return 
all copies of such information to the Service upon completion of 
proceedings, including judicial review; and
    (iv) Such other requirements as the Immigration Judge finds 
necessary to protect the information from disclosure.
    (3) Upon issuance of such protective order, the Service shall serve 
the respondent with the protective order and the sealed information. A 
protective order issued under this section shall remain in effect until 
vacated by the Immigration Judge.
    (4) Further review of the protective order before the Board shall 
only be had pursuant to review of an order of the Immigration Judge 
resolving all issues of removability and any applications for relief 
pending in the matter pursuant to 8 CFR 3.1(b). Notwithstanding any 
other provision of this section, the Immigration Judge shall retain 
jurisdiction to modify or vacate a protective order upon motion of the 
Service or the respondent. An Immigration Judge may not grant a motion 
by the respondent to modify or vacate a protective order until either: 
the Service files a response to such motion or 10 days after service of 
such motion on the Service.
    (g) Admissibility as Evidence. The issuance of a protective order 
shall not prejudice the respondent's right to challenge the 
admissibility of the information subject to a protective order. The 
Immigration Judge may not find the information inadmissible solely 
because it is subject to a protective order.
    (h) Seal. Any submission to the Immigration Judge, including any 
briefs, referring to information subject to a protective order shall be 
filed under seal. Any information submitted subject to a protective 
order under this paragraph shall remain under seal as part of the 
administrative record.
    (i) Administrative enforcement. If the Service establishes that a 
respondent, or the respondent's attorney or accredited representative, 
has disclosed information subject to a protective order, the Immigration 
Judge shall deny all forms of discretionary relief, except bond, unless 
the respondent fully cooperates with the Service or other law 
enforcement agencies in any investigation relating to the noncompliance 
with the protective order and disclosure of the information; and 
establishes by clear and convincing evidence either that extraordinary 
and extremely unusual circumstances exist or that failure to comply with 
the protective order was beyond the control of the respondent and his or 
her attorney or accredited representative. Failure to comply with a 
protective order may also result in the suspension of an attorney's or 
an accredited representative's privilege of appearing before the 
Executive Office for Immigration Review or before the Service pursuant 
to 8 CFR part 3, subpart G.

[67 FR 36802, May 28, 2002]

Subpart D [Reserved]