Department of State v. Munoz
Case Overview
The Supreme Court held 6-3 that the Constitution does not give a U.S. citizen a fundamental right to have a noncitizen spouse admitted to the country. The State Department's visa denial therefore did not infringe a constitutionally protected liberty interest and was subject only to rational-basis review.
The Facts
Luis Asencio-Cordero, a Salvadoran national, was denied a visa by a consular officer who cited concerns about gang affiliation under the Immigration and Nationality Act. His wife, U.S. citizen Sandra Munoz, challenged the denial, arguing she had a constitutional right to live in the United States with her husband.
The Application
Under the consular nonreviewability doctrine, the Court rejected Munoz's liberty-interest argument because no fundamental right exists to have a noncitizen spouse admitted to the United States. The visa denial for gang-affiliation concerns satisfied rational-basis review without requiring disclosure of the officer's reasoning or judicial second-guessing of the consular determination. Since immigration admissions decisions rest within the executive's plenary power and do not implicate a protected constitutional interest, the State Department's discretionary denial was unreviewable.
The Conclusion
**Court ruled 6-3 for the State Department.** No constitutional right to spousal immigration. Barrett wrote the majority; Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson dissented.
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