News From The Courts
6th
Circuit Court of Appeals
Case
No. 02-3749
2003
US App. LEXIS 26602
The
Petitioners escaped Albania following repeated beatings and torturing of the
husband. The couple determined
escape was imperative after learning that the husband’s name was on the
Communist government’s political death list.
At
the hearing, a former coworker of the Petitioner verified the stories of the
beatings and stated that although the government had changed, the same people
were still in power. The
immigration judge denied the Petitioners’ application for asylum and for
withholding of removal, but granted their request for voluntary departure.
The IJ placed considerable weight on the Country Report and Asylum
Report, which indicated that individuals were no longer persecuted on political
grounds. The BIA affirmed without
opinion.
The
Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals found support for the IJ’s determination that
the Petitioner’s suffered past persecution and no well-founded fear of future
prosecution. However, the Court
agreed with the Petitioners that the IJ abused his discretion by not considering
whether the long-term persecution of the Petitioner and his family was
sufficiently atrocious to merit a discretionary grant of asylum under In re
Chen, 20 I&N Dec. at 18.
Since
the IJ did not address the issue of humanitarian asylum in his opinion, the
Court remanded for a decision as to whether the persecution that the Petitioners
suffered was sufficient to merit a grant of asylum for humanitarian reasons.
The Court instructed the IJ to offer a clear explanation and
determination of whether the Petitioners’ past persecution warrants a
discretionary grant of asylum.
*****
Zhang
v. Ashcroft
9th
Circuit Court of Appeals
2004
US App. LEXIS 719
Xiaodong
Zhang, a native and citizen of China, petitioned for review of the Board of
Immigration Appeals’ holding denying him asylum, withholding of removal, and
relief under the Convention Against Torture.
The
Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals granted the petition and held that the BIA’s
and IJ’s holdings that the Petitioner was not credible were not supported by
substantial evidence. Further, no
determination was made as to whether the Petitioner’s testimony, if credible,
was sufficient to establish eligibility for relief.
As
a result, the Ninth Circuit granted the petition and remanded the case back to
the BIA.
*****
Cardenas-Morfin
v. Ashcroft
9th
Circuit Court of Appeals
2004
US App. LEXIS 807
Sergio
Cardenas-Morfin petitioned for review of the Board of Immigration Appeals and
the Immigration Judge’s denial of his application for cancellation of removal
and voluntary departure.
The
Petitioner argues on appeal that the Immigration Judge violated his
constitutional right to due process in denying him a full and fair hearing.
The
Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals found that the Immigration Judge prevented the
Petitioner from testifying in support of his application for cancellation of
removal. This denial of testifying
denied him from presenting crucial evidence to support his application.
The court also found that the IJ limited the Petitioner’s testimony in
support of his application for voluntary departure.
The Immigration Judge refused to allow testimony in support of the
Petitioner’s good moral character after the INS introduced evidence that the
Petitioner intentionally made false statements to the IRS on old tax returns.
The
Ninth Circuit found that the Immigration Judge’s refusal to allow the
Petitioner a chance to rebut the INS’s contentions likely did affect the
outcome of the proceedings. As a
result, the court granted the petition and remanded the case for future
proceedings.
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