News From The Courts
Jahed
v. INS
US
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
No. 02-70487
The
Ninth Circuit granted the petition of the Jahed family to review the Board of
Immigration Appeals’ decision to deny their motion to remand and appeal of the
Immigration Judge’s decision denying their asylum petitions.
The
members of the Jahed family are citizens of Iran.
Mr. Jahed claimed that he had faced persecution in the past and feared
future persecution by soldiers of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard.
He stated that this persecution stems from his involvement with the
Mojahedin, an Iranian political group that was displaced by the current Iranian
government. Mr. Jahed stated that
the current Iranian regime has banned the Mojahedin and has ordered all members
of the group to be killed.
In
his asylum petition, Mr. Jahed recounted an incident where a soldier of the
Iranian Revolutionary Guard threatened to kill him and his family unless Mr.
Jahed paid him a large sum of money. Knowing
that he would be killed whether or not he paid the money, Mr. Jahed fled the
country with his family.
The
Immigration Judge (IJ) denied Mr. Jahed’s petition, concluding that Mr. Jahed
had established that he had been the victim of attempted extortion, but not
persecution for his political beliefs. He
further noted that Mr. Jahed’s act of fleeing Iran “was not motivated by his
political opinion or lack thereof, but rather by his inability to pay [the
money].”
Mr.
Jahed filed a motion to reconsider the IJ’s decision due to ineffective
counsel incompetent translation by the interpreter.
He also appealed the decision to the Board of Immigration appeals (BIA).
Mr. Jahed filed another motion with the BIA to consider the motion to
reopen as a motion to remand. He
later filed a supplemental petition to the BIA requesting relief under the UN
Convention Against Torture (CAT).
The
BIA accepted the IJ’s decision, dismissed Mr. Jahed’s appeal, and denied the
motion to remand. The BIA did not
address Mr. Jahed’s petition for relief under CAT.
The
Ninth Circuit concluded, “Petitioner’s evidence viewed in its totality
clearly establishes a causal connection between the persecution, the fear of
future persecution, and Petitioner’s political opinion.”
The court further noted that the IJ and BIA did not view the soldier who
committed the attempted extortion “was part of the totalitarian government to
which the Petitioner had been opposed when he was active in the Mojahedin...although
the soldier himself did not personally threaten harm, he represented that it
would be done by the government by which he was employed.”
The
court granted the Jahed’s petition: because Mr. Jahed did face persecution in
the past and did have a well-founded fear of persecution in the future, he and
his family are eligible for asylum due to Mr. Jahed’s political opinion.
*****
Mayo
v. Ashcroft
US
Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
317
F.3d 867; 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 1227
Petitioner,
a native of the Philippines, entered the United States in 1987 as an unmarried
daughter of a lawful permanent resident. Approximately
one year later, she was detained for 22 months following the INS’ finding of
documentation that indicated that she was married in the Philippines.
She claimed that the documents were only evidence of a proposal of
marriage, but spoke little English and had no representation.
The case eventually reached the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals and was
remanded for an evidentiary finding and to provide Petitioner with an
interpreter and an attorney. On
remand, the immigration judge found that she should not be deported, but the BIA
reversed his decision.
The
8th Circuit Court of Appeals did not believe that the BIA sufficiently justified
their decision with regard to Petitioner’s credibility.
The BIA relied exclusively upon the first immigration judge’s decision
and the previous appeals, which had been reversed and remanded due to many
procedural defects. The Court also
found that the IJ properly exercised his discretion in granting Petitioner a
Section 212(k) waiver, even though the BIA did not even address this issue in
their opinion.
With
regard to the validity of the marriage, the man who signed Petitioner’s
marriage license testified that the marriage was valid.
Because of inconsistencies in his statements, the IJ did find his
testimony credible. The BIA stated
that his inconsistent statements did not provide it with adequate reasons to
discredit his entire testimony. The
Court of Appeals did not find the BIA explanation sufficient.
The Court believed that the BIA did not offer the IJ the deference that
it should have and failed to provide an adequate justification for its ruling.
The Court agreed with the IJ that there was ample evidence to find that
the signature on the marriage license was forged and not a valid signature.
Due to this finding, the marriage was void because it was not performed
prior to the time that a valid marriage license was signed.
The
Court acknowledged that the case should typically be remanded for further
hearings, but in this case, the Court determined that rare enough circumstances
were involved as to allow the IJ’s order to be carried out.
Due to the fact that the Petitioner had been in immigration limbo for 12
years and the IJ’s order thoroughly examined the issue, the case was remanded
to the BIA with directions that the IJ’s order be carried out and that the
Petitioner be granted a waiver of inadmissibility under Section 212(k).
*****
Kourski
v. Ashcroft
US
Court
of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
2004
U.S. App. LEXIS 915
Vassili
Kourski, a citizen and native or Russia, petitioned for review of the order of
the Board of Immigration Appeals affirming the IJ’s denial of his application
for asylum.
The
Petitioner applied for asylum before his tourist visa expired, claiming to have
been persecuted in Russia as a result of being Jewish by anti-Semites.
The
Petitioner’s presented as evidence a copy of his Russian birth certificate
that listed his nationality as being Jewish.
The Petitioner testified that his mother sent him the birth certificate
and he did not know whether it was a forgery.
The IJ determined to the birth certificate to be a forgery, and declared
him not to be credible.
The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals granted the petition and held that because the IJ did not find that the Petitioner knew or suspected that the birth certificate was a forgery, he did not have any basis for its adverse credibility finding.
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