News From the Courts
Perez-Ajanel v. INS
United
States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (No. 02-72556)
The
Petitioner claimed that he was a member of a student organization that made
efforts to help Guatemalan refugees located in southern Mexico.
The Guatemalan government approached members of this organization and
ordered them to cease any aid to these refugees.
Members of the organization then received death threats and two members
were kidnapped. One member was
found tortured and murdered, while another member is still missing.
The Immigration Judge found the Petitioner’s testimony to be credible
and substantial evidence of a well-founded fear of persecution on account of
political opinion and granted him asylum. The
BIA found that unfulfilled threats did not constitute past persecution and that
the circumstances were changed in the Petitioner’s native country, therefore
vacating the order of asylum.
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals granted the alien’s petition. The Court found that the kidnappings and murder indicated a direct causal nexus between the persecution and the Petitioner’s membership in the documented political and humanitarian organization. In addition, while the BIA relied upon a U.S. State Department report indicating changed country conditions, the Court found that evidence indicated that the violence against student groups persisted in the alien’s native country even after other circumstances had changed.
*****
Kaur
v. Ashcroft
United
States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (No. 02-71986)
The
Petitioner, Harjeet Kaur, a native and citizen of India, sought judicial review
of a BIA holding dismissing her appeal from a decision from an Immigration
Judge. The IJ denied the
Petitioner’s application for asylum and withholding of removal on the basis
that the Petitioner failed to establish either past persecution or a
well-founded fear of future persecution.
The
Petitioner testified that she was beaten, raped, and threatened by police.
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals reviewed the decisions of the BIA and
the IJ and found that rape or sexual assault may constitute persecution.
The appellate court quoted Lim v. INS and held that “a
petitioner’s family’s continued safety does not rebut the petitioner’s
well-founded fear of future persecution when there is not evidence that the
family is ‘similarly situated or subject to similar risk, and nothing in the
record supports an inference that their safety ensures that [petitioner] will be
safe.”
The
court held that the reasons cited by the IJ for finding the Petitioner not
credible were not legitimate or substantial, and reversed and remanded the case
for further proceedings consistent with that result.
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