Abdulahad v. Holder

581 F.3d 290, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 20426, 2009 WL 2923259
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 15, 2009
Docket08-3850
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 581 F.3d 290 (Abdulahad v. Holder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abdulahad v. Holder, 581 F.3d 290, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 20426, 2009 WL 2923259 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

FRIEDMAN, Circuit Judge.

The principal issue in this immigration appeal is whether the record supports the immigration judge’s determination that the marriage of a male non-citizen alien to a female American citizen was a sham, entered into to enable the alien to remain in the United States. The alien also challenges various aspects of the proceedings before the immigration judge. Based on her rulings, the immigration judge ordered the alien removed from the United States. The Board of Immigration Appeals upheld that decision, and we DENY the petition for review.

I

A. The petitioner Imad Abdulahad is a Syrian citizen who legally entered the United States as a nonimmigrant, student in October 1994. Before his student visa expired, in 1997 he married Carmel McKentry, a United States citizen. Based on that marriage, the Immigration and Naturalization Service on March 24, 1998, adjusted his status to “conditional lawful permanent resident.” See Immigration and Naturalization Act § 216(a)(1) [8 U.S.C. 1186a(a)(l) ]. Under that statute, within two years of that status adjustment and within 90 days of the end of that two-year period, the alien and his spouse were required to file a petition to remove the conditions on residence. See INA §§ 216(c)(1), (d)(2) [8 U.S.C. §§ 1186a(c)(l), (d)(2) ]; 8 C.F.R. § 1216.2.

On January 31, 2000, Abdulahad and McKentry jointly filed such a petition. Approximately two years later, however, after an immigration official indicated to her during an interview that he knew she was not living with Abdulahad, McKentry withdrew her joinder in the petition. She also filed two sworn statements that she had married Abdulahad in exchange for $6,000 to help him stay in the United States, that she and Abdulahad did not have a sexual relationship during their marriage, that she stayed at Abdulahad’s house only occasionally, “in case INS showed up,” and that her “marriage to Imad Abdulahad was a sham and entered into for the sole purpose of helping him stay in the United States.” She stated they had lived together for seven months.

In April 2002, the Immigration and Naturalization Service notified Abdulahad that because the joint petition was withdrawn, his conditional status was terminated, effective March 24, 2000, and that it proposed to remove him. While the removal proceeding was pending, Abdulahad filed a new Petition to Remove the Conditions on Residence, in which he requested a waiver of the joint filing requirement on the ground that his removal would cause extreme hardship and because he had married McKentry in good faith. He contends this filing extended his status as a conditional lawful permanent resident. The Department of Homeland Security denied this petition on February 11, 2005.

*293 In the removal proceedings, Abdulahad denied all charges and again requested a waiver of the joint petition requirements of § 216(c)(1), on the same grounds he previously had asserted: extreme hardship and that he married McKentry in good faith.

At the hearing before the immigration judge in the removal proceedings, McKentry and Abdulahad presented conflicting evidence about their marriage. McKentry repeated the sworn statements she previously had made. She testified that, in return for marrying Abdulahad she was to be paid $6,000 and was to participate in immigration proceedings. The marriage never was consumated and she and Abdulahad did not live together as husband and wife. They never intended to establish a life together and she never behaved as if she was his wife, in public or with friends and family. They had a joint checking account, which she occasionally used. Over the course of the marriage, Abdulahad gave her approximately four thousand dollars.

Before each of the two interviews with immigration officials she attended, McKentry and Abdulahad rehearsed what they were going to say, and they were not living together at the time of either interview. When she supposedly was living with Abdulahad in East Lansing, she instead was living in housing on the campus of Michigan State University. She signed various apartment leases to create the appearance that she and Abdulahad were living together. Photographs of the two of them together that Abdulahad presented were taken to submit to immigration authorities as evidence that the two had established a life together.

McKentry testified that she had given inaccurate, sworn statements to the government at an interview with immigration officials, as well as in numerous documents submitted in support of Abdulahad’s immigration efforts. She also testified that on February 22, 2002, she signed a statement that her marriage was a sham and entered into solely to help Abdulahad stay in the United States.

While she was married to Abdulahad, she had a child by another man, of which Abdulahad was not aware until after it was born.

Abdulahad gave a completely different version of their relationship. He testified that the two were married in a civil wedding ceremony on August 5, 1997. No family members or friends attended or were even aware that a wedding would occur. After the wedding, he and McKentry began living together in East Lansing in a one-bedroom apartment. They also opened a joint checking account at Citizens bank. She co-signed his application for a student loan.

Abdulahad stated that his marriage with McKentry broke down after her younger sister died in 1998. He said that after that McKentry became a different person. She started partying and staying out late and eventually became a stripper at a local night club. He suspected her of drug use.

Abdulahad presented documentary evidence to support his claims, including apartment leases and joint bank account statements.

He admitted that his prior sworn statement to immigration officials that he and McKentry had not been separated for more than a day was false and gave multiple explanations for it. He was not truthful when he said they were living together in East Lansing at the time of the interview and explained the statement on the ground that he believed she “would always come back.”

B. In a lengthy oral opinion that discussed the evidence in detail, the immigration judge found that “this marriage was *294 entered into solely for the purpose of the respondent obtaining his residency status, and this marriage was not entered into in good faith.” She ordered him removed.

The immigration judge found Abdulahad “not to be credible and that his ex-spouse testimony was forthright and credible.” The administrative judge “note[dj” “that on direct examination,” Abdulahad “was able to recall the dates, and the exact address where the respondent and his ex-spouse, reportedly lived more then a decade ago” “with virtual perfect accuracy.” The immigration judge then “f[ou]nd” that Abdulahad

was essentially scripted during much of his testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
581 F.3d 290, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 20426, 2009 WL 2923259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abdulahad-v-holder-ca6-2009.