Acheampong v. Keisler

250 F. App'x 158
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 4, 2007
Docket06-4068
StatusUnpublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 250 F. App'x 158 (Acheampong v. Keisler) 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
Acheampong v. Keisler, 250 F. App'x 158 (6th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

BOGGS, Chief Judge.

An Immigration Judge (IJ) decided that Alice Acheampong’s marriage was a sham, denied her petition for permanent resident status, and ordered her deported. The Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) affirmed, but allowed Acheampong to depart voluntarily. Acheampong appeals and we affirm because the record does not compel a contrary conclusion.

I

Acheampong, a native and citizen of Ghana, used her sister-in-law’s documents to enter the United States on April 20, 1992. She filed for asylum with the agency then known as the INS in 1992. The application was referred to the Executive Office of Immigration Review in 1995, but no decision was reached. According to Acheampong’s testimony before the IJ, in 1995 Acheampong was introduced to Hosea Evans, a United States citizen, by her sister-in-law. After four dates, Evans proposed and the pair married in Toledo on March 29, 1996. On October 9, 1996, Acheampong adjusted her status to “conditional permanent resident” based on the marriage. The couple filed a joint petition to remove the condition on her residency on July 15, 1998, slightly more than two years after the marriage as required by the statutory scheme. In 1999, Officer Daniel Wells of the INS reviewed Acheam *159 pong’s petition, interviewed the couple, and became suspicious because the couple “knew very little about one another” and “did not reside together.” He submitted the case for further action, but for reasons not in the record the case was returned to him in 2001 without any further action having been taken.

Wells re-interviewed the couple in November of 2001. This time the interview was videotaped, and the couple brought counsel. Before the interview, Wells learned that both Acheampong and Evans filed their taxes as “Head of Household” from separate addresses and that their joint bank account showed minimal activity. At the interview, Acheampong and Evans told different stories on multiple subjects, including whether they knew certain members of each other’s family and when and where they lived together. Acheampong could not give the names or ages of Evans’s children from his previous marriage or give any information about his hospitalization following a recent stroke. Despite being a Registered Nurse, she misidentified which side of his body the stroke harmed and could not identify any of the medicines he was taking.

On April 10, 2002, the INS denied Acheampong’s petition and on April 11 issued her a Notice to Appear in removal proceedings. Acheampong appeared before an IJ on April 4, 2003 and denied removability, challenged the termination of her status as a permanent resident, and renewed her asylum claims. 1 A full hearing was held on February 9, 2005.

At the hearing, Acheampong admitted that she has not listed Evans as a beneficiary on her health insurance or her retirement plan. She could not say where he attends church. When confronted with the separate tax returns, she blamed the preparers. She claimed that the couple began living together after their marriage, lived apart from July 2001 to late 2004 because of personal problems, financial problems, and Evans’s stroke, but then began living together again when they purchased a home in November 2004. When shown loan documents listing both Acheampong and Evans as single people residing at separate addresses, Acheampong once again claimed ignorance and blamed the preparers.

Evans testified that he suffered a stroke in 2000 that prevented him from working and created memory problems. He said that the couple lived together “on and off.” When asked to clarify that statement, he replied “[w]ell, she worked and I worked and we lived together because, on and off because it seemed like it was better that way.” Later, when asked where he lived immediately after he married Acheampong, he answered “with my daughter (from a previous marriage).” As to the taxes and the loan applications, he also blamed the preparers. His testimony repeatedly conflicted with Acheampong’s, but the BIA discounted those inconsistencies because of Evans’s poor health.

The only other witnesses were Officer Wells and Acheampong’s brother, who testified that he was present at the couple’s wedding ceremony. Acheampong submitted evidence that the couple owned a joint bank account, but it showed minimal activity. Acheampong also submitted “Letters of Support” from six people who claimed to know the couple well, but four of these *160 letters contained only identical two-sentence statements. The others came from Acheampong’s brother and sister-in-law.

On February 10, 2005, the IJ ruled that Acheampong’s marriage was a sham. He discussed the lack of documentary evidence and stated that he still could not determine whether Acheampong and Evans had lived together before 2004. He stressed that it was not the fact that they lived apart that was troubling, but the “inability of the respondent and her own witnesses, the petitioning spouse and the brother, to agree on when they lived together” that made him skeptical.

When Acheampong appealed to the BIA, the BIA acknowledged certain “irregularities” in the 2001 interview 2 and also noted Evans’s medical condition at the 2005 hearing. Therefore, the BIA placed only limited weight on the inconsistencies at the 2001 interview and Evans’s testimony at the 2005 hearing. Nevertheless, the BIA pointed to seven other facts that supported the IJ’s decision and affirmed. This appeal followed.

II

At trial, the government must prove that an alien’s marriage is fraudulent and that the alien is therefore removable. 3 8 U.S.C. § 1186a(c)(3)(D). However, on appeal we ask only if the BIA’s decision, under the proper standard, was supported by substantial evidence. Klawitter v. INS, 970 F.2d 149, 151 (6th Cir.1992). Under this standard, “[a] factual determination by the Board that an alien’s marriage was entered for the purpose of gaming entry into the United States is conclusive if it is supported by reasonable, substantial, and probative evidence in the record considered as a whole.” Bazzi v. Ashcroft, 118 Fed.Appx. 953, 956 (6th Cir.2004). This is a deferential standard; we cannot reverse merely because we would have decided the case differently. Indeed, the Supreme Court has told us that “[t]o reverse [a] BIA finding we must find that the evidence not only supports that conclusion, but compels it.” INS v. Elias-Zacarias, 502 U.S. 478, 481 n. 1, 112 S.Ct. 812, 117 L.Ed.2d 38 (1992) (emphasis in original). The deferential standard dictates our decision to affirm.

Ill

An alien who marries a United' States citizen can apply for lawful permanent resident status. For the first two years, the alien is given only conditional permanent residence. See 8 U.S.C.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kulwinder Dhaliwal v. Loretta E. Lynch
614 F. App'x 314 (Sixth Circuit, 2015)
Oriola Bebeci v. Eric Holder, Jr.
588 F. App'x 483 (Sixth Circuit, 2014)
Amer Adi v. United States
498 F. App'x 478 (Sixth Circuit, 2012)
Fang Huang v. Mukasey
523 F.3d 640 (Sixth Circuit, 2008)
Huang v. Mukasey
Sixth Circuit, 2008

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
250 F. App'x 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/acheampong-v-keisler-ca6-2007.