Ahmad Ali v. Eric Holder, Jr.

534 F. App'x 286
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 2, 2013
Docket12-4066
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 534 F. App'x 286 (Ahmad Ali v. Eric Holder, Jr.) 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
Ahmad Ali v. Eric Holder, Jr., 534 F. App'x 286 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

BERNICE BOUIE DONALD, Circuit Judge.

Ahmed Ali, a citizen of Pakistan, claims that he would be subjected to political persecution if he returned to his home country. After an immigration judge and the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) denied his application for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the U.N. Convention Against Torture (CAT), Ali filed a petition for review. He asserts that the BIA’s credibility and lack of corroboration determinations were not supported by substantial evidence. We disagree, and DENY his petition for review.

I.

Ahmed Ali is a thirty-year-old native and citizen of Pakistan. In 1997, he decided to follow in his father’s political footsteps by joining the Muslim League. He served as the party’s fundraising secretary and as a recruiter.

The Muslim League was at loggerheads with Pervez Musharraf, a military general who ascended to power in 1999. With the political tides changing, Ali’s life became more difficult. Police officers arrested Ali on July 21, 2000 for participating in a march protesting Musharraf’s regime. They detained him for one day and beat him with shoes and sticks, causing Ali to bleed. Having never been told what the charges against him were, Ali was released after his father posted bail.

On January 7, 2001, Ali participated in a hunger strike protesting the Musharraf government; once again, he was arrested. This time, he spent three days in jail. During his detention, he was beaten, occasionally denied food, and repeatedly asked to sign documents disavowing his own party. On the third day, when Ali refused to sign the disavowal documents, a police officer threw Ali to the floor. Ali hit his head, began bleeding from it, and lost consciousness.

He woke up in the intensive-care unit (ICU) of a hospital, allegedly with eight stitches on his head. After two days in the ICU, Ali was transferred to a private *288 room. Police officers were stationed outside Ali’s door, waiting to re-arrest him and accompany him back to the local station. To escape, Ali jumped out of his second-story hospital window, landing without serious injury to himself.

At the direction of his father, Ali left his hometown of Lahore and headed to Karachi. Once in Karachi, he hid from authorities by staying at the home of his father’s friend.

The day after Ali’s hospital escape, police officers went to his family’s home. They harassed Ali’s mother and arrested his brother Tariq, beating him in the process. Fearing for his life and in search of escape from police harassment, Tariq left for Spain. The police eventually returned to the home, antagonizing Ali’s mother once more and arresting Ali’s father. They placed Ali’s father in confinement and occasionally beat him. After a week, he was released. In response to such harassment, Ali’s mother joined Tariq in Spain, while Ali’s father went into hiding.

For almost six months, Ali hid in Karachi. He left Pakistan on June 10, 2001, accompanied by a man named Sharas. The two posed as father and son in their travels, using false passports. According to Ali’s asylum application, he traveled through Turkey, France, and the United Kingdom to reach the United States. During his testimony, he added that he also traveled through Canada. 1

In Canada, the two encountered problems. Customs agents confiscated then-passports and instructed the pair to return to the airport three days later. When the duo returned, the agents explained that they merely wanted to verify the identities on the passports. Ali and Sharas resumed their journey thereafter.

On June 21, 2001, Ali reached the United States by way of New York. He subsequently moved to Columbus, Ohio, moving in with another one of his father’s friends. Despite the fact that Ali never had a valid passport, he filed a police report claiming that he lost his passport so that he could obtain a new one. The Pakistani consulate in New York provided a temporary passport after Ali produced identification and a copy of his birth certificate.

Ali filed an asylum application on April 3, 2002. In 2004, Ali’s father sent him documents supporting his asylum claim; Ali stored these documents in his car. The car, however, was stolen later that year, with its contents rendered irretrievable.

Nevertheless, Ali had photocopies of three documents: two police reports — both in Urdu — detailing Ali’s two arrests, as well as a Pakistani hospital memo, written in English, confirming Ali’s stay in the ICU. 2 The memo reads, in its entirety:

This is certified that Mr. Ahmed Ali s/o Mr. Liaqhat Ali was brought to the hospital on 10 of January 2001, where he was under Dr. Iftikhar Cheerna, stayed in ICU for 3 days and was move to the private Room 15 Second floor. Our Records do not show any departure date, according to Police of Gulshan Ravi, Mr. Ahmed Ali was guilty of a crime and ran away from the Window.

To further support his asylum application, Ali submitted a letter from Tariq, describing the future persecution that Ali might be subjected to if he were to return to Pakistan. For his return address, Tariq *289 listed the family home in Pakistan. He wrote:

I am keeping you [up to date] about the political situation here in Pakistan. Current [government] is giving hard time to protestors. I heard one of your close friend died inside the jail. I am requesting you not to come back here till present Gov’t is in power place, your life here will be in big danger.
I will keep you update about political situation. Once again don’t come back here, till you hear from me.

Ali did not submit the envelope that delivered his brother’s letter.

In 2007, Ali married a U.S. citizen. They have two children together. Evidently, the marriage did not go over well with Ali’s father, who severed relations with Ali. Other members of the family were also displeased about the marriage.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) served Ali with a Notice to Appear on June 18, 2008. Ali conceded all factual allegations and did not contest removability. He requested asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the U.N. Convention Against Torture.

The immigration judge (IJ) denied relief. Six inconsistencies between Ali’s testimony and asylum application led the IJ to conclude that Ali was not credible. First, Ali failed to mention on his asylum application that he traveled through Canada during his trip from Pakistan to the United States — this fact had only surfaced during his testimony. Second, Ali had no scar from the injury allegedly inflicted by a police officer during his detention — an injury that purportedly required eight stitches. Third, Tariq’s letter sounded as if it was sent from Pakistan, despite Ali’s testimony that Tariq was living in Spain at the time. Fourth, the medical record detailing Ali’s hospital stay was written in English, instead of Urdu like the two police reports. Fifth, the IJ noted that Ali filed a false police report to obtain a replacement Pakistani passport while in the United States.

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