Ahmedmehrabi v. Gonzales

250 F. App'x 164
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 4, 2007
Docket06-4057
StatusUnpublished

This text of 250 F. App'x 164 (Ahmedmehrabi v. Gonzales) 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
Ahmedmehrabi v. Gonzales, 250 F. App'x 164 (6th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

Mr. Masoud Ahmedmehrabi and his family appeal the decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals denying their requested relief and ordering their removal to Iran. Mr. Ahmedmehrabi is an Iranian national who sought asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture for both himself and his family. After a hearing, the Immigration Judge denied all requested relief and ordered that Mr. Ahmedmehrabi and his family be removed to Iran. He appealed the IJ’s decision. The Board of Immigration Appeals dismissed his appeal in a per curiam opinion. We deny Ahmedmehrabi’s petition for review because the IJ’s determinations that Mr. Ahmedmehrabi and his family do not qualify for asylum, withholding of removal, or relief under CAT are supported by substantial evidence.

I. Background

Mr. Ahmedmehrabi lived and practiced medicine in Tehran, Iran from 1991 until October 2000, when he came to the United States on a B-l visa. His wife and children followed in October 2001 on non-immigrant dependent visas (H-4). It is undisputed that he and his family overstayed their visas and are subject to removal. They applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture in December 2002, and in January 2003 the Immigration and Naturalization Service charged them with being subject to removal.

To support his claims for relief, Mr. Ahmedmehrabi claims that in Iran he was advised not to talk politics at work after he expressed the opinion that some individuals in Iran had been treated unfairly. His wife, Sousan Mehrabi, claims to have had a similar experience in 1998, when she was allegedly warned by members of an Islamic group not to speak too much while she was at the university. She believes that these warnings were prompted by the fact that she spoke too much about politics. Mr. Ahmedmehrabi, while working at the hospital, also treated patients who he believes had been injured by the Iranian government.

The focal point of his arguments, however, is his claimed involvement in hiding his nephew from the Iranian government. Mr. Ahmedmehrabi and his wife testified that in the summer of 1999, Mr. Ahmedmehrabi’s nephew, Farshad Mehrabi, participated in a pro-democracy demonstration in Iran. Following the July demonstration, Mr. Ahmedmehrabi claims that he allowed his nephew to stay at his house for a period of time. 1 In November 1999, Farshad received a subpoena to appear before Iran’s Revolutionary Court; he left for the United States in November 2000, where he was granted withholding of removal in August 2002. 2 Mr. Ahmedmehrabi claims *166 that he, too, has been issued a subpoena by the Revolutionary Court. That subpoena was allegedly delivered to his parents in Tehran in November 2002. He claims that his sister forwarded the subpoena from his parents to his immigration attorney in the United States. The Islamic Revolutionary Courts were established in 1979 to try offenses “viewed as potentially threatening to the Islamic Republic, including threats to internal or external security, narcotics and economic crimes, and official corruption,” and “are notorious for their disregard of international standards of fairness.” U.S. Dep’t of State Country Report on Human Rights Practices 2006, available at http:// www.state.gov/p/nea/ci/82004.htm. Mr. Ahmedmehrabi believes that he was subpoenaed because he provided shelter to his nephew in 1999, and he testified that he is afraid to return to Iran because those who answer Revolutionary Court subpoenas are frequently arrested, beaten, killed, or disappear. The State Department’s 2006 country report on Iran details Iran’s worsening human rights record, which includes “unjust executions after reportedly unfair trials; disappearances; torture and severe officially sanctioned punishments such as death by stoning; flogging; ... arbitrary arrest and detention; lack of judicial independence; lack of fair public trials,” among other things. Id.

The Immigration Judge was not persuaded by Mr. Ahmedmehrabi’s evidence. He concluded that the testimony and evidence fell short of that required to support a grant of asylum, and that therefore the evidence also necessarily fell short of that required under the higher standards for withholding of removal or relief under the CAT. The IJ determined that “even if the testimony of the adult respondents were credible or true,” the circumstances relied on by Mr. Ahmedmehrabi and his family were “too remote in time and substance” to support a conclusion that they had a well-founded fear of persecution, which is a prerequisite to a grant of asylum. JA 27. The IJ noted that Mr. Ahmedmehrabi was never detained, imprisoned, or otherwise mistreated while in Iran and that the worst maltreatment to which he and his wife testified was being advised to stop talking politics by their co-workers. The IJ concluded that the significance of these minor pre-1999 incidents was considerably undermined by the fact that Mr. Ahmedmehrabi and his wife failed to file applications for asylum when they came to the U.S. in 2000, and also by the wife’s testimony that she never feared returning to Iran until her husband allegedly received the subpoena from the Revolutionary Court in 2002. Additionally, the IJ found it significant that Mr. Ahmedmehrabi was employed at a government hospital and kept his position until he left in 2000, and that both petitioner and his family were allowed to leave Iran without any trouble.

The IJ concluded, in particular, that the alleged subpoena ordering Mr. Ahmedmehrabi to appear before the Revolutionary Court carried no evidentiary weight because it was of questionable significance and/or authenticity. The IJ deemed the document to be of questionable authenticity because it changed many hands before it reached Mr. Ahmedmehrabi, and Mr. Ahmedmehrabi was “unable to provide proof of the alleged transferís]” and “offered no testimony to establish a credible chain of custody regarding the document relating to who, how or when his parents allegedly received the document”; because the document was created when Mr. Ahmedmehrabi was in the United States; and because Mr. Ahmedmehrabi failed to prove corroborative affidavits regarding the subpoena, despite still being in contact with his parents. JA 28. The IJ also questioned the document’s authenticity— and, if assumed to be authentic, its signifi *167 canee and relation to the 1999 demonstration — because Mr. Ahmedmehrabi remained employed at a government hospital following the 1999 incident; because he and his family were allowed to depart Iran with no difficulty; and because his testimony was “devoid of what [his] political opinion was and how he overtly expressed it to the Iranian Government. [Mr. Ahmedmehrabi’s] claim that he was political or expressed adverse political opinions was nebulous and without any specificity.” JA 28. Finally, the IJ found Mr. Ahmedmehrabi’s testimony regarding his participation in the 1999 demonstrations to be implausible and unbelievable. This finding contributed to the IJ’s doubt about the subpoena’s authenticity and significance because Mr. Ahmedmehrabi alleges that the subject of the subpoena is his participation in the 1999 demonstrations by housing his nephew.

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
250 F. App'x 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ahmedmehrabi-v-gonzales-ca6-2007.