Aliaj v. Mukasey

257 F. App'x 957
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 18, 2007
Docket06-4399
StatusUnpublished

This text of 257 F. App'x 957 (Aliaj v. Mukasey) 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
Aliaj v. Mukasey, 257 F. App'x 957 (6th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge.

Paulin and Vjollca Aliaj, a married couple who are both citizens of Albania, were granted voluntary departure for a period of 90 days after withdrawing their applications for asylum. Claiming that they had received ineffective representation from their privately retained counsel during the removal hearing, the Aliajs then filed a timely motion to reopen the administrative proceedings. The immigration judge (IJ) denied the motion.

After several procedural issues were resolved, the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) affirmed the denial of the motion to reopen and dismissed the Aliajs’ appeal. The Aliajs now claim that the ineffective assistance of them counsel was so prejudicial that they were denied their Fifth Amendment right to the due process of law. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the judgment of the BIA.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual background

The Aliajs separately and illegally entered the United States using fake passports. Paulin first submitted an application for asylum in July of 2001. The application showed that he had entered the United States in May of 1997, but there is no evidence in the record to support such an entry date. Attached to this application was a lengthy declaration detailing alleged beatings, detentions, arrests, and threats suffered by Paulin at the hands of the former Communist regime. Paulin was interviewed by asylum officers in February of 2002, at which point he contradicted a number of the statements contained in his original asylum application, including where and when he had entered the United States. During that interview, Paulin discussed a meeting that he had had with the attorney who had filed his application for asylum. He disclosed to the officers that he had originally signed a blank application, and that he had subsequently demanded that the attorney withdraw that application because “[njothing other than my name was true.”

In June of 2002, Paulin submitted a second application for asylum. That application, which was prepared with the assistance of a different attorney, states that he had entered the United States in September of 2000. He claimed that he had been threatened by a group of men whose leader was the former regional police chief, a person who had been relieved of his duties when the Communist regime fell from power. Paulin asserted that the men had repeatedly threatened and beaten him af *959 ter he informed the authorities that he had heard the group discussing the smuggling of oil and weapons into Yugoslavia. He claimed that because many members of this group were later arrested, them colleagues would seek retribution against Paulin if he were to return to Albania. In his second application for asylum, Paulin supplied specific information about his departure from Albania and entry into the United States. The details that he provided in this application contradicted those he had given in his February 2002 asylum interview.

Paulin’s wife Vjollca entered the United States in May of 1997. She originally claimed derivative status on her husband’s application for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the United Nations Convention Against Torture (CAT). Eventually, however, she submitted her own application. In that application, Vjollca claimed that “[her] family has been one of the most persecuted families in Northern Albania,” and that she feared that she would be “beaten, and imprisoned or even killed for [her] political activities” if she were to return to Albania. She reported that because of her activities with the Youth Forum of the Democratic Party, she had twice been beaten by members of the Socialist Party while recruiting people for the Youth Forum. Vjollca also asserted that these people had threatened to rape and kill her, and harm her entire family, if she continued to work for the Democratic Party. According to Vjollca and a corroborating letter from a doctor in Albania, she received medical attention after both of the attacks. The doctor’s letter states that Vjollca was twice treated for a “hemorrhage of the nose and teeth ..., black marks on the face and different parts of the body, and hematoma.”

B. Procedural background

In June of 2002, the Aliajs were served with a Notice to Appear (NTA) and placed in removal proceedings pursuant to the Immigration and Nationality Act § 212(a)(6)(A)(i). The couple appeared before an IJ in August of 2002. During this hearing, the Aliajs, through new counsel, admitted the allegations contained in the NTA. The Aliajs were provided with an interpreter fluent in them native language at this hearing and at all future merits hearings. In August of 2004, they appeared for a merits hearing on their application for asylum. The IJ and the Aliaj s’ attorney at the time agreed that because of the falsity of Paulin’s original application, he had not submitted a valid request for asylum within a year of entry and would therefore be limited to an application for withholding of removal. Furthermore, because Vjollca could no longer obtain derivative status from Paulin’s application, the IJ requested Vjollca to file one of her own. The hearing was then continued. Vjollca subsequently filed a separate application in October of 2004.

In December of 2004, the Aliajs appeared before a different IJ at a merits hearing on their applications. Dalia Kejbou, an attorney retained by the Aliajs two weeks prior to the hearing, represented the couple. At the beginning of the hearing, the IJ concluded that, based on the Aliajs’ previous testimony and applications, they were removable as charged. The IJ then heard testimony from the Aliajs, discussed the discrepancies in Paulin’s applications, and requested original documents from Kejbou. At that point, Kejbou noted that she had not seen Paulin’s original asylum application prior to the hearing and explained that she had left certain documents at home. She was unaware, moreover, that originals of the Aliajs’ documents had not been submitted as evidence. Finally, Kejbou did not bring to the hearing a letter from Vjollca’s physician that had arrived several days before the proceeding, which letter corroborated *960 Vjollca’s claim that she had continuing psychological problems as a result of the alleged mistreatment she suffered in Albania.

At the end of the hearing, after the IJ indicated that the Aliaj s’ applications were likely to be denied and after they had had an off-the-record discussion with Kejbou, the Aliajs withdrew their applications for asylum and agreed to a voluntary departure within 90 days. The IJ then granted them a voluntary departure and denied the applications for asylum. She also commented that the main problem with both cases was Paulin’s filing of a fraudulent application, which she believed tainted them cases “all the way along.”

The Aliaj s, represented by yet another attorney, subsequently filed a timely petition to reopen the administrative proceedings. They claimed that Kejbou had provided ineffective assistance of counsel at them December 2004 hearing and had “severely prejudiced [them] and completely deprived them of the ability to seek any relief from removal.” The IJ denied the motion to reopen, explaining that the Aliajs had “demonstrated a serious lack of credibility in them past dealings with the United States government.”

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LOZADA
19 I. & N. Dec. 637 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
257 F. App'x 957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aliaj-v-mukasey-ca6-2007.