Amadou Lamine Sarr v. Alberto R. Gonzales, United States Attorney General

485 F.3d 354, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 8952, 2007 WL 1146465
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 19, 2007
Docket05-4558
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 485 F.3d 354 (Amadou Lamine Sarr v. Alberto R. Gonzales, United States Attorney General) 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
Amadou Lamine Sarr v. Alberto R. Gonzales, United States Attorney General, 485 F.3d 354, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 8952, 2007 WL 1146465 (6th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

MARTHA CRAIG DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judge.

The petitioner, Amadou Sarr, 1 seeks review of a ruling of the Board of Immigration Appeals (Board) that affirmed an immigration judge’s decision denying Sarr’s requests for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief pursuant to the United Nations Convention Against Torture. Sarr contends that he proved by sufficient evidence that he had suffered past persecution in his native Senegal and that country conditions have not changed sufficiently to alleviate the threat of future persecution if he is returned to Senegal. Sarr also contends on appeal that he was denied due process by the immigration judge’s adverse credibility finding and by the Board’s refusal to adjudicate certain of his requests for relief. Because we conclude that Sarr has failed to satisfy the heavy burden imposed upon him to overturn the administrative decisions in question, we must deny Sarr’s petition for review relating to those determinations. In addition, because there is no basis upon which to conclude that the petitioner has been denied procedural due process, we cannot grant review on constitutional grounds, even though we reject the government’s argument that the Board’s decision in In re Velarde-Pacheco, 23 I. & N. Dec. 253 (BIA 2002), confers upon the government the power single-handedly to prevent the Board’s consideration of an otherwise meritorious motion to reopen or remand a request for adjustment of status.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

After studying English at a university in Senegal, Sarr entered the United States in 1991 on a one-year visa as an “exchange scholar.” While the visa was still valid, he filed an application for asylum, in which he indicated that he had been politically active in an opposition party in Senegal, resulting in his arrest and “mistreatment” following the 1988 general election. He also indicated that he had been “detained” for participating in “a peaceful march protesting the results of [that] election,” but he did not allege that he had been physically harmed in any way. Summarizing his reasons for seeking refugee status, Sarr wrote, “I believe in democracy and I think that people should have the right to express their political opinion regardless of race, religion, etc.”

Not surprisingly, this application was not deemed sufficient to establish grounds for a grant of asylum, which was denied in 1998. However, Sarr filed a second application for asylum in 1999, and this time he detailed a series of events that, if established to the satisfaction of the immigration court, would arguably have made out a case of past persecution under the applicable statute, 8 U.S.C. § 1101 (a)(42)(A). *358 He also testified in support of his application that he had been a member of the Senegalese Democratic Party’s youth division for 12 years, from 1979 to 1991, and had participated in marches and other peaceful demonstrations against the ruling Socialist Party. Even though he was employed as a high school teacher by the Senegalese government for much of that time, Sarr claimed to have suffered serious retribution for the expression of his political beliefs. According to his testimony, Sarr was arrested numerous times as a result of his opposition activities, beginning in February 1988, when he was arrested, jailed for one week, and beaten with a leather whip called a “gourdin” for writing a newspaper article critical of the Socialist rulers. He told the immigration judge that in March 1988 he was arrested again, this time for demonstrating peacefully in the capital city of Dakar, that he was jailed for seven to ten days, and beaten, whipped, and kicked by his captors “[ajlmost every day,” and that he sought medical attention after his release from confinement.

The petitioner further testified that he was arrested again the following month, on April 4, 1988, Senegal’s independence day, at another peaceful demonstration. He claimed that he was jailed for “one week or two weeks” on that occasion and that he was beaten by the police “with the back of a rifle.” Similar' arrests and incarcerations allegedly occurred on December 24, 1988, in March 1989, and in December 1990. The last arrest also involved various Democratic Party leaders, including Ab-doulaye Wade, the current president of Senegal, and Idrissa Seek, the country’s prime minister at the time of Sarr’s hearing. Sarr testified that after that 1990 arrest, he was tortured and beaten, one of his ribs was broken, he was bound hand and foot and hung from a pole suspended between two tables, and police burned him with cigarette butts.

Sarr alleged that he was arrested again in April or May 1991, jailed for two weeks, tortured, beaten, hit with a rifle, and kicked. During that incarceration, he testified, his captors also warned him that continued protesting would result in further physical punishment for him and harm to his family. Finally, the petitioner said that he was arrested in Dakar in May 1991 and accused of being a member of the rebel Democratic Forces of Casamance, ironically the organization that supposedly had kidnaped Sarr just prior to this last arrest. He testified that he was, on that occasion, detained for three weeks and beaten so severely that he lapsed into a coma. Upon recovering from his injuries, Sarr said, he managed to escape from the hospital and hide out until he was able to secure his visa and flee from Senegal to the United States in August 1991.

Unfortunately for Sarr, he offered virtually no corroboration for his testimony at the hearing finally held in 2004 before the immigration judge — no documentation of his arrests, no hospital records, no copy of the alleged newspaper article, nothing other than a single affidavit allegedly executed by Sarr’s political comrade in Senegal that, because of its similarity to Sarr’s own affidavit, appears to have been prepared by his attorney in Michigan and sent to Senegal merely for signing. The omission of corroboration proved significant in light of the fact that Sarr had a large number of family members still in Senegal who, presumably, could have supplied documentary evidence of the events that Sarr described in his second application and at the hearing. He was also unable to explain to the immigration judge’s satisfaction why the 1992 asylum application had omitted the .myriad details later included in the 1999 application, saying only that he had not *359 had assistance in filling out the 1992 form and that he had simply forgotten to include in it much of what he later remembered to set out in the 1999 application.

Citing the discrepancies between the two applications and significant inconsistencies between the 1999 application and Sarr’s testimony in 2004, the immigration judge discredited the petitioner’s testimony, saying that “[t]he inconsistencies and discrepancies present in [Sarr’s] claim are more than incidental misstatements; they involve material facts that go to the heart of the asylum claim,” and held that he had failed to establish past persecution. The judge also ruled that even if Sarr’s testimony were considered credible, dramatic changes in the country conditions in Senegal in the 13 years since Sarr left were sufficient to rebut any claim of well-founded fear of future persecution.

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

Related

Jonas Nsongi Mbonga v. Merrick B. Garland
18 F.4th 889 (Sixth Circuit, 2021)
Tadevosyan v. Eric H. Holder, Jr.
743 F.3d 1250 (Ninth Circuit, 2014)
Kirubanesam Anandarajah v. Attorney General United States
538 F. App'x 229 (Third Circuit, 2013)
El Sidi Mohamed v. Eric Holder, Jr.
542 F. App'x 446 (Sixth Circuit, 2013)
Jackson Seo, Sr. v. Eric Holder, Jr.
533 F. App'x 605 (Sixth Circuit, 2013)
Modou Hydra v. Eric Holder, Jr.
531 F. App'x 587 (Sixth Circuit, 2013)
AVETISYAN
25 I. & N. Dec. 688 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 2012)
Jihad Geagea v. Eric Holder
466 F. App'x 502 (Sixth Circuit, 2012)
Aleksander Vasili v. Eric Holder, Jr.
442 F. App'x 203 (Sixth Circuit, 2011)
Shewchun v. Holder
658 F.3d 557 (Sixth Circuit, 2011)
Leonard Burgaj v. Eric Holder, Jr.
428 F. App'x 578 (Sixth Circuit, 2011)
Gentian Ashafi v. Eric Holder, Jr.
418 F. App'x 447 (Sixth Circuit, 2011)
Manuel Ralios Morente v. Eric Holder, Jr.
401 F. App'x 17 (Sixth Circuit, 2010)
Aissata Ba v. Eric Holder, Jr.
389 F. App'x 505 (Sixth Circuit, 2010)
Mohammad Nabhani v. Eric H. Holder, Jr.
382 F. App'x 487 (Sixth Circuit, 2010)
Bonilla-Morales v. Holder
607 F.3d 1132 (Sixth Circuit, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
485 F.3d 354, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 8952, 2007 WL 1146465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amadou-lamine-sarr-v-alberto-r-gonzales-united-states-attorney-general-ca6-2007.