Amadou Ly v. Eric Holder, Jr.

396 F. App'x 304
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 16, 2010
Docket09-3545
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 396 F. App'x 304 (Amadou Ly 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
Amadou Ly v. Eric Holder, Jr., 396 F. App'x 304 (6th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner Amadou Oumar Ly appeals from a decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) denying his motions for asylum, withholding of removal, and *305 protection under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). For the reasons that follow, we deny Ly’s petition for review.

I.

Ly, allegedly a native and citizen of Mauritania, requests review of his application for asylum to escape the torture and persecution that he purportedly experienced in Mauritania between 1989 and 2000. In his first asylum application filed on June 28, 2001, Ly claimed that he had been an active member of the Gatta Association of Culture and had voted for the opposition party (“the UFD”) in 1992 and 1997. He also claimed that he was attacked and imprisoned one time because of his support for the UFD and because of his Fulani race. With regards to this first application, Ly later testified that he cannot read or write English, Fulani, or French, and therefore had a layperson fill out his initial application for him after Ly provided the person with a few bare facts.

Ly eventually amended his asylum application on June 22, 2006 — approximately five years later. This time, Ly claimed that he had been arrested a total of eight times while in Mauritania, each time because white Moor soldiers demanded money from him. He did not claim that he was arrested because he was Fulani, because of any political activities, or because he was not Mauritanian.

Between the time Ly filled out his asylum application and the day of his hearing, Ly met with an asylum officer. The notes taken by the asylum officer during that meeting indicate that Ly stated he had been arrested three times. Ly purportedly offered different reasons than he had previously offered to the government for these three arrests. The IJ admitted this evidence for impeachment purposes.

At the hearing before the IJ, Ly’s testimony was not consistent with either his first asylum application, the amended asylum application, or the asylum officer’s interview notes. Rather, Ly claimed at the hearing that military officers came to his shop five times, beat him, and took him to a military camp because “[t]hey told me I was not Mauritanian, I was a Senegalese.” Ly further testified that each of the five times he was arrested, he had to pay the military officials to secure his release. Ly showed the court multiple scars and markings on his body as evidence of military torture.

Ly’s testimony contained several other inconsistencies. For instance, Ly testified that his older brother lives in France and that his younger brother served in the Mauritanian military but died in 1990. However, when questioned by the government on cross-examination, Ly was unable to provide the court with any details concerning his brother’s position as sergeant major, which he allegedly held before he was killed at the age of twenty. Ly provided the court with a birth certificate and claimed initially that it was the original given to him by his parents and that he had possessed it since birth. However, on cross-examination the government asked Ly why the certificate was dated November 26, 2000. Ly then changed his testimony and claimed that he had left his original in his rush to leave Mauritania and had received this replacement, which a friend had obtained “through one of his friends who works for the government.”

Ly was also questioned about three letters he offered as exhibits: one from a person he claimed to be his friend, one from the person Ly claimed to be his brother, and the third from the person Ly claimed to be his wife. All of the letters were written in French — a language that Ly claims he cannot read. When asked why these people wrote letters to him in a *306 language that he could not read, Ly responded, “[w]ell, they probably don’t understand it that some people who will read it to me, and explain it to me.”

Ly introduced the first letter — allegedly sent from his brother in France — to support his claim that he feared persecution upon return to Mauritania. The letter warns Ly not to return to Mauritania and asserts that two of Ly’s friends are being detained by the Mauritanian military. When asked about these individuals, Ly claimed they were his relatives. But when the government then asked Ly why he previously testified that he did not have any living relatives in Mauritania, Ly only explained: “Earlier you did not talk, mention the letter, so I did not talk about them.” The government then questioned Ly regarding the two letters allegedly sent from his wife and friend living in Senegal. The letters tell Ly not to return to Mauritania because the military is looking for him. Ly could not explain, however, how his wife and friend in Senegal could know that the Mauritanian government was looking for Ly in Mauritania.

After hearing the testimony and observing Ly’s behavior, the IJ found Ly to be not credible. Specifically, the IJ found:

[Ly’s] testimony was vague in places, non-responsive, and evasive in places on cross-examination, implausible in other places, internally inconsistent in still other places, not consistent in places with one or both of his written asylum applications, and not consistent in other places with what he told the asylum officer at his interview. Particularly on cross-examination, the respondent did not appear to answer all questions sincerely and forthrightly.

The IJ supported its adverse credibility determination with several specific examples. First, the IJ found Ly’s accounts regarding his arrests by the Mauritanian military to be inconsistent. The IJ found it implausible that Ly claimed to have been arrested one time in his original asylum application, three times in his interview with an asylum officer, eight times in his second asylum application, but then five times in his in-court testimony before the IJ.

Second, the IJ found Ly’s testimony implausible and inconsistent as to the reasons why he was arrested by the Mauritania military. Ly claimed that he was arrested first for supporting the opposition party, then because of his race, then because he was from Senegal and not Mauritania, and finally because the military wanted money from him. The IJ found that Ly did not adequately reconcile the discrepancies in his testimony and that Ly offered no other evidence aside from his own inconsistent statements linking his scars, burns, and other injuries from the alleged arrests to any action by the military on account of his race or ethnicity.

Third, the IJ noted the discrepancy regarding his family and personal records. The IJ found it inherently implausible that Ly could grow up with his brother, live in the same house with him, and not remember what year he left for the military. The IJ found it difficult to comprehend how Ly’s brother could earn such a high rank as sergeant major before he died at twenty years of age. Because Ly struggled to give the court any details about his brother, the court found it possible that the person Ly claimed to be his brother was in fact not related to him at all. These concerns about Ly’s personal family history were compounded by his inconsistent account of the authenticity of his birth certificate.

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396 F. App'x 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amadou-ly-v-eric-holder-jr-ca6-2010.