Amonnon Louis v. U.S. Attorney General

271 F. App'x 985
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedApril 1, 2008
Docket07-12763
StatusUnpublished

This text of 271 F. App'x 985 (Amonnon Louis v. U.S. Attorney General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amonnon Louis v. U.S. Attorney General, 271 F. App'x 985 (11th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

*986 PER CURIAM:

Amonnon Louis, through counsel, petitions for review of the decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals affirming the order of the immigration judge (“IJ”) denying his claims for asylum and withholding of removal under the Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”), and relief under the United Nations Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). He challenges the IJ’s adverse credibility finding, argues that the IJ failed to consider corroborating evidence, and erred in finding that he had no well founded fear of future persecution. We DENY the petition.

I. BACKGROUND

In 2004, the Department of Homeland Security served Louis, a native and citizen of Haiti, with a notice to appear, alleging that he was an alien who had remained in the United States for a time longer than permitted, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(1)(B). Louis admitted the allegations, but sought asylum and withholding of removal.

In his application, Louis stated the following: He was seeking asylum based on his political opinion which was in opposition to the Lavalas Party. He was president of the “Cooperation pour la Promotion de la Production Nationale d’Haiti” (“CPPNH”). AR at 137-38. In November 2002, he participated in a panel that denounced the Aristide government for its violations of the constitution. Immediately after the panel discussion, Felix Bien-Aimé, a member of Lavalas, led a dozen people in an attack on Louis at his home. The attackers told Louis that the panel was going to be the last time he spoke about the government. Louis’s neighbors stopped the beating and prevented Bien-Aimé and the others from taking Louis away. As he left, one of the attackers struck Louis with the butt of a gun and screamed, “long lives Aristide and down with Convergence.” Id. at 142. Convergence was a party opposed to Lavalas.

After the attack, Louis went into hiding. His neighbors reported to him that three men in a truck came looking for him on an almost daily basis. He decided that his life was in danger and it was in his best interest to move to Miami. Louis feared going back to Haiti because he believed that Bien-Aimé would kill him. Louis reported that the vice-president of CPPNH told him to stay in Miami. Louis also mentioned in the application that he had been arrested twice because of his political opinion, and had been accused of being in the Convergence Party because he was not part of the Lavalas Party.

In support of his application Louis submitted, among other things, the following evidence: (1) his membership card for the Haitian Christian Democratic Party; (2) his membership card for the CPPNH, which stated that he was the president and founder; (3) a print-out from a website that was selling “Rethinking Haiti,” a book that Louis coauthored; (4) a letter from members of CPPNH; (5) a reference letter, which stated that Louis had helped create jobs in Haiti; and (6) a letter from Louis’s wife. The letter from the CPPNH members stated that Louis was their president, that they had been shut down by the school board, and that Louis had left involuntarily because his life was in danger. The letter from his wife stated that Louis had opened a factory where clothing was made, but that a branch of the school board had seized the building, leaving the factory without a space in which to reopen. His wife added that one day Bien-Aimé had come to their home and threatened to kill Louis.

At his asylum hearing, Louis testified to the following: He was a member of the National Democratic Christian Party of Haiti. In 1998, he had founded the *987 CPPNH to promote work and Haitians getting involved in their government. The CPPNH had not affiliated with any political party. In early 1998, Louis spoke with the mayor of Delmas about obtaining a government sponsored “local” for storing the goods that the CPPNH produced. Id. at 68. The mayor asked Louis if he would register the CPPNH under the Lavalas Party, but Louis refused.

Nevertheless, the mayor gave the CPPNH a building in which to store materials. The CPPNH building was in a five-building complex, and the four other buildings were being used by a school board. Louis reported that, in December 1999— after nearly two years, a school board representative and three armed security guards confronted Louis at the building. They assaulted him, told him that CPPNH would no longer occupy the building, and then locked him out. To avoid further confrontation, Louis then went to the police station where they allowed him “sit down and calm [himjself.” Id. at 71. Later that day, he went home. After that incident, Louis received threats that he would die unless he registered the CPPNH as part of the Lavalas Party.

He further testified that, in May 2002, men dressed as policemen had beat and arrested him. Louis believed that they were not really policemen because the men could not identify themselves as police officers, and when they brought him to the police station in Port>-au-Prince, the real police asked the men how they could arrest someone without a warrant. Louis identified these men as members of the “OP, [or] Popular Organization.” 1 Id. at 73. The real police held Louis overnight and released him the next day when a judge so ordered. The IJ noted that Louis had not described this incident in detail in his asylum application.

Louis continued, testifying that later that same month, the real police had arrested him because Bien-Amé had filed a complaint. Bien-Amé claimed that Louis had assaulted his wife. Louis was brought before a court within hours of being arrested. After hearing testimony from Louis and Bien-Amé, the judge determined that there was no foundation for the charges and ordered Louis’s release.

Louis then described how, on 20 August 2002, 2 Bien-Amé and 12 others came to Louis’s home and started beating him. They hit him and told him “this [was] the last time [he was] going to talk about the Lavalas.” Id. at 79. Louis’s neighbors came to his defense and prevented Bien-Amé and the men from taking him away. However, Louis was forced to leave home after the incident. Louis stated that Bien-Amé had attacked him because he had criticized the government at a debate his organization had sponsored.

Louis asserted that he was well known in Haiti for his political opinion and his organization’s activity. Louis testified that he had written a book entitled “The Retaking of Haiti,” and that he was working on another book titled “Haiti in Coma.” Id. at 85. Louis feared that if he returned to Haiti, he would be killed. He explained that some of his colleagues were in hiding because they had been accused of being rebels responsible for Aistide leaving. Louis reported that one of his friends had been killed for helping Louis leave Haiti.

On cross-examination, Louis stated that he was aware that Aistide was no longer *988 in power, but that Lavalas was still very powerful. He admitted that he had heard rumors that Bien-Aimé had been arrested by the police in September 2002.

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Bluebook (online)
271 F. App'x 985, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amonnon-louis-v-us-attorney-general-ca11-2008.