Antonina Averianova v. Michael Mukasey

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 10, 2007
Docket06-3717
StatusPublished

This text of Antonina Averianova v. Michael Mukasey (Antonina Averianova v. Michael Mukasey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Antonina Averianova v. Michael Mukasey, (8th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 06-3717 ___________

Antonina Averianova, * * Petitioner, * * v. * * Michael B. Mukasey, Attorney General * of the United States of America, * * Respondent. *

___________ Petition for Review of an Order of No. 06-3718 the Board of Immigration Appeals. ___________

Oksana Averianova, * * Petitioner, * * v. * * Michael B. Mukasey, Attorney General * of the United States of America, * * Respondent. * ___________

Submitted: September 27, 2007 Filed: December 10, 2007 (Corrected 12/10/07) ___________ Before COLLOTON, ARNOLD and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges. ___________

GRUENDER, Circuit Judge. Antonina and Oksana Averianova, citizens of Uzbekistan, petition for review of a Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) decision affirming the immigration judge’s (“IJ”) denial of the Averianovas’ applications for asylum and for withholding of removal.1 For the reasons discussed below, we deny the Averianovas’ petitions.

I. BACKGROUND

Antonina and Oksana Averianova are a mother and daughter seeking asylum in the United States because of alleged persecution on account of their Jewish ethnicity and religious beliefs.

Antonina was born in Russia in 1951. Her family moved to Uzbekistan shortly after her birth. She has two children, Oleg and Oksana. Antonina claims that her father was Jewish and her mother Russian, but her mother “adopted” her father’s ethnicity upon marriage. Antonina does not practice Judaism regularly and only began practicing in the late 1980s. She cites various incidents of past persecution in Uzbekistan, allegedly because of her Jewish background. She testified that she was once attacked on a bus because she was not Muslim. On another occasion a man yelling about Jews hit her and split her lip. Her son was beaten for not being Muslim and having Jewish roots. She did not report any of these incidents to the police. In 1992, Antonina arrived as a non-immigrant visitor to the United States. She applied for asylum in 1993.

1 The IJ and BIA also rejected the Averianovas’ claim for protection under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). The Averianovas have not set forth an argument on appeal regarding the CAT ruling. Therefore, petitioners waive this claim. See Chay-Velasquez v. Ashcroft, 367 F.3d 751, 756 (8th Cir. 2004).

-2- Oksana testified to various problems she encountered in Uzbekistan because of her alleged Jewish ethnicity. In school, she faced frequent taunting. A group of girls once threatened her and pushed her head in a toilet. She recalled incidents of Muslim men harassing her, slapping her in the face, calling her a Jewish whore, and threatening to cut her legs for wearing a short skirt. She reported that her professors at night college prevented her from participating in class and that she had difficulty finding employment in Tashkent, the capital of Uzbekistan. Oksana did not report any of these incidents to the police. She arrived in the United States in 1996 and applied for asylum shortly thereafter. She does not practice Judaism in the United States. The IJ consolidated her case with Antonina’s.

During the asylum proceedings, the Averianovas submitted several birth certificates to prove their Jewish ethnicity. (In the former Soviet Union, the government considered “Jewish” an ethnicity and listed it on birth certificates as a nationality.) None were original documents, and the Averianovas testified that any original documents, such as original birth certificates, internal passports, travel passports or marriage certificates, had been lost or stolen. The Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”),2 in conjunction with the American embassy in Tashkent, investigated the birth certificates submitted by the Averianovas and identified specific discrepancies that called into question their authenticity.

The Averianovas presented a translated copy of Oksana’s birth certificate, notarized in Russia in 1994, which stated that Antonina was “Jewish.” In May 2002, the INS gave the copy of Oksana’s birth certificate to American embassy personnel in Tashkent. Embassy staff then asked the local register of Tashkent to access Oksana’s birth record. The embassy personnel discovered that the official record of Oksana’s birth listed Antonina’s nationality as “Russian.” Oksana contended that the

2 The INS ceased to exist March 1, 2003, and its functions were transferred to the new Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”). See Homeland Security Act of 2002, Pub. L. No. 107-296, 116 Stat. 2135 (Nov. 25, 2002). We shall continue to refer to the DHS as the INS in this opinion.

-3- embassy report was an unreliable, hand-written copy, and that it erroneously listed her birth date. American embassy officials subsequently obtained two digital photographs of her birth record. The photographs showed Antonina’s nationality as “Russian.” The register also corrected the birth date error after embassy staff identified it. The IJ found that the two documents were “identical . . . with one exception”—the nationality of “Russian” in the original record had been changed to “Jewish” in Oksana’s copy.

After the INS’s original inquiry into Oksana’s birth certificate, the Averianovas initiated a court proceeding in Tashkent on March 5, 2003, to amend Antonina’s father’s birth record to state that he was Jewish. Antonina’s father’s original birth certificate indicated that he was Russian. The court changed the record on May 21, 2003. The Averianovas submitted the amended birth certificate and the record of the Tashkent court hearing to the IJ.

Once the INS discovered that Oksana’s birth record actually stated that Antonina was “Russian,” not “Jewish,” the Averianovas submitted several more copies of birth certificates to the IJ. First, a copy of Antonina’s brother Victor’s birth certificate dated August 10, 2002 reflected that his (and Antonina’s) father was “Jewish.” The INS obtained digital photographs of the original birth record bearing the serial number reflected on the copy submitted by the Averianovas and determined that the serial number reflected on the copy actually was contained on a birth certificate issued to someone other than Victor. Second, a birth certificate submitted for Oleg stated that his mother Antonina was “Jewish.” The INS obtained two digital photographs of his actual birth record in Tashkent that listed Antonina’s nationality as “Russian.” Third, Antonina submitted a copy of her birth certificate issued in 1992 that listed her father’s nationality as “Jewish.” The INS found that the serial number on this birth certificate also was issued to someone else and obtained a copy of that person’s birth record.

The IJ rejected the Averianovas’ asylum claims. The IJ focused on their claims of persecution based upon their Jewish ethnicity because that was the “overwhelming

-4- thrust” of their claims, and they had not provided sufficient testimony regarding claims of persecution on account of their non-Uzbek ethnicity. The IJ determined that the photographs of Uzbek records were trustworthy and persuasive evidence. The IJ found that the Averianovas had submitted fraudulent documents, which adversely affected their credibility. He also found that they offered no explanation for the discrepancies. He held that without credible proof of their Jewish ethnicity, their asylum claims failed. The IJ refused to extend comity to the Tashkent court proceeding of March 5, 2003. He also found a “lack of any objective corroborating evidence” regarding the Averianovas’ alleged persecution. On account of the lack of credible testimony and lack of corroborating evidence, the IJ also rejected their claims for withholding of removal.

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