Beatriz Aguilar v. Eric Holder, Jr.

500 F. App'x 484
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 21, 2012
Docket10-4438
StatusUnpublished

This text of 500 F. App'x 484 (Beatriz Aguilar 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
Beatriz Aguilar v. Eric Holder, Jr., 500 F. App'x 484 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

ALAN E. NORRIS, Circuit Judge.

Beatriz Aguilar, a citizen of Colombia, seeks review of a Board of Immigration Appeals (“the Board”) decision that affirmed the denial of her requests for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). Petitioner’s initial asylum application stated that she sought asylum based upon the fact that her father was a landowner who had been targeted by the Revolutionary Forces of Colombia (“FARC”), a guerrilla organization associated with drug trafficking and a long-term opponent of the Colombian government. However, at a subsequent hearing before an immigration judge, petitioner amended her application and testified that her father was, in fact, a member of the FARC and had been targeted by a rival faction within the organization. Because of this significant shift in testimony, the immigration judge found that petitioner lacked credibility and therefore denied her all forms of relief. The Board affirmed that decision and dismissed petitioner’s appeal.

I.

Petitioner and her two children, who have filed for derivative relief, entered the United States as non-immigrant visitors on October 13, 2000. In November of 2001, she filed an application for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under *486 the CAT. In that application, which was prepared in Miami by a Spanish-speaking attorney, she gave the following basis for her asylum claim:

My family is being persecuted by the guerrilla groups in Colombia. My father is a farmer there and the guerrilla group is requesting money from him for their political activities and their war. My father does not believe in the guerrilla movement or their ideas, but he has been threatened and members of my family have been killed. They have killed one of my sisters and two of my brothers.
I lived in Italy for a while, when I was married to an Italian. However when I divorced him because he mistreated me and my daughter, I had to return to Colombia.
As soon as I got there my father told me that he was not able to protect me or my children from the guerrilla[s], who were threatening him because he refused to help them. He told me that I must leave the country.
I knew that I was not able to relocate to another part of the country, since my brothers were killed after they tried to hide. Since I had a U.S. tourist visa, I decided to come to this country, so that my children and myself are safe. The guerrilla[s] consider me their enemy, since my father opposes their political activities. They will harm me or my children in order to make my father comply with their demands for cooperation and support.

In the application she also checked “no” when asked if any member of her family belonged to a guerrilla organization.

After submitting this application, an asylum officer interviewed petitioner, noted that her testimony was “deemed credible,” but denied her application as untimely. Because of this decision, petitioner and her children were served with Notices to Appear, which charged them with being removable from the United States. At a hearing later that year in Orlando, she conceded that she and her children were, in fact, removable. The years passed and three additional hearings occurred. The last of them was held in Memphis on December 22, 2008.

At the December 22nd hearing, petitioner was permitted to amend her application. In the revision, she changed her answer to the question, “Why are you seeking asylum?” She wrote, “My father is a member of FARC.” She added that her godmother’s children had been killed. She also indicated that her father had been jailed after her mother’s death.

She expanded upon these changes in her testimony. She stated that her father “was among the higher ups” in the FARC. She speculated that her father was “aligned with some group” but they disagreed and he formed his own faction.

According to petitioner, in 1986 her older sister Isabella was assassinated by an element of the FARC. Then, two years later, two of her brothers were executed on their way to an agricultural show. The police “thought it was someone that had to do with my father ... [because] they wanted most of the members of my family to disappear.” The police suggested that the family hire bodyguards and also referred them to a psychologist for counseling.

Time passed and, in 1990, petitioner gave birth to her daughter, Jessika Real, and, in 1996, to her son, Andres Giraldo. The year after her son was born, petitioner moved to Italy so that her “children wouldn’t have to go through the same things I had lived through.” She married in Italy but divorced after a year and a half.

*487 She returned briefly to Colombia in 2000 with her children and lived next door to her mother. After her return, the two sons of her godmother were assassinated. At the funeral, a close friend from childhood who was a member of the FARC told her “that he knew that FARC wanted my family to disappear totally.” As a result, she came to the United States on a temporary visa in October 2000.

In 2002, petitioner learned that her mother had been murdered: she had been beaten and her throat was cut. Petitioner was told, and believed, that her father killed her mother because she objected to his involvement with the FARC. Petitioner testified that he was put in jail “for a few days” after the murder. She speculated that he paid off an official to avoid prosecution.

The next year, her younger brother, Jai-ro, was shot and killed. Another brother, Armando, was kidnaped in 2004 and has not been seen since. Petitioner has two remaining siblings: a sister, Claudia, who is in a government-sponsored program for victims of violence, and a brother, Luis Alfonso, who is a member of the FARC.

She also testified that she had heard of a massacre perpetrated by the FARC in 2004 in which 45 people were killed. She was told that her father was “part of it.” When asked what would happen to her if she were to return to Colombia, she said that “they would either kidnap my children or they would kill me” because of her father.

On cross-examination, the government focused on the inconsistencies between petitioner’s original and amended asylum applications. She conceded that her lawyer who helped her prepare her asylum application spoke Spanish. At the subsequent interview with the asylum officer, which her attorney did not attend, she explained that she and the officer had difficulty communicating. When asked if she told the officer that her father was a member of the FARC, she stated that “my father was not in very good company, was not keeping very good company, but we had a problem understanding each other.” She also said, “I didn’t say anything [about her father’s affiliation with the FARC] because my mother and brothers were still alive, and also because there wasn’t a complete understanding with the lady that was doing the interview.”

After the hearing, the immigration judge delivered an oral decision. He recited the testimony summarized above before making his factual findings. First, he disagreed with the asylum officer’s conclusion that the asylum application was time-barred, a decision that is not before us.

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

Related

Aziz Abdurakhmanov v. Eric Holder, Jr.
666 F.3d 978 (Sixth Circuit, 2012)
Ceraj v. Mukasey
511 F.3d 583 (Sixth Circuit, 2007)
CHEN
20 I. & N. Dec. 16 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
500 F. App'x 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beatriz-aguilar-v-eric-holder-jr-ca6-2012.