Beltran Escamilla v. Holder, Jr.

459 F. App'x 776
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMarch 9, 2012
Docket11-9510
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 459 F. App'x 776 (Beltran Escamilla v. Holder, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beltran Escamilla v. Holder, Jr., 459 F. App'x 776 (10th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

MARY BECK BRISCOE, Chief Judge.

Rivaldo Alejandro Beltran Escamilla (Escamilla) seeks review of a Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) decision deny *778 ing his applications for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the United Nations Convention Against Torture (CAT). We have jurisdiction for limited review under the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) § 242(a)(2)(D), 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(D), and we deny Es-camilla’s petition for review.

For asylum and withholding purposes, Escamilla argued he is a member of four particular social groups: 1) Salvadoran men believed to be gang members of a rival gang; 2) Salvadoran men with prior gang associations who have resisted gang membership and bettered their lives; 3) Salvadoran men who are family members of well-known, high-ranking gang members; and 4) Salvadoran men who are HIV positive. On appeal, Escamilla acknowledged at oral argument that our intervening ruling in Rivera Barrientos v. Holder forecloses the second proposed social group. 658 F.3d 1222, 1234 (10th Cir.2011) (holding that the group defined as “Salvadoran women between the ages of 12 and 25 who have resisted gang recruitment” lacked sufficient social visibility to be a particular social group). Escamilla also seeks review of the BIA’s denial of his applications for asylum and withholding of removal based on his claims of past and future persecution due to his political opinion.

In this case, we conclude that Escamil-la’s first proposed social group, Salvadoran men believed to be gang members of a rival gang, fails for lack of visibility. We then assume, without deciding, that Salvadoran men who are family members of well-known, high-ranking gang members and Salvadoran men who are HIV positive qualify as particular social groups, but hold that Escamilla cannot claim asylum or withholding from removal based on his membership in these groups because he fails to show that membership in either group resulted in his past persecution or in his well founded fear of future persecution. We next determine that he has not been subjected to persecution based on his political opinion and that he does not have a well founded fear of future persecution based on his political opinion, again denying him asylum and withholding-from-removal eligibility. Finally, because he cannot show that it is more likely than not that he would be tortured if removed to El Salvador, we determine that Escamilla is ineligible for protection under the CAT.

I.

A. Escamilla’s background

Escamilla presents detailed information on the tragic gang violence in El Salvador, the government’s effort to combat the gang violence, the status of HIV-positive men in El Salvador, and his own personal background. 1 Although Escamilla is not and has never been a gang member, his life in El Salvador intertwines with the two prominent Salvadoran gangs, Mara Salva-trucha (“MS-13”) and the 18th Street gang (“Mara 18” or “M-18”). The Salvadoran government has made reducing the power and influence of gangs a high priority, with very limited success. Gang recruitment focuses on young men, often as young as nine or ten. While most gang membership is not coerced, gangs are recruiting with increasingly violent methods, including harassment, physical abuse, and murder, either of the targeted youth or his or her *779 family. See, e.g., Barrientos, 658 F.3d at 1225-26 (woman kidnapped, gang-raped, and beaten, and her family threatened with murder when she refused to join MS-13). Gangs significantly affect most of the Salvadoran population.

Escamilla faced gang violence beginning at age nine, when MS-13 members beat him because he refused to join. Beginning at age nine or ten, he lived on the streets for three years, where he was often recruited and beaten by both MS-13 and M-18. While living on the street, he was shot twice by people wearing police uniforms, although Escamilla was not sure if they were actually police or merely gang members in police uniforms. Escamilla suggests that many of his problems with gangs stem from his uncle’s extensive involvement in M-18. His uncle is currently serving a jail sentence for “murder, extortion, and forced recruitment of young men into the ranks of the'Mara 18 gang.” Certified Administrative Record (CAR) at 568. While living on the street, Escamilla faced pressure from both gangs. As he put it, “[t]o the outside world, and the rival Mara Salvatrucha 13 gang, it appeared I was a Mara 18 gang member. Yet to the Mara 18 gang, I was the kid that constantly refused to join their ranks. I was becoming dangerously stuck in the middle.” Id. at 569.

As a young adult, Escamilla was beaten, robbed, and threatened with death by MS-13 during an attack when returning from work, and he often faced “[hjard looks and threats” from MS-13. Id. at 572. At the time, he was also dating a woman who was part of the Mara 18 gang, resulting in additional attacks by MS-13. MS-13 later killed his girlfriend and mutilated her body.

Later, Escamilla worked in a coffee field, and while working there he inadvertently disrupted an MS-13 plan to rape a woman. MS-13 members sought to kill Escamilla after the foiled rape, but because Escamilla was not working on the day they came for him, they ultimately killed another man in the coffee fields. M-18 also attacked Escamilla several times: he was carjacked by M-18 members, including one wearing a police badge, chased by an M-18 member carrying a machete, and finally shot at by M-18 members.

After the last shooting attempt, Escam-illa left El Salvador. He traveled up through Central America, eventually entering the United States in 2006. He later moved to Jackson, Wyoming, where he began living with Rhea Brough, a United States citizen, in March 2007. He was diagnosed with HIV in July 2007. His condition does not yet require medication, but he does receive medical checkups with blood tests to monitor his condition every three or four months. Escamilla married Brough on April 25, 2009.

In addition to the evidence related to Salvadoran gang activity, Escamilla presented testimony from an expert witness, Mr. Omar Banos, who described conditions in El Salvador that might impact an HIV-positive man. Banos described societal discrimination, stigma, and occasional violence inflicted on HIV-positive men, and noted that an HIV-positive man would likely be considered homosexual, which would expose him to additional discrimination. He also noted that El Salvador has laws prohibiting discrimination against HIV-positive individuals, although the laws do not appear to be widely enforced. Ba-nos discussed access to HIV medications in El Salvador, noting that although the government had an all-access policy for anyone needing HIV drugs, only roughly half of people needing the drugs actually received them.

*780 B. Immigration court proceedings

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459 F. App'x 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beltran-escamilla-v-holder-jr-ca10-2012.