Berinde, Domnica v. Gonzales, Alberto R.

203 F. App'x 732
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 1, 2006
Docket06-1109
StatusUnpublished

This text of 203 F. App'x 732 (Berinde, Domnica v. Gonzales, Alberto R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berinde, Domnica v. Gonzales, Alberto R., 203 F. App'x 732 (7th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

ORDER

Vasile and Domniea Berinde, husband and wife and Romanian nationals, petition for review of a Board of Immigration Appeals’ (BIA) order denying their applications for asylum and the withholding of removal. We deny Vasile’s petition because we lack jurisdiction to review his asylum application, and substantial evidence supports the BIA’s finding that he failed to meet his burden of proof for withholding of removal. Furthermore, specific, cogent reasons support the BIA’s decision to deny Domnica’s asylum application based on her lack of credibility.

Vasile and Domniea attempted to enter the United States using false documents. Vasile tried to enter through Miami using a false Austrian passport in September 2000, while Domniea attempted to enter through San Ysidro, California using a false green card in May 2001. They were both stopped by INS officers, who determined that they had a credible fear of being harmed if returned to Romania based on their political opposition to the reigning socialist party. The INS initiated removal proceedings and their cases were consolidated for review. The Berindes applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture (CAT).

Vasile testified at his removal hearing that his difficulties began in the 1980s, during his military service, when he had a “problem” for having a postcard sent by a friend in Italy. He was informed that it was illegal to maintain contact with foreigners, but he did not elucidate what consequences he believed he would face as a result of the incident.

The Berindes continued to associate with foreigners once they married and started a family, seeking medicine for their two daughters who were afflicted with a genetic disorder called Werdnig Hoffman disease. Vasile testified that he was prohibited from traveling abroad to help his daughters with their health problems because he was not a member of the communist party. However, in 1989, Vasile obtained foreign medicine for his youngest daughter through a former neighbor who had moved to the United States, but doctors refused to administer it. Vasile testified that, shortly thereafter, the police arrested and detained him for four days because of this contact with his former neighbor, and that he was “pushed, hit, swung at, and spit at by policemen” daily. (This testimony was at odds and in conflict *734 with his asylum application, in which he described this arrest but failed to mention any physical abuse by the police, and with his airport screening interview conducted upon arriving in the United States in September 2000, at which he stated that he had never been arrested at all.) Vasile testified that both of his children died due to Werdnig Hoffmann disease.

Later in 1989, the communist regime was overthrown but the Berindes continued to have problems under the new government headed by Ion Iliescu, the leader of the Social Democratic Party of Romania (PDSR). When asked if he participated in politics after the Romanian revolution, Va-sile stated that he “was advised to participate” in the PDSR, but refused to join. He testified that during a PDSR meeting in January 1996, he criticized the party’s failure to fulfill its promises to provide free hospitalization and education and to create new jobs. Immediately following this meeting, Vasile testified, two party leaders threatened to “destroy” him because he “tried to destroy the image of their party.” He testified that a week later, his small furniture shop was torched and set on fire, and the fire department determined that the blaze was intentional. Vasile blamed the PDSR members, although he acknowledged at the hearing that he did not witness the act of arson.

Shortly after the fire Vasile fled to the United States to avoid further harm, but Domnica began encountering threats and harassment in Romania. Vasile testified that while he lived in the United States, Domnica told him that suspicious people followed her on the street, she received phone calls threatening “serious problems” and demanding information regarding Va-sile’s whereabouts, and there was a break-in of their home. In 1998, in hopes that she would no longer be targeted, they divorced.

Vasile returned to Romania in November 1999 and reunited with Domnica because he thought his criticism of the PDSR was long forgotten, but he encountered more threats shortly after his arrival. Va-sile testified that when he criticized a PDSR mayor in a television interview in June 2000, a few days later PDSR members threatened him. A week later, a drunk driver hit Vasile’s car and Vasile sustained minor injuries. After this incident, Domnica and Vasile feared for their safety and fled to the United States.

Domnica’s testimony largely tracks Va-sile’s. However, in her asylum application, she stated that Vasile was “arrested and imprisoned” during his military service and she described his 1989 detention for importing medicine for his children as “house arrest.” Domnica’s asylum application also described Vasile as being “heavily involved in politics.” On cross-examination, however, she backed off from that characterization. When reminded that Va-sile testified that he was only invited to join the PDSR but declined, Domnica then explained, “no, that, that, that was it, it was just a beginning, but he gave up on it shortly afterwards.”

The Immigration Judge (IJ) denied the Berindes’ asylum applications because they failed to file within one year after their respective entries into the United States; Vasile filed his application over three years late and Domnica filed hers a day late. See 8 U.S.C. § 1158(a)(2)(B). The IJ also denied their applications for withholding because they failed to carry their burden of proof. The IJ noted three inconsistencies in the Berindes’ testimony: (1) Va-sile’s hearing testimony regarding his military “problem,” which Domnica described more severely as an arrest and imprisonment; (2) Vasile’s removal hearing testimony regarding his 1989 arrest, detention and beating, which contradicted his airport *735 screening interview where he denied ever being arrested; his asylum application which omitted facts about physical abuse; and Domniea’s testimony which downplayed the event as a house arrest; and (3) Vasile’s level of political involvement, which Domnica described as heavy though Vasile only testified that he refused to join the PDSR, criticized the party, and attended a couple of meetings. The IJ refused to credit the testimony regarding the military problem and his 1989 arrest, and discredited all of Domnica’s testimony. The IJ expressed skepticism regarding the intentional burning of Vasile’s shop because of the lack of corroborating evidence. The IJ considered the Berindes’ inability to get medical treatment abroad for their daughters and the car accident in 2000, but stated that neither incident rose to the level of persecution. The IJ also denied relief under the CAT because the Berindes failed to meet their burden of proof.

The BIA adopted and affirmed the IJ’s denial of Vasile’s requests for relief.

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