Bobby Bunyan v. Attorney General United States of America

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedAugust 22, 2024
Docket23-2797
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bobby Bunyan v. Attorney General United States of America (Bobby Bunyan v. Attorney General United States of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bobby Bunyan v. Attorney General United States of America, (3d Cir. 2024).

Opinion

NOT PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT

_______________________

No. 23-2797 _______________________

BOBBY DEBOE BUNYAN, Petitioner v.

ATTORNEY GENERAL UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

On Petition for Review of a Decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals BIA-1: A208-092-155 Immigration Judge: Steven A. Morley __________________________

Submitted under Third Circuit L.A.R. 34.1(a) June 28, 2024

Before: JORDAN, SMITH, Circuit Judges, and BUMB, Chief District Judge*

(Filed: August 22, 2024) __________________________

OPINION† __________________________

* Honorable Renée Marie Bumb, Chief District Judge of the United States District Court for the District Court of New Jersey, sitting by designation. † This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does not constitute binding precedent. Bumb, Chief District Judge.

Petitioner Bobby Deboe Bunyan asks us to overturn the Board of Immigration

Appeals’ (BIA) decision affirming the denial of his asylum application. Arguing he

suffered persecution in Liberia because of his anti-corruption political beliefs, Bunyan

seeks asylum. There is no dispute that Bunyan suffered past persecution. He was harassed,

abducted, and beaten. He received death threats, his family was terrorized, and his sister

was killed. The issue centers on whether his persecutors inflicted that harm because of

Bunyan’s anti-corruption political opinion. The Immigration Judge (IJ) found no evidence

that Bunyan suffered those harms because of a political opinion. The BIA agreed. We

agree, too, and will therefore deny Bunyan’s petition.

I.

A.

Bunyan is a native and citizen of Liberia. In Liberia, Bunyan worked as a bank

auditor for the First International Bank (the Bank). Bunyan “monitor[ed] the activity of

the [B]ank relating to [the] misappropriation of fund[s], fraud, and detection.” AR116. As

part of his job responsibilities, in January 2013, Bunyan unearthed a fraudulent scheme

involving ten Bank employees—tellers and operational employees—who had stolen about

$1.2 million from the Bank. Three of those employees had relatives who worked for the

Liberian government: Richard Gboyah (the son-in-law of Robertson Siaway—a

representative in the Liberian House of Representatives), Robert Cummings (related to

Julius Berrien—a representative in the Liberian House of Representatives), and Jerman

Tegli (Bunyan could not name the relative). 2 As part of his “duties at the [B]ank[,]” in mid-February 2013, Bunyan reported the

fraudulent scheme to the Bank’s “management” and the “Central Bank of Liberia.”

AR117; AR199. On the same day he filed the report, Bunyan began receiving threatening,

anonymous calls with one caller telling Bunyan he was “going to regret the situation.”

AR119-20. Bunyan estimates he received about six or seven such threatening phone calls.

Somehow, journalists learned of Bunyan’s report and approached him to get his

“point of view.” AR246-47. Journalists questioned Bunyan as to how he was “being

protected and how the state is protecting [him].” AR248. Bunyan had no “self-interest”

or “reason” to provide the journalists with information or to get his story in the papers.

AR249. A Liberian newspaper later published a story about Bunyan, the fraudulent scheme

he uncovered, and the threats he received.

In April 2013, Representative Siaway phoned Bunyan about his son-in-law

Gboyah’s involvement in the fraudulent scheme. Siaway asked Bunyan to visit with him.

Bunyan did not meet with Siaway. He traveled to the United States for a training the next

month. While in the United States, Bunyan’s wife, Mathaline Bunyan, told Bunyan that

she, too, had received phone calls from callers threatening to kill her husband when he

returned to Liberia. Bunyan returned to Liberia, and two days later, Siaway phoned

Bunyan again, but this time with a bribe: Siaway would pay Bunyan $50,000 if Bunyan

held a press conference to “deny the case” and refuse to participate in the prosecution.

AR122. If he did not agree to accept the bribe, Siaway threatened that Bunyan’s “life was

going to be in danger.” AR123. Bunyan rebuffed Siaway’s bribe, telling the representative

that he could not accept it because auditing is his profession and “it’s [his] integrity.” 3 AR126. In other words, Bunyan would not compromise his integrity “so the auditing . . .

[could] be free of corruption.” Id.

A few days later, four armed men dressed in police uniforms and wearing masks

burst into Bunyan’s home. The armed men demanded Bunyan accept the “$50,000 as was

being promised.” AR128. Bunyan again refused the bribe, telling the assailants he

“represent[ed] an institution” and “had to defend it until those responsible . . . can be

prosecuted.” AR128. The gunmen then dragged Bunyan to an open field where they beat

him with an iron rod for about thirty minutes trying to force him to accept the bribe.

Bunyan eventually passed out, and his two brothers found him unconscious in the field a

few hours later. The brothers found a note next to Bunyan that read: “This is just the

beginning of your journey to death if you do not comply.” AR298. Bunyan’s brothers

took him to a hospital where Bunyan stayed for two nights because of his injuries.

Bunyan’s wife reported the abduction to the police, but no one responded.

Shortly after his abduction, Bunyan and his family fled to a section of Paynesville,

Liberia where Bunyan’s younger sister lived. While the Bunyans were asleep, a neighbor

observed three individuals setting the Bunyans’ house ablaze. Although Bunyan, his wife,

and his children escaped the flames, Bunyan’s younger sister did not; she died from burns

and smoke inhalation. A few days after his sister’s death, Bunyan received a phone call

from the Bank’s “head of [] security” who told Bunyan that he saw former rebels at the

Bank who had placards with Bunyan’s picture and were “looking for [him].” AR146-47.

The security officer warned Bunyan to be careful.

4 Following the fire, Bunyan moved to another area of Liberia where, according to

Bunyan, nothing happened to him or his family in 2014. But the new year brought new

problems. In January 2015, Bunyan discovered a note written on the wall outside of his

home stating: “We will kill you and your family.” AR369. Bunyan immediately fled to

the United States. Bunyan planned to stay in the United States for only a month, but, after

learning about more death threats and receiving warnings not to return to Liberia from

friends and neighbors there, he applied for asylum and withholding of removal under the

Convention Against Torture (CAT).

While Bunyan sought sanctuary in the United States, Bunyan’s family in Liberia

continued to be tormented. Mathaline continued to receive death threats that she reported

to the police. Then, in 2020, armed assailants broke into a building next to the Bunyans’

home and stole the family’s personal belongings. The assailants told Mathaline that they

would come back, and if they discovered Bunyan there, they would kill him or harm his

family.

B.

The United States Citizenship and Immigration Services denied Bunyan’s asylum

application and referred Bunyan to the Department of Homeland Security for removal.

Homeland Security served a Notice to Appear on Bunyan claiming he remained in the

United States beyond the time allowed.

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Bobby Bunyan v. Attorney General United States of America, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bobby-bunyan-v-attorney-general-united-states-of-america-ca3-2024.