Ceraj v. Mukasey

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 28, 2007
Docket06-4148
StatusPublished

This text of Ceraj v. Mukasey (Ceraj v. Mukasey) 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
Ceraj v. Mukasey, (6th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206 File Name: 07a0503p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT _________________

X Petitioners, - SEFERIN CERAJ and IRINI DEDA-CERAJ, - - - No. 06-4148 v. , > MICHAEL B. MUKASEY, Attorney General of the - - Respondent. - United States,

- N

On Appeal from the Board of Immigration Appeals. Nos. A70 372 039; A73 629 551. Submitted: December 7, 2007 Decided and Filed: December 28, 2007 Before: DAUGHTREY, GILMAN, and COOK, Circuit Judges. _________________ COUNSEL ON BRIEF: Bruno Joseph Bembi, Hempstead, New York, for Petitioners. Jeffrey L. Menkin, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Respondent. _________________ OPINION _________________ RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge. Seferin Ceraj and his wife, Irini Deda-Ceraj, both natives and citizens of Albania, entered the United States using fraudulent documents in March of 1997. In August of 1997, Ceraj filed an application for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the United Nation’s Convention Against Torture (CAT). Deda-Ceraj filed an application that was entirely derivative of her husband’s. Notices to Appear, charging them with being subject to removal, were issued in February of 2001. Following a merits hearing in March of 2005, an Immigration Judge (IJ) denied the petitioners’ request for relief and ordered them removed. The IJ found that Ceraj (1) filed a frivolous asylum application, (2) did not testify credibly, and (3) failed to establish either past persecution or a well-founded fear of future persecution in Albania. The Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) adopted and affirmed the IJ’s decision in a per curiam order. Ceraj and his wife timely petitioned for review. For the reasons set forth below, we DENY their petition.

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I. BACKGROUND A. Factual background Ceraj initially fled from Albania in November of 1990. He filed an application for refugee status while in Yugoslavia in 1991. At that time, Ceraj stated that he had left Albania because [m]y aunt fled from Albania 15 years ago. [H]er son was sentenced to 12 years’ imprisonment because of that, and he was confined. Our family was discredited and mistreated. Without freedom, democracy, religion, threatened and without right to education and to free choice of employment, I decided to escape from Albania. The former Immigration and Naturalization Service (the INS, now the Department of Homeland Security) denied Ceraj’s application for refugee status in November of 1991, finding that he had not been persecuted. In April of 1991, while still living in Yugoslavia, Ceraj allegedly reentered Albania to participate in a demonstration against the Albanian government. Ceraj was arrested by the police during the demonstration and held for three days, during which time he claims that he was beaten. But he did not disclose this information during the interview regarding his refugee application in May of 1991. According to Ceraj, he feared that he would be sent back to Albania if the American authorities knew that he had reentered the country once before. Ceraj returned to Albania in 1994, began farming with his father, and married Deda-Ceraj. The Democratic Party was in control of the Albanian government at the time. In early 1997, Ceraj and his wife allegedly participated in at least four demonstrations against the government and its leader, Sali Berisha. At one of the demonstrations, Ceraj claims that the police broke his arm and injured his back. In March of 1997, Ceraj and Deda-Ceraj left Albania and used fraudulent documents to gain admission into the United States at New York City. Ceraj filed an application for asylum in August of 1997. In that application, Ceraj stated that he was seeking asylum because of his political and religious views. He claimed that he was “constantly activ[e]” in the demonstrations that took place during the fall of the Communist regime in Albania and cited his involvement in the April 1991 protest. Ceraj said that he was arrested because he “and most of the young people of Shkodra were trying to take down the statute of the ex- leader Enver Hoxha.” He also stated that he was involved “with the organizations” that were trying to stop government-led pyramid schemes in early 1997 and that he was beaten several times and threatened with arrest or death. The application further indicates that Ceraj was a “member of a demokratik [sic] party of Albania [since] April [19]90.” According to the handwritten notes prepared by the asylum interviewer, Ceraj’s duties and responsibilities as a party member included distributing leaflets. Ceraj filed a supplemental application for asylum in late October of 2001. An affidavit accompanied this application and provided more details regarding Ceraj’s asylum claim. According to this latest application, Ceraj feared returning to Albania “because of [his] political beliefs which are anti-Communist and [his] membership in a well-known anti-Communist family in Northern Albania.” Ceraj claims that he is well known to the Communist Party of Albania and many members of the current Socialist government. He also makes reference to his membership in the Roman Catholic minority population in Northern Albania. Ceraj’s supplemental application lists three instances in which he was allegedly mistreated by the Albanian authorities. First, Ceraj claims that he left Albania in 1990 because he had been targeted by the Communist secret police for listening to radio programs such as “Voice of America” and “Vatican Voice.” The secret police allegedly broke Ceraj’s radio and told him that they would No. 06-4148 Ceraj et al. v. Mukasey Page 3

“take other measures” if he did not stop listening to the radio and encouraging others to do likewise. Ceraj felt that he would be “arrested and executed” if he continued his behavior. He in fact claims that ten days after the incident with the radio, the secret police told him that he would be killed. The supplemental application is the first time that any mention is made about this specific incident. According to Ceraj’s testimony during the hearing, he did not mention the radio incident during his initial refugee application in 1991 because the interpreter “in that situation was from Kosovo.” Ceraj also claimed that he might not have understood the question. Contrary to his asylum application in 1997, Ceraj alleges that he was not a member of the Democratic Party before he left Albania because the party had yet to be organized. He acknowledges, however, that he was “active in seeking to bring about the end of the Communist Regime and to form a new anti-communist political structure.” Ceraj testified before the IJ that he had “never been a member of any political party” and that he “was for freedom, just that.” The second alleged instance of mistreatment by the Albanian authorities set forth in Ceraj’s 2001 supplemental application was his arrest at the demonstration in April of 1991. In the affidavit accompanying Ceraj’s application, he provides details about how he swam across the Buna River into Albania the night before the demonstration with his cousin and three other men. During his testimony before the IJ, however, Ceraj repeatedly changed the number of people who swam with him. He initially stated that there were three people, then four, then five who swam across the river. Ceraj also was unclear about whether his brother was among the persons involved in this incident. After the men arrived in Albania, they hid in a hay wagon and rode to the demonstration. Ceraj claims that the demonstration was peaceful until the police attacked the protestors.

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