Ceribashi v. Gonzales

188 F. App'x 1
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 21, 2006
Docket05-2106
StatusPublished

This text of 188 F. App'x 1 (Ceribashi v. Gonzales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ceribashi v. Gonzales, 188 F. App'x 1 (1st Cir. 2006).

Opinion

COFFIN, Senior Circuit Judge.

Petitioner Engjell Ceribashi, a native and citizen of Albania, entered the United States in June 2001 on a six-month visitor’s visa and applied early the next year for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the United Nations Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). Finding that petitioner’s tale of persecution lacked credibility, an immigration judge (“IJ”) deemed him ineligible for relief; the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) affirmed without opinion. After carefully examining the record, we are unpersuaded that “any reasonable adjudicator would be compelled to” reach a different outcome, 8 *2 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(4)(B), and we consequently deny Ceribashi’s petition for review.

Ceribashi’s allegations of persecution prominently feature his father’s role as a political activist in Albania in the 1940s and the father’s execution by the Communist regime in 1946, when petitioner was ten years old. He claims that the family experienced various forms of ill treatment through the following decades, including his confinement in labor camps between 1965 and 1985. Petitioner’s circumstances improved when the Democratic Party (“DP”) controlled the Albanian government in the 1990s and he was involved in DP activities, 1 but the danger returned when the Socialist Party came to power in 1997.

Ceribashi points to two specific incidents, in addition to his family history, to substantiate his claim of persecution. First, he asserts that in May 1998 he was deliberately hit by a car as he rode a bicycle to his home in Tirana. He was hospitalized for five days and, concerned about his safety, spent most of his time at home for the next two years. He returned to the hospital in March 2000 for surgery on his leg, and he said the second incident occurred upon his release about two weeks later. Two men confronted him after he left the hospital, warning that “[w]e are not done with you and your family” and threatening to cut off his legs or kill him if he continued his support for the Democratic Party. Petitioner said he recognized the men as active supporters of the Socialist Party.

Petitioner stated that his reports of the incidents to the police were ignored because the police also were Socialist supporters who recognized him and knew of his family background and DP affiliation. Fearing for his life after the second assault, petitioner went into hiding for six months and then applied for a visa at the American embassy. He was granted a visitor’s visa in December 2000, but did not leave Albania until June 2001 because he lacked the funds to make the trip earlier.

Petitioner claims that if he is forced to return to Albania his life will be at risk because of his family history and his support for, and activities on behalf of, the Democratic Party. The IJ, however, had “serious issues with [petitioner’s] credibility,” concluding that it is “highly unlike[ly] that [he] would have been targeted in the year 1998 or even in the year 2000 by those who perhaps might have remembered his father some 53 to 55 years ago.” The IJ further noted that, even if petitioner’s version of events were credible, “he has failed to state a claim that is rational ] and reasonable based upon the country conditions in Albania as reported by the United States State Department.” Accordingly, the IJ denied all of petitioner’s claims.

Our review is limited: we consider only whether substantial evidence in the record supports the IJ’s finding that the petitioner failed to show a well founded fear of persecution and thus did not establish his asylum claim; if the finding has sufficient support, it must stand unless a reasonable factfinder would be compelled to make a contrary determination. Lumaj v. Gonzales, 446 F.3d 194, 198 (1st Cir.2006) (citing Olujoke v. Gonzales, 411 F.3d 16, 21 (1st Cir.2005)). 2 The record here is ade *3 quate to sustain the IJ’s ruling. 3

The IJ’s doubts about petitioner’s credibility stem in part from variations in his story about the bicycle incident and from the judge’s skepticism that animosity toward petitioner’s father sixty years ago would continue to fuel persecution against petitioner. The IJ noted that petitioner told the asylum officer who initially interviewed him that a car door opened suddenly and knocked him off his bicycle, but later testified that a car drove straight at him. 4 Of more significance in supporting the IJ’s credibility judgment is that petitioner consistently reported that no one else was on the street when the bicycle incident occurred, but he produced a photograph of the suspect car taken by a friend nearly two years later; the friend supposedly “was close to the street where the incident happened,” remembered the license plate number, and recognized the vehicle.

The IJ also observed that petitioner’s son remains in Albania, apparently safely, and the record reveals that two of petitioner’s siblings live there as well. Although petitioner claims that he is a target while they are not because of his DP activity and because his brother and sister are elderly, petitioner was beyond 65 when he left Albania and is now nearly seventy years old.

Moreover, the IJ was skeptical that petitioner played a significant role in the DP, and the record permits such doubts. In his application for asylum, petitioner said that he supported the democratic movement and “took part in ... all the demonstrations to overthrow the communist system” and also stated that he wrote articles in the Democratic Party newspaper. He testified that he attended “all the meetings of the democratic party” and that he was “a speaker for the democratic system in that time.” So far as we can tell, however, none of the newspaper articles he authored are in the record, and his DP membership card was dated July 2001—which was after his arrival in the United States. 5 He offered no other specific evidence of a leadership role in the DP, and thus left largely unexplained why he would be targeted for harm—other than to rely on his father’s activity half a century earlier. 6 Additional *4 ly, the IJ could have discounted the seriousness of any threat because petitioner remained in his home without incident for two years after the bicycle episode and then waited a year after the hospital episode to leave the country. Although he reported that he was in hiding for that final year, he also testified, in response to a question, that he lived in the same residence between 1998 and 2001, the year of his departure.

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Related

Makhoul v. Ashcroft
387 F.3d 75 (First Circuit, 2004)
Olujoke v. Gonzáles
411 F.3d 16 (First Circuit, 2005)
Bocova v. Gonzales
412 F.3d 257 (First Circuit, 2005)
Un v. Ashcroft
415 F.3d 205 (First Circuit, 2005)
Waweru v. Gonzales
437 F.3d 199 (First Circuit, 2006)
Lumaj v. Gonzales
446 F.3d 194 (First Circuit, 2006)
CHEN
20 I. & N. Dec. 16 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 F. App'x 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ceribashi-v-gonzales-ca1-2006.