Ceta v. Ashcroft

117 F. App'x 478
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 2, 2004
DocketNo. 03-3066
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 117 F. App'x 478 (Ceta v. Ashcroft) 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
Ceta v. Ashcroft, 117 F. App'x 478 (7th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

ORDER

Pelivan Ceta, a citizen of Albania, arrived at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport in 1998 and immediately requested asylum or withholding of removal on the ground that he was persecuted in Albania for supporting the Democratic Party. After a hearing, an immigration judge found that Ceta was not credible and that he was removable on four different bases, including that he tried to enter the United States by using a fraudulent passport. Ceta’s request for asylum was denied. The Board of Immigration Appeals subsequently concluded that the IJ’s adverse credibility determination was not sustainable, but nonetheless upheld the denial of relief and the finding of a fraudulent or willful misrepresentation. In his petition for review in this court, Ceta challenges both the asylum determination and the finding regarding the fraudulent passport. We agree with Ceta that the government failed to prove that his passport was invalid and so the evidence does not support a finding that he engaged in fraudulent or willful misrepresentation, but, with these exceptions, we deny his petition for review.

On October 31, 1998, Ceta arrived at O’Hare on a flight from Italy. Upon inspection, he told immigration officials that he was seeking asylum and showed them an Albanian passport with an issue date of October 25, 1998. Ceta, however, did not have a visa. At the airport, immigration inspectors questioned him and took a sworn statement regarding his intention to apply for asylum. In this statement, Ceta recounted that he presented his Albanian passport, number 1163251, upon inspection at O’Hare. According to Ceta, he obtained the passport while in Italy with help from two friends. Ceta represented in his statement that he paid two Italians $7,000 to board the plane and that nobody checked his passport before boarding. Ceta further stated that he is a member of the Democratic Party, that he left Albania due to a war, and that he fears returning there because he will be persecuted.

The Immigration Service ultimately charged Ceta as removable on the alternative grounds that he (1) attempted to gain entry into the United States by fraudulently or willfully misrepresenting a material fact, INA § 212(a)(6)(C)©; (2) did not have a valid, unexpired immigrant visa, id. § 212(a) (7) (A) (i) (I); (3) did not have a valid passport, id. § 212(a)(7)(B)(i)(I); and (4) did not have a valid non-immigrant visa, id. § 212(a)(7)(B)(i)(II). Ceta conceded removability under § 212(a) (7) (A) (i) (I) and § 212(a)(7)(B)(i)(II) because he did not haye a valid visa of any kind, but he denied attempting to enter the United States by means of a fraudulent or willful misrepresentation, and denied not being in possession of a valid passport.

On April 16, 1999, Ceta formally applied for asylum. When asked on the application form whether he or a family member belonged to any political party, he responded that both he and his brother supported the Democratic Party. When asked whether any family member had ever been mistreated or threatened by Albanian authorities, Ceta answered affirmatively and, with respect to the motivation for the abuse, checked the box for “political opinion.”

In a separate statement in support of his asylum application, Ceta detailed his and [480]*480his family’s involvement in the Democratic Party, recounted attacks on himself and his family that he attributed to party membership, provided details about how he acquired his Albanian passport, and explained how he traveled from Albania to the United States via Italy. In particular, Ceta described a series of incidents that, he said, showed how he and his family were targeted for participating in the Democratic Party and resisting the Socialist Party. Ceta described two incidents where shots were fired toward his family home, once by men driving Socialist Party vans, and the other time by someone driving a white Mercedez-Benz. Ceta also pointed to his mother’s injury in a hit-and-run incident involving a van driven by masked men, and another incident where he and a friend were chased and his friend was gunned down and killed. Ceta explained in his statement that these events came after his oldest brother, Axhem, was named chief of police for their town and followed Axhem’s arrests of several criminals who were also members of the Socialist Party. Ceta further explained that these events frightened him to the point that he fled his hometown and eventually reached Italy.

As to his passport, Ceta recounted in the statement submitted with his asylum application that he received it while in Italy. According to Ceta, two friends traveled from Italy to Albania to retrieve the passport, which Axhem had obtained on his behalf. Ceta conceded in his written statement that the birth date on the passport is incorrect by two days (he gives his birth date as February 26, 1977, but the passport says February 28) but insisted that the name and photograph are his. He also submitted with his asylum application a copy of a document purportedly from the Ministry of Public Order in Albania, which (as translated) certifies that Albanian passport number 1163251 was “issued to the citizen Pelivan Ceta born on February 7, 1977” and “is a valid passport.” The February 7 birth date given for Ceta on the certification differs both from the date Ceta gives and from the date on the passport.

At the February 2000 hearing on Ceta’s asylum application, he maintained that his passport was valid, but the IJ found that the circumstances by which Ceta obtained it were highly irregular and that Ceta’s insistence that the document was valid amounted to fraud. Ceta also recounted details of his and Axhem’s involvement in the Democratic Party, as well as Axhem’s position as chief of police in their hometown of Kucove. Ceta testified that “as a result” of Axhem becoming chief of police, a position that he abandoned after just one week, the family began experiencing problems.

The details of those problems track the account Ceta gave in his earlier written statement. Regarding a motive for the gunfire targeted at the family home, Ceta testified that he and Axhem were well-known in the Democratic Party but that Axhem believed the shootings to be a result of his position as the chief of police. Ceta further testified that Axhem resigned from the police department after their mother was injured, and went into hiding for 3 months. While Axhem was away, Ceta explained, the family received one letter giving them 2 weeks to locate Ax-hem if they wanted to avoid harm and a follow-up letter serving final notice that Ceta would be killed if Axhem did not reappear within 10 days. Ceta also recounted the story of his friend being shot and killed when they were stalked by two masked gunmen. It was fear from this event, Ceta testified, that finally prompted him to flee.

[481]*481In his hearing testimony Ceta again recounted how he traveled from Italy to the United States. He said he paid two Italians $7,000 for a plane ticket and that he was escorted to the plane without showing any travel documents. Ceta testified that he fears going back to Albania and believes that, if he is returned, a couple of “longtime criminals” who are Socialists might kill him. Ceta also testified that he has been a supporter of the Democratic Party since 1993 and that for a period of time ending in 1995 he had served in the army, but that until Axhem became chief of police he had not experienced problems because of his politics.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ceta v. Mukasey
535 F.3d 639 (Seventh Circuit, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 F. App'x 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ceta-v-ashcroft-ca7-2004.