Charlyne Aneyoue v. Alberto Gonzales

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 23, 2007
Docket05-2924
StatusPublished

This text of Charlyne Aneyoue v. Alberto Gonzales (Charlyne Aneyoue v. Alberto Gonzales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Charlyne Aneyoue v. Alberto Gonzales, (8th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 05-2924 ___________

Charlyne Sokopy Aneyoue, * * Petitioner, * * Petition for Review of an Order of the v. * Board of Immigration Appeals. * Alberto Gonzales, Attorney General * of the United States of America, * * Respondent. * ___________

Submitted: February 16, 2007 Filed: February 23, 2007 ___________

Before RILEY, MELLOY, and SHEPHERD, Circuit Judges. ___________

MELLOY, Circuit Judge.

Charlyne Sokopy Aneyoue, a native and citizen of Liberia, applied for and was denied asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture. An Immigration Judge (“IJ”) found that she had submitted a fraudulent document and that her testimony lacked credibility. She filed a Notice of Appeal with the Board of Immigration Appeals (“the Board”) and also asked the Board to reopen her case, submitting new evidence that purported to cure the deficiencies noted by the IJ. The Board rejected her appeal and refused to reopen the case on the basis of the newly submitted evidence because Aneyoue had not shown that it was previously unavailable. Aneyoue moved for reconsideration of the denial of her motion to reopen, raising substantially identical arguments. The Board denied her motion for reconsideration, and Aneyoue petitions this court for review of the Board’s decision not to reconsider its prior denial of her motion to reopen. We deny the petition.

I. BACKGROUND

Charlyne Sokopy Aneyoue legally entered the United States at Baltimore in late 2000 on a visitor’s visa. She overstayed the visa, and immigration authorities charged her as a removable alien. In response, Aneyoue applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture. After an interview with an asylum officer, in which the officer found that Aneyoue lacked credibility, she appeared before an IJ in Atlanta for an initial hearing in 2001. Following several extensions of time and a transfer of venue, she appeared before an IJ in Bloomington, Minnesota, for a hearing on the merits of her claims on October 27, 2003.

At the hearing, Aneyoue gave the following account. Before arriving in the United States, she lived in a village in Lofa County, Liberia, with her father. Her father was an ethnic Krahn, a group that suffered well-documented abuses at the hands of the Liberian government under the 1997-2003 regime of exiled President Charles Taylor. Though her parents often spoke the Krahn language at home, Aneyoue learned only English. In April of 2000, Liberian soldiers arrived in the village, firing weapons and accusing the Krahn residents of supporting rebels in Liberia’s then- ongoing civil war. The soldiers came to her apartment house, told the residents that they were going to be executed, and ordered the residents to follow them. Aneyoue’s father asked them to spare his daughter’s life, and the soldiers shot and killed him in response. The commander and one or two men then took Aneyoue behind the building and proceeded to beat and rape her.

-2- A week or two later, Aneyoue exhibited the symptoms of a sexually transmitted infection and traveled to St. Joseph Catholic Hospital in Monrovia for treatment. While in Monrovia, she received a message from a friend in the village warning her that the soldiers had returned to the village and had inquired about her. She spent some months saving money, then flew to the United States with a passport that she obtained shortly before the violence in her village. She said she feared returning to Liberia because she is worried that Taylor and his forces may come back to the country.

Aside from her testimony, Aneyoue’s only other evidence of the incident was a purported medical record from St. Joseph indicating that doctors had treated her for injuries consistent with rape. The document stated that doctors initially examined her on July 16, 2000, which contradicted her testimony that she was raped in April of 2000 and went to the hospital within two weeks after the incident. A government investigation also showed the document to be fraudulent. The investigator contacted the hospital administrator at St. Joseph, who stated that the hospital had no record of treating Aneyoue, no record of the doctor whose supposed signature appears on the medical record, and that the document itself was not authentic: St. Joseph used different stationery than the document, as well as a different seal of authenticity. In addition, the investigator noted that the document was clearly generated on a computer, while most clinics in Liberia at the time used manual typewriters due to a lack of electricity. The government served a copy of this investigative report upon counsel for Aneyoue on September 12, 2002, and that same counsel represented Aneyoue at the merits hearing more than a year later.

Despite having notice of the document’s flaws well in advance of her hearing, Aneyoue had not withdrawn the purported medical record from evidence and had no explanation for its apparent lack of authenticity. She claimed she asked her uncle in Liberia to obtain the record for her; after receiving notice that it may be fraudulent, she attempted to call her uncle but took no other steps to resolve the matter.

-3- This and other inconsistencies (such as the fact that she could not speak a word of the Krahn language despite allegedly growing up in a household where it was spoken openly), as well as Aneyoue’s inability to give particular details surrounding the alleged violence in April of 2000, led the IJ to find that Aneyoue was not credible and the purported medical record was fraudulent. These findings left Aneyoue without solid evidence to support her claims for relief, and the IJ denied those claims. The IJ also found that Aneyoue’s application for asylum was frivolous, thus rendering her permanently ineligible for immigration benefits. 8 U.S.C. § 1158(d)(6).

Aneyoue filed a notice of appeal with the Board, indicating that she intended to file a brief in support of the appeal. Rather than submitting a brief, however, she filed a “Motion to Reopen and Remand” with attached evidence, including an affidavit stating that she had located a witness to the rape (the friend who warned her against returning to the village) and a second hospital record showing that she registered at the JFK Medical Center on May 10, 2000, and told her treating physician that she had been the victim of rape. The Board adopted the factual findings of the IJ and affirmed the decision, holding that the record supported the IJ’s adverse credibility finding. It also denied Aneyoue’s motion to reopen and remand the case on the basis of new evidence, because she did not show that the evidence “was not available and could not have been discovered or presented at the former hearing.” 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(c)(1). Aneyoue filed a subsequent motion to reconsider this decision of the Board, this time attaching an affidavit from the alleged witness who attested to the events described in Aneyoue’s testimony. The Board denied that motion as well, noting that it was “not persuaded by the respondent’s contentions that our prior decision was either legally, or factually, erroneous.”

II. DISCUSSION

Aneyoue appeals the denial of her motion for reconsideration to this court, arguing that the Board should have reopened and remanded her case due to her

-4- submission of new evidence. Aneyoue argues that this evidence removes the grounds for an adverse credibility finding and therefore enables her to show her eligibility for asylum.

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