Chen v. Atty Gen USA

164 F. App'x 274
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 31, 2006
Docket04-4685
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 164 F. App'x 274 (Chen v. Atty Gen USA) 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
Chen v. Atty Gen USA, 164 F. App'x 274 (3d Cir. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

AMBRO, Circuit Judge

Juan Chen and Zhong Rong Yang — wife and husband, respectively — petition for review of a decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) affirming a decision of the Immigration Judge (“IJ”) that denied Chen’s application for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). 1 She contends that the BIA erred in concluding that she had not suffered past persecution and did not have a well-founded fear of future persecution due to China’s restrictive family planning policies. For the reasons noted below, we grant the petition.

I. Facts and Procedural History 2

Chen, a citizen of the People’s Republic of China, entered the United States in June 2001 without a valid entry document. She was interviewed by an officer of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) 3 upon her arrival. Chen claimed that she fled China due to its restrictive family planning policies. She was placed in removal proceedings by a notice to appear dated June 13, 2001. In July 2001 she filed an application for asylum and withholding of removal, and later requested additional relief under the CAT.

A. Hearings Before the IJ

Chen testified before the IJ on July 15, 2003 and repeated the relevant allegations contained in her asylum application. She began by stating that the reason for her claim was that she had been forcibly sterilized but, upon further questioning by the IJ, stated that she “didn’t mean to say” that she had been sterilized but rather that she underwent an abortion. She testified that she became pregnant with her first child, a daughter, in 1993, but could not remember the month. According to Chen, three months after her first child was born, family planning officials forced her to insert an intrauterine device (“IUD”), but that IUD “fell out” and another one was inserted in September 1996 after the lost IUD was discovered during a routine medical examination. She testified that the second IUD “wasn’t successful,” and in April 1997 she learned she was pregnant again. She also stated that, upon learning of her pregnancy, she surmised that the second IUD must have fallen out, but did not know precisely when this occurred.

*277 Chen testified that, upon learning she was pregnant, she was “afraid that [the family planning officials] would discover my pregnancy and force me to ... undergo an abortion.” She and Yang thus fled to Fuzhou in April 1997, leaving their daughter in the care of Yang’s parents. She testified that she returned to her home four months later to visit her daughter and was accosted by five officials who took her to a hospital and “insert[ed] a needle ... [i]n my belly.” Chen stated that she began to feel intense pain and “within two or three hours the fetus had c[o]me out.” After the abortion, officials visited her house “every few days” and threatened her with sterilization. As a result of these threats, Chen and Yang again left their daughter in the care of Yang’s parents and returned to Fuzhou in August 1997. They left for the United States in 2001. 4

On cross-examination, Chen stated that for the four years she lived in Fuzhou after the forced abortion, she and Yang did not return to her village to visit their daughter because she “was afraid that if I ... would be discovered by the officials I would be forced to undergo a sterilization,” and that she did not bring her daughter with her to Fuzhou because “I escape[d] and I was on the run and I ... had to move from place to place.” She admitted, however, that she had steady work as a nanny and babysitter in Fuzhou during this time. She also stated that she waited until June 2001 to come to the United States because Yang came to this country first and she “was waiting for my husband to ... stabilize in America.”

The Government then called Yang to testify. Yang stated that he did not include his wife’s experiences in his prior asylum application because his prior attorney advised him that he “didn’t have personal experience” with those incidents and “it was better for my wife to tell her own story.” He also testified that he did not inform the INS asylum officer of his wife’s abortion when he was interviewed because “I was mainly concern[ed] about my case” and “I didn’t have the time ... to go into detail.”

B. IJ’s Oral Decision ■

At the close of testimony, the IJ issued an oral decision denying Chen’s application for asylum, withholding of removal, and withholding under the CAT. He also denied Yang’s derivative application. The IJ concluded that Chen’s testimony was “conjured up and fabricated ... just to present to this Court,” and that her application was therefore frivolous. Specifically, he found that Chen’s initial confusion regarding whether she was sterilized or forced to undergo an abortion in 1997 rendered her testimony not credible. He also faulted Chen for allegedly equivocating on when the first IUD fell out, finding that Chen “changed her testimony” by first stating that she discovered it had fallen out in April 1997 when she learned she was pregnant, and then stating that, in fact, the failure of the IUD was discovered in a 1996 medical exam. Moreover, the IJ concluded that it was “extremely difficult to believe” that Chen would not remember the date she became pregnant with her first child, and therefore concluded that, “rather than these events actually happen *278 ing to [Chen],” she had “memorized this testimony and consequently that calls for the confusion when she was getting her facts backwards.”

The IJ also concluded that Chen’s testimony that she was afraid to return to her village between 1997 and 2001, and instead was hiding in Fuzhou, “ma[de] absolutely no sense” because there was no evidence that Chen violated any birth control laws during that time and thus “she would not have a verifiable fear of being sterilized.”

As for Yang’s testimony, the IJ found that it “ma[de] absolutely no sense” that Yang would not have mentioned his wife’s alleged violations of China’s family planning laws in his asylum application, and that his testimony that his attorney at the time advised him to list only his personal experiences was not credible because “his attorney would know that if indeed his wife had undergone an abortion, this would positively affect [Yang’s] application.” The IJ also faulted Yang for not revealing this information to the INS asylum officer at his initial interview, concluding that “the first words out of [Yang’s] mouth to the asylum officer surely would be relating to the problems that his wife had.”

The IJ thus found that Chen and Yang had not testified credibly about past persecution or a well-founded fear of future persecution, and therefore denied the applications for asylum and withholding of removal. He also concluded that there was no evidence in the record that the petitioners risked torture if removed to China, and therefore denied their requests for withholding under the CAT.

C. Proceedings Before the BIA

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Related

In Re: Chen
245 F. App'x 153 (Third Circuit, 2007)
Agusalim v. Gonzales
181 F. App'x 144 (Third Circuit, 2005)

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Bluebook (online)
164 F. App'x 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chen-v-atty-gen-usa-ca3-2006.