Cruz-Ibarra v. Lynch

632 F. App'x 824
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 3, 2015
DocketNo. 14-4159
StatusPublished

This text of 632 F. App'x 824 (Cruz-Ibarra v. Lynch) 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
Cruz-Ibarra v. Lynch, 632 F. App'x 824 (6th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

SILER, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner Francisco Cruz-Ibarra seeks review of the Board of Immigration Appeals’ (“BIA”) denial of his application for withholding of removal under the Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”) and protection under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). For the reasons stated below, we'DENY Cruz-Ibarra’s petition.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Cruz-Ibarra, a Mexican national born in Ebano, San Luis Potosí, entered the United States without inspection or parole through the Texas border in 2001 and eventually settled in Nashville, Tennessee. In April 2011, he was arrested in Nashville for driving under the influence, and the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) began removal proceedings against him. Appearing before an Immigration Judge (“U”), Cruz-Ibarra conceded his removability under the INA and requested withholding of removal and protection under the CAT. Cruz-Ibarra claimed he was eligible for -withholding because he feared that, if removed, he would be persecuted on the basis of his membership in two particular social groups — “land owners”, and “returning Mexican national[s] from the United States.” Cruz-Ibarra testified that he left school in 1999, at the age of 12, to work for his grandfather, who owns a large cattle ranch in Ebano. Cruz-Ibarra stated that the ranch was worth ten million pesos,1 that members of his family worked there, and that the community knew his grandfather owned the land.

The Zetas, an organized criminal enterprise, began to threaten members of Cruz-Ibarra’s family in 2011. He testified that, due to these threats, he feared returning to Mexico because the Zetas “believe that [he] ha[s] money,” as he would regularly send funds to his family. According to Cruz-Ibarra, members of the Zetas called his mother multiple times and demanded 2,000,000 pesos from her, threatening that, without payment, they would kidnap her youngest daughter. Cruz-Ibarra’s mother did not pay the money or call the police; instead, she changed her phone number and relocated to Estación Velasco, a town near Ebano. In 2012, Cruz-Ibarra’s mother and his niece travelled to Ebano to deposit funds at a bank in connection with his mother’s new job as a school treasurer. According to Cruz-Ibarra, men he believed to be Zetas stopped his mother and niece, demanded the 15,000 pesos his mother had on her person, took his niece, and refused to return her until his mother handed over 80,000 pesos from her personal account. He testified that no other members of his family had been harmed,2 but he feared he would be kidnapped by the Zetas if he returned to Mexico because [826]*826he spent time in the United States and would therefore be perceived as wealthy.

In addition to his own testimony, Cruz-Ibarra provided a declaration from Rafael Quezada, who conveyed that “Cruz[-]Ibar~ ra is [an] honest, pacific and very hardworking person with who[m he] ha[s] lived with in [Ebano] personally and professionally.” Quezada also stated that Cruz-Ibarra left Mexico because of “the high risk of insecurity’ in the country and because “nobody would want to be subject to violence.” In contrast, Cruz-Ibarra’s own declaration stated that he “came to the United States to help [his] family economically.” Cruz-Ibarra also submitted two news articles about drug violence in Ebano and San Luis Potosí. The IJ denied Cruz-Ibarra’s petition for withholding of removal and denied him protection under the CAT. She found Cruz-Ibarra to be credible but noted that he did not testify as to how he knew or was related to Quezada, that Quezada’s declaration was “generic,” that Cruz-Ibarra did not “provide any declarations from any of his family members,” and that he did not provide anything to show that corroborating evidence was unavailable.

The IJ determined that Cruz-Ibarra did not meet his burden of production because he came forth with “very little corrobora^ tion” for his account considering the type of evidence that would be expected when a petitioner claims that threats or other incidents “were because of his membership in a particular social group.”

Nevertheless, the IJ addressed the merits of Cruz-Ibarra’s claim. She determined that Cruz-Ibarra did not show that he was persecuted in the past—and thus future persecution was not presumed—because he had not connected any negative experience that his family members had to himself or his status. The IJ also found that Cruz-Ibarra did not otherwise establish that he was likely to suffer future persecution if removed to Mexico because he did not demonstrate an objective fear of persecution based on a protected ground. In reaching this conclusion, the IJ reasoned that the Mexican government has taken action to stop crime and gang activities, but Cruz-Ibarra’s mother did not contact the police and therefore did not give law enforcement an “opportunity to intervene and assist the family members.” Further, Cruz-Ibarra’s grandparents, father, and some of his brothers have continued to live and work in Ebano without incident.

The IJ also determined that Cruz-Ibar-ra did not sufficiently show a connection between his fear of persecution and membership in a “particular social group.” The IJ found that Cruz-Ibarra had not established that he was “a wealthy landowner or that anyone perceive[d] him as such.” To that end, the IJ noted that Cruz-Ibarra had stated that he came to the United States to help his family financially and that, though his grandfather owns land, the fact that Cruz-Ibarra sent money to support his family undercut his argument that they are wealthy. The IJ also stated that Cruz-Ibarra did not provide corroboration for the landownership or any other evidence that people in the community saw the family as landowners collectively. Additionally, the IJ found that Cruz-Ibarra had not shown that he or any member of his family was “singled out for persecution because of the fact that they owned land in the community,” as the incidents involving his mother did not occur on account of landownership. Rather, Cruz-Ibarra’s mother was a target for extortion, and he did not connect that extortion “to her being a wealthy landowner.”

Moreover, the IJ found that perceived wealth—whether on the basis of landownership or the fact that Cruz-Ibarra resided [827]*827in the United States — is not “a basis for inclusion in a particular social group” for purposes of withholding of removal. According to the decision, a class of individuals defined in this way lacks “particularity” and its defining characteristics are not “immutable.” The IJ noted that essentially everyone in Mexico is at risk from the Zetas and similar parties and that the term “particular social group” in the standard for withholding of removal “is not a catchall for persons alleging harm.”

Regarding the CAT claim, the IJ found that Cruz-Ibarra feared violence at the hands of the Zetas rather than a governmental entity or official, and he did not present evidence to suggest “that any government official would know about any torture to [Cruz-Ibarra] and turn a blind eye.”

On appeal, the BIA found that the IJ’s findings of fact were not clearly erroneous. It agreed that Cruz-Ibarra “did not demonstrate eligibility for withholding of removal,” and it adopted the IJ’s reasoning on this point.

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Bluebook (online)
632 F. App'x 824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cruz-ibarra-v-lynch-ca6-2015.