Da Tong Peng v. Attorney General

340 F. App'x 121
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedAugust 5, 2009
DocketNo. 08-2800
StatusPublished

This text of 340 F. App'x 121 (Da Tong Peng v. Attorney General) 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
Da Tong Peng v. Attorney General, 340 F. App'x 121 (3d Cir. 2009).

Opinion

[122]*122OPINION

PER CURIAM.

Da Tong Peng petitions for review of an order of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) affirming the Immigration Judge’s (“IJ”) final order of removal. For the reasons that follow, we will deny his petition.

I.

Peng, a native and citizen of China, entered the United States on October 21, 2000 on a nonimmigrant business visitor’s visa, which he overstayed without authorization. On February 14, 2001, he applied for asylum, withholding of removal and relief under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). He was placed into removal proceedings in March 2001. Following a hearing on November 3, 2003, the IJ denied relief. On appeal, the BIA remanded the record back to the IJ “for a clear credibility determination,” and stated that the parties could provide additional evidence on remand. On August 28, 2006, a second hearing was conducted before a new IJ. Peng submitted additional corroborating exhibits, including a medical record and a letter from his wife in China. The IJ again denied Peng’s requests for relief, and the BIA adopted and affirmed the IJ’s decision. Peng filed a petition for review.

The IJ based his denial of relief on his conclusion that Peng was not a credible witness. (App.34, 44-47.) This finding was based primarily on three pieces of evidence: the letter from Peng’s wife, the consular investigation, and the “serious and material inconsistencies” between Peng’s original and amended asylum applications. (App.34-35.) Peng submitted a letter from his wife dated March 26, 2005, which he testified was written in response to the BIA’s instruction to submit additional evidence on remand. (App.164.) At the conclusion of the letter, Peng’s wife wrote: “Attached is the Photocopy of Proof of Hospitalization, CT diagnosis, bone fracture pictures, and medical condition, & c.” (App.239.) The IJ found these statements troubling, as he explained:

In addition, the wife’s affidavit specifically mentioned after her alleged signature, attached is the photocopy of proof of hospitalization, C.T. diagnosis, bone fracture, pictures, and medical conditions certification, and etc. Again, none of those records of a bone fracture, a C.T. diagnosis were ever[ ] provided to this Court. The respondent’s wife did not provide them with the letter that was provided to this Court. In fact, the only medical record provided to this Court was related to the respondent suffering allegedly some form of pneumonia which he argued was somehow related to the treatment he received [at] the hands of the Chinese police for his allegedly practicing of falún gong.
The Court finds it significant that when you review respondent’s two affidavits that were provided to this Court, neither one of them mentions bone fractures or the need apparently for a CAT scan. Neither one of them mentions that the respondent had a CAT scan. This raises serious concerns for this Court as to the credibility which goes to the heart of this case. The Court is specifically referring to Exhibit 3, the first detailed affidavit provided by the respondent as well as a subsequent amended affidavit, Exhibit 7. Therefore, the wife’s letter grays [sic] serious and material issues for this Court when considering the credibility of the respondent.

(App.35-36.)

Next the IJ addressed the consular investigation into the authenticity of three documents submitted by Peng in support [123]*123of his asylum claim: a Letter of Appointment from his alleged former employer dated November 11, 2007 (App.457-58), a Certificate of Search Number 537 (App. 460-61), and a Subpoena Number 843 (App.463-64), both dated November 2000 and issued by the Chengdu City Public Security Bureau. He testified that his wife provided these documents to him, but he did not know how they came to be in her possession. (App.137, 168-69.) She did not address this issue in her letter or any other document of record. (App.238-39.) The investigation was conducted by Julia Feng, a Foreign Service National Investigator of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”), on May 14, 2002. After Ms. Feng was unable to find the phone number for Peng’s alleged former employer, “Si Chuan Provincial Key Constructions the Industry and Commerce Limited”, she contacted Cheng Du District Shen Xian Shu Officials and Veterans Training Center. The person she spoke to stated that he had never heard of that organization. (App.395.) Next Ms. Feng attempted to ascertain the authenticity of the “search” and “subpoena” documents by contacting the Cheng Du City Public Security Bureau. (Id.) She faxed redacted copies of the “search” and “subpoena” documents to Mr. Yang Nan Jun, Duty Officer at the Operation Center, who informed her that the documents did not conform to those used by the Cheng Du City Public Security Bureau because: (1) the header did not contain the full name “People’s . Republic of China Criminal Procedural Laws” and (2) the format generally differed from that of authentic versions of the documents. (App.395-96.) For further confirmation, Ms. Feng contacted several other local public securities in mainland China and obtained samples of their search and subpoena certificates, which she concluded were totally different from the ones submitted by petitioner. (App. 396.) The IJ found Ms. Feng’s conclusion that Peng’s documents appeared to be fraudulent to be “compelling”. (App.38.)

Finally, the IJ contrasted the two asylum affidavits provided by Peng. In his first affidavit, which he submitted with his asylum application dated September 1, 2001, Peng stated that he was forced “to go to a meeting to ‘study’ ” and was “required to write criticisms of Falun Gong and our confessions,” and that since then, all of his construction projects were terminated and he was not paid for his finished projects. (App.442.) He did not allege any physical harm.1 In his second affidavit, dated January 10, 2003, he alleged:

7. At around 9:30 in the evening on December 25, 1999, two plain clothed police officers took me from my house to Xiaotianzhu Police Station. At the Police Station, another uniformed police officers interrogated me. During the interrogation, I was beaten in my legs by another plain-clothes officer with a bamboo stick. I was released at around midnight, and told to provide a detailed report to the police station. After I was released, I could see blackened marks on both my legs.
8. Because I didn’t submit the report as they required, the next day, I was taken to Xiaotianzhu Police Station again at around 9:00 p.m. for interroga[124]*124tion. During this interrogation, I was beaten and tortured for even longer and more severe than the previous one. I was beaten by bamboo sticks. The officer(s) also made me sit in a chair, and suddenly pushed the chair on the ground with me in it. The fall made the back of my head swollen and in pain. After my wife guaranteed that I would not practice Falun Gong anymore, I was released at around 3:00 a.m. on December 27, 1999. My legs and hands all bled from the beating and torture.
11. On April 21, 2000, at around 1:00 p.m., three uniformed military officers came to my house, and took me to a facility in the Military District, where I was continuously interrogated and tortured daily. From April 21, 2000 to April 24, the military officers tortured me by forcing me to perform a military stand continuously. I was also refused to be given water to drink.
12.

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