DIAZ

10 I. & N. Dec. 199
CourtBoard of Immigration Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1963
Docket1270
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 10 I. & N. Dec. 199 (DIAZ) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Board of Immigration Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DIAZ, 10 I. & N. Dec. 199 (bia 1963).

Opinion

Interim Decision 4 1270

MATTER or Drat

In DEPORTATION Proceedings

A-12386631

Decided by Board March 90, 1963 Respondent, a native and national of the Dominican Republic, has not established that he would be subject to physical persecution within the meaning of section 243 (li) of the Immigration and Nationality Act by claiming possible physical injury, incurred as an innocent bystander, incident to uncontrolled mob vio- lence in the Dominican Republic. CHARGE: Order; Act of 1952—Sectioa 241(a) (2) [5 U.S.O. 1251(a) (2)]—Visitor remained longer.

The record establishes respondent is deportable as charged in the order to show cause. He remained in this country after the author- ized time of his visit expired on December 10, 1961. The special inquiry officer granted him the privilege of voluntary departure to be replaced by deportation to the Dominican Republic, the country of his birth and nationality, if he fails to comply with the conditions gov- erning his voluntary departure. Respondent did not designate a coun- try to which lie would want to be sent if deported. The maintains he will be physically persecuted if returned to the Dominican Republic and appeals from the portion of the special inquiry officer's decision denying him the benefits of section 243 (h) of the Immigration and Nationality Act. Respondent's contentions differ substantially from those generally raised in proceedings under section 243(h). He does not allege the Dominican authorities would physically persecute him because of any opposition on his part to the present government or any past activities. Counsel for respondent asserts the special inquiry officer erred in limit- ing physical persecution under the statute to acts inflicted, or sanc- tioned, by governmental authorities. He argues that the statutory meaning of the term "physical persecution" includes bodily harm at . the hands of the populace (or certain elements thereof) where the gov-

199 Interim Decision 40270 •rnment, although not sanctioning such act, is unable to control the situation. Respondent's evidence consists almost entirely of testimony of two -witnesses and factual material from newspapers and magazines pub-

lished either in this country or the Dominican Republic. Primarily, it reports instances of mob violence occurring in Santo Domingo over the past several months and points to the elements contributing to the unrest. None of this evidence relates directly and specifically to respondent. As we perceive counsel's argument it comprises at least three dis- tinct situations. A mob or organized group in the Dominican Re- public may attack a person known to have been connected officially or unofficially with the Trujillo regime and suspected, with good reason, of participation in the dictatorship's excesses, or known by the mob or group as otherwise opposed to its interests. The second situation also results in intentional physical harm, but there the mob or group erro- neously identifies the person as inimical. Respondent's witness, Ar- mando Luna, underwent such an experience. In either of the forego- ing situations the attacker (as happened to the witness, Luna) may -enlist the unwitting aid of the authorities through false accusations. In the third situation a completely innocent bystander may be inad- vertently injured during a riot or other lawless and violent activity caused by political unrest. As the'Service's representative at oral argument points out, counsel's historical examples of nongovernmental persecution relate to par- ticular groups the early Christians, the Jews in Russia, and the —

nobility during the French revolution. The dictionary defin ition re- ferred to in respondent's brief also suggests the group or class concept. 2 Respondt,hwvriclamsebhpnyclasorgu which would render him particularly liable to harassment. Thus we -

do not have before us the situation in which a mob or group might attack 's person because of his past or present political activities. Accordingly, we do not rule whether the statute contemplates that situation.2

2 ". . . Third Edition of Webster's New International Dictionary issued in

1961, which is quoted as follows: 'la The Act or practice of persecuting as (1) the infliction of sufferings, harm or death on those who differ (as in origin, religion or social outlook) in a way regarded as offensive or meriting extirpa- tion: * * * b : a campaign having for its object the subjugation or extirpation of the adherents of a religion or way of life (pogroms in Russia)'." Respond- ent's brief, p. 2. The point which counsel raises has been at least twice before Federal courts of appeals. In each ease a group of Communists—acting without the govern- ment's authority or approval—allegedly would harass the individual in question Footnote continued on following page.

200 Interim Decision #1270 Counsel for respondent does not clearly distinguish the variations of what we have assigned as his second situation. Under that situation the attackers may simply mistakenly identify the victim. On the other hand, the attackers may properly identify the victim, but act on the basis of motives unrelated to those avowed. There may be only a single attack or two or more. These possibilities suggest many ramifications in the broader aspects of the question whether physical injury arising under this second situation might come within the statutory concept of physical persecution. Physical persecution for purposes of the statute has been held gen- erally to be based upon religious, political, or racial grounds' There is some indication that the term should not be so restricted.' We limit our inquiry at this point, however, to circumstances in the second situ- ation, reasonably derived from the record, which if counsel's thesis is correct might satisfy the requirements of the statute. Within this scope any intentionally inflicted physical harm respondent might suf- fer could result only from a completely mistaken identification of him as a supporter of Trujillo or as otherwise opposed to the political in- terests of the mob or fraction. Nothing in respondent's testimony

because of his political convictions. In Lavdcts v. Holland, 235 F.2d 955 (CA. 3, 1956), the court ruled there was insufficient basis for the petitioner's belief that if he returned to his small community in Greece, Communists there, who in no way represented the governmental authorities, would physically harm him. The court for this reason did not decide nor comment upon whether fear of perse- cution by secretly and illegally operating communist terrorists in the petitioner's homeland might satisfy the requirements of the statute—section 4 of the Die- placed Persons Act, 50 U.S.C. App. section 1953. In U.S. ex rel. Cantieani v. Holton, 248 F.2d 737 (OA. 7, 1957) cert. den. 356 U.S. 932 (1958) (referred to by the special inquiry officer) the petitioner declared he would be subject to persecution and abuse from communistic elements in his village in Italy. The court in upholding the administrative denial of relief under section 243 (h) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1253 (h) ) gave no indication whether abuse by nonofficial elements in the population could constitute physical persecution for purposes of that statutory provision.

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10 I. & N. Dec. 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diaz-bia-1963.