Dieng v. Mukasey

284 F. App'x 2
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 7, 2008
Docket06-1622
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 284 F. App'x 2 (Dieng v. Mukasey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dieng v. Mukasey, 284 F. App'x 2 (4th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Aminata Dieng, a native and citizen of Senegal, petitions for review of a final order of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) affirming the immigration judge’s (“IJ”) denial of her applications for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”), as well as the denial of her minor son’s derivative claims. For the reasons set forth below, we deny the petition for review.

I.

Dieng and her minor son are natives and citizens of Senegal. Dieng entered the United States on February 17, 2003, using a Senegalese passport belonging to another person and an American visa issued in someone else’s name. Her son entered the United States shortly thereafter. The Immigration and Naturalization Service initiated removal proceedings against Dieng and her son on January 20, 2004, on grounds they had entered the United States without a valid visa or other entry document. Dieng concedes she and her son entered the United States without a valid visa or other entry document as alleged in the notices of removal. Removal proceedings were held before the IJ, who denied her applications. The BIA affirmed the IJ’s decision by summary order.

As an initial matter, it is undisputed on appeal that Dieng was subjected to female genital mutilation (“FGM”) in Senegal. At the removal proceeding, Dieng testified that her parents ordered FGM to be performed on her when she was five years old. She also explained that FGM was and continues to be a common practice in Senegal, and that it is prevalent among members of the Toucouleur tribe, of which she is a member. The IJ, apparently crediting that testimony and other documentary evidence, found that Dieng suffered FGM as a child and therefore demonstrated past persecution. The government does not challenge that finding.

Dieng grounded her asylum claim on two separate arguments. First, Dieng asserted that she held a well-founded fear of future persecution because, if removed to Senegal, she would object to FGM being performed on her alleged daughter, who is still in Senegal. That objection, she argued, would result in physical abuse by her purported husband, who also still resides in Senegal. Second, Dieng claimed that she personally endured past persecution in the form of FGM, which automatically gives rise to a presumption that she holds a well-founded fear of future persecution. In requesting withholding of removal, Dieng claimed the severity of her past persecution (i.e., FGM and domestic abuse) warranted a discretionary grant of asylum. Finally, as to her application for protection under the CAT, Dieng apparently claimed that she would likely be “tortured” because her husband would abuse her and local police authorities would, based on their past unwillingness to intervene, acquiesce in that abuse.

A.

In her application and in testimony before the IJ, Dieng summarized her life in *5 Senegal and the circumstances that brought her to the United States. She generally explained that women in her tribe were expected to be subordinate to the men and that all girls were circumcised at a young age. She recalled that her parents had FGM performed on her when she was five years old.

Dieng testified that, in 1995, her parents arranged for her to marry Malick Talla, who already had at least two other wives. 1 Dieng objected to the marriage, which resulted in her parents beating her severely. She eventually acquiesced to the marriage, and allegedly had two children with Tallaher son, who was born in 1997, and a daughter, who was born in 2000 and still lives in Senegal. 2 Dieng testified that Talla was physically abusive, beating her whenever she refused to have sexual intercourse with him.

According to Dieng, Talla decided in May 2002 that FGM would be performed on her daughter. Talla beat Dieng with a whip or belt when she objected, and the physical abuse continued for as long as she continued to object to the procedure. Dieng testified that, although she sought assistance from local police on two occasions, they were unwilling to help. After several months, Dieng fled with her children to her friend Fama Sail’s home, and then later to the home of Sail’s father. Dieng left for the United States on February 17, 2003, leaving her two children with Sail’s father in Senegal. Shortly thereafter, her son came to the United States. According to Dieng, Sail’s father is still sheltering her daughter.

Among the various documents Dieng submitted with her application were a copy of her daughter’s birth certificate that lists Malick Talla as the father and a copy of her son’s birth certificate that lists “Le GrandBourre Louis” as the father. The inconsistency concerning the identity of Mouhamed’s father would be an important part of the IJ’s decision. Dieng also submitted the statements of a Toucouleur “Excision Specialist” and others who explained that all young Toucouleur girls undergo circumcision and are forced to marry at a young age regardless of whether they consent. A cousin and Sail provided statements corroborating the circumstances of Dieng’s forced marriage to Talla.

During cross-examination before the IJ, Dieng explained how she entered the United States by using a Senegalese passport issued to Sail Aibibatou Talla, one of her husband’s other wives. Dieng testified that she obtained the passport from her husband’s unlocked briefcase while looking for jewelry that Talla took from her. Dieng discarded the passport after her son arrived in the United States.

Counsel for the government questioned Dieng about the history of her visits to the United States. Dieng testified that she first visited the United States with her son in September 1999 but subsequently re *6 turned to Senegal. Dieng said she did not seek asylum at that time because she had no money and because her husband’s cousin was monitoring her actions. Although Dieng testified that her son’s only entries into the United States occurred in 1999 and in 2003, the government offered evidence that her son had entered the country on at least three other occasions. Dieng responded that her son may have traveled with her husband without her knowledge.

Other inconsistencies appeared in Dieng’s testimony regarding her husband’s name and identity. Despite Dieng’s testimony that Talla was the father of both of her children, her son’s birth certificate identified “Le Grandbourre Louis” as the father and listed her son’s last name as “Rebeiz.” When the government confronted Dieng with those inconsistencies, she testified that Talla was also called Le GrandBourre Louis Rebeiz and that she only neglected to mention that information earlier because she had not been asked. She also testified that her son sometimes went by the name “Le GrandBourre Rebeiz.” The government produced evidence in the form of an internet search that showed “Legrande Rebeiz” residing at Dieng’s house in Virginia with the same phone number that Dieng put on her application for asylum.

The government sought further explanation of her daughter’s current location and why Dieng left her in Senegal. Dieng explained that she could not bring her daughter to the United States because she lacked the required documentation to obtain a visa and that trying to obtain the necessary paperwork would generate “suspicions” in Senegal.

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284 F. App'x 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dieng-v-mukasey-ca4-2008.