Edvart Kacici v. Eric H. Holder, Jr

349 F. App'x 58
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 19, 2009
Docket08-3893
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 349 F. App'x 58 (Edvart Kacici v. Eric H. Holder, Jr) 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
Edvart Kacici v. Eric H. Holder, Jr, 349 F. App'x 58 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Petitioner Eduard Kaciqi 1 is an Albanian citizen who entered this country illegally and now seeks review of the Board of Immigration Appeals’s decision denying his petition for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the United Nations Convention Against Torture. Because we conclude that the Board was correct in affirming the immigration judge’s rulings that Kaciqi lacked credibility and that country conditions in Albania have changed such that the petitioner would not reasonably be threatened with persecution upon return, we deny review.

Kaciqi, a native and citizen of Albania, arrived in the United States on April 26, 2002, at Houston’s international airport, presented a fraudulent Greek passport to the immigration officer, and was charged as an inadmissible alien under 8 U.S.C. § 1225(b)(1). At the time of entry, he told the immigration officer that his reasons for coming to the United States were primarily economic: “I’m unemployed, my parents are unemployed, nob[o]dy works. There are no jobs in my country.” He denied that he feared returning to Albania but was nevertheless provided with a “credible fear” interview a week later, at which time he changed his story, claiming that he had been “beaten, mistreated and detained for 8 days at the end of Jan. 2001.” He also reported a second arrest around two weeks after his first. In addition, he claimed that he was arrested for a third time in June 2001 and detained for approximately two months after his cousin, a candidate for mayor, was killed by government officials and Kaciqi demanded that the police investigate. In removal proceedings in June 2002 and October 2002, he admitted removability under 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i) and (a)(7)(A)(i)(I), but indicated that he intended to apply for asylum. He filled out an application for asylum dated October 23, 2002, but it was not signed or submitted at that time.

For reasons not apparent on the record, but perhaps due to a change in venue, the petitioner’s asylum hearing did not take place until June 5, 2006. Kaciqi’s completed application, submitted on the same *60 date, included a family history that began with the former Communist government’s purported confiscation of his grandfather’s land and his father’s birth in an internment camp. Kaciqi indicated in his application that he had worked in Greece and traveled back and forth between Greece and Albania between 1997 and 1999, a period of social and political upheaval in Albania. He also reported serving one year in the Albanian army, after which he purportedly joined the Democratic Party in 2001. He claimed that he was harassed, arrested, and threatened while supporting his cousin’s campaign for mayor of the village of Zhep. He asserted that the police were in league with the Socialist Party, then in power, and that the Socialists opposed his cousin’s candidacy for mayor because the cousin was affiliated with the Democratic Party. After his cousin’s alleged disappearance and murder, Kaciqi claimed, he pressed the police to investigate his cousin’s death and supported the replacement candidate. Kaciqi also swore in his application that shots were fired into his house on several occasions, giving rise to his fear that the local police force, sympathetic to the Socialists, would harm him if he were to return to Albania.

But, despite his sworn statements in the asylum application, Kaciqi’s testimony at the asylum hearing conflicted in several significant ways with both his application and his supporting documentary evidence. For example, at the hearing he claimed that he had served two months in the Albanian army, not a year as his application stated, and that he was beaten while in prison to the point of breaking his ribs, a key detail that was not included in his written application. He also claimed at his hearing that he did not support the new mayoral candidate put forward by the Democrats after his cousin “disappeared,” contradicting assertions in his application. In addition, Kaciqi equivocated regarding the date of his last arrest, testifying initially that he was arrested in July 2001. But, after being reminded that his asylum application indicated that the arrest took place in June 2001, he changed his testimony. When confronted with a letter written by his brother that placed the time of his arrest in July, he first said that he made a mistake on his asylum application and that the arrest took place in July. He then changed his testimony again, insisting that his brother was mistaken about the date and that he had actually been arrested in June.

When asked about these inconsistencies, Kaciqi explained that he was “very nervous” and insisted that this was the reason why he kept changing the date of his last arrest. Questioned about his inconsistent answers during his first immigration interview in Houston, he said that he was hungry and tired when he told the officer he came into the country because of “economy problems” and that he omitted information about his arrests in Albania because he feared being beaten and imprisoned by U.S. immigration officers.

The government introduced Kaciqi’s Albanian passport, which further undercut Kaciqi’s claim about his alleged arrest in the summer of 2001. The Albanian passport contained stamps showing that he entered Greece from Albania on May 9, 2001, and did not leave Greece until December 25, 2001. Clearly, if Kaciqi had been in Greece between May and December 2001, then he could not have been imprisoned in Albania in June or July of the same year. Kaciqi later claimed that he was not in Greece at all in 2001 and that his brother-in-law must have used his passport to enter Greece while he was imprisoned. Kaciqi later obtained a written statement from his brother-in-law in which the brother-in-law claimed that he had used Kaciqi’s passport to travel be *61 tween Albania and Greece in 2001. But this letter did not corroborate Kaciqi’s testimony that the brother-in-law used the passport while Kaciqi was in prison. Instead, the letter said that the brother-in-law used the passport “during the period that Eduard Agron Kaciqi left Albania,” flatly contradicting Kaciqi’s testimony that he did not leave the country in 2001. Like many of the other documents submitted at the court hearing, the letter also had an improperly certified translation: the translator had affixed his own notary seal to the document, instead of certifying that he was competent to translate it and having his declaration notarized. Although the immigration judge observed that a notary is ordinarily not permitted to attest to his or her own signature, she apparently allowed the documents to be filed with the record.

In her oral decision, the immigration judge denied all forms of relief to Kaciqi, noting various inconsistencies in the petitioner’s testimony, including several instances in which Kaciqi changed his story when confronted with conflicting evidence. Kaciqi had produced his uncle as a witness; he testified regarding his former work as a police officer in Korce and his yearly trips back to Albania. The immigration judge discounted his testimony, however, finding it not credible due to his demeanor while testifying and the pauses in his responses.

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Bluebook (online)
349 F. App'x 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edvart-kacici-v-eric-h-holder-jr-ca6-2009.