El-Moussa v. Holder

569 F.3d 250, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 13141, 2009 WL 1675754
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 17, 2009
Docket08-3982
StatusPublished
Cited by220 cases

This text of 569 F.3d 250 (El-Moussa v. Holder) 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
El-Moussa v. Holder, 569 F.3d 250, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 13141, 2009 WL 1675754 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

Zeinab El-Moussa petitions for review of a Board of Immigration Appeals decision denying her application for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture. El- *252 Moussa asserts that her failed marriage to a Lebanese imam, whom she met and married shortly after entering the United States, and her subsequent marriage to a Christian, place her at risk of violence if she returns to Lebanon. The Immigration Judge denied El-Moussa’s asylum claim because she did not apply for asylum within one year of entering the United States. Her claim does not fall under one of the exceptions that would give this court jurisdiction to review a denial based on untimeliness. El-Moussa does not qualify for relief on either of her other two claims because the IJ’s determination that El-Moussa did not testify credibly is entitled to deference under the standards set forth in the REAL ID Act of 2005.

I.

Zeinab El-Moussa, a native and citizen of Lebanon, entered the United States on September 19, 2001, with a six-month tourist visa. Her stated reason for coming to the United States was to care for her ailing mother, who has resided legally in this country since 1999. El-Moussa received two extensions, which allowed her to stay until March 18, 2003. She did not leave the country when her extended visa expired. Instead, she remained in the United States with no official status. INS served El-Moussa with a Notice to Appear on December 6, 2004. After several initial hearings, El-Moussa appeared before an IJ on November 17, 2005, and filed an application for withholding of removal and protection under the Convention Against Torture. At that hearing, her attorney conceded that El-Moussa was not eligible for asylum because she did not file her application within one year of entering the United States.

El-Moussa explained in her application that, after entering the United States, she married an imam named Haydar Jawad. This marriage, which took place under Islamic law and has since been terminated under the same law, never became official under U.S. law because Jawad was already married to another woman. El-Moussa listed various ways that her ex-husband had abused her, including giving her drugs to cause her to miscarry, threatening to have her killed if she returned to Lebanon, threatening to have her deported, taking away her passport, and beating her. She stated in her application that she feared returning to Lebanon because Jawad, who was a member of Hezbollah and a man of standing in the Lebanese community, could easily have her killed there.

The merits hearing was scheduled for March 7, 2007, more than fifteen months later. In the meantime, on February 19, 2007, El-Moussa filed an addendum to her application, stating that changed circumstances both in Lebanon and in her personal situation made her eligible for asylum. With regard to her personal situation, she reported that since the time of her divorce from Jawad, she had married a Christian man and given birth to two children. According to El-Moussa, her marriage was a violation of Islamic law and placed her life in danger should she return to Lebanon. El-Moussa’s testimony at the hearing ultimately led the IJ to conclude that El-Moussa’s account lacked credibility and that El-Moussa’s fear of persecution was based on her deteriorated relationship with her ex-husband rather than on a protected ground. At the hearing, El-Moussa testified about several instances of abuse. She recounted a time when her husband came to the Arabic school where she taught and dragged her out of the classroom by her hair. El-Moussa also submitted a letter from a coworker who recounted learning about the incident from El-Moussa’s students, looking for El-Moussa, and not finding *253 her. El-Moussa testified in contrast that the co-worker did find her after the beating and brought her back into a classroom to comfort her. El-Moussa acknowledged that her co-worker’s account differed from her own, and said that fear prevented her co-worker from testifying at the hearing.

El-Moussa also testified that at the time of this beating she was six weeks pregnant. Later on the day of the beating, her husband gave her some medicine for abdominal pain resulting from the beating. The medicine caused her to start bleeding. After the bleeding continued for nine days, El-Moussa’s husband took her to a clinic. El-Moussa testified that the nurse told her that, because of all the bleeding, the child could not be brought to term. Instead, El-Moussa received an abortion. In apparent contradiction to El-Moussa’s testimony, her medical records reflect a normal pregnancy and an elective abortion.

El-Moussa also testified about a civil lawsuit she pursued and won against Jawad. The first time she mentioned the lawsuit was in the context of the poisoning/abortion account, and the implication was that the suit somehow arose from that incident. El-Moussa later gave more details about the lawsuit, saying that she was awarded $4,900 that Jawad had stolen from her. The pleadings that El-Moussa filed in the civil lawsuit indicate that Jawad induced her to marry him by promising to sponsor her for citizenship and to provide a home for her. After the marriage, he asked her to give him $4,800 to rent a house, and she gave him the money. Jawad did not keep either promise. Instead he abused and threatened El-Moussa. The pleadings do not mention the poisoning/abortion incident. El-Moussa won a $4,900 judgment against Jawad. Based on the documents from her civil case and El-Moussa’s initial reticence to discuss the fact that the lawsuit was about money, the IJ concluded that El-Moussa’s marriage to Jawad had primarily been for the purpose of obtaining citizenship.

After divorcing Jawad, El-Moussa met and married Wisam Halia, a native Iraqi and naturalized U.S. citizen. Halia is a Christian; however, he and El-Moussa married under Islamic law. Like El-Moussa’s previous marriage, this marriage is also unofficial because Wisam’s divorce from another woman has been pending for three years. While El-Moussa explained that the initial delay in finalizing the divorce occurred because Halia left the country to serve as a contractor with the U.S. military, she was unable to explain why the divorce had not been finalized in the year and a half since Halia’s return. El-Moussa testified that she has since given birth to twins, the children of Halia. She did not present official birth certificates for these children, although she did present documents issued by the hospital.

El-Moussa testified that she fears reprisal in her own country because of Jawad’s connections to Hezbollah and because she married and bore children to a Christian man. She testified that Jawad had told others of his intent to harm her if she returned to Lebanon, but that she believed she would be safe in the U.S. because of the rule of law. She also testified that she fears Hezbollah will issue a fatwa against her because she has breached Islamic tradition by marrying a Christian man. When specifically asked on cross-examination, she testified that her siblings in Lebanon had warned her that people were looking for her in Lebanon.

At the conclusion of the testimony, the IJ dismissed the translator, after asking whether there was any objection, and hearing none. The IJ then heard closing arguments and discussed procedural matters with El-Moussa’s attorney.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
569 F.3d 250, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 13141, 2009 WL 1675754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/el-moussa-v-holder-ca6-2009.