Fatmata Kanu v. Loretta E. Lynch

652 F. App'x 390
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 16, 2016
Docket14-3896
StatusUnpublished

This text of 652 F. App'x 390 (Fatmata Kanu v. Loretta E. Lynch) 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
Fatmata Kanu v. Loretta E. Lynch, 652 F. App'x 390 (6th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

*391 OPINION

JANE B. STRANCH, Circuit Judge.

Fatmata Kanu, a citizen of Sierra Leone, petitions for review of the Board of Immigration Appeals’s opinion holding that she is removable for procuring admission to the United States by fraud or willful misrepresentation and that she filed a frivolous application for asylum. Kanu also challenges the termination of her derivative refugee status by the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services. For the reasons that follow, we DENY the petition.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Admission & Medical Records

Fatmata Kanu was admitted to the United States in April 2003 as the unmarried child of a refugee. The United States Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), as it was then, found that Kanu qualified for admission and derivative refugee status pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1157(c)(2)(A). That finding was based, in part, on a Form 1-590 for “Registration for Classification as Refugee” that Kanu submitted in 2002 while living in a refugee camp in The Gambia. On her 1-590, Kanu indicated that she was born in Lunsar, Sierra Leone on January 10, 1986, and that she had never been married and had no spouse. Kanu also received and signed, with the assistance of an interpreter, an “RE-3 Notice of Pre-Departure Marriage & Declaration,” in which she declared that she was “not married” and that she understood her admission to the United States was contingent upon her remaining unmarried and under the age of 21. “Should you marry prior to your arrival in the United States,” the RE-3 warned, “failure to disclose your marriage at the time of your admission will be viewed by the INS as misrepresentation. Such misrepresentation could result in the termination of your refugee status and removal from the United States.” (R. 9, PagelD 977.)

In January 2003, prior to her admission, Kanu underwent a medical examination conducted by the United States Department of State at a medical center in The Gambia. The “[p]hysical [examination” section of a “medical history and physical examination worksheet” from that appointment includes a checked box indicating that Kanu’s “[h]earing and ears” were normal. (Id. at PagelD 688.) After her admission to the United States, however, Kanu sought treatment at the Michigan Ear Institute complaining of hearing loss in both ears. A health history questionnaire that was completed in connection with one visit to the Ear Institute in October 2003 asked if Kanu “had any serious injury[.]” (Id. at PagelD 624). On the form, which was signed by Kanu’s mother, “No” was checked in response. A doctor at the Ear Institute examined Kanu with her family members acting as translators and concluded that she suffered from hearing loss, tinnitus, and otorrhea. The doctor also noted that “[i]t seems that the patient has had problems with ear infections all her life, even as a child.” (Id. at PagelD 628.)

B. Application for Adjustment of Status

In 2005, Kanu prepared, signed, and submitted an 1-485 Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status with the help of an immigration lawyer. The 1-485 indicated that Kanu was married to a man named Abdoulai Bundu, and a G-325A Biographic Information form that Kanu signed in July 2005 listed the date and place of her marriage to Bundu as February 5, 2002 in The Gambia. Kanu also attached a Gambian marriage certificate to her 1-485 that appeared to confirm the details of her and Bundu’s marriage. *392 When an immigration officer presented Kanu with the conflicting documents in an interview with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) in June 2006, however, Kanu told the interviewing officer that she was not really married to Bundu. The officer nevertheless concluded that Kanu was indeed married prior to her admission and that she appeared to be inadmissible due to prior fraud or willful misrepresentation — namely, her claim on the 1-590 that she was unmarried when she applied for refugee status. The officer informed Kanu that she could submit an 1-602 application for waiver of grounds of excludability.

C. Application for Waiver of Grounds of Excludability

Kanu signed and submitted an 1-602 Application by Refugee for Waiver of Grounds of Excludability on August 30, 2006. In that application, Kanu stated:

I signed a statement on 11/18/2002 that said I was single to obtain admission as a refugee.... That day I was approved refugee status, however, I was married at the time to Abdoulai Bundu (DOB: 05/07/1979). I married Mr. Bundu on 02/05/2002 in Gambia.

(Id. at PagelD 697.) In support of her request for waiver on humanitarian grounds, Kanu explained:

Although I was married when I received refugee status, I request a waiver of the grounds of inadmissibility because returning to Gambia or Sierra Leone would be devastating. When I was in Sierra Leone, I was shot by the rebels and lost much of my hearing. Returning would put me in terrible danger.

(Id.) In a subsequent notarized letter dated June 20, 2007, Kanu stated: “I got married in Gambia without realizing that this would affect my immigration status.... I apologize for not telling the truth because I was scared to be left alone without my family.” (Id. at PagelD 979.) USCIS denied Kanu’s 1-602 application for waiver and her 1-485 application for adjustment of status in August 2007.

D. Termination of Refugee Status

On January 10, 2008, USCIS sent Kanu a notice of intent to terminate her refugee status, explaining that Kanu was “not entitled to admission to the United States as a derivative child of [a] refugee” in light of her Gambian marriage. (Id. at PagelD 770.) The notice gave Kanu 30 days to present evidence showing why her status should not be terminated. Kanu responded via counsel in a letter dated February 8, 2008. Kanu argued, among other things, that she “WAS a refugee when she entered the United States because she was in fact persecuted in Sierra Leone.” (Id. at PagelD 776 (emphasis in original).) She also argued “that despite her previous representations, she is not now, nor ever has been married to Abdoulai Bundu or anyone else.” (Id. at PagelD 777.)

In support of her persecution argument, Kanu attached an affidavit and a draft I-589 application for asylum and withholding of removal that she said she intended to file shortly in the course of removal proceedings that had already begun. Kanu stated in her affidavit that rebels attacked her house in Sierra Leone in 1999 and that “one of the soldiers shot at me, and the bullet passed very close to my ear and damaged my hearing.” (Id. at PagelD 780.) She also explained, with respect to her marital status, that she was “tricked into helping a man named Abdoulai Bun-du” who “was [her] boyfriend for a time while [she] was living with [her] family in the refugee camp in Gambia.” (Id.

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Bluebook (online)
652 F. App'x 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fatmata-kanu-v-loretta-e-lynch-ca6-2016.