Fen Yong Chen v. Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services

470 F.3d 509, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 29369, 2006 WL 3436585
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 29, 2006
DocketDocket 04-5748-AG
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 470 F.3d 509 (Fen Yong Chen v. Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fen Yong Chen v. Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services, 470 F.3d 509, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 29369, 2006 WL 3436585 (2d Cir. 2006).

Opinion

POOLER, Circuit Judge.

This petition for review concerns the order of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) sustaining the government’s appeal of Immigration Judge (“IJ”) Philip L. Morace’s decision granting Petitioner’s request for political asylum. The IJ determined that Petitioner was credible and had satisfied his burden of demonstrating past persecution in light of Petitioner’s wife’s forced abortion in China by family planning officials. See In re Chen, No. A 29 *511 846 062 (Immig. Ct. N.Y. City June 9, 2003). The BIA vacated the IJ’s decision and ordered Petitioner removed to China, finding that the IJ’s positive credibility determination was erroneous. See In re Fen Yong Chen, No. A 29 846 062 (B.I.A. Oct. 14, 2004). Because we find that the BIA improperly conducted a de novo review of the IJ’s credibility finding, we conclude that the BIA erred in vacating the IJ’s decision. The petition for review is therefore granted, and the case is remanded to the BIA for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

Petitioner’s 1994 Asylum Application

Petitioner Fen Yong Chen, a native and citizen of China, filed an application for asylum and withholding of removal in August 1994. Chen’s asylum claim was based on China’s population control policy. In his application, Chen stated that his wife was subjected to a forced abortion, although he did not specify the date of this abortion or give any other details regarding the abortion in his application. Chen further stated that when his wife was pregnant with their second child, he was seized by three government officials and taken to a local police station where he was beaten. Chen’s statement indicated that he was released from prison after he bribed a guard. Chen’s,application further stated that he learned by telephone that family planning officials continued to harass his wife after he left China, and she was forced to undergo sterilization after the birth of their second child.

In August 1995, an asylum officer evaluated Chen’s application and heard testimony from Chen regarding the merits of his claim. The asylum officer found Chen not credible because of inconsistencies between Chen’s testimony and his written application. The asylum officer further found that because Chen had testified that he feared returning to China because he owed money to his former employer, Chen had failed to satisfy his burden of proving he was a refugee. The asylum officer referred Chen’s application to the IJ. After a hearing before the IJ in May 1996, Chen withdrew his application and was granted voluntary departure. See In re Chen, No. A 29 846 062 (Immig. Ct. N.Y. City May 28, 1996).

Petitioner’s 2002 Asylum Application

In May 2002, Chen filed a motion to reopen his proceedings, relying on the BIA’s decision in In re X-G-W-, 22 I. & N. Dec. 71 (B.I.A.1998), which permitted motions to reopen asylum claims based on coercive population control programs in light of changes in the asylum laws created by passage of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 1 (“IIRIRA”). 2 Chen subsequently submitted a second asylum application, re *512 iterating the information from his first application that his wife was forced to have an abortion, and specifying that this abortion occurred in August 1984. Chen further explained in his 2002 application that after the birth of his first child in 1979, family planning officials required that his wife have an IUD surgically inserted and that he and his wife sign a contract promising not to have any more children. In April 1984, Chen’s wife learned she was pregnant again. Chen stated that he suspected a neighbor discovered the pregnancy and alerted family planning officials. On August 24, 1984, three family planning officials came to Chen’s house and forcibly took his wife to the Hospital of Fujian Province, where she was forced to have an abortion. According to Chen, his wife became pregnant again in September 1988, and once again, a neighbor reported the pregnancy to the family planning officials. After the pregnancy was discovered, Chen stated that his wife went into hiding at her mother’s home. Several days later, four family planning officials came to Chen’s house to take his wife for a “check-up,” but since his wife was not there, they arrested him instead as a “hostage.” Chen stated that because he knew two of the officials personally, he was able to escape. He went to hide at a friend’s house and eventually fled to the United States.

Proceedings Before the IJ

At a hearing before the IJ, Chen testified to the events recounted in his 2002 asylum application, including his wife’s forced abortion in August 1984, her third pregnancy in 1988, and his arrest by family planning officials. The IJ then inquired about the 1994 asylum application, which did contain a statement that Chen’s wife had an abortion, but did not contain any further details regarding this abortion. Chen explained that the 1994 application had been prepared by a travel agency, and he was not told the contents of the application before being instructed to sign it. Chen reiterated this explanation when asked about the inconsistency between his 1994 and 2002 accounts of how he had escaped from the family planning officials after he was arrested. Chen testified that the statement in the 1994 application that he had bribed a prison guard was not correct, and, as he indicated in the 2002 application, he escaped because he personally knew two of the officials who arrested him. Chen also acknowledged that although the 1994 application indicated that his wife had been sterilized, this had not in fact occurred.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the IJ rendered his oral decision granting Chen’s application for political asylum. The IJ noted the discrepancies between Chen’s 1994 and 2002 applications, but found that the 1994 application must be weighed carefully in light of Chen’s testimony that it “had not been prepared on his behalf by attorneys, but rather by these so-called travel agents, non-attorneys, and that [Chen] was instructed to sign the application without having the full contents of the application read back to him first, not necessarily fully aware of the contents of the document.” With respect to the asylum interview in 1995, the IJ ruled that he would admit the asylum officer’s evaluation and notes from the 1995 asylum interview into evidence, but would “weigh them very cautiously for a variety of reasons,” including that the officer was not available for cross-examination and that the quality of the interpreter used in the interview was unknown. The IJ also emphasized that Chen’s first asylum application was filed prior to passage of the IIRIRA, which expanded the definition of refugee to specifically include those subjected to a coercive population control program. The IJ reasoned that the asylum officer conduct *513 ing the interview in 1995 — prior to passage of the IIRIRA- — would not have been motivated to elicit details regarding Chen’s fear of persecution based on China’s family-planning policies because such a fear did not provide a valid basis for asylum under then-existing law.

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470 F.3d 509, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 29369, 2006 WL 3436585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fen-yong-chen-v-bureau-of-citizenship-and-immigration-services-ca2-2006.