Fergiste v. INS

CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMarch 12, 1998
Docket97-1851
StatusPublished

This text of Fergiste v. INS (Fergiste v. INS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fergiste v. INS, (1st Cir. 1998).

Opinion

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<pre>                   United States Court of Appeals <br>                        For the First Circuit <br>                        ____________________ <br>                                   <br>                                   <br>No. 97-1851 <br> <br>                          NICKEN FERGISTE, <br>                                   <br>                             Petitioner, <br>                                   <br>                                 v. <br>                                   <br>               IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE, <br>                                   <br>                             Respondent. <br>                                   <br>                        ____________________ <br>                                   <br>                 ON PETITION FOR REVIEW OF AN ORDER <br>                 OF THE BOARD OF IMMIGRATION APPEALS <br>                                   <br>                        ____________________ <br>                                   <br>                               Before <br>                                   <br>                       Selya, Stahl and Lynch, <br>                           Circuit Judges. <br>                                   <br>                        ____________________ <br>                                   <br>    David S. Clancy with whom Deborah E. Anker was on brief for <br>petitioner. <br>    Karen Ann Hunold, Attorney, with whom Frank W. Hunger, Assistant <br>Attorney General, and Linda S. Wendtland, Senior Litigation Counsel, <br>Office of Immigration Litigation, United States Department of Justice, <br>were on brief for respondent. <br> <br> <br>                         ____________________ <br> <br>                           March 12, 1998 <br>                         ____________________

     STAHL, Circuit Judge.  Petitioner Nicken Fergiste appeals a <br>    Board of Immigration Appeals ("Board" or "BIA") decision <br>    affirming a final order of exclusion, denying him political <br>    asylum and withholding of deportation.  The Board found that <br>    changed country conditions in Haiti had obviated any need for <br>    political asylum.  Because the Board failed to apply, and the <br>    Immigration and Naturalization Service ("INS") failed to <br>    rebut, a presumption that petitioner had a reasonable fear of <br>    persecution in the future if he were to return to Haiti, we <br>    reverse and remand the case to the Board.   <br>                              I.   <br>                  FACTS AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS <br>      Fergiste seeks political asylum under section 208(a) of the <br>  Immigration and Nationality Act ("INA"), 8 U.S.C.  1158(a), <br>  and withholding of deportation under section 243(h) of the <br>  INA, 8 U.S.C.  1253(h), on the basis that he has suffered <br>  political persecution in his home country of Haiti and that <br>     such persecution will resume if he returns to Haiti. <br>      Fergiste's testimony, affidavit, and asylum application <br>  showed the following facts.  Fergiste was born in Port-au- <br>  Prince, Haiti, on April 17, 1966.  He worked as a fork lift <br>  driver for the port authority, a supervisor on a merchant <br>  ship managed by his cousin, and an accountant.  From 1979 <br>  until the early 1980s, Fergiste attended and participated in <br>  activities at the St. Jean Bosco Church, where Jean-Bertrand <br>  Aristide preached reform.  He also attended meetings of the <br>  National Front for Change and Democracy ("FNCD"), Aristide's <br>  political party, and helped to campaign and raise money for <br>    Aristide's bid to be president of Haiti.  In addition, <br>    Fergiste worked with a "neighborhood committee" that, <br>  apparently, was both devoted to community improvement and <br>    involved with politics, and "Family is Your Life," an <br>  organization dedicated to helping orphans.  In 1990, on the <br>    day Aristide was elected president, the FNCD assigned <br>  Fergiste to monitor for fairness a Port-au-Prince polling <br>                            booth. <br>      Fergiste believes that, as a result of his open support of <br>  Aristide and his friendship with another Aristide supporter, <br>  Pierre Charles, he became a target of political persecution <br>  by the Ton-Ton Macoutes, a paramilitary group that protected <br>  the Duvalier dictatorship until 1986 when the Duvaliers were <br>  deposed.  He also believes that he was targeted by military <br>  "attachs" that protected a series of military dictators from <br>  1986 until Aristide's election in 1990.  Fergiste recounts <br>     several incidents to support his claim of political <br>  persecution.  On July 29, 1985, he was shot in the shoulder <br>  by a member of the Ton-Ton Macoutes, allegedly because of his <br>  association with Pierre Charles.  In May 1989, government <br>   attachs raided Fergiste's home and, when unable to find <br>  Fergiste, murdered his aunt.  Following a 1991 coup d'etat <br>    during which the military regained power, a political <br>  associate of Fergiste was repeatedly threatened and detained <br>  and eventually went into hiding, and Pierre Charles was shot <br>  and killed.  In September 1993, three government attachs <br>  approached Fergiste and told him to cease associating with a <br>  fellow Aristide supporter and to become an attach.  One of <br>  them hit him on the back of his shoulder with either his fist <br>  or the butt of a rifle.  And in December 1993, three attachs <br>  went to Fergiste's mother's house, threatened her by putting <br>    a gun to her head, and eventually fired several times, <br>                 hitting her in the shoulder. <br>      In early 1994, fearing for his safety, Fergiste fled his <br>  homeland and came to the United States unlawfully.  Although <br>   democratic government was restored to Haiti in September <br>  1994,   Fergiste remains afraid to return on the grounds that <br>    Haiti is still unstable, and that anti-Aristide factions <br>    continue to persecute Aristide supporters. <br>        After arriving in the United States and being placed in <br>    exclusion proceedings, Fergiste requested political asylum <br>    under section 208(a) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.  1158(a), and <br>    withholding of deportation under section 243(h) of the INA, 8 <br>    U.S.C.  1253(h).

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