Gailius v. Immigration & Naturalization Service

147 F.3d 34, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 13374, 1998 WL 320928
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 23, 1998
Docket97-2283
StatusPublished
Cited by129 cases

This text of 147 F.3d 34 (Gailius v. Immigration & Naturalization Service) 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
Gailius v. Immigration & Naturalization Service, 147 F.3d 34, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 13374, 1998 WL 320928 (1st Cir. 1998).

Opinion

LYNCH, Circuit Judge.

Irmantas Gailius petitions for relief from the denial of his claims for asylum and withholding of deportation. Gailius fled his native Lithuania in 1990, when that country was part of the Soviet Union, because he feared the Soviet authorities would persecute him for his activities in support of democracy and Lithuanian independence. Lithuania became independent and has held two elections that international observers have certified as free and fair. Largely on the basis of these dramatic changed country conditions, as confirmed in State Department opinion letters, the Immigration Judge (IJ) denied Gailius’ claims, and the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) affirmed.

Gailius, however, put evidence in the record to show that the former Communist Party has been restored to power in Lithuania through electoral means, that some former Communists have engaged in violent reprisals against those who took part in Lithuania’s democracy movement, and that numerous specific threats have been directed against him. Gailius submitted into evidence threatening letters, which he said were sent to his family, warning that he would be murdered if he returned to Lithuania. He also provided expert testimony casting doubt on the State Department’s positive view of the current regime in Lithuania.

It is well established that general changes in country conditions do not render an applicant ineligible for asylum when, despite those general changes, there is a specific danger to the applicant. See, e.g., Fergiste v. INS, 138 F.3d 14, 19 (1st Cir.1998). Therefore, the authenticity of Gailius’ physical evidence and the credibility of the account of threats against him is a central issue in his case. But the IJ did not make findings concerning the truthfulness of Gailius’ testimony about these threats or the authenticity of the threatening letters, and did not offer any adequate explanation for why these threats, if they had occurred, would not cause a reasonable person to fear persecution.

In the absence of such findings, coherent review of the agency decision, which we are required by statute to perform, is impossible. Accordingly, we vacate the BIA’s order and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I.

We summarize the evidence that Gailius presented to the agency, and then describe the agency’s assessment of that evidence.

Irmantas Gailius was born in 1971 in what was then the Soviet Socialist Republic of Lithuania, U.S.S.R. 1 In 1987, Gailius entered *37 Vilnius Civil Engineering Institute, the university where his father Albinas taught. Gáilíus. soon became active in a variety of political activities opposing the Soviet regime. In the spring of 1988, Gailius helped to organize a student chapter of the Lithuanian Freedom League, then an underground movement, and served as an officer. He wrote and signed political articles for outlawed newspapers urging democracy and independence and organized political rallies and demonstrations. In October 1988, Gaili-us served in a security detail guarding, a meeting of the Sajudis Congress, the organization that eventually secured Lithuania’s independence and whose leader oversaw the adoption of Lithuania’s current democratic constitution. Gailius submitted into the administrative record a photo identification card noting his status as. a student security guard for Sajudis.

Gailius was also a member of the Lithuanian National Youth Union “Young Lithuania”, which encouraged Lithuanian youth to resist the Soviet draft as a protest against the Soviet military’s presence in Lithuania. Gailius publicly refused to .cooperate with the draft and demanded that the Soviet army leave Lithuania. In November 1989, he lay in front of oncoming tanks with other “Young Lithuania” activists in a Red Army parade, was arrested, and spent a twenty-four hour period under intense KGB interrogation. During that interrogation, the KGB threatened to have him expelled from the university (thus subjecting him to the draft) and to have his father Albinas Gailius fired.

In February 1990, Irmantas Gailius signed a letter, put into evidence, refusing conscription into the Soviet military. He sent the letter and his military passport to Soviet authorities. That same month, Gailius helped organize and spoke at a demonstration protesting the visit of a Soviet minister to the university. Gailius and other students posted placards — demanding independence and the withdrawal .of the Red Army from Lithuania — at the hall in which the minister was speaking. The placards were removed. Gailius attempted to give a note to the minister containing the students’ demands, which university faculty intercepted.

In March 1990, the first free elections since World War II were held in Lithuania. The Sajudis movement, headed by Vytautas Landsbergis, won the elections, and the Lithuanian Parliament voted in favor of independence. The Soviet Union responded by surrounding the Lithuanian Parliament Building with tanks and by imposing an economic embargo on Lithuania. Gailius helped build barricades around the Lithuanian Parliament Building to protect the legislators from Soviet troops. In May 1990, Gailius joined the outlawed volunteer army formed by Sajudis.

Because of his role in the February 1990 protest, the university faculty voted to expel Gailius at the end of the academic year in June. That order expelling him and other Students “because of their participation in antigovernment demonstration^] and [for] using slanderous slogans against the [Soviet] Deputies” was put into evidence. Having lost his status as a student, Gailius became subject to the draft.

Gailius feared that he would be drafted into the Soviet army and placed into a special “punishment unit” for political dissidents, where he would be brutalized.- He decided to leave Lithuania for a time. He spent the next few months in Poland, Czechoslovakia, East Germany and West Germany, until he could travel to the United States. In October 1990, he received a draft notice from the Soviet authorities. Gailius obtained a visitor’s visa and purchased a roünd-trip ticket to Washington, D.C., for a flight in November, intending to stay with relatives.

In -January 1991, Soviet authorities atr tempted to overthrow the elected government of Lithuania, and Soviet armed forces attempted to take control of the central tele *38 vision tower in Vilnius, killing several civilians. The attempt failed. The Soviet Union continued the economic embargo and refused to accept Lithuania’s independence. Gailius, in this country, applied for asylum.

In July 1991, while Gailius was awaiting his asylum interview, he spoke with his family in Lithuania and learned that his sister Ingrida, a public school teacher, had been taken into KGB custody for four hours and interrogated concerning Gailius’ whereabouts. The KGB officials told Ingrida that if Gailius did not return soon, and face induction into the military, his family would never see him again.

In August 1991, the Soviet Union’s disintegration accelerated with the failure of a coup attempt in Moscow against President Gorbachev. The Soviet Union recognized Lithuania’s independence and ended its economic embargo.

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Bluebook (online)
147 F.3d 34, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 13374, 1998 WL 320928, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gailius-v-immigration-naturalization-service-ca1-1998.