Gjelaj v. Gonzales

183 F. App'x 490
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 11, 2006
Docket05-3204
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 183 F. App'x 490 (Gjelaj v. Gonzales) 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
Gjelaj v. Gonzales, 183 F. App'x 490 (6th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The petitioner, Aleks Gjelaj, is a citizen of Albania who seeks review of a decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) that summarily affirmed an immigration judge’s denial of the petitioner’s claims for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the United Nations Convention Against Torture. Specifically, Gjelaj contends that the immigration judge improperly held both that he was not credible in regard to his claims of past persecution and that he had filed a frivolous application for relief in this matter. We conclude that there is substantial evidence to support these findings, and we therefore deny review.

*492 The petitioner was born in December 1975 in Albania and lived the first 15 years of his life under what the United States Department of State refers to as “an exceptionally repressive and idiosyncratic communist regime.” Gjelaj testified that he joined the Albanian Democratic Party in March 1994 and began actively working for open government in the country and against perceived attempts by officials to revert to the totalitarian practices rampant in Albania from the end of World War II until the fall of the communist regime in 1990. During the next several years, he became increasingly active, serving in various offices in the local party. According to Gjelaj, he also participated in various demonstrations, he organized rallies, and he gave speeches and radio interviews between 1997 and 2000. As a result of some of these activities, Gjelaj claimed, the police repeatedly harassed him and arrested and beat him during the period when the Socialist Party was in power in Albania.

Gjelaj later testified to certain specific instances of persecution, most of them at the hands of otherwise unidentified “socialist terrorist groups.” For example, the petitioner testified that he was drinking coffee at a local café with two cousins and two other Democratic Party members on November 9, 1999, when a masked man appeared and started spraying their table with gunfire, killing Gjelaj’s four companions. While other gunmen stood guard outside the café, the individual who fired the fatal shots exclaimed, “[F]rom now on you can no more speak and do things for the party or anything at all.”

Gjelaj also testified that on March 23, 2000, the day after he joined in a celebration in Tirana commemorating the anniversary of the Democratic Party’s rise to power, he made a speech in his hometown, walked to his car, and watched as it burst into flames when he was only “about seven meters” from the vehicle. Gjelaj said that he did not report this incident to the police because he felt that the police were responsible for the bombing.

Instead, he testified, as the result of those two violent attempts to dissuade him from continuing his political activities, he decided to leave Albania. On May 12, 2000, he traveled by boat to Italy, and then flew to the United States on May 13, 2000. He arrived in Newark, New Jersey, with authorization for a six-month stay in this country. When he remained in the United States beyond the allotted time period, however, he was detained and removal proceedings were instituted.

At an evidentiary hearing held on May 20, 2003, Gjelaj testified to the extent of his political activities in his homeland and the repercussions he suffered as a result. He also introduced three pieces of documentary evidence to support his claims of political persecution. Included in those documents were a hospital report detailing treatment for a leg injury suffered during a beating in retaliation for a 1998 radio interview he gave that was critical of the then-ruling Socialist Party, his Democratic Party membership card, and a letter purportedly signed by two party officials detailing the retaliation Gjelaj suffered for his political activities. Through both his oral testimony and the documentary evidence, the petitioner attempted to convey that he would be imprisoned or killed on account of his political activity if he were to return to Albania.

The immigration judge, however, expressed concerns about the authenticity of the various pieces of documentary evidence and about the truthfulness of Gjelaj’s testimony in general. Indeed, all three documents had been submitted for investigation through the American consular office in Tirana, and the investigator reported that although the Democratic *493 Party membership was considered valid, the hospital record and the report of the petitioner’s activities were not genuine. The immigration judge had already warned Gjelaj orally and in writing that the introduction of false documents or testimony could lead to a finding that his application was frivolous, in turn leading to an order permanently barring him from re-entry into the United States. Out of an abundance of caution, he also afforded the petitioner an opportunity to obtain verification of the documents after Gjelaj’s attorney objected to the report of the Albanian investigator finding two of the them invalid.

After a six-month recess in the proceedings, the petitioner’s counsel reported that she had been unable to locate one of the two appropriate Democratic Party officials in Albania to verify the authenticity of the party document, and she offered no explanation as to the second official who had purportedly signed the document. It is also clear that she had done “nothing” “with respect to the hospital record.” Consequently, the immigration judge concluded that “[Gjelaj] has filed some frivolous documents. He’s testified falsely and this was all-knowing and accordingly the Court finds that his application is frivolous.”

The immigration judge also denied the petitioner’s claims for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture. Finding Gjelaj not to be credible, the immigration judge first stated that the petitioner “has not demonstrated what he claimed happened to him happened to him in Albania and accordingly he has not demonstrated past persecution.” In any event, the immigration judge concluded, “there is not [a] pattern or practice of persecution of democratic party membership people and accordingly he has not demonstrated that he has a well-founded fear of future persecution either objectively or subjectively.” Because a grant of withholding of removal or a grant of relief under the Convention Against Torture requires the petitioner to satisfy an even more stringent burden than a movant seeking only asylum, the immigration judge also found those avenues of relief to be closed to Gjelaj. The BIA then affirmed the immigration judge’s rulings “without opinion.” The petitioner now seeks review in this court of the immigration judge’s determinations.

When, as in this case, the BIA summarily affirms the decision of an immigration judge without issuing its own opinion, “we review the [immigration judge’s] decision as the final agency decision.” Denko v. INS, 351 F.3d 717, 726 (6th Cir.2003). We must sustain a decision by the immigration judge denying relief if that determination is “supported by reasonable, substantial, and probative evidence on the record considered as a whole.” INS v. Elias-Zacarias, 502 U.S. 478, 481, 112 S.Ct. 812, 117 L.Ed.2d 38 (1992).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Birbili v. Gonzales
205 F. App'x 400 (Sixth Circuit, 2006)
Xhamixhi v. Gonzales
188 F. App'x 472 (Sixth Circuit, 2006)
Cacani v. Gonzales
188 F. App'x 444 (Sixth Circuit, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 F. App'x 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gjelaj-v-gonzales-ca6-2006.