Gontcharova, Evgueni v. Ashcroft, John

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 29, 2004
Docket03-1641
StatusPublished

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

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Gontcharova, Evgueni v. Ashcroft, John, (7th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 03-1641 EVGUENIA GONTCHAROVA and KSENIA KIDANOVA, Petitioners, v.

JOHN D. ASHCROFT, Respondent.

____________ On Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals. Nos. A77 856 642 & A77 856 643 ____________ ARGUED MAY 19, 2004—DECIDED SEPTEMBER 29, 2004 ____________

Before CUDAHY, RIPPLE, and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges. CUDAHY, Circuit Judge. The question in this asylum case is whether the immigration judge properly applied the “corroboration rule,” under which an asylum applicant may be required to present evidence corroborating her testimony even when that testimony is deemed credible. The test, as set forth by the Board of Immigration Appeals, hinges on whether it is “reasonable to expect” the applicant to produce particular pieces of evidence. Because we conclude that the rule was unreasonably applied in this case, we grant the petition for review. The petitioners, Evguenia Gontcharova and her daughter Ksenia Kidanova, are from Kaliningrad, the westernmost 2 No. 03-1641

province of Russia. They arrived in the United States in August 1998 as visitors. A year later, they applied for asy- lum and withholding of deportation, claiming that they were persecuted in Kaliningrad because of the whistleblowing activities of Evguenia’s husband, Andrei Kidanov. According to the narrative accompanying Evguenia’s and Ksenia’s asylum application, their family was targeted for persecution after Andrei, a tax inspector, discovered evidence of widespread corruption involving the appropriation of public resources by a firm with close ties to the province’s gover- nor. In the face of his agency’s unwillingness to pursue an investigation, Andrei made copies of the incriminating docu- ments and hid them at the home of his sister, Lena. Andrei’s repeated efforts to draw attention to the corruption led to threats against him and his family, raids on his home, and his eventual involuntary commitment to a mental hospital as an alleged schizophrenic. Earlier, Andrei had discussed his findings with his wife, Evguenia. While Andrei was hospitalized, she and Lena con- tinued trying to publicize the situation, and they succeeded in getting a story published in a local opposition newspaper. Soon after that, the newspaper’s offices were destroyed by arson and its editor was severely beaten. Evguenia’s family was also targeted: a motorcycle ran her son Vladislav down, breaking his legs, and an anonymous caller told her that her daughter might suffer a similar attack. At Andrei’s request, Evguenia and Ksenia left Kaliningrad in August 1998, entering the United States on tourist visas. (Andrei and Vladislav were both still hospitalized.) Evguenia hoped that the situation in Kaliningrad would eventually return to normal, but instead things got worse. Andrei was released from the hospital, only to be discovered dead a few months later. His body was found doused in vodka on the floor of his sister Lena’s home, which suggested to Evguenia that he had been attacked—an anonymous caller had No. 03-1641 3

earlier threatened her that an assailant might exploit her husband’s weak heart by “pour[ing] a glass of vodka into him and he will be done.” Soon after Andrei’s death, his sister Lena was found hanging from a noose. Other family members met comparable fates: Lena’s husband was arrested and imprisoned, and Vladislav disappeared altogether. At their asylum hearing, Evguenia and Ksenia testified concerning the events described in their application and sub- mitted background documentation concerning the political conditions and the widespread corruption in Kaliningrad. They also submitted several documents pertaining to their specific situation, including: (1) Andrei Kidanov’s death cer- tificate, identifying the cause of death as “alcoholic cardio- myopathy”; (2) a formal request from the Federal Tax Police for an evaluation of Andrei’s professional fitness from the “VTEK Commission” (apparently some sort of ethics review board); and (3) a letter from Irina Bulatova, a former co- worker of Andrei’s who still lived in Kaliningrad. During Evguenia’s and Ksenia’s asylum hearing, the im- migration judge occasionally expressed skepticism about their story of persecution. Nevertheless, the IJ found that their testimony was consistent with their written statement, and that the background information they provided ade- quately established the existence of widespread corruption. The IJ did not, however, make an explicit finding as to whether the testimony was credible. Instead, his analysis focused on the lack of evidence corroborating their claims, specifically their claim that Andrei was killed because of his efforts to expose governmental corruption. The IJ explained why he considered the documents they provided to be inadequate: With the exception of [the letter from Irina Bulatova], there is no evidence to indicate that [Mr. Kidanov] was employed [by the Russian] Internal Revenue Service. A review of the letter generally mentions Mr. Kidanov’s 4 No. 03-1641

death. There is not enough information, assuming the contents of the letter to be entirely true, to support the assertion that Mr. Kidanov was murdered because of his involvement in the investigation. The IJ went on to identify the kinds of documents he ex- pected: There are no documents from the tax service, there are no documents from the governor’s office, there are no statements other than the one previously mentioned from any other co-workers, no affidavits from friends, no affidavits from acquaintances. . . . [T]here are no documents to show that [Mr. Kidanov] himself was hospitalized. The IJ also expressed concern about the absence of documents corroborating the allegedly suspicious circumstances in which Andrei and his sister died: The only document which appears in the file relative to his death is the actual death certificate . . . which simply shows the cause of death as “alcoholic cardiomyopathy.” There is no other reference to the circumstances sur- rounding his death or the suspicious manner in which Ms. Gontcharova believes he died. Ms. Gontcharova has made [the] claim that Mr. Kidanov’s sister also met with foul play, that she was found hang- ing. There is no letter, newspaper article; there is no document which supports that. Finally, the IJ was troubled that the petitioners had not presented testimony from a woman Evguenia knew from Kaliningrad who now lived in Chicago, a former neighbor named Irina Bongarenko (the woman, incidentally, who had brought Evguenia her husband’s death certificate). Evguenia offered explanations for failing to produce doc- uments that may have been available to her: when she left Kaliningrad in August 1998, she was fleeing from what she No. 03-1641 5

considered an imminent danger of assault, so she did not have time to gather documentation. She also had not originally intended to apply for asylum, hoping instead that the situation in Kaliningrad would eventually return to normal and she could return safely. She further suggested that the people she knew back home were themselves fear- ful of government retaliation, and it was therefore difficult to ask them to help her obtain sensitive documents. The IJ did not address these explanations when he gave his decision, but simply concluded that Evguenia and Ksenia failed to meet their burden of proof—that they “should have provided more specific documentation in order to specifically corroborate their claim to persecution.” The IJ therefore de- nied their requests for asylum and withholding of deporta- tion but granted them voluntary departure. The Board of Immigration Appeals affirmed without comment. The petitioners now argue that the IJ misapplied the BIA’s so-called “corroboration rule.” The rule is based on the BIA’s interpretation of 8 C.F.R.

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