Guang Ri Li v. Attorney General of the United States

186 F. App'x 201
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 30, 2006
DocketNo. 05-1668
StatusPublished

This text of 186 F. App'x 201 (Guang Ri Li v. Attorney General of the United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guang Ri Li v. Attorney General of the United States, 186 F. App'x 201 (3d Cir. 2006).

Opinion

[202]*202OPINION OF THE COURT

FISHER, Circuit Judge.

Guang Ri Li sought asylum in this country on the grounds that he and his wife had been forcibly sterilized in their native China. The immigration judge, in a decision adopted by the Board of Immigration Appeals, refused to credit these allegations because of perceived inconsistencies between Li’s testimony at the hearing and his statements in prior proceedings. Li now petitions for review by this Court, arguing that the immigration judge misconstrued the record and ignored critical evidence supporting his claim. We agree and will grant the petition.

I.

Removal proceedings were commenced against Li in 1996, after he entered the United States with an invalid passport. Li conceded deportability but filed an application for asylum claiming persecution based on religion and political opinion.

A hearing on the application was held in July 1996. Li was the sole witness. He testified that he, his wife, and their two children had been persecuted in China based on their Christian faith. He could, however, recall only one actual incident of intimidation: In 1985, he had been arrested and detained for ten days for allowing a priest to deliver a sermon in the family home.

Li also testified that his family had been persecuted based on their opposition to the one-child policy of the Chinese government. He recalled that, after the birth of their first child, authorities “requested” that his wife undergo sterilization and insertion of an intrauterine device (“IUD”). He and his wife went into hiding but, after the birth of their second child, his wife was abducted by Chinese officials and sterilized, in September 1989.

Both counsel for the government and the immigration judge questioned Li whether he had himself been sterilized. Li’s responses were vague. When the judge asked Li if he or his wife had undergone sterilization, Li replied: “My wife was sterilized.” When counsel for the government asked Li directly if he had been sterilized, Li replied: “Because the man in the family usually has to work ... [w]hen we didn’t have any choice then she underwent the procedure.”

The immigration judge denied the application for asylum. Focusing primarily on the claim of religious intimidation, the judge found that the ten-day period of detention that Li had allegedly suffered for assisting the priest did not give rise to a well-founded fear of persecution.

Li, acting pro se, appealed. He recounted, in an addendum to the appeal, the facts supporting his claim of persecution based on opposition to the one-child policy. The addendum asserts that Li’s wife had been required to undergo an IUD insertion after her first pregnancy and had been threatened with sterilization after her second pregnancy. The addendum does not state expressly that Li’s wife was actually sterilized, but it does indicate that she “got a pain in [her] waist because of the sterilization,” implying that the procedure was performed.

In the addendum Li also revealed, for the first time, that he had been sterilized. He stated that, shortly after his wife’s detention, Chinese officials arrested and transported him to a hospital where the procedure was performed. He did not disclose this fact previously, he explained, because “it was humiliating” and “[he] was ashamed.”

The Board agreed that Li had failed to establish persecution based on religious belief, but held that the immigration judge [203]*203had failed to give adequate consideration to Li’s claim of persecution based on opposition to the one-child policy. It noted that, under the Immigration and Naturalization Act (“INA”), an alien is deemed to have suffered “persecution” — establishing eligibility for asylum — if he or his spouse has suffered forcible sterilization. Although Li’s failure to mention his own sterilization during the first hearing cast doubt on his credibility, the Board concluded that he could still demonstrate eligibility for asylum by substantiating his allegations through “medical documentation.”

The Board identified another discrepancy between the allegations in the addendum and Li’s prior testimony. Specifically, it remarked that, while Li had previously “claimed that his wife was forcibly sterilized,” he “presently appears to allege that his wife was not sterilized.”

Following remand, a second hearing on the asylum application was held in September 2001. At the start of the hearing, counsel for Li introduced a letter from Bruce B. Sloan, M.D., a urologist. The letter, dated August 2001, indicates that Dr. Sloan had examined Li and had determined that Li had, “without question, undergone bilateral vasectomy.” The government objected to the letter, noting that Dr. Sloan had not been called to testify. The immigration judge overruled the objection and admitted the document, stating that he would give it “whatever weight [the court] deem[s] advisable.” He remarked, however, that he could not be sure from the letter alone whether Dr. Sloan had actually examined Li, whether Li had undergone the vasectomy voluntarily, or when the vasectomy had been performed.

Li was, once again, the only witness. He testified that he had been married in 1987 — contrary to his testimony in the first hearing that he had been married in 1981 — and that his wife and children remain in China. Counsel for the government asked Li to explain why a marriage certificate, introduced earlier in the hearing, indicated that his marriage had been registered in April 1990. Li explained that he had not registered his marriage immediately, but had waited until Chinese authorities required him to do so, in 1990.

Li recounted the allegations underlying his claim of forcible sterilization. He testified that, after his wife became pregnant for a second time, officials attempted to force her to have an abortion, but the family fled to another province. When they returned to their home in October 1989, after the child’s birth, family planning officers confronted them and “dragged” Li’s wife to a hospital for sterilization. She pleaded with hospital officials that she had a heart condition and could not endure the procedure. Doctors initially agreed; however, after cadres were unable to apprehend Li for sterilization, they directed that his wife be sterilized regardless of the risk to her health. The operation was performed three days after Li’s wife had initially been detained.

Notwithstanding the sterilization of his wife, cadres continued to pursue Li. He explained that they intended to “punish” him for refusing to obey the prior sterilization order. Li was subsequently captured and forcibly sterilized. He could not remember the exact date of the procedure, but said that it was “sometime early in October.”

Li conceded that he had not mentioned his own sterilization during the previous hearing, but offered two reasons for this omission. First, Li said that his original counsel had advised him that, “to make things easier” and avoid “a lot of questions,” he should mention only his wife’s sterilization. Second, Li indicated that he did not “like to have people to know” about [204]*204the sterilization because it is not “such a glorious thing[ ].”

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21 I. & N. Dec. 915 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1997)

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Bluebook (online)
186 F. App'x 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guang-ri-li-v-attorney-general-of-the-united-states-ca3-2006.