Guo Wang v. Eric Holder

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedOctober 2, 2009
Docket07-5369-ag
StatusPublished

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Guo Wang v. Eric Holder, (2d Cir. 2009).

Opinion

07-5369-ag Guo W ang v. Eric Holder

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT

_______________

August Term, 2009

(Argued: September 23, 2009 Decided: October 2, 2009)

Docket No. 07-5369-ag ________________________________________________________

GUO QI WANG ,

Petitioner,

—v.—

ERIC H. HOLDER, JR., Attorney General of the United States,*

Respondent.

________________________________________________________

Before : WALKER, KATZMANN , and ROTH ,** Circuit Judges.

Petition for review of an order of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) affirming a decision of an immigration judge which denied petitioner Guo Qi Wang’s application for asylum, withholding of removal under 8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3), and withholding of removal under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). We deny the petition, finding that the BIA correctly concluded that Wang’s participation in a scheme to sell organs for profit on the black market was a serious nonpolitical crime.

* Pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 43(c)(2), Attorney General Eric H. Holder, Jr. is automatically substituted for former Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey as respondent in this case. ** The Honorable Jane R. Roth, of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, sitting by designation. Counsel for Petitioner: JOHN F. CLARK, Holland & Hart LLP, Washington, DC

Counsel for Respondent: JAMES E. GRIMES, Senior Litigation Counsel (Gregory G. Katsas, Assistant Attorney General, Linda S. Wernery, Assistant Director, on the brief), Office of Immigration Litigation, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, DC _______________

PER CURIAM :

This case calls upon us in principal part to determine whether the Board of Immigration

Appeals (“BIA”) correctly concluded that participation in a scheme to sell organs for profit on

the black market is a serious nonpolitical crime.

Petitioner Guo Qi Wang petitions for review of an order of the BIA affirming a decision

of an immigration judge which denied his application for asylum, withholding of removal under

8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3), and withholding of removal under the Convention Against Torture

(“CAT”). We agree with the BIA that Wang’s participation in a scheme to sell organs for profit

on the black market was a serious nonpolitical crime. Accordingly, we deny the petition.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

In May 2000, Guo Qi Wang, a native and citizen of the People’s Republic of China,

attempted to enter the United States without valid travel documents. In April 2001, Wang filed

an affirmative application for asylum, withholding of removal under 8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3),

withholding of removal under the CAT, and deferral of removal under the CAT. In his

application, Wang claimed a fear of persecution and torture for violating his agreement with the

Chinese government not to expose the government’s program of harvesting organs and tissue

from executed prisoners for profit. Wang stated that, as part of the government’s program, he

2 extracted organs and tissue from executed prisoners at least one hundred times.

In July 2002, Wang was charged as removable by service of a Notice to Appear. In

February 2003, Wang filed a supplemental asylum application, presenting essentially the same

facts and claims as his first application, namely a fear of persecution and torture for exposing the

Chinese government’s program of extracting organs from executed prisoners for profit. At an

April 2004 merits hearing, Wang testified in support of his application for relief from removal.

Specifically, Wang testified that he had become personally involved, at the military hospital

where he worked, in a scheme involving the harvesting of organs from executed prisoners. Wang

stated that, in order to procure the cadavers from which to harvest organs, the hospital would pay

court officials for each body, and that he himself sometimes made these payments on behalf of

the hospital. According to his testimony, Wang personally removed the skin from cadavers

“about 100 times.” The harvesting would occur either at the execution location or at a

crematorium, and Wang was present at some of the executions, although he was instructed not to

disclose the details of the organ harvesting scheme to the public. Wang testified that after the

organs were harvested, the hospital “sold them to patients[,] . . . [f]irst . . . [to] the patients who

had money, and second [to] the patients who have prestige to get those organs.” According to

Wang, the organ harvesting scheme was very lucrative for the hospital. Wang participated in the

harvesting of organs from 1988 to 1995, when he began refusing to participate. When Wang

voiced an objection to the scheme as “an uncivilized and immoral way of doing things,” the

hospital required Wang to sign an agreement that he would not reveal the organ harvesting

scheme “to the media, the foreign countries, or to outside parties.” Besides harvesting the skin

from executed prisoners, Wang also carried the corpse of an executed prisoner on a stretcher and

3 administered anti-clotting medication to a living prisoner in order to extend the viability of his

kidneys after his execution, although he told the prisoner that the medication was a tranquilizer

that would prevent unnecessary suffering. According to Wang, he learned from his superior that

some executions were intentionally botched, that is, the executioner would intentionally misfire

so that the prisoner did not die, to extend the life of the kidneys before transplantation. Wang

also testified that he had once removed the skin of a prisoner who was still alive after a botched

execution. Wang claimed that the Chinese government would persecute and torture him,

asserting that the government had responded to testimony he gave before Congress about the

organ-harvesting scheme by identifying him as a traitor in the news and by seeking information

about his whereabouts from his wife.1

In August 2005, the IJ issued a decision denying Wang’s application for asylum,

1 Both before the BIA and before this Court, Wang has maintained that certain portions of his testimony, particularly the testimony about his knowledge of intentionally botched executions and the incident involving removing the skin from a living prisoner, were mistranslated. The above account of his testimony before the IJ, however, is drawn exclusively from testimony the accuracy of which Wang does not dispute, including the independent translation of his testimony that Wang submitted to the BIA and this Court.

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McMULLEN
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