Herdiansyah, Yonatha v. Gonzales, Alberto R.

224 F. App'x 508
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 14, 2007
Docket06-2114
StatusUnpublished

This text of 224 F. App'x 508 (Herdiansyah, Yonatha v. Gonzales, Alberto R.) 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.

Bluebook
Herdiansyah, Yonatha v. Gonzales, Alberto R., 224 F. App'x 508 (7th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

ORDER

Yonathan Herdiansyah, a national of Indonesia, applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture (CAT), based on his Christian faith and Chinese ethnicity. The Immigration Judge (IJ) denied his asylum application as untimely and denied his requests for withholding of removal and relief under CAT on the merits; the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) affirmed. Herdiansyah now petitions for review, arguing that the IJ violated his rights to procedural due process and to be represented by counsel, and that substantial evidence does not support the denial of his applications for asylum and withholding of removal. We deny the petition.

I

Herdiansyah entered the United States as a visitor in June 2001, but he did not leave when he should have. Instead, he remained and avoided the attention of the immigration authorities until the government instituted the National Security Entry Exit Registration System, which is a program requiring certain aliens to register with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). See Hadayat v. Gonzales, 458 F.3d 659, 661 (7th Cir.2006). As he *510 was required to do, Herdiansyah registered in March 2003. This action, not surprisingly, led to DHS’s discovery that his presence in the country was unauthorized. DHS accordingly served him with a Notice to Appear but left the court’s location and the date of his initial hearing to be set later. The notice, however, was not addressed properly, and so Herdiansyah never received it. When he did not appear for his hearing (which was in Los Angeles), the IJ ordered him removed in absentia. Some time later, Herdiansyah learned about the removal order and retained an attorney, who moved to reopen the case. The IJ granted that motion.

Herdiansyah then appeared for an initial hearing in July 2003, where, represented by counsel, he conceded removability and expressed his intention to apply for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under CAT. The IJ continued the case until September 2003. The IJ also asked counsel to “advise [Herdiansyah] of the consequences of failing to appear and waive my reading.” It is not clear to what “reading” the IJ was referring, but counsel agreed to the request.

In September 2003, Herdiansyah filed his asylum application with the court, contending that he feared persecution based on his Christian faith and Chinese ethnicity, though he recounted no specific instances of past persecution. He supported his application with several newspaper articles from 2000 to 2002 discussing attacks on Christians in Indonesia, including the bombings of Christian villages and churches. His case was set for a merits hearing, and counsel once again “waive[d] [the IJ’s] reading.”

At the August 2004 merits hearing, before anything of substance occurred, counsel advised the Los Angeles immigration court that Herdiansyah wanted to transfer his case to Chicago. Herdiansyah told the IJ that he had moved to Chicago in April and that potential witnesses for his case were in the Chicago area. The IJ granted the motion, which was unopposed. At this hearing Herdiansyah also submitted more documents in support of his application, including a letter from a church official in Indonesia stating that as a “dedicated evangelist” Herdiansyah had “ministered” while there, and a certificate showing that the Pentecostal Church in Indonesia had ordained him two months before he left for the United States. Finally, the IJ allowed Herdiansyah’s attorney to withdraw from the case. The judge warned Herdiansyah to “find an attorney [in Chicago] to assist you. Don’t delay.”

Herdiansyah did not heed this advice. He showed up at his October 2004 preliminary hearing before the Chicago immigration court without an attorney, although he told the IJ that he was looking for one. (In the eventual order denying relief, the IJ stated that at this October hearing Herdiansyah “was again explained his rights through counsel.” The trial transcript confirms, and the government concedes, that this is an error: Herdiansyah appeared pro se at this hearing.) The IJ set the merits hearing for December 2004, and explained that he would “speak to [Herdiansyah] further about [his] case” then.

In December 2004, Herdiansyah once again appeared without counsel. The IJ stated — inaccurately—that at the previous hearing he had informed Herdiansyah of his “right to be represented by an attorney at [his own] expense and that if [he] could not afford a private attorney there were legal aid[ ] organizations that represent people at little or no charge.” (No such explanation appears in the transcript of the October hearing, and the government does not contend that the IJ advised Herdiansyah off the record.) After confirming that Herdiansyah did not have a lawyer, *511 the IJ announced that he was “going to go over” Herdiansyah’s application to determine his eligibility for relief. Responding to the IJ’s questioning, Herdiansyah testified that he came to the United States because incidents in Indonesia made him “terrified.” He explained that in 1998, three years before he entered the United States, rocks were thrown into his house, and that at some later date (he did not say when) he saw a woman get shot. Herdiansyah did not explain who the perpetrators were in either incident or what motivated them. He also testified that his church was shut down for two months in 1998, but he was not asked, nor did he offer to explain, why the closure occurred. Herdiansyah added that, although the Indonesian government had not prohibited him from practicing his religion, Muslim groups effectively did. Nothing about these events had been disclosed previously in Herdiansyah’s written submissions or during his personal appearances before the immigration courts.

The IJ then gave Herdiansyah a copy of the 2004 Department of State Report on International Religious Freedom in Indonesia, which notes “advances in interreligious tolerance and cooperation,” and admitted the report into the record. Acknowledging that terrorist attacks continued in Indonesia, the IJ nonetheless observed that the government had not prevented Herdiansyah from “practicing his religion or placed restrictions on his practice.” After expressing his inclination to rule against Herdiansyah, the IJ asked, “[I]s there something else you want to tell me about your case that you haven’t already told me?” Herdiansyah responded that Christians and people of Chinese ethnicity still faced discrimination in Indonesia, but he offered no further supporting evidence or witnesses.

The IJ found Herdiansyah’s asylum application untimely because he had filed it almost two years after his entry (i.e. almost a year late) and no extraordinary circumstances justified that delay. Alternatively, the IJ concluded that Herdiansyah fell “far short” of the asylum standard because he suffered no personal harm in Indonesia and did not face a well-founded fear of future persecution. Because Herdiansyah failed to meet the asylum standard, the IJ also denied his request for withholding of removal.

Less than a month later, Herdiansyah retained counsel to assist in his appeal to the BIA.

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224 F. App'x 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herdiansyah-yonatha-v-gonzales-alberto-r-ca7-2007.