Hongyok v. Gonzales

492 F.3d 547, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 15829, 2007 WL 1892310
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 3, 2007
Docket05-61169
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 492 F.3d 547 (Hongyok v. Gonzales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hongyok v. Gonzales, 492 F.3d 547, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 15829, 2007 WL 1892310 (5th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:

Puangsuk Hongyok seeks review of a decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) denying withholding of removal under 8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3) and protection under the Convention against Torture (“CAT”), 8 C.F.R. §§ 1208.16 through -18. We deny the petition.

I.

Hongyok is an adult female native and citizen of Thailand. In 1999 or 2000 she entered the United States at or near Los Angeles, California, either without inspection or as a tourist. In February 2003 she was charged with being removable as an alien illegally present in the United States. She appeared before an immigration judge (“IJ”), who found that she was in the United States illegally and thus was removable.

Because she was unable to establish that she had sought asylum within one year of entering the United States, Hongyok sought withholding of removal and relief under the CAT in lieu of asylum. She contended that she would be subject to persecution and torture because she is a *549 member of a “particular social group” composed of victims of sex trafficking who have escaped. 1

Hongyok testified that she had intended to leave Thailand to come to the United States with people who had promised her a job. Instead, her passport was taken away from her, and she was taken to New York and forced to work as a prostitute to repay a $45,000 debt owed to the people who had brought her to the United States. She was confined inside a New York brothel for six months by persons she identified as Kim and Yok.

At the end of her time in New York, Hongyok was told she had paid off $30,000 of the debt and was taken to Chicago and then to Atlanta. Apparently her stay in Atlanta was unprofitable for the traffickers, and she was told to return to New York.

Instead, Hongyok used money she had received in Atlanta to fly to Los Angeles. She went from Los Angeles to Philadelphia, Atlantic City, and Houston. She was arrested for prostitution in all three of the latter cities.

Hongyok testifies that she still owes Kim and Yok $5,000, and they are still looking for her and have called her mother in Thailand “about five times” to say Hon-gyok still owed them money and was in “big danger” of being hurt. Hongyok believes associates of Kim and Yok will kill her if she returns to Thailand, and there is nowhere in Thailand where she would be safe from the traffickers.

Hongyok does not believe the Thai government will protect her from Kim and Yok or their gang, because the Thai police have been thoroughly corrupted by sex traffickers. She also presented documentary evidence reporting a widespread sex trade in Thailand and southeastern Asia and the Thai government’s toleration of and complicity in sex trafficking.

II.

Although the IJ granted withholding of removal and relief under the CAT, the BIA reversed. The BIA declined to categorize escaped sex trafficking victims as a particular social group and found that Hongyok’s fears of persecution were based on an outstanding debt. The BIA further determined that Hongyok had failed to meet her burden to prove that persecution on her return to Thailand was “more likely than not.” See INS v. Cardoza-Fonseca, 480 U.S. 421, 423, 107 S.Ct. 1207, 94 L.Ed.2d 434 (1987). The BIA pointed out that Hongyok had not specified when the alleged threatening phone calls to her mother had been made; it concluded that the callers “seemed more interested in having the debt repaid than in seeking [Hongyok].”

III.

We review the BIA’s decision, not that of the IJ. See Mikhael v. INS, 115 F.3d 299, 302 (5th Cir.1997). Where the BIA has not adopted the IJ’s conclusion or findings, the IJ’s determinations are irrelevant to our review. See id.; Chun v. INS, 40 F.3d 76, 78 (5th Cir.1994).

The government argues that we lack even the authority to review the BIA’s decision, because Hongyok has failed to exhaust her administrative remedies. 2 We disagree.

*550 The government emphasizes that Hon-gyok’s proposed group of “sex trafficking victims who escape from a sex trafficking ring” was not adopted by the IJ and thus was not before the BIA on the government’s appeal. Instead the IJ defined the protected social group as “sex slaves from foreign countries who are brought to the United States under false pretenses and forced at the threat of death and destruction to participate in sexual activities.”

This disparity, however, does not implicate the straightforward requirement that a petitioner present her ground for relief to the administrative agency in the first instance in order to avoid waiver. Wang v. Ashcroft, 260 F.3d 448, 452 (5th Cir.2001). Hongyok has asked for the same relief—withholding of removal because of membership in a protected social group and protection under the CAT—at every agency and judicial level involved in this case and has done so with the same proposed formulation of the social group. The government fails to point to any material difference between Hongyok’s proposed social group and the one adopted by the IJ.

We are aware of no case conditioning federal court jurisdiction on the absence of insignificant semantic differences between a petitioner’s proposed social group and the definition formulated by the agency, and we decline to announce such a condition here. Although the IJ’s formulation of the social group might be somewhat more legally precise than that proposed by Hongyok—and Hongyok would have been entitled to defend it—she is not conclusively barred from judicial relief; she presents the court with the same definition she originally proposed to the agency, and that definition does not significantly differ from the one considered on appeal by the BIA. She has adequately presented her proposed ground for relief to the administrative agency in the first instance. See id. at 452.

IV.

We need not and do not address the BIA’s legal conclusion that escaped sex slaves are not a protected social group; the BIA’s factual conclusion that Hongyok has failed to meet her burden to prove that she personally would more likely than not be subject to persecution in Thailand is supported by substantial evidence. 3

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492 F.3d 547, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 15829, 2007 WL 1892310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hongyok-v-gonzales-ca5-2007.