Huang Dong Lin v. Attorney General of the United States

428 F. App'x 143
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 18, 2011
DocketNo. 09-4621
StatusPublished

This text of 428 F. App'x 143 (Huang Dong Lin 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
Huang Dong Lin v. Attorney General of the United States, 428 F. App'x 143 (3d Cir. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

JORDAN, Circuit Judge.

Hong Dong Lin (“Lin”) petitions for review of an order of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) denying him asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). Lin argues that his testimony, which had been presumed credible for purposes of his appeal to the BIA, was alone sufficient to establish his eligibility for relief. He says the BIA thus erred by requiring additional evidentiary support and questioning his credibility. We agree that the BIA erred in denying relief based on Lin’s demeanor. However, that error was harmless because the BIA’s decision is independently justified by Lin’s failure to corroborate his claimed fear of future persecution. We will therefore deny his petition for review.

I. Background

Lin is a Chinese citizen who arrived illegally in the United States in January 2005. He was subsequently issued a Notice to Appear (“NTA”) and was charged with removability pursuant to § 212(a)(6)(A)(l) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(6)(A)(l) (2005), as an alien in the United States without authorization. In May 2005, Lin, through counsel, admitted the factual allegations of the NTA.

Having conceded his removability, Lin sought asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the CAT based on, inter alia, his religious beliefs, political opinion, and membership in a particular social group. The case centers on his arguments and evidence concerning his religious beliefs and Chinese policy towards unregistered churches.

At a June 2006 hearing before an IJ, Lin testified that on November 14, 2004, Chinese police stormed the church that he had recently joined, arrested the priest, and attempted to arrest him and the few others who were in attendance. He testified that he escaped the raid and later learned through his father’s “ask[ing] around” that the church was an “underground church ... [that] was illegal to attend,” that seven people had been arrested that night, and that the police were tracking the people who had escaped the church, including himself. (AR at 407.) Lin further said that he cannot return to China because he [145]*145left “without permission ... when the police were still looking for [him],” that he would be arrested immediately and imprisoned upon his return because people “deported to China” are sentenced to jail for two or three months, and that “[bjeating and torture almost always occurs during detention.” (Id.) He added that his father told him that the “police came to [his] home looking for [him] after [he] left China ... [and] that the priest who was arrested at November 14 night, [was] still detained in jail.” (Id.)

Lin also submitted the following: reports and articles regarding conditions in China; a letter dated March 29, 2005, noting his attendance at a church in New York; a translation of a letter purportedly from his father, saying that the police had inquired as to Lin’s whereabouts and that an “acquaintance, who ... knows [Lin’s] case, ... [had said] that [Lin] would better not go home” because he would “be caught and put in the jail” (id. at 308); and a translation of a letter from someone claiming to be Lin’s uncle stating that Lin had hidden at the uncle’s house before leaving China.

At the end of the hearing, the Immigration Judge (“IJ”) issued an oral decision denying Lin’s application and ordering him removed to China. The IJ noted that “[t]he weaker the testimony, the greater the need for corroborative evidence,” (id. at 229), and he said he found much of Lin’s testimony to be “weak” because Lin’s alleged fear of returning to China was based largely on hearsay, (id. at 229-30). The IJ also commented on the brevity and lack of specificity in the written statement Lin submitted with his application and on the fact that Lin had “never been persecuted in China, in terms of beatings, [or] punishment of any sort.” (Id. at 232.) The IJ noted that the State Department’s 2005 International Religious Freedom Report on China, which Lin put in evidence, indicated that unregistered “house churches” are permitted in China. (Id. at 233.) The IJ also said that Lin had not indicated why he desired to go to an unregistered church as opposed to an authorized Christian church and had also not demonstrated “any knowledge of Christianity whatsoever.” (Id. at 231.) Further, the IJ found that the letters offered as corroboration seemed to be illegitimate and written “for the purpose of impressing a decision maker with the notion that [Lin] is wanted still in China and cannot return.” (Id. at 236.) Considering the deficiencies in Lin’s case, the IJ found that he had not met his burden of proof.

Lin appealed that decision to the BIA, which sent the case back to the IJ for an “explicit credibility finding.” (Id. at 163.) The IJ conducted a hearing on remand and issued an oral decision incorporating the prior decision, but, remarkably, the IJ “deelin[ed] to make a specific credibility finding.” (Id. at 55.) The IJ reasoned that the absence of a credibility finding allowed the BIA to presume on appeal that Lin was credible, pursuant to the REAL ID Act. The IJ then added that, if the BIA read the REAL ID Act as not allowing that presumption, it should consider Lin credible. The IJ also noted that Lin had supplemented his earlier testimony with more detail about the church and his relationship with it, as well as information on why he did not want to attend a state-sponsored church. The IJ commented that the testimony regarding why Lin would not go to a sanctioned church if returned to China was not “particularly convincing” as it was brief and not given with emotion. (Id. at 57.) According to the IJ, that observation about Lin’s demeanor was pertinent to “the question of burden of proof.” (Id. at 58.)

[146]*146The IJ next turned to the substance of Lin’s claims and concluded that Lin’s supplementation of earlier testimony with more detail about the church and why he did not want to attend a state-sponsored church in China was insufficient corroboration to carry Lin’s burden of proof. The IJ observed that Lin had ignored the IJ’s earlier-given “blueprint”1 for appropriate corroboration.2 (Id. at 59.) Specifically, the IJ found that Lin had failed to present corroborating evidence to overcome the suspicious nature of the letters supposedly sent by his uncle and father and had also failed to support his claims that he would be arrested or tortured because of his illegal departure from China. Concluding that the only question was Lin’s risk of future persecution, the IJ again determined that Lin had not met his burden of proof and denied his application.

Lin appealed the IJ’s second decision, and the BIA affirmed. “[Presuming [Lin] was credible for the purposes of ... -; appeal,” the BIA concluded that Lin had “failed to present specific and probative evidence demonstrating eligibility for relief.” (Id,, at 2.) It noted that testimony alone could be sufficient to sustain Lin’s claim if the testimony was “credible, persuasive, and referred] to specific facts sufficient to demonstrate that he is a refugee.” (Id. at 3 (citing § 208(b)(l)(B)(ii) of the REAL ID Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1158

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428 F. App'x 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huang-dong-lin-v-attorney-general-of-the-united-states-ca3-2011.