Ibrahim Berete v. Eric Holder

315 F. App'x 537
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 2, 2009
Docket08-3864
StatusUnpublished

This text of 315 F. App'x 537 (Ibrahim Berete v. Eric Holder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ibrahim Berete v. Eric Holder, 315 F. App'x 537 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

KENNEDY, Circuit Judge.

Ibrahim Berete petitions for review of the Board of Immigration Appeal’s (BIA) order removing him to Sierra Leone. The Immigration Judge (IJ) concluded that Be-rete was not credible, so that he was ineligible for asylum and withholding of removal under the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1101 et seq., and protection under the Convention Against Torture. With respect to asylum and withholding of removal, the IJ also concluded that the government’s showing of changed country conditions sufficed to rebut any well-founded fear of persecution Berete may have had, supposing that it had been established. Berete appealed the decision which the BIA dismissed after agreeing with the IJ’s credibility finding. Berete then filed a petition for review in this court of the BIA’s denial of asylum. 1 For the following reasons, we deny the petition.

*538 BACKGROUND

Berete’s removal hearing was held before an IJ on September 18, 2006. There, he testified to the following which provides the basis for his claim of past persecution.

Berete’s father was in the diamond business in Sierra Leone. Berete had traveled with his father to Belgium and France where his father sold diamonds. As a successful businessman, Berete’s father was friendly with the police chief as well as other high ranking officials. Many of these officials would come to Berete’s home and his father’s store. His father was known to support the government, run by Momoh, as part of All People’s Congress (APC) rule. His family was prominent generally, because many people would visit their store. At the time of the April 11, 2000 incident upon which Berete relies to establish past persecution, Berete lived in Hanga, a suburb of Kenema, in Sierra Leone, with his father, his mother, his father’s other wife, his siblings, and his own wife and children. The store was adjacent to Berete’s family’s home. Workers employed by Berete’s father were also at the house on the day of the incident.

On April 11, 2000, Berete’s father ran home from mosque, told the family that he had heard gunshots, and determined that the family needed to flee the city. Be-rete’s entire family split up into three cars. Berete was in a car with his mother, his father, and his father’s other wife. As they attempted to speed away, rebels shot out the tires of their car. The car flipped over. The car’s steering wheel crushed Berete’s father’s chest. Berete sustained a broken leg.

Berete’s father’s wives pulled Berete’s father from the wreckage, but he died. Meanwhile, the other two vehicles containing other members of Berete’s family stopped nearby. At some point, Berete’s 17-year-old sister got out of the car and was standing by the roadside, when two Land Rovers pulled up alongside and kid-naped Berete’s sister against the protestations of the family. Berete’s mother decided that she needed a cloth to cover up Berete’s father’s body. Berete’s mother sent their driver back to the house to get the cloth. The driver retrieved the cloth, and upon his return, he informed the family that rebels had broken into the home, were looting the place and setting it ablaze, and beating the workers around the place.

Berete managed to make contact with the Red Cross which took him and his family, including his mother, his mother’s co-spouse, his wife, his children, and his siblings, to Port Loko in Sierra Leone about 200 miles from his hometown. They stayed there in a camp for a few weeks until they were attacked by persons who knew who their father was. The entire family decided to leave Port Loko and traveled to nearby Guinea. From Guinea, Berete boarded a boat to the United States.

Prior to his testimony at the removal hearing, Berete had filed, in April of 2001, an 1-589 application for asylum and withholding of removal. On that application, he stated:

On April/11/00 ruthless rebels attacked my family compound and maliciously killed my father and then they break into my room and beat me and leave me lying down in my own blood with my right leg broken. The thugs then raided our boutique that me and my father use to operate and took every thing that we owned and lived for. After this devastation, I had to leave my home town of Hangha and went to Guin *539 ea where I stayed and healed my broken leg and ruptured ribs. I will also provide you with a picture of my right leg which was broken during the incident.
After all these incidents the rest of my family’s whereabout is unknown to me. It is believed that the rebels took along with them not only money but two of my sisters and two of my brothers, beyond their wills. They could have taken me as well but because I was severely beaten, they thought I was going to die. At this point in my life, I will not even wish my dead body be sent to Sierra Leone.

About the reason for his past mistreatment, Berete wrote:

Probably simply, because we owned a prominent business in the city of Hon-gha and they needed to loot our store and take our money to support their rebellious group.

Berete signed his name on the application as both the applicant and the preparer of the application.

An asylum officer interviewed Berete with regard to his application on October 18, 2001. In his referral assessment, the asylum officer wrote:

Applicant stated that he and his father owned a general store in the town of Hanga. Applicant stated that on April 20, 2000, unknown men, whom the applicant assumed were rebels, attacked the village and looted their store. Applicant stated that his family attempted to escape, but were stopped by the rebels. Applicant stated that the rebels killed his father and beat him. Applicant stated that he suffered a broken leg as a result of the beating. Applicant stated that after the attack, ECOMOG forces entered the area and transported him to a Red Cross facility in Guinea. Applicant stated that he remained in Guinea for 3 months until he was able to make arrangements to come to the United States.

Notes taken by the asylum officer at that time also became part of the record. In his notes, the asylum officer wrote:

Applicant stated on April 11, 2000 unidentified rebels came to his store/home and stole all their goods 6 AM and asked applicant’s father for money. Applicant stated his family tried to escape in a car but the rebels began shooting. Applicant’s father was killed. Applicant was severely beaten and left for dead. Applicant’s wife sisters and brothers were taken. The applicant stated the same day he was rescued by ECOMOG troops and transported to the [unreadable] on the border of Guinea.

He also noted the following brief question and answer exchange:

Q: Why do you think you were attacked by unidentified rebels?
A: Because we were wealthy Mandin-gos. All [unreadable] Africa we are. Singled out.
Q: What do you think would happen to you if you returned to Sierra Leone?
A: I will be killed.

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Bluebook (online)
315 F. App'x 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ibrahim-berete-v-eric-holder-ca6-2009.