Juan Barragan-Ojeda v. Jeff Sessions

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 5, 2017
Docket16-2964
StatusPublished

This text of Juan Barragan-Ojeda v. Jeff Sessions (Juan Barragan-Ojeda v. Jeff Sessions) 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
Juan Barragan-Ojeda v. Jeff Sessions, (7th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 16‐2964 JUAN CARLOS BARRAGAN‐OJEDA, Petitioner,

v.

JEFF SESSIONS, Attorney General of the United States, Respondent. ____________________ Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals. No. A206‐516‐229. ____________________

ARGUED DECEMBER 1, 2016 — DECIDED APRIL 5, 2017 ____________________

Before POSNER, RIPPLE, and ROVNER, Circuit Judges. RIPPLE, Circuit Judge. Juan Carlos Barragan‐Ojeda, a native and citizen of Mexico, entered the United States without au‐ thorization in 2013. He was apprehended at the border and requested asylum. Appearing pro se before the immigration judge (“IJ”), he claimed eligibility for asylum because a Mex‐ ican criminal gang had persecuted him. At the conclusion of 2 No. 16‐2964

his testimony, he briefly mentioned that he had been the vic‐ tim of discrimination in employment because he was effemi‐ nate, but, when questioned by the IJ, he denied that he was gay. The IJ denied asylum, and Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals (“Board” or “BIA”). There, represented by counsel, Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda filed an additional affidavit asserting facts not before the IJ: he claimed that he was gay and that he had been persecuted be‐ cause of his sexual orientation. The Board adopted and af‐ firmed the IJ’s denial of asylum on the ground asserted in the original application. With respect to the new ground, the Board treated the appeal as a motion to remand and deter‐ mined that the requirements for such a motion were not sat‐ isfied. Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda now petitions for review in this court. He submits that the IJ denied him due process in the conduct of the proceedings and that the Board erred in deny‐ ing him asylum on the basis of his sexual orientation. We deny the petition for review. Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda’s due process challenge is premised on the IJ’s conduct of the hearing; this sort of claim must be presented to the Board be‐ fore it can be presented here, and Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda did not do so. In any event, nothing in the record suggests that the IJ’s conduct of his hearing evinced the kind of impatience and bias that might be characterized as a violation of due process of law. The Board correctly evaluated the new evidence submit‐ ted by Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda under the standards applicable to a reopening. It correctly denied relief because he submitted no evidence to establish that his new claim was previously unavailable. No. 16‐2964 3

I BACKGROUND Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda was born in Mexico on March 6, 1995 and entered the United States in July 2013 at age 18. He was apprehended at the border and requested asylum. The De‐ partment of Homeland Security (“DHS”) then placed him in removal proceedings. The IJ continued his case for over a year, in part to give him an opportunity to locate an attorney if he wished to be represented in proceedings.1 On April 23, 2015, Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda appeared pro se before the IJ for an individual merits hearing on his asylum claim. His current at‐ torney asserts in his brief that Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda made a preliminary, off‐the‐record request to the IJ for a closed asy‐ lum hearing, but that the IJ denied the request. Members of Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda’s family were present. Before the IJ, Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda testified, with the assis‐ tance of an interpreter, that he had entered the United States in 2013 to “save [his] life,” which was threatened by a large criminal gang in Mexico called the Caballeros Templarios.2 His family resides in the Mexican state of Michoacán, where they own land and where his father is a farmer and a propri‐ etor of a liquor store. Members of the gang extorted money from his family from 2012 until 2013, when his father refused to continue paying them. At that point, his father “tried to get us out of the town.”3 Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda came to the United

1 The IJ gave him a list of organizations that could assist him at little or no

cost. 2 A.R. at 249.

3 Id. at 251 (testimony of Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda). 4 No. 16‐2964

States, but his parents elected to stay in the same town in Mi‐ choacán. Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda stated that after he left Mexico, shots were fired through the windows of his parents’ home. He also claimed that his family members were victims of ex‐ tortion. When asked if “all businessmen or all people in the area” were similar targets, he replied, “Yes. Yes. They ask for every business you have, for every car you have, for every motorcycle.”4 His parents had not relocated, he continued, be‐ cause they “have their whole life there. They have their houses. They have their parcels. They have their land.”5 His family also had not sought government protection because “the government is also joined in with organized crime.”6 Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda supported his application with two articles in Spanish discussing the murder of his uncle. When asked, he said that he did not know the circumstances of his uncle’s death. He also submitted a letter from his father. The letter noted that his uncle had been shot to death in their hometown and that the family was in danger and afraid of the police. It also noted, for the first time, that Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda had received a phone call in which he had been “threatened that he would be killed.”7 According to his father, he would be targeted “because he was cooperating with the self‐defense groups because he would take … food to those that are in the movement.”8 When asked by the IJ about this statement,

4 Id.

5 Id. at 252.

6 Id.

7 Id. at 255.

8 Id. No. 16‐2964 5

Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda clarified that, on one occasion, his grand‐ mother had sent plantains to a group of local people opposing the extortion by the gang, and Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda had dropped off the box. Afterwards, he received a threatening phone call, likely because gang informants were part of the group. The IJ began an oral ruling in which he denied Mr. Bar‐ ragan‐Ojeda’s claim on the basis that the harm he faced was too generalized and not tied to a protected ground; specifi‐ cally, he had not identified a viable social group. Before fin‐ ishing his ruling, however, the IJ engaged Mr. Barragan‐ Ojeda in one final exchange: Q. Sir, is there anything else you want to tell me concerning your fear of going back to Mex‐ ico? A. It’s just that there are many things. Q. Well, is there any other reason why you fear going back other than what you have told me? A. What about discrimination for being ef‐ feminate? Q. Well, that doesn’t qualify you for asylum. I mean are you saying that you’ve been mis‐ treated by someone or people discriminate against you because of the way you look? A. Yes. Q. But what difficulties have you had? 6 No. 16‐2964

A. Well, at work, when I would look for work they would tell me that they needed men and not little girls. Q. I mean do you think, are you a homosex‐ ual or not? A. No. Q. But you think people perceive you that way. A. Yes. [Q.] Well, you left Mexico shortly after grad‐ uating high school. The fact that you believe you faced discrimination would not constitute persecution. So I don’t see that you qualify to remain in the United States under the law.[9] The IJ then continued an oral decision in which he noted that Mr. Barragan‐Ojeda appeared to be attempting to define his social group as victims of extortion in Mexico, but that this group, defined only by a relationship to the persecutors, was not sufficient under Board precedent. The IJ also examined several other potential social groups, including those who support the self‐defense group, or young men from families that had been extorted by criminal gangs, but he determined that these groups were too generalized and that the record was insufficient to establish a connection between these groups and his mistreatment.

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Juan Barragan-Ojeda v. Jeff Sessions, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/juan-barragan-ojeda-v-jeff-sessions-ca7-2017.