Juarez-Lopez, Sonia v. Gonzales, Alberto R.

235 F. App'x 361
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 23, 2007
Docket06-3143
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 235 F. App'x 361 (Juarez-Lopez, Sonia 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
Juarez-Lopez, Sonia v. Gonzales, Alberto R., 235 F. App'x 361 (7th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

ORDER

Sonia Maribel Juarez-Lopez 1 , a citizen of Guatemala, petitions for review of an order of the Board of Immigration Appeals denying her application for asylum. Following a removal hearing, an Immigration Judge denied her application for asylum on the ground that she was not a credible witness and also denied her the other immigration relief she sought. The BIA summarily affirmed. Juarez-Lopez now petitions for review of her asylum claim only. Because the IJ’s adverse credibility *363 finding is not supported by substantial evidence, and since we cannot decide in the first instance whether Juarez-Lopez would be entitled to asylum if found to be credible, we grant her petition and remand the matter back to the BIA.

Juarez-Lopez and her sons, Sergio Lopez and Rigoberto Lopez, arrived in the United States from Guatemala in February 1990. At the time, the boys were 7 and 2 years old, respectively. In November 1990 Juarez-Lopez completed an application for asylum; that document provides few details about her background or the nature of her claim, save her statement that she fears for her life. In early 1991 she was interviewed by an asylum officer, but the administrative record contains no transcript or other description of the discussion during the interview. The record is also silent about who, if anyone, helped Juarez-Lopez prepare her application. Juarez-Lopez had another son in 1992 and a daughter in 1994; both were born in the United States. As far as the administrative record shows, Juarez-Lopez heard nothing regarding her asylum claim until 2002 when the Department of Homeland Security granted her another asylum interview — the details of which are also absent from the administrative record — then initiated removal proceedings against her and her two non-citizen sons. The three conceded removability but continued to press for asylum. In July 2004 Juarez-Lopez and Sergio testified at a hearing before an IJ.

Juarez-Lopez testified that she was born in 1966 in Guatemala. When she was about 12 or 13, she was allegedly raped by a man 15 to 17 years her senior, Rigoberto de la Pena, who lived nearby. Juarez-Lopez testified that she did not report the rape to the police or to her parents because de la Pena threatened to kill her parents if she did. Over the next three years, de la Pena raped Juarez-Lopez at least seven more times. Because of this contact, Juarez-Lopez became pregnant with her oldest son, Sergio, when she was 16. Her parents did not want her to report the rape to the police because de la Pena was wealthy and they were afraid of him. Juarez-Lopez left the town and lived with her sister and then with her mother’s cousin. When Sergio was about five, Juarez-Lopez went back to visit her parents, and de la Pena raped her again. She testified that she became pregnant a second time, and that de la Pena took her to live with him. At de la Pena’s insistence, she named her second son Rigoberto, after him, even though de la Pena would not acknowledge the boy as his own by giving him his last name. Juarez-Lopez testified that de la Pena was physically violent and threatened to harm her parents if she told anyone about the abuse. De la Pena was involved with another woman at this time, Rebeca Ramos, who was also abusive and violent toward Juarez-Lopez. Juarez-Lopez worked for Ramos cleaning her house. After about six months, Juarez-Lopez moved out of de la Pena’s house and returned to her parents’ home. Juarez-Lopez was still afraid of de la Pena, who beat her before she left and threatened to kill her if she was ever with another man. She went to live with her sister in another town, but she explained that she became frightened when guerillas stopped the bus she was traveling on during a return visit to her parents. Juarez-Lopez testified that she finally decided to leave Guatemala in 1990 because she was afraid of continuing violence by de la Pena and Ramos and of guerilla attacks, and she wanted to protect her children.

Throughout Juarez-Lopez’s testimony, the IJ’s reluctance to believe that she was raped was apparent. After Juarez-Lopez had given her account of being raped for the first time at age 12 or 13, the IJ asked, *364 “Now, how do I know this was not a consensual arrangement?” Juarez-Lopez answered that she was telling the truth and would not lie in front of her children. The IJ responded:

But, nevertheless, unfortunately on occasion people he. And even in this country young ladies who had arrangements with other boyfriends later charged them with rape. And in some cases innocent boys are sent to jail because the lady changed her mind. How do I know that this is not the incident in your ease?

Later the IJ asked:

How do I know that you’re not making up this story? That you’re coming here as an economic refugee and you have no legal right to be here and you’re making up a story so you can claim asylum? And there’s reasons [sic] for you to misstate the facts, because you want to stay here and there’s no other way that you can stay here unless you make up a story. Now, how do I know, do I have anything other than your statement that you claim that you were raped by this young man in Guatemala?

In denying the family’s applications for asylum, the IJ did not analyze whether the events Juarez-Lopez described could constitute past persecution or give rise to an objectively reasonable fear of future persecution. Instead, the IJ based his decision entirely on his finding that Juarez-Lopez was not credible.

The IJ characterized her testimony as “vague, meager, and inconsistent.” He observed that Juarez-Lopez did not mention her two oldest sons in her asylum application in 1990 but instead had stated “none” in response to questions about children. The IJ further explained that Juarez-Lopez said nothing in the application about having been raped.

The IJ next said that he doubted Juarez-Lopez’s credibility because of her prolonged interactions with de la Pena. The IJ was skeptical that she would move in with him and name her second son after him if, in fact, he repeatedly raped her. The IJ also characterized as “unbelievable” Juarez-Lopez’s testimony that de la Pena would not acknowledge her children as his own but still compelled her to name her second son after him.

The IJ acknowledged that Juarez-Lopez did disclose the alleged rapes, her children, and an assault by Ramos in the declaration she attached to her application for cancellation of removal in 2004, but he labeled that declaration as “inconsistent with her testimony” because in the declaration she does not mention living with de la Pena for six months or that Ramos and de la Pena were lovers. The IJ also thought it “confusing” that Juarez-Lopez testified at her hearing that she lived with a sister during and after her first pregnancy but states in her declaration that she returned to her parents’ house to have the baby.

In addition, the IJ questioned Juarez-Lopez’s “honesty” concerning her explanation for why the father of her son born in the United States is listed incorrectly on the child’s birth certificate. Juarez-Lopez testified that the father is her current partner, Luis Eduardo Rodas, but that the woman who completed the birth certificate wrote “Jorge Rivera” by mistake. The IJ was doubtful that this woman “would not just leave the father’s name blank, instead of fabricating a name.”

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