Kalitani v. Ashcroft

340 F.3d 1, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 16365, 2003 WL 21904585
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 11, 2003
Docket02-2346
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 340 F.3d 1 (Kalitani v. Ashcroft) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kalitani v. Ashcroft, 340 F.3d 1, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 16365, 2003 WL 21904585 (1st Cir. 2003).

Opinion

LYNCH, Circuit Judge.

Susan Kalitani, a native and citizen of Uganda, petitions for review of the denial of her applications for asylum, withholding of deportation, and protection under the United Nations Convention Against Torture. We affirm.

*2 I.

Kalitani entered the United States on September 8, 1998, ostensibly as a visitor for pleasure. After overstaying her visa, she applied for asylum in August 1999 and received an interview with an asylum officer, who recommended against granting asylum. The INS began removal proceedings against Kalitani on March 6, 2000. Kalitani conceded the charge, declined to designate a country for removal, and sought asylum, withholding of deportation, relief under the U.N. Convention Against Torture (“CAT”), 1 and, in the event removal was necessary, voluntary departure. The Immigration Judge (“IJ”) held a hearing on the merits of Kalitani’s case on February 12, 2001, and on the same day issued an oral opinion denying her petition. The Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) issued a summary affirmance without opinion on September 27, 2002. See 8 C.F.R. § 1003.1(a)(7) (2003)(formerly 8 C.F.R. § 3.1(e)(4)). This appeal followed.

Kalitani’s asylum application and hearing testimony tell a dramatic and harrowing story. She testified that if she returns to Uganda, she will be killed by the government. Kalitani said that her father, Wasswa Henry Kabazzi, was a former rebel turned high-ranking military officer in Uganda when, in August 1995, soldiers abducted him from the family home. The soldiers claimed he was plotting to overthrow the government (which was controlled by the National Resistance Army). Soldiers burst into the house again at three o’clock in the morning on the same night. They searched for papers and weapons, beating family members who disclaimed knowledge of Kabazzi’s activities. Kalitani, her mother, and her siblings fled to Kalitani’s grandmother’s home in another village, where they stayed for two weeks until soldiers discovered them hiding there. As the soldiers came in the front door of the house, Kalitani and her brother ran out the back. They took refuge in the forest and hid there for five days, unaware of what happened to the rest of the family. When they emerged from the woods, they took shelter briefly with a local priest and then sought protection from a group of rebels who were friends of their father. The rebels were members of the Lord’s Resistance Army, known as the LRA.

Kalitani and her brother eventually decided to join the LRA. She lived at one of their training camps for over a year and a half, and belonged to the group for about two years in total. As a woman, she said, she was made to cook for the rebels and help with work around the camp. She also participated in some of the group’s more dangerous activities. Three times, Kalita-ni was sent to spy on government barracks. In addition, she was trained to use weapons, including an AK-47 assault rifle. When she left the camp in the spring of 1997, armed with an AK-47, she received a “serious” mission: to raid government barracks and set free a number of rebel prisoners. There was a firefight during the mission and Kalitani fired on government soldiers, although she insisted that she did not kill anyone. She testified that she and her brother were captured after the firefight, beaten and tortured by soldiers of the National Resistance Army, and held prisoner in an underground room for over four months. During that time, the soldiers would periodically choose prisoners to execute. She watched the soldiers execute her brother by firing squad.

*3 Eventually, Kalitani managed to escape and she fled into the forest. A pair of strangers rescued her and delivered her to the home of a Mend, where she learned that her sister and grandmother had been killed. There was no news of her mother and other sister. She stayed with her friend for nine months. Then, by bribing border officials, Kalitani made her way into Kenya, where she boarded a plane and traveled to the United States via Switzerland and Denmark. She used a Ugandan passport and a U.S. entry visa obtained for her by a person whom she variously described as a friend of her father and as the father of a friend. She was unwilling or unable to say how this person obtained the passport or acquired the visa; Kalitani never personally visited an American consulate or embassy. When Kalitani finally arrived in Seattle on September 8, 1998, she did not reveal to U.S. immigration authorities that she was fleeing Uganda. Instead, she told them that she was simply visiting the country for pleasure, consistent with the visa in her passport. Approximately a year later, Kalitani gave birth to a daughter in the United States.

In addition to Kalitani’s testimony, the IJ also considered a 1997 State Department country conditions report for Uganda that the government entered in evidence. The report confirms that while the ruling government’s human rights record improved somewhat during 1996, “numerous, serious problems remain” and that “[government forces committed or failed to prevent extrajudicial killings of suspected rebels and civilians.” The report also mentions the LRA, which it describes as killing, torturing, maiming, raping, and abducting large numbers of civilians; displaying the mutilated bodies of their victims; and terrorizing civilians by hacking off limbs and noses and breaking legs with hammers. In addition, the report states that the LRA “regularly abducted children of both sexes and virtually enslaved them as concubines, guards, and soldiers.”

Like the interviewing asylum officer before him, the IJ found that the petitioner was simply not credible, citing specific examples in her story of inconsistencies and unlikely assertions. After reviewing her asylum application and testimony, the IJ concluded:

The respondent’s inconsistencies, which I have found [and] which are stated in the record, which the asylum officer found was not credible, which I agree with, refleet[ ], and I so find[,] that the respondent’s testimony concerning the reasons why she is afraid to return to Uganda are not credible.... A reasonable person similarly situated as the respondent would not fear, based on this record[,] returning to Uganda, and I find that the respondent!, upon] returning to Uganda[,] would not be persecuted or [have] a well-founded fear of persecution for what is contained in the asylum application ... [or] her testimony in these proceedings!,] nor for her race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political opinion. Consequently, her application for political asylum will be denied as a matter of discretion.

The IJ then denied Kalitani’s requests for withholding of deportation and protection under CAT on essentially the same grounds.

II.

The BIA’s determination of an alien’s eligibility for asylum “must be upheld if supported by reasonable, substantial, and probative evidence on the record considered as a whole.” INS v. Elias-Zacarias, 502 U.S. 478, 481, 112 S.Ct.

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340 F.3d 1, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 16365, 2003 WL 21904585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kalitani-v-ashcroft-ca1-2003.