Kompany v. Gonzales

236 F. App'x 33
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 31, 2007
Docket05-60851
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 236 F. App'x 33 (Kompany v. Gonzales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kompany v. Gonzales, 236 F. App'x 33 (5th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Monique Vula Shakena Kompany appeals the dismissal by the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) of her appeal of the Immigration Judge’s (“IJ”) denial of her application for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). Claiming that she was imprisoned and brutally raped for her political opinions and associations, Kompany argues that substantial evidence in the record does not support the IJ’s finding that Kompany is not credible. Kompany presents a very sympathetic case. We are not, however, finders of fact. That task belongs to the BIA and to the IJ, which discredited her testimony and rejected her claims. Our sympathy for her story, notwithstanding, we are bound by the rules and the precedents and must DENY the petition.

I.

Kompany testified to the following: She is a citizen of the Democratic Republic of Congo (“Congo”), a country rife with civil war and military unrest. Her husband, now deceased, was a founding and active member of “Mouvement de Solidante pour la Democratie et la Protection des Enfants,” which, translated, means “Solidarity Movement for Democracy and Child Protection” (“SMDCP”). SMDCP sought to return the majority age from 14 back to 18 by educating the public and voicing their concerns to public officials. SMDCP was founded by a group of lawyers and doctors, that is, by parents whose children had been raped or enrolled by force in the military. SMDCP held meetings once a month, in hiding.

Kompany last saw her husband alive in Congo in 1998 when he dropped her off at work and drove to the hospital where he worked as a physician. On his way to the hospital, he saw a group of people gathered around a twelve-year-old girl lying on the ground, bleeding. Kompany’s husband approached the girl, attempting to save her life. A fourteen-year-old military soldier told him to leave because it was none of his business, and the soldier shot and killed Kompany’s husband.

Kompany eventually obtained the arrest of the fourteen-year-old soldier who murdered her husband. The soldier was in prison only briefly and then disappeared. One day, Kompany returned to her house after Sunday services to find a threat note reading: ‘YOU ARE DEAD.” She fled with her family to her uncle’s house and stayed there for a month until she read in the newspaper that the soldier who murdered her husband had been killed while stealing in a house.

Although Kompany’s husband was a founding and active member of SMDCP, *35 Kompany did not begin attending SMDCP meetings until 1999, after her husband’s death. Although she did not consider herself a member, she was a “sympathizer” and assisted SMDCP by using her work printer and copier to publish documents for SMDCP. Kompany also provided SMDCP with ideas for helping children and women, ideas such as making baskets and preparing salted fish to sell.

On May 12, 2002, Kompany was publishing documents for SMDCP at work when she heard a commotion outside the building. She got up to see what was causing the commotion, when military soldiers entered and ordered her and her colleagues to sit down. The soldiers searched her office and found the SMDCP documents. The soldiers arrested her and two of her colleagues and took them to prison.

At the prison, soldiers beat Kompany with “concentrated plastic,” leaving scars on her back. One of the weapons pierced Kompany’s right index finger and came out the other side, permanently injuring it. The soldiers tied Kompany’s hands together with thick string, permanently injuring her wrists. They also beat her with an electric cord.

The soldiers imprisoned Kompany for a month. They raped Kompany repeatedly, at least three times per week. Kompany testified that they each took their turn, and they were different soldiers each time. According to Kompany’s testimony, “[t]he place they took was [sic] all dark, black. It was a small area, we were numerous. When they called you to get a coffee, it depended on the day, but maybe one or two performed the act.” In her asylum application, she stated: “After two weeks I was allowed to go outside the cell to cook and clean for the guards [sic], who when ever [sic] they wanted would point their gun at you while their friend is violently raping you. Some of them are younger than my kids but what can you do? You cry you feel bad you are hurt but before you recover they do it again.”

The soldiers fed Kompany and the other prisoners twice each week. Kompany and the other prisoners took showers once or twice per week. The prison was “very dirty,” causing extensive black blemishes, like pimples, on Kompany’s skin: “It, it was starting, my skin was just eating me because of the, the dirt we were, it was the sanitary conditions that caused it, my skin to, to just break out like this and we went to the bathroom, you know, on the floor, on the ground.”

At one point, soldiers placed a woman who was bleeding severely in Kompany’s cell. The woman bled to death. The smell of the corpse became unbearable, and she and other prisoners asked the soldiers to remove the body. It is unclear what precisely occurred at this point, for Kompany testified that the soldiers proceeded to beat her and hit her in the stomach, causing her to bleed excessively. She testified that she “was swelling everywhere because of the beatings.” However, she stated in her written statement and asylum application that she was raped violently by two guards, causing her to bleed excessively. Regardless of the cause, she endured the pain for four days, and on the fifth day, she hemorrhaged and lost consciousness. When she regained consciousness, she found herself in Ngaliema Hospital left to die. In Ngaliema Hospital, Kompany was treated by Dr. Nzambi, a friend of her late husband, and found out she was pregnant. Dr. Nzambi feigned Kompany’s death and paid off a guard. Soldiers later visited Kompany’s house and neighborhood to see if she was really dead.

According to Kompany’s testimony before the IJ, she was taken to the hospital on July 13, 2002. She testified that she spent 17 days at the hospital, and that on *36 July 31, Dr. Nzambi gave her a passport and took her to the U.S. Embassy to obtain a tourist visa to the United States. She testified that she stayed at Dr. Nzambi’s house and left Congo on August 15, 2002. Two days later, on August 17, Kompany arrived in the United States. In the United States, Kompany applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under CAT, with the aid of an acquaintance who translated and filled out the application for her.

Before the IJ, Kompany presented her own testimony and the testimony of Lokwekim Matadi, a lawful permanent resident of the United States. Matadi attended school with Kompany’s late husband and left Congo in 1989. In 1997, Matadi traveled to Congo and stayed there nine months. During his nine months in Congo, Matadi visited Kompany’s late husband’s home three or four times. During his visits, Matadi met Kompany, and at the immigration hearing, Matadi identified Kompany as the wife of his late friend, the woman he met while visiting the home of his late friend. He also testified that the couple had two children at the time, confirming an earlier statement by Kompany alleging the same. Furthermore, Matadi testified that Kompany’s late husband was involved in an organization to protect and help children.

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236 F. App'x 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kompany-v-gonzales-ca5-2007.