Korytnyuk v. Atty Gen USA

396 F.3d 272
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 25, 2005
Docket03-1537, 03-4677
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 396 F.3d 272 (Korytnyuk v. Atty Gen USA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Korytnyuk v. Atty Gen USA, 396 F.3d 272 (3d Cir. 2005).

Opinion

SMITH, Circuit Judge.

This immigration case presents two questions of law: (1) whether we have jurisdiction over certain discretionary denials by the Board of Immigration Appeals of motions to remand under the transitional rules of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, and (2) the appropriate standard of review for questions of fact where the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA” or “Board”) denies a motion to remand in an exercise of its discretionary authority. We conclude that we have jurisdiction over the type of denial the BIA exercised in this case, and that the appropriate standard of review for the fact cited in that denial is substantial evidence. Because the immigration judge lacked substantial evidence for his factual finding that Petitioner participated in criminal activities in the Ukraine, a finding on which the BIA solely rested its denial of Petitioner’s motion to *274 remand, we will vacate the BIA’s denial as an abuse of discretion and remand this case for further explanation and development of the record.

I.

A.

Mykhaylo Korytnyuk is a native and citizen of the Ukraine who came to the United States on June 8,1993 on a visitor’s visa. Korytnyuk overstayed that visa, and on May 15, 1996, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) 1 commenced deportation proceedings against him. At a hearing before an immigration judge, Ko-rytnyuk through counsel admitted that he had overstayed his visa and was held to be deportable, but requested asylum and withholding of deportation. On January 16, 1998, an immigration judge held a hearing on Korytnyuk’s application for asylum and withholding of deportation, denied both requests for relief, and required a final order of deportation to be entered against Korytnyuk. Korytnyuk appealed to the BIA the denial of his application for asylum and withholding of deportation (“direct appeal”).

While his direct appeal was pending, Korytnyuk received an approved immigrant petition for alien worker. 2 With that approval in hand, Korytnyuk filed a motion to remand to the immigration judge (“IJ”) so he could apply for adjustment of status to that of a lawful permanent resident. In February 2003, in a one-page decision, the BIA “dismissed” Korytnyuk’s direct appeal and denied his motion to remand. In response, Korytnyuk timely petitioned this Court for review of the BIA’s denial of his motion to remand. Soon thereafter, Ko-rytnyuk filed with the BIA a motion to reopen his claim and a motion to reconsider its denial of his motion to remand. In November 2003, the BIA at once denied both of these motions. Korytnyuk filed a timely petition seeking review of that denial.

On petition to this Court, Korytnyuk does not seek review of the BIA’s denial of his direct appeal. Instead of asylum in the United States, he seeks an adjustment of his status. Specifically, he petitions for review of the BIA’s denials of his motions (1) to remand and (2) to reopen or reconsider insofar as they pertain to his efforts to apply for adjustment of status. 3 Our focus narrows further still, however, as, stripped of his direct appeal, Korytnyuk’s motions to reopen and reconsider do little more than restate his motion to remand; and the BIA’s denial of his motions to reopen and reconsider simply refers back to its rationale for denying his motion to remand. Thus, we are left essentially with the BIA’s denial of Korytnyuk’s motion to remand.

B.

Our factual focus is on the IJ’s determination that Korytnyuk, in the words of the BIA, “participated in criminal activities,” as that finding is the sole basis on which the BIA denied Korytnyuk’s motion to remand. We examine here the proceedings *275 conducted by the IJ, his oral decision, and his written “Oral Decision and Order” (“Decision”).

1. Deportation Hearing

Korytnyuk testified that he was born in Rivno, Ukraine. 4 He joined the military as soon as he left high school and served near the Afghanistan border in an elite paratrooper unit. After he finished his military tour, Korytnyuk worked as a fire truck driver at a government chemical company in Rovno, Ukraine. 5 In 1992, Korytnyuk joined the druzhinnik, a division of the local police force, called the Berkut. 6 In the druzhinnik, Korytnyuk was trained in police work, protecting small businesses, and the druzhinnik’s major responsibility, to provide security for “critical situations” in the area. Koryt nyuk testified that, as an example of a “critical situation,” the druzhinnik secured unsafe portions of the town. Each member of the force wore a uniform during normal working hours.

Korytnyuk testified that the druzhinnik performed emergency assignments after working hours. At first, he believed they *276 were being called to investigate suspicious people causing problems in the area, but later it became clear that these persons were suspicious simply because they were Ukrainian nationalists who had been informed upon by members of the former Communist party. 7

Korytnyuk testified that during these after-work assignments, the rest of the team would enter a house and lock the door behind them. He “felt something unusual was going on there.” He began to get “news such as people get beaten. They kill people. They get, they get dead, either in their house or in, in the hospitals.” Korytnyuk stated that on orders from the group commander he always acted as a lookout and remained outside. When asked whether he ever was a witness to any beatings, Korytnyuk responded, “I was not. They would execute in the inside and they’d be inside, yes. In sometimes, I had learned that those people had died in the houses or the hospitals.”

Korytnyuk testified that he learned of the beatings and killings from family members of those who had been harmed by the druzhinnik, and at first he did not believe their reports. Once he began to ask questions and speak out against the after-work assignments, he no longer received such assignments. He left the druzhinnik in October 1992, after roughly six months of involvement.

In November 1992, members of the dru-zhinnik warned Korytnyuk that he would be killed if he did not return to the force. His assignments changed at his job as a fire truck driver, and he began to be punished. He testified that he was severely beaten by five or six members of the dru-zhinnik, incurring an arm injury and bruises all over his body, and was hospitalized. When he returned to work, he was beaten several more times before he eventually left the town. Most notably, in February 1993, a group of druzhinnik officers broke into a friend’s apartment where Ko-rytnyuk was staying, destroyed property, and beat him and his friend.

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396 F.3d 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/korytnyuk-v-atty-gen-usa-ca3-2005.