Li Zu Guan, 1 v. Immigration and Naturalization Service

453 F.3d 129, 2006 WL 1776717
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 29, 2006
Docket02-4302
StatusPublished
Cited by117 cases

This text of 453 F.3d 129 (Li Zu Guan, 1 v. Immigration and Naturalization Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Li Zu Guan, 1 v. Immigration and Naturalization Service, 453 F.3d 129, 2006 WL 1776717 (2d Cir. 2006).

Opinion

CALABRESI, Circuit Judge:

Li Zu Guan (“Petitioner” or “Li”) petitions this court for review of a June 19, 2002 order of the BIA summarily affirming the September 14,1998 denial, by an IJ, of Li’s requests for asylum and for withhold *132 ing of removal. 2 Li sought this relief on the grounds that he and his wife had been persecuted for violating the family planning policies of the People’s Republic of China (“China”) by having more than one child. The IJ found Li not to be credible, and for that reason denied relief. Before this court, Li asserts that the IJ’s findings were not supported by substantial evidence and alleges several specific errors. We agree with Li that the IJ’s credibility finding rested, in part, on errors. And because we cannot conclude with confidence that the BIA would reach the same result on remand in the absence of errors, we grant Li’s petition for review.

I. Background

A. Li’s Claims

Li testified to the following facts at his removal hearing. Except where noted (in footnotes), Li’s in-court testimony is consistent with a statement that he submitted in 1997 to accompany his 1-589 asylum application (“the 1-589 statement”). 3 Li testified that he had a wife, whom he married in 1982, 4 and two children in China. In May 1985, about a month after the birth of his daughter and while Li was away from home working on a fishing boat, government officials seized Li’s wife and forced her to have an intrauterine device (“IUD”) inserted. In August 1986, Li and his wife secured the services of a private doctor, who removed the IUD. They proceeded to have a second child. Li claimed that the government officials did not know that Mrs. Li was expecting a second child because, early in her pregnancy, she went into hiding at her older sister’s home on Launchi Island in Fujian Province. A few weeks after giving birth to her son in 1987, Mrs. Li left the new baby with this older sister and returned to their home village of Guantou to live with Li and their daughter. Li’s son remained on the island with his maternal aunt for the next four years, and the Lis would visit him there every two or three months.

In 1992, Li brought his son home to see Li’s ailing father. 5 At this time, the child was noticed by the local family planning officials, who insisted that the couple pay a fine of RMB 15,000 and that one of them undergo a sterilization procedure. The officials did not confront the Lis in person, but instead broadcast these sanctions over a loudspeaker to the entire village. Rather than pay the fine and submit to sterili *133 zation, the Lis and their children fled by boat back to Launchi Island. But, concerned that the government would find his family, Li fled the country in 1993, after more than a year in hiding. 6 Soon after Li left China in the spring of 1993, Mrs. Li was apprehended by government officials and sterilized against her will.

B. Documentary Evidence

Li also submitted to the IJ a number of documents in support of his claim. Among these were a marriage certificate issued in 1989 (“the 1989 certificate”) and a “notarial” marriage certificate 7 issued in 1998 (“the 1998 certificate”). 8 These certificates were the subject of much attention in Li’s removal proceedings. Both certificates contain the same photograph of Li and his wife. The IJ asked how it was that the two certificates, issued nine years apart, featured the same image. Li explained that his wife made a copy of the original picture for use in the notarial certificate, because Li was no longer in China — and hence, unavailable to pose with her for a new photo — when his wife applied for the notarial certificate in 1998. 9

The IJ ordered a forensic analysis of the two photographs and certificates. Claude Eaton, a Senior Forensic Document Analyst with the INS, submitted his findings in a report. Eaton could not confirm the authenticity of the 1989 certificate, but the 1998 certificate did “eonform[] to specimens on file.” With respect to the photographs, Eaton concluded that the photo in the 1998 certificate ‘is the result of photographing a duplicate of the photograph in [the 1989 certificate].’ He explained that “PRC marriage certificates are produced in duplicate; one is issued to the female and the other is issued to the female [sic].” Based on a comparison of the images, Eaton further concluded that the 1989 certificate which Li submitted “is the male’s copy; the photograph in [the 1998 certificate] is a copy of the female’s marriage certificate.” He explained that the photo in the 1989 certificate features “an embossed Chinese character from the seal,” and the 1998 certificate’s photo has a corresponding “photographed Chinese character,” but in a different position — meaning that it was copied from a different stamped copy of the same image. Eaton’s report also raised the possibility, based on an unexplained shadow, that the original photograph “may be a composite photograph; *134 i.e., the photograph may have been composed of two separate photographs.”

C. The IJ’s Oral Decision

After a brief recitation of the facts, procedural posture, and relevant law, the IJ set forth his grounds for denying both Li’s petition for asylum and his petitions for withholding of removal. First, the IJ questioned the corroborating evidence that Li had presented. The IJ focused in particular on the marriage certificates, and the photographs they contained. He noted that the picture in the 1998 certificate was a photograph of the picture in the 1989 certificate. “Therefore,” the IJ continued, “it appears that the photograph, whether contained in [either certificate], appears to be a composite photograph.” In the IJ’s view, this finding reduced Li’s credibility dramatically. Li “asserts a statement with regard to his presence in the People’s Republic of China with a spouse when the photograph had been taken,” but this now “becomes questionable.” The faked picture undermines “a material element of his claim, that in fact he’s married, and that he has two children.” Moreover, because the notarial certifícate was not issued until 1998, little weight should be afforded to that document. The IJ also found the notarial birth certificates for Li’s children to be unreliable, largely because they were issued so long after the births, and he faulted Li for not producing contemporaneous evidence of the births. The IJ questioned the credibility of the x-ray report, too, because it contained the same photograph that appeared in Li’s wife’s notarial birth certificate, and because it stated her age as 37, while judging from her birth certificate, she was 36 at the time.

Second, the IJ pointed to Li’s failure to provide additional corroborating materials, in particular with respect to his wife’s sterilization.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Zhu v. Bondi
Second Circuit, 2025
Reid v. Bondi
Second Circuit, 2025
Reid v. Garland
132 F.4th 109 (Second Circuit, 2024)
Djerasimovic v. Garland
Second Circuit, 2024
Graham v. Garland
Second Circuit, 2023
Khatiwada v. Garland
Second Circuit, 2023
Pomavilla-Zaruma v. Garland
81 F.4th 145 (Second Circuit, 2023)
Reyes v. McHenry
S.D. New York, 2021
Gomez v. McHenry
S.D. New York, 2020
Yan Yang v. Barr
929 F.3d 26 (Second Circuit, 2019)
Zheng v. Sessions
Second Circuit, 2018
Shi v. Sessions
Second Circuit, 2018
Rana v. Sessions
Second Circuit, 2018
Lin v. Sessions
Second Circuit, 2018
Chen v. Sessions
Second Circuit, 2018
Xu v. Sessions
Second Circuit, 2018
Feng Li v. Sessions
697 F. App'x 78 (Second Circuit, 2017)
Tian Di Li v. Lynch
661 F. App'x 145 (Second Circuit, 2016)
Xun Jian Liu v. Lynch
661 F. App'x 68 (Second Circuit, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
453 F.3d 129, 2006 WL 1776717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/li-zu-guan-1-v-immigration-and-naturalization-service-ca2-2006.