Liming Zheng v. Eric Holder, Jr.

410 F. App'x 912
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 28, 2010
Docket09-3232
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 410 F. App'x 912 (Liming Zheng v. Eric Holder, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liming Zheng v. Eric Holder, Jr., 410 F. App'x 912 (6th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

COLE, Circuit Judge.

Liming Zheng petitions this Court for review of a decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) which dismissed Zheng’s appeal from an order of the Immigration Judge (“IJ”) denying Zheng’s applications for asylum and -withholding of removal and for relief under the Convention Against Torture. The BIA’s decision also denied Zheng’s motion to remand her case to the IJ based on ineffective assistance of counsel. For the following reasons, we VACATE the BIA’s opinion and REMAND to the BIA for consideration of Zheng’s motion to reopen her claim based on ineffective assistance of counsel.

I. BACKGROUND

Zheng, a native of China, entered the United States without inspection in November 1996 and filed an application for asylum and withholding of removal with the former Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) in March 1997.

At her asylum hearing, Zheng maintained that she married Yong Zhong Zheng in October 1990 and that she became pregnant in May 1991; she then went into hiding to avoid family planning officials, who ultimately learned of her pregnancy, and took her to a hospital where they forced her to undergo an abortion. Family planning officials additionally requested that she have an intrauterine device (“IUD”) implanted to prevent pregnancy, but Zheng refused. When Zheng’s husband learned of the abortion, he allegedly had a physical confrontation with family planning officials. Zheng’s husband left China in November 1991 and arrived in the United States in February 1992.

In May 1997, Zheng’s asylum application was referred to an IJ for adjudication. On December 17, 1998, after holding a hearing, the IJ entered an oral decision denying Zheng’s request for asylum and related remedies. The BIA affirmed the IJ’s decision without opinion on August 13, 2002. After filing a petition for review with the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, Zheng and the government entered into a joint stipulation order to remand Zheng’s case to the BIA to develop the record further. On remand, an IJ ordered Zheng removed in absentia when she failed to appear before the immigration court on October 21, 2005. Zheng moved to reopen her case, alleging that she did not receive notice of the hearing date; her motion was granted.

Venue changed to Cleveland, Ohio, and Zheng appeared before the IJ for rehearing on May 29, 2007, where the IJ entered an oral decision denying Zheng’s request for asylum and related remedies. The IJ found that Zheng was not credible and that she failed to produce corroboration from her family, particularly her husband *914 who was present at the hearing. Zheng appealed to the BIA and subsequently filed a motion to remand alleging ineffective assistance of counsel. On February 11, 2009, the BIA dismissed Zheng’s appeal and denied her motion to remand. This petition for review followed.

II. ANALYSIS

A. Adverse Credibility Finding

Zheng contends that the BIA erred in upholding the IJ’s adverse credibility finding because: (1) the inconsistencies on which the IJ relied are legally insufficient to support the finding; (2) the IJ’s negative assessment of Zheng’s demeanor was not supported by substantial evidence; and (3) it was improper for the IJ to base an adverse credibility finding on a lack of corroborating evidence.

The IJ’s adverse credibility determination is a “conclusive” finding of fact unless “any reasonable adjudicator would be compelled to conclude to the contrary.” Hassan v. Gonzales, 403 F.3d 429, 434 (6th Cir.2005) (quoting Yu v. Ashcroft, 364 F.3d 700, 702 (6th Cir.2004)). As the BIA adopted the IJ’s decision and added its own reasoning, this Court reviews directly the IJ’s decision and considers the additional comments of the BIA together as the “final order.” Ceraj v. Mukasey, 511 F.3d 583, 588 (6th Cir.2007).

1. Inconsistent Statements

The IJ relied on two evidentiary incon-sistences to find that Zheng’s testimony was not credible: the shifting date of her forced abortion (at her hearing in 1998, Zheng testified that the abortion occurred in mid-August 1991, while at the hearing in 2007, Zheng stated that the abortion took place in late September or October 1991), and the timing and nature of her husband’s altercation with family-planning officials.

As to the timing of her abortion, at the 2007 hearing Zheng testified that she became pregnant in May 1991, went into hiding in August of that year and was forced to have an abortion forty days thereafter. On cross-examination, Zheng agreed that forty days after August was September or October, though, as Zheng now argues, forty days after the beginning of August is early September, not October. Even so, this fact does not mean that her testimony in 2007 accords with her statements in 1998. Zheng did not specify at the 2007 hearing when in May she became pregnant and the other dates in her time-line follow from the discovery of her pregnancy. Because the IJ could reasonably interpret Zheng’s testimony to state that she discovered her pregnancy at the end of May, concluding that Zheng testified to having undergone an abortion in early October is not so outlandish a finding that any reasonable adjudicator would be compelled to reject it. The interpretation is particularly reasonable because Zheng agreed to the date on cross-examination. Zheng’s later clarification that the abortion occurred in late August or early September, a date closer to the one to which she testified at her 1998 hearing, does not compel reversal either. The IJ could reasonably discount the correction because it occurred after Zheng had been impeached by her prior testimony.

With respect to the IJ’s finding that the evidence of an altercation between Zheng’s husband and Chinese family-planning officials (variously, over the insertion of an IUD and Zheng’s forced abortion) was inconsistent, Zheng contends the IJ improperly relied on these inconsistencies, as other testimony in the record accounted for some of them. And the inconsistencies are irrelevant in any event, Zheng submits, because her husband’s actions do not go “to the heart of [her] claim.” Kaba v. *915 Mukasey, 546 F.3d 741, 749 (6th Cir.2008). 1

The latter argument is inapposite. The purported altercation between Zheng’s husband and Chinese family planning officials, if true, speaks directly to Zheng’s claim. Zheng alleges that she was persecuted by Chinese family planning officials; evidence that her husband had an altercation with those very officials over the subject of Zheng’s forced abortion, or the insertion of an IUD device, goes to the heart of her claim. Id.

The inconsistencies respecting this altercation properly supported the IJ’s adverse credibility finding.

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