Ling Chen v. Eric Holder, Jr.

394 F. App'x 252
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 2, 2010
Docket09-3671
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 394 F. App'x 252 (Ling Chen 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
Ling Chen v. Eric Holder, Jr., 394 F. App'x 252 (6th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner-appellant Ling Juan Chen petitions for review of a decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) dismissing her appeal from an Immigration Judge’s (“U”) decision denying her application for withholding of removal under the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1101 et seq. (“INA”), and the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). Chen, a native and citizen of the People’s Republic of China (“China”), applied for withholding of removal based on alleged persecution by the Chinese government for membership in an underground Christian church, illegally exiting China, and having two children in the United States in alleged violation of Chinese family planning policies. Her application was denied by the IJ due to a lack of evidence of past or future persecution. The BIA affirmed the IJ’s decision and dismissed her appeal.

For the following reasons, we dismiss the petition for review.

I.

In 1999, Chen fled her home of Guantou Town, located in Fuzhou City, Fuijian Province, due to her fear of persecution for her religious affiliation. Chen began attending church in China in 1993 and attended church up to four days a week. The Chinese government considered Chen’s church, the Guantou Christa Delp-hians, 1 an “underground” church. On October 25, 1998, during a church meeting, officials from the public security bureau came to arrest members of the church. When the officials arrived, Chen heard a commotion from the back of the church where she was washing tables. A church member shouted for her to “run,” and Chen fled the church through the back door and ran to the nearby mountains.

Chen hid in the mountains until nightfall, then walked to a relative’s house. There, she telephoned her parents, who advised her to stay with her relative and not return home because the public security officials were arresting people from her church. Two days later, Chen’s father called to inform her that the public security bureau had come to their house and served a notice requiring her to appear for a hearing at the bureau in seven days. *254 Chen had heard from other church members that people who appeared for hearings at the bureau received beatings and experienced other forms of violence, and so she did not appear for her hearing. Chen stayed in hiding, moving from one relative’s house to another, and went eventually to her cousin’s home in Chong Qing City, Szechuan Province, approximately ten to twenty hours away from Guantou Town, where she stayed for six or seven months. While at her cousin’s house, she heard thát her relatives in Guantou Town were being questioned by officials and that the officials were looking for her. She did not often leave her cousin’s home and was not harmed by the government while there.

In 1999, Chen came to the United States with the help of a “snake head,” a common Chinese term for smuggler, for the price of $50,000. Chen flew from China to Hong Kong using a Chinese passport. 2 However, in Hong Kong, the smuggler took the passport and gave her a fake passport in English that contained her picture. She entered the United States on June 15, 1999, but did not seek asylum because she did not know that it was available and because she was working to pay off the remaining amount owed for the smuggler’s services. 3 Since her arrival, Chen has married and has had two children, both born in the United States.

Chen’s family remains in China, where her parents belong to an officially recognized, registered church and her brother attends underground churches. Her brother moves around China because he fears being caught by the government. Public security officials came to Chen’s parents’ house a “few times” a year to look for her after the incident on October 25, 1998, and continued to come after her departure from China. The officials broke dishes and pushed over furniture while at the house.

The Department of Homeland Security initiated removal proceedings against Chen on August 24, 2008. Chen applied for withholding of removal under the INA and withholding pursuant to Article 3 of the CAT. At her hearing before the IJ on January 29, 2009, she testified that she believes that if she is returned to China, the public security bureau would imprison her for three reasons: (1) she attended an underground Christian church in China; (2) she was smuggled illegally out of China; and (3) she has had two children in the United States, in violation of Chinese family planning policies. Chen further testified that she could not relocate in China because, in order to resume her previous career as a nurse, she would have to register herself, and this registration would alert the police that she was back in China. While the IJ found Chen credible, she nevertheless denied Chen’s application and ordered her removed to China, finding that Chen failed to demonstrate her eligibility for withholding of removal under both the INA and the CAT.

First, the IJ found that there was no evidence of past persecution relating to Chen’s religious practices because Chen did not testify that she was arrested, detained, or beaten while in China. The IJ *255 further found that the notice to appear before the public safety bureau did not rise to the level of persecution. The IJ also found that the fact that Chen was able to stay with a relative for six or seven months without incident, coupled with the fact that Chen’s brother frequently relocates, demonstrated that Chen’s relocation within China would be possible, should she return.

The IJ also addressed Chen’s fear of returning to China because she was smuggled out of the country illegally and found that there was no documentary evidence that Chen would be targeted because she was purportedly smuggled out of China. The IJ found that this claim was undercut by the ease with which Chen obtained a passport and further noted that Chen obtained a passport and passport extension from the Chinese Consulate in Chicago without problems. Furthermore, the IJ found that Chen’s fear of returning to China because she was smuggled out of the country did not contain the requisite nexus to a protected ground for purposes of establishing persecution.

Finally, the IJ found that Chen’s fear that she would be subject to Chinese family planning policies, specifically, sterilization, should she return was insufficient to establish Chen’s eligibility for withholding of removal under the INA. The IJ noted that Department of State Reports contained in the record indicated that forced sterilization was formally prohibited in China. Further, the IJ noted that, should Chen take her children back to China with her, they would not count for family planning purposes, as long as they were not registered as permanent residents of China. Finally, the IJ found that there was no evidence that Chen intended to have more children and then would have to face the dilemma of whether to register her U.S.-born children and have them counted for family planning purposes.

Chen filed an appeal from the IJ’s decision with the BIA, which the Board dismissed.

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394 F. App'x 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ling-chen-v-eric-holder-jr-ca6-2010.