Liu Di Wang v. Reno

862 F. Supp. 801, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13440, 1994 WL 518999
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 6, 1994
DocketCV-93-5523 (CPS)
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 862 F. Supp. 801 (Liu Di Wang v. Reno) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liu Di Wang v. Reno, 862 F. Supp. 801, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13440, 1994 WL 518999 (E.D.N.Y. 1994).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

SIFTON, District Judge.

In this action challenging the standard used by the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) to evaluate asylum applications based on coercive family planning practices, plaintiffs seek declaratory, injunctive, mandamus, and habeas relief. Plaintiffs also seek a temporary restraining order, a preliminary injunction, class certification, and leave to supplement their pleadings and add additional parties. The Attorney General opposes these motions and has filed a motion to dismiss contending that this Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to provide the relief sought. For the reasons discussed below, the Attorney General’s motion to dismiss is granted except as to those two plaintiffs who are located within the Eastern District of New York and have received final orders of exclusion. All other motions are denied with leave to refile.

BACKGROUND

Plaintiffs are citizens of the People’s Republic of China (the “PRC”) who are in various stages of the process of seeking asylum and orders withholding deportation under the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. §§ 1101 et seq. (the “INA”), based on what they contend are the coercive family planning practices of the PRC. The original complaint was filed on behalf of ninety-seven plaintiffs. Of those ninety-seven, eleven were residing in the Eastern District of New York and one, plaintiff Chen, Xiu Qin, a.k.a. Chen, Xie Xing (“Chen”) (Chinese names are hereinafter given in the Chinese style, with family name prior to first name), was being held here in the Wackenhut detention facility in Springfield Gardens, Queens. At the time the complaint was filed, the majority of the plaintiffs either resided or were being detained within the Southern District of New York; the rest were located in eight states and Peru. 1 Plaintiffs also seek to add a total of sixty-nine additional plaintiffs to the action, forty-three of whom resided in the Eastern District and one, Zhou, Shan Bin (“Zhou”), who was being detained here. 2

*803 According to plaintiffs, as of May 17, 1994, thirty-three of the individuals named in both the initial complaint and the various submissions seeking to add additional parties had been issued final orders of exclusion. Of those thirty-three, only two, Zhou and Chen, were located in the Eastern District. Five of the thirty-three, including Liu, Yau Gwong (“Liu”), were located in the Southern District. Liu filed a habeas petition along with the original complaint. During the course of this action, both Chen and Zhou filed habeas petitions. With the exception of those presenting habeas petitions, plaintiffs have not provided any description of the circumstances of their entry, parole or detention.

Chen is a twenty-nine year old citizen of the PRC who arrived at Kennedy International Aiiport seeking entry into the United States on July 31, 1993. She was taken into INS custody and placed in exclusion proceedings. She contends that she fled the PRC “fearing continuing repercussions, after having suffered (with her husband) threats and demands of sterilization, as well as being pursued and subjected to harsh economic sanctions.” Memo In Support, Chen v. Slattery, CV 94 2568 (CPS). She alleges that the local government in the PRC closed down her family hairdressing business as a result of her opposition to the PRC’s birth control policy. After her arrival in the United States, her request for asylum was denied by an immigration judge on October 26, 1993, and her appeal to the BIA was dismissed on March 14, 1994.

According to his habeas petition, Zhou is a citizen of the PRC who sought entry into the United States on July 19,1993. In his initial asylum application, he contended that he was involuntarily sterilized after the birth of his second child. However, the sterilization was apparently unsuccessful and his wife became pregnant again. During that pregnancy, she attempted to avoid detection. When she was discovered, local officials threatened to subject her to an immediate abortion. Zhou and his wife ultimately paid a large fine to avoid the abortion, and the child was born. Ten days later, Zhou left the country, afraid that he would be sterilized against his will. After arriving in the United States, his request for asylum was denied by an immigration judge on November 5, 1993, and his appeal to the BIA was dismissed on April 6, 1994.

According to his habeas petition, Liu is a thirty-one year old native of the PRC from the Fouzhou Province who was a farmer and a tile or briekmaker. After traveling to Burma and Thailand, Liu boarded the Golden Venture in an attempt to reach the United States. He was arrested in the Eastern District of New York after that vessel ran aground in the waters off Queens, New York on June 6,1993. 3 Liu asserts that he left the PRC to avoid sterilization. His asylum application was denied by an immigration judge on August 9,1993, and on November 3,1993, the BIA dismissed his appeal of that denial.

The heart of plaintiffs’ suit is a challenge to the reasonableness and the applicability of the decision of the BIA in Matter of Chang, Int. Dec. 3107 (BIA May 12, 1989), 1989 WL 247513 (B.I.A.), in which the Board found that the PRC’s “one couple, one child” family planning policy did not include officially-sanctioned mandatory sterilization and was not “on its face persecutive.” The BIA noted that the policy could be implemented in a way that would serve as a basis for asylum under the INA but stated that “[t]o the extent ... that such a policy is solely tied to controlling population, rather than as a guise for acting against people protected by the Act, we cannot find that persons who do not wish to have the policy applied to them are victims of persecution or have a well-founded fear of persecution within the present scope of the Act.”

In addition, the BIA stated that, even if an asylum-seeker could show that he would be forced to undergo mandatory sterilization, that evidence, by itself, would not be sufficient to establish a well-founded fear of persecution under the terms of the INA because the alien would not have shown that he was treated differently from other citizens or that the application of the policy in his case was actually an attempt to achieve an end other *804 than the legitimate governmental goal of general population control.

In reaching that determination, the BIA specifically declined to follow the reasoning of an August 5, 1988 memorandum of the Attorney General issued to the Commissioner of the INS which directed that “INS asylum adjudicators” give “careful consideration” to the asylum applications of PRC nationals who refused to abort a pregnancy or undergo sterilization as an “act of conscience.” 4 The BIA held that it was not bound by the policy directives of the Attorney General.

Plaintiffs’ challenge to Chang is based on the response of the Executive and Legislative Branches to the decision. In an explicit attempt to overrule Chang,

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Bluebook (online)
862 F. Supp. 801, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13440, 1994 WL 518999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liu-di-wang-v-reno-nyed-1994.