Lopez-Monterroso, Ce v. Gonzales, Alberto

236 F. App'x 207
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 23, 2007
Docket06-3716
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 236 F. App'x 207 (Lopez-Monterroso, Ce v. Gonzales, Alberto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lopez-Monterroso, Ce v. Gonzales, Alberto, 236 F. App'x 207 (7th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

ORDER

Cesar Lopez-Monterroso, a citizen of Guatemala, petitions for review of the denial of his application for asylum. An Immigration Judge denied that application after an evidentiary hearing, but the basis for the IJ’s decision is muddled. The IJ criticized Lopez for not submitting corroborating evidence, and that omission might be one reason why the IJ denied relief. Whether or not it was, however, the IJ explicitly concluded that the reasons Lopez gave for fleeing Guatemala did not rise to the level of past persecution. The Board of Immigration Appeals affirmed. Although the IJ’s demand for corroboration is problematic, Lopez does not challenge the IJ and BIA’s ultimate conclusion that what happened to him in Guatemala was not persecution. That conclusion is sup *208 ported by substantial evidence. Accordingly, we deny the petition for review.

Lopez entered the United States illegally on March 28, 2002. He was arrested two days later, and the former Immigration and Naturalization Service immediately issued a Notice to Appear and commenced removal proceedings, charging him with being present in the United States in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a) (6) (A) (I).

Lopez conceded his inadmissibility and applied for asylum and withholding of removal on the basis of his religion and membership in a particular social group. He stated in his application that he was “threatened by criminal gangs in Guatemala” because he didn’t want to join them. According to Lopez, the “criminal gangs do anything they want in Guatemala, because the police and the government can’t or won’t do anything to stop them. They kill and harm a lot of young men who don’t join them, because they view us as a threat to their power.” He asserted that he would be in danger of “persecution” by the criminal gangs if he returned to Guatemala. He also added that he came to the United States in order to rejoin his mother, Yolanda Monterroso, who is an asylum applicant here.

In support of his application for asylum, Lopez submitted declarations from himself and his mother. In his declaration Lopez states that he was “forced to leave Guatemala” because he had been “constantly beaten and threatened by criminal gangs, for refusing to join any of the gangs.” He describes constant fighting in his town, which is home to two rival gangs: “There was very fierce shooting all the time, like in a war, right in the town. It never stopped.” According to Lopez, one gang tried to recruit him at age 14 and told him that he would be beaten and required to use drugs with members of the gang. Lopez refused to join “even though almost all the young men from the town had become part of one gang or another.” He resisted, he says, partly because he is a devout Christian and the gangs oppose churches, which the gangs view as their rivals for control over the community. Because of his continued resistance to gang membership, Lopez says, he was beaten up “about 14 different times” by gang members. Lopez never went to the hospital because he didn’t want to wait the six hours it would take until he was treated. He also “never bothered” to go to the police or other authorities because the “police are more afraid of the gangs than anybody, and they are powerless to prevent violence.” Had he made a complaint, Lopez adds, the gangs simply would have taken revenge on him. In his declaration Lopez explains that he was in frequent communication with his mother, who left Guatemala for the United States when he was 13. She often sent him money, and gradually he saved up enough to leave the country. His decision to move was sparked by his witnessing the shooting death of a young man by a group of other men. The next day, an acquaintance said she had seen him there and knew that he saw what happened. Lopez feared that the killers were gang members who would come after him and possibly kill him to keep him quiet.

In her declaration, Yolanda Monterroso states that she applied for asylum because her husband, Lopez’s father, was beaten to death by guerillas near their home. She knew that gangs had been trying to recruit her son since he was a teenager and had attacked him for resisting. She states her belief that he was in “constant danger” in Guatemala. She also confirms that she and her son are devout Christians.

After several continuances, Lopez appeared before an IJ in May 2005. He testified that he was born in 1982 in Gua *209 témala. He explained that he left Guatemala because young gang members oppress many people there, especially Christians. Lopez said that in Guatemala he attended his church, the Light of the World, three times a week. When he would leave church, gang members would “be judging” him and would hit him. This happened about 12 or 13 times between 1998 and 2002. Lopez said he thought he was targeted because the gang members wanted him to join and “didn’t want to see [him] in church.” On one occasion, when Lopez was coming home from work, three gang members pushed him off his bicycle into a drainage ditch, causing him to break his teeth. This was the only injury for which he sought medical attention. Lopez testified, though, that he never went to the police because he knew the police would not help him; it is common knowledge, he said, that the police “just give a paper and they don’t really act on it.” Lopez said that he spoke with his mother once a week when he was in Guatemala, describing his troubles, and she sent him about $1300 for him to come to the United States. Lopez testified that just 15 days prior to the hearing, his 16-year-old cousin, who had started attending his church, was shot to death, presumably by gang members. Lopez stated that if he returned to Guatemala he would be in danger from the gangs because they have gotten bigger and “can’t stand to see a person walking with a Bible under their arm.”

The IJ issued an oral decision denying relief. The IJ began with this characterization of Lopez’s claim: “Basically, the respondent has testified that he left Guatemala to come to the United States to join his mother and brother here in the United States. Apparently, the mother had departed when he was 13 years of age.” The IJ then commented that “regretfully, people think gold is on the streets, and all one has to do is come to the United States and pick them up from the roadside without the incumbent requirement to earn a living.” The IJ concluded, “The fact that the respondent came to the United States to join his mother undercuts his claim of the purpose of his departure from Guatemala.” The IJ acknowledged Lopez’s testimony that he was assaulted by Guatemalan gangs that wanted to persuade him to stop going to church and join them, but the IJ expressed skepticism about this testimony because Lopez had managed to live in Guatemala until age 19 without joining a gang.

The tenor of the IJ’s order discloses his skepticism about Lopez’s testimony, but the IJ never made an explicit finding that Lopez was not credible. Despite this omission, however, the IJ emphasized the lack of corroboration for Lopez’s account of his experiences in Guatemala.

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236 F. App'x 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lopez-monterroso-ce-v-gonzales-alberto-ca7-2007.