Lovert Tchougoue v. William P. Barr

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 26, 2019
Docket18-2392
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lovert Tchougoue v. William P. Barr (Lovert Tchougoue v. William P. Barr) 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
Lovert Tchougoue v. William P. Barr, (7th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit Chicago, Illinois 60604

Argued February 27, 2019 Decided March 26, 2019

Before

DIANE P. WOOD, Chief Judge

WILLIAM J. BAUER, Circuit Judge

ILANA DIAMOND ROVNER, Circuit Judge

No. 18-2392

LOVERT TCHOUGOUE Petition for Review of an Order of the Petitioner, Board of Immigration Appeals.

v. No. A213-089-410

WILLIAM P. BARR Attorney General of the United States, Respondent.

ORDER

Lovert Tchougoue, a 22-year-old citizen of Cameroon, petitions for review of the Board of Immigration Appeals’ denial of his application for asylum after he was beaten by police for protesting government policies that have violently divided Francophones and Anglophones. An immigration judge denied relief, finding that Tchougoue was not credible and failed to corroborate his claim of political persecution sufficiently. The No. 18-2392 Page 2

Board assumed that Tchougoue was credible, but affirmed the denial of relief on grounds that he had not established persecution. Because the Board applied the wrong legal standard to Tchougoue’s claim, we grant the petition for review and remand the case for further proceedings.

Tchougoue’s asylum claim arises from his involvement in protests against the Cameroon government over the dominance of the French language in the Anglophone region of northwest Cameroon. The increasingly violent conflict between Anglophones and the Francophone majority began in late 2016 when teachers and lawyers in the Anglophone regions, including Tchougoue’s hometown of Bamenda, went on strike for months to protest their marginalization and forced assimilation by the Francophone government. See e.g., U.S. Department of State, 2018 Human Rights Report: Cameroon 1–2. The government responded by arresting and killing protesters, and the crackdown spawned a violent, secessionist movement demanding an independent Anglophone state called Ambazonia. Id. at 1, 3, 9-10. In search of separatists, the government burned homes in the country’s Anglophone regions, and indiscriminately killed civilians, causing hundreds of thousands of Anglophones to flee from Cameroon’s English- speaking northwest and southwest regions. Id. at 15, 22-23; see also U.S. Concerned over Uptick in Violence in Cameroon, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE (Nov. 6, 2018), https://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2018/11/287178.htm.

In 2016, when he was a university student in Bamenda, Tchougoue joined a student protest of the government’s use of French in schools. He was arrested by police on November 11, 2016,1 and taken to prison. The police accused him of being a leader of the protests and, for two days, held him in a cell and repeatedly beat, slapped, and kicked him, leaving scars on his body and back. Tchougoue managed to escape and fled to his grandmother’s village ten kilometers away.

For the next six months, Tchougoue hid at his grandmother’s house. But on May 23, 2017, upon venturing to a store, he was picked up by another police officer, who, accusing Tchougoue of being a leader of the student protest, arrested him, beat him, slapped him, and forced him into a police car. Again Tchougoue escaped, jumping out of the police car before he arrived at prison. Tchougoue later contacted his mother, who

1 Tchougoue testified at his hearing that police arrested him in 2017, but in his appeal to the Board he corrected himself and wrote that he meant to say 2016. For purposes of its decision, the Board assumed “without deciding” that the correction was true. No. 18-2392 Page 3

told him that police had come to the house looking for him. He then returned to his apartment in Bamenda to collect his things and found his apartment in disarray— presumably the aftermath of a police search.

Tchougoue scooped up his bags and trekked on foot for ten days until he reached Nigeria. He worked there for two months to gather funds, flew to Ecuador, and then via Mexico entered the United States. At the California border, he applied for admission to the United States without a visa and was detained. He remains detained at a facility in Chicago.

A month after his entry, the Department of Homeland Security served him with a notice to appear in removal proceedings for his entry without a visa. At a later hearing before the immigration judge, Tchougoue applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture (CAT). (Tchougoue now proceeds only on his asylum claim.) The IJ told Tchougoue about the importance of corroborating evidence to support his application, and scheduled another hearing a month later.

At the next hearing, the IJ denied all of Tchougoue’s applications. The IJ found that Tchougoue’s testimony was neither plausible nor believable; that even if he had testified credibly, the alleged harm did not rise to the level of persecution; that he had not sufficiently corroborated his claims; and that any fear of future persecution he had was not objectively reasonable.

Tchougoue appealed to the Board, which upheld the IJ’s decision. Though the Board assumed (without deciding) that Tchougoue had testified credibly, it concluded that his past experiences—albeit “distinctly unpleasant”—“did not reach the level of ‘persecution.’” In reaching this conclusion, the Board analogized Tchougoue’s situation to cases in which we held that the record “did not compel [the] conclusion” of persecution. Without corroboration, the Board added, Tchougoue could not establish a well-founded fear of persecution.

Tchougoue opens his petition by challenging the IJ’s adverse credibility determination on grounds that it relied upon minor inconsistencies that were reasonably explainable. In particular, he contends that the IJ wrongly discredited him for inadvertently misstating the year of his arrest and for not adding more details about his detention. Although we note that the grounds for the credibility ruling are thin and the inconsistencies trivial, we can assume for purposes of our review that Tchougoue is No. 18-2392 Page 4

credible: when he appealed this issue to the Board, the Board assumed—without deciding—that Tchougoue was credible, and we will operate from the same assumption. See Sibanda v. Holder, 778 F.3d 676, 679 (7th Cir. 2015).

Tchougoue asserts that the IJ erred in requiring additional corroborative evidence because the IJ failed to specify what evidence he would have liked to have seen and whether the evidence was readily obtainable or reasonably available. In his oral ruling, the IJ found that Tchougoue “offered no corroborating evidence.” But Tchougoue does not develop this point and, in any case, the IJ may require corroborating evidence under the REAL ID Act, see 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(1)(B)(ii), even if the applicant is credible, as long as that evidence is reasonably available. See Raphael v. Mukasey, 533 F.3d 521, 527 (7th Cir. 2008). Neither the IJ nor Tchougoue discussed whether the evidence was reasonably available (and arguably it was not given Tchougoue’s escape, abrupt flight from Cameroon, his instant detention in the U.S., and his prompt immigration hearing). But Tchougoue did not demonstrate that corroborative evidence was reasonably unavailable, as was his burden to do so. Id. at 529.

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

Related

Mamadou Diallo v. John D. Ashcroft
381 F.3d 687 (Seventh Circuit, 2004)
Ferdinant Mema v. Alberto R. Gonzales
474 F.3d 412 (Seventh Circuit, 2007)
Victor Sirbu v. Eric Holder, Jr.
718 F.3d 655 (Seventh Circuit, 2013)
Rapheal v. Mukasey
533 F.3d 521 (Seventh Circuit, 2008)
Mekhtiev v. Holder
559 F.3d 725 (Seventh Circuit, 2009)
Katsiaryna Sobaleva v. Eric Holder, Jr.
760 F.3d 592 (Seventh Circuit, 2014)
Andriy Yasinskyy v. Eric Holder, Jr.
724 F.3d 983 (Seventh Circuit, 2013)
Lucy Sibanda v. Eric Holder, Jr.
778 F.3d 676 (Seventh Circuit, 2015)
Yumin Xiang v. Loretta Lynch
845 F.3d 306 (Seventh Circuit, 2017)
Jose Orellana-Arias v. Jefferson B. Sessions III
865 F.3d 476 (Seventh Circuit, 2017)
Raul Plaza-Ramirez v. Jefferson B. Sessions III
908 F.3d 282 (Seventh Circuit, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Lovert Tchougoue v. William P. Barr, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovert-tchougoue-v-william-p-barr-ca7-2019.