Luis Fernando Valderrama Hernandez v. U.S. Attorney General

631 F. App'x 922
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 14, 2015
Docket14-12762
StatusUnpublished

This text of 631 F. App'x 922 (Luis Fernando Valderrama Hernandez v. U.S. Attorney General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luis Fernando Valderrama Hernandez v. U.S. Attorney General, 631 F. App'x 922 (11th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Luis Fernando Valderrama Hernandez (“Luis”) and Magnolia Gomez Rubio (“Magnolia”) (collectively, “Petitioners”), spouses and natives and citizens of Colombia, petition this Court for review of the denial of Luis’s application for asylum. An immigration judge (“U”) denied Luis’s application on the basis that he failed to meet his burden of proof by not providing reasonably available evidence to corroborate his credible testimonial account of being persecuted by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (“FARC”) for aiding a local civic organization. Luis appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”), which affirmed based on the lack of corroborative evidence. Luis and Magnolia now bring this petition for review, arguing that Luis’s credible testimony and other documentary evidence were sufficient to establish his eligibility for asylum and that the IJ and BIA improperly applied the corroboration standard under 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(l)(B)(ii).

I.

Luis and Magnolia last entered the United States in May 2011 as non-immigrant visitors. After entry, Luis applied for asylum on the ground of membership in a particular social group, listing Magno *924 lia as a derivative beneficiary; Following an interview on Luis’s application, Luis and Magnolia were charged as removable for having remained in the United States for a time longer than permitted. See 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(1)(B). They conceded re-movability, and Luis renewed his asylum application. 1

An IJ conducted a hearing on Luis’s asylum application, at which Luis and Luis’s treating psychologist testified. At the beginning of the hearing, the petitioners’ counsel indicated that Magnolia was present in the courtroom, but counsel stated that she did not plan to call Magnolia as a witness.

A. Hearing Testimony

In support of his application for asylum, Luis testified as follows. He was born in 1966 in Colombia. For the past ten years, he had been a self-employed accountant. In 2006, Luis began working pro bono for the Avanti Foundation in Cali, Colombia, where he lived at the time. The Avanti Foundation educated low-income community members and provided them with needed medical and legal services. Through his work there, he taught heads of households and youths between the ages of fifteen and twenty how to start their own small businesses, among other things.

In January 2010, Luis began receiving calls on his cell phone from self-identified members of the FARC. They told him to stop working for the Avanti Foundation because, by promoting what the FARC viewed as capitalism, he was pushing youths away from communism and thereby harming the FARC’s recruitment. Luis received more than four or five similar calls, always from a male. In May 2010, the caller threatened Luis’s wife, stating that the caller knew who she was and where she worked. After that call, he and Magnolia decided to move to Bogotá at the end of May. They did not tell anyone they were leaving.

Luis stated that he did not report the phone calls to authorities because there was a “major” risk that the authorities could be connected with the FARC members, and that they would respond to his complaint by having him beaten, kidnapped, or killed. He did not trust the authorities in Colombia.

In Bogotá, Luis continued to teach for the Avanti Foundation over the Internet. In March 2011, he received a phone call from the FARC stating that it had found him in Bogotá. Luis told the head of the Foundation, Pastor Candelaria Hernandez, that he was having problems with the FARC.

On March 30, 2011, Luis was kidnapped by the FARC. He was in Bogotá getting some food when three men approached him from the back, threatened him with a gun, and forced him into a taxi. They told him that they were going to hold a military trial and then kill him because he had not stopped teaching capitalism. In the taxi, he was forced to change clothes and to take three pills, which caused him to black out. At dawn the following day, he awoke dizzy and weak in a new car with the same men. His captors drove to a mountainous area, which seemed to be a “coffee zone,” where he was forced to get out of the car. They tied his hands behind his back with a chain. He was given over to a group of men wearing military clothing and arm *925 bands identifying them as members of the FARC.

After he was transferred to the men in military uniforms, Luis was forced to walk for nearly twelve hours straight without food. That evening, they arrived at a place where he was tied to tree, standing, where he stayed until morning. They left at dawn and walked another full day. Luis was beaten at some point and was not fed. When they arrived at their destination, Luis was tied to a tree again, but allowed to rest on a piece of plastic. He was told he had to wait for the commander. At first he was just given water. On the fourth day, he was given rice. On the fifth day, a sub-commander told him that he had to continue to wait but that a military trial was going to be held and then he would be killed. Luis stated that he needed his blood-pressure medication, but he was told that it was good he suffered.

Luis was held captive for around fourteen days. By the end of his captivity, .he was covered in insect bites and his feet were swollen, as they accumulated liquid without his blood-pressure medication. He lost consciousness, and when he woke up, he was at the house of a farmer. The farmer stated that he found Luis on one of the nearby roads. The farmer helped him to obtain transportation back to Bogotá later that day.

When Luis arrived baek in Bogotá on April 15, 2011, he called his wife, Magnolia, and they went to a hotel. At the hotel, they decided to leave Colombia for the United States, believing it would be the safest place for them. They bought plane tickets and left Colombia on April 18, 2011. Luis and Magnolia did not report Luis’s kidnapping to the authorities because he was traumatized from the experience, and Magnolia was afraid that, if they reported the kidnapping, the FARC would find out and kill him. Luis received psychological counseling in the United States for the traumatic experience. He was prescribed an anti-depressant to address wishes of dying. He believed he would be killed if he returned to Colombia.

On cross-examination and in response to questioning from the IJ, Luis testified to the following: He and Magnolia had family in the Cali area, but they did not notify family that they left for Bogotá because they did .not want to worry them or put them in danger. When they left Cali, Luis transferred all of his business clients to an accountant friend in the area. Luis guessed that the FARC released him from captivity because, given his poor physical condition and unconscious state, they probably believed he was dead. The farmer found a bag of Luis’s clothes next to him on the roadside, which also contained his identification credentials and wallet without any money inside. Magnolia’s brother, a criminal attorney in Bogotá, helped them find a hotel upon Luis’s return to Bogotá and prompted them to take pictures of Luis’s injuries.

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Bluebook (online)
631 F. App'x 922, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luis-fernando-valderrama-hernandez-v-us-attorney-general-ca11-2015.