Lumaj v. Gonzales

446 F.3d 194, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 10466, 2006 WL 1085547
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 26, 2006
Docket05-2209
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 446 F.3d 194 (Lumaj v. Gonzales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lumaj v. Gonzales, 446 F.3d 194, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 10466, 2006 WL 1085547 (1st Cir. 2006).

Opinion

COFFIN, Senior Circuit Judge.

Petitioner Lush Lumaj claims that he fled his native Albania in 2001 because of persecution based on his involvement with the Democratic Party. He entered the United States using a false passport and subsequently applied for asylum and withholding of removal. In denying his application, the Immigration Judge (IJ) found that petitioner was not a credible witness and that he had failed to establish eligibility for relief. The Bureau of Immigration Appeals (BIA) affirmed without opinion. After examining the record, we conclude that the IJ’s -decision is sufficiently sup *196 ported and consequently deny Lumaj’s petition for review. See 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(4)(B). 1

I. Factual Background

Petitioner arrived in the United States in May 2001 and presented a Slovenian passport bearing someone else’s name. He was detained at Miami International Airport, and an asylum officer who interviewed him concluded that his assertions of persecution might be found credible if fully developed. Petitioner subsequently submitted an Application for Asylum and for Withholding of Removal.

In his accompanying two-page statement, he reported that his family had been persecuted through the years by the communist regime in Albania and that they had been among the first to support the democratic movement that emerged in the early 1990s. He stated that he joined the Democratic Party (DP) in 1991 and became active in the organization’s Youth Forum, encouraging friends to join the party and working as an election coordinator for DP candidates. The party won the elections in 1992 and remained in power until 1997, when the Socialist Party— which petitioner links with the Communist Party — regained control of the Albanian government.

Petitioner claims that he was actively involved with the Youth Forum during the June 1997 elections and that his activities, which included transporting people to the polls and to demonstrations, were watched “by the local fanatics and the Socialist police.” He stated that on June 29, “two well-known criminals” came to his car window and said: “Keep it Up and you’ll end up dead.” Another incident occurred two years later, in July 1999, when petitioner reports he was arrested at his home for participating in an illegal rally and distributing anti-government leaflets. He claimed that he was held in custody overnight, beaten with a rubber stick, and told upon his release to stop supporting the DP “or you will have problems with us.”

He remained active, however, and reported that he barely escaped when the police came to his home to arrest him in November 2000. After hiding for a month, he resumed his political activities and took part in several demonstrations. In January 2001, a friend dissuaded him from joining a hunger strike that was part of a large protest because petitioner was known as one of “the most wanted democrats” and would be “attacked by the large contingent of policemen.”

Petitioner wrote that, at that time, “Realizing that my life was in danger,” he made the “very difficult decision to leave my family and escape Albania before I would get killed.” The statement then describes his route to the United States in April and May 2001, which began with three days in Greece and continued with stops in Spain, France and Guadeloupe before he reached Miami.

Petitioner presented oral testimony on three separate occasions and before two immigration judges because of continuances in his hearing. He provided further details of his family’s political persecution, including that his father’s uncle’s son had been executed and his own cousin had been imprisoned for sixteen years. He asserted that his family’s properties had been confiscated and that he had been allowed to remain in school only through eighth grade. Petitioner also testified, however, that his father had served as *197 chief in their village and that neither parent had experienced difficulties stemming from their recent DP involvement. 2

In his testimony on April 28, 2003, he reported that his arrest in July 1999 occurred after police forcibly entered his home at 11 p.m., and he stated that he was punched and beaten with police clubs during the four— to five-hour drive to the police station. At the resumed hearing on February 19, 2004, however, petitioner recalled the episode differently. He stated that the police knocked on the door when they arrived, and his mother opened it. He then testified that he was taken to the police station, where he was beaten with a rubber stick. On both occasions, he said that he was told upon his release that he would be killed if he continued to support the DP leader Berisha.

Petitioner also testified to additional details of the episode that occurred in November 2000, when he fled his home to avoid the police. In his testimony on June 26, 2003, he stated that he went to a friend’s home in the mountains but returned several hours later to a location “close to home” to meet with his father, who told him that the police had indeed been looking for him. Again, the February 2004 hearing revealed a changed version of the events. At that time, petitioner stated that he remained in hiding with his friend for a week or more, that his friend acted as a messenger between him and his parents, and that it was the friend who relayed the information that the police had come to arrest him.

Several other discrepancies in his story surfaced. At different times, he stated that he was born in different years (1972 and 1973), and he claimed at one point that he was issued only one DP membership card — in 1991 — but he submitted a copy of a card issued in 2000. Earlier, he had testified that he had received other cards but lost them.

In addition to his own testimony, petitioner presented a witness, Rush Draju, another member of the DP who fled Albania and was awarded political asylum in the United States. Draju testified that petitioner was a member of the DP and had helped in his election campaign and in other candidates’ campaigns. Petitioner also relied on country condition reports prepared by Amnesty International describing the ill treatment of DP supporters during the time period in which he claimed to experience persecution.

The IJ was unpersuaded by petitioner’s presentation. Noting the inconsistencies in his recollections about significant events, the judge found petitioner not credible: “[H]e is testifying to very specific salient factors that a person who is telling the truth would not confuse.” The judge found petitioner’s demeanor to be “evasive” and “furtive,” and he questioned his failure to seek asylum in any of the other countries through which he traveled en route to the United States. The judge noted that other members of petitioner’s politically active family remain, unharmed, in Albania, and they own the land on which they farm. The IJ further relied, inter alia, on a report issued by the State Department detailing the educational opportunity available for members of the Association of Former Politically Persecuted Persons. 3 The judge also referred to peti *198

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Bluebook (online)
446 F.3d 194, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 10466, 2006 WL 1085547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lumaj-v-gonzales-ca1-2006.