Lutaaya v. Mukasey

535 F.3d 63, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 15954, 2008 WL 2877477
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 28, 2008
Docket07-2328
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 535 F.3d 63 (Lutaaya v. Mukasey) 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
Lutaaya v. Mukasey, 535 F.3d 63, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 15954, 2008 WL 2877477 (1st Cir. 2008).

Opinion

LYNCH, Chief Judge.

On July 11, 2007, the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) denied relief from removal to Grace Lutaaya, a Ugandan citizen. It affirmed an Immigration Judge’s (“IJ”) decision that (1) Lutaaya’s asylum application was untimely filed and the delay was not excused, see 8 U.S.C. § 1158(a)(2)(B), (a)(2)(D); and (2) she had not met her burden for withholding of removal and protection under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”) because she was not credible.

On her petition for review, we lack jurisdiction over the denial of asylum. The CAT claim is not before us because she did not exhaust that claim before the BIA. The decision on her application for withholding of removal is amply supported in the record and we deny the petition.

I

Grace Lutaaya entered the United States on December 11, 1997 on a six-month non-immigrant visitor visa, overstayed, and was charged with removability on September 13, 2000. Lutaaya filed an application for relief, which is the subject of this petition, on April 13, 2005, claiming a fear of future persecution in Uganda because of her membership in the Democratic Party (“DP”) and because she had been attacked in 1996 by members of the Ugandan military. Lutaaya was given two *66 hearings; the second was so that she could have additional time to collect documents, which were wanting, in support of her claim.

A. Lutaaya’s May 2005 Hearing

We describe Lutaaya’s testimony before an IJ on May 20, 2005. 1 She was born in Uganda and ran a delivery business with her husband Vincent Sabeera until 1996. In January 1996, they won a government bid to deliver food supplies to soldiers fighting a rebel group known as the “Lord’s Resistance Army” (“LRA”) in the northern part of the country. Sabeera left home in January for a delivery trip and was ambushed and abducted by LRA soldiers. 2 The soldiers confiscated Sabe-era’s trucks and used them in several raids, leading the Ugandan government to suspect Sabeera and Lutaaya of collaborating with the LRA.

On April 2, 1996, four members of the Ugandan military came to Lutaaya’s house in Entebbe. They questioned her about Sabeera’s whereabouts. Lutaaya, who was seven months pregnant, told them that she did not know what had happened to him. The soldiers accused her and Sabeera of cooperating with the LRA. They beat her, cut her with a sword, and raped her. The soldiers set fire to her house, but Lutaaya escaped and was taken to a hospital the next day. She delivered prematurely on April 4.

After leaving the hospital, Lutaaya stayed with her mother in a town about twenty-five miles away but fled in September after government agents sought her there. She stayed with friends throughout the country and obtained a visa from the American Embassy, leaving for the United States in December 1997. Lutaaya left her baby in the care of her mother and left her five older children in the care of relatives.

Lutaaya testified that she and her husband had been active supporters of the Democratic Party (“DP”) in Uganda, a group that opposed the government but was unrelated to the LRA. She joined the DP in 1991 and supported the party by organizing the women’s wing in Entebbe and, with Sabeera, hanging posters for campaigns.

Lutaaya stated that she feared future persecution from the Ugandan government because of her support for the DP and because “the same government” whose soldiers had attacked her for allegedly collaborating with the LRA was still in power. She stated that government agents went to her mother’s place of business in September 2004 to inquire about Lutaaya’s whereabouts.

When asked about her failure to apply for asylum within one year of her arrival, Lutaaya testified that she had not known how to file and had lacked the funds to hire an attorney. She said that she could afford to file only after her husband arrived.

During questioning, the IJ and counsel for the government raised several discrepancies between Lutaaya’s testimony and *67 her earlier statements to the asylum officer who had interviewed her and Sabeera in 2000 and gave her the opportunity to explain. For example, the asylum officer reported that Sabeera and Lutaaya had claimed that the infant delivered on April 4, 1996 was stillborn, not premature. Lu-taaya had also reportedly told the asylum officer that five soldiers, not four, were involved in the attack and rape. Her explanation for the discrepancy was that she denied making either statement to the asylum officer.

The IJ found that Lutaaya had not provided documentation to corroborate her testimony but granted her a continuance to enable her to obtain her birth certificate, hospital records from 1996, and records of her and her husband’s membership in the DP. Lutaaya had submitted photographs purportedly of her stab wound from the attack.

B. The November 2005 Hearing and the IJ’s Decision

At the next hearing, nearly six months later on November 14, 2005, Lutaaya submitted an undated identification card from the DP, a copy of her birth certificate, photographs of her children and several school records, and a letter dated August 1, 2005 from Dr. Odama Stephen Baroa of Hope Medical Center concerning her treatment in 1996.

The letter, titled “Mrs. Grace Lutaaya Sabera [sic] Mpoza’s Medical Report,” stated that Lutaaya had been brought into the hospital in 1996 with profuse bleeding; that she reported that she had been raped, stabbed, and beaten; and that she had delivered a premature baby. 3 The IJ questioned Lutaaya about the letter and about her failure to obtain records contemporaneous with the 1996 hospitalization. Lutaaya claimed that the letter was the only record she was able to obtain. Under cross-examination, Lutaaya acknowledged that the letter contained both a telephone number and an email address, but testified that she had not followed up with the doctor to request medical records contemporaneous with her treatment. The judge admitted the letter into evidence but stated that Lutaaya had not provided medical records as he had requested.

As to the undated party identification card, Lutaaya testified that she had received the card, through a friend, in September 2005 and had lost the original card when her home was burned.

The IJ issued an oral decision finding Lutaaya statutorily ineligible for asylum because she did not file her application within one year of her arrival and because she was not eligible for an exception to the filing deadline due to changed circumstances affecting her eligibility or extraordinary circumstances relating to the delay. See 8 U.S.C. § 1158(a)(2)(B), (a)(2)(D).

The IJ denied Lutaaya’s application for withholding of removal as well, finding her not credible. The IJ relied on the record, the testimony, and the documentation.

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Bluebook (online)
535 F.3d 63, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 15954, 2008 WL 2877477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lutaaya-v-mukasey-ca1-2008.