Manuel Leon-Leon v. Loretta Lynch

652 F. App'x 342
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 15, 2016
Docket15-4059
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 652 F. App'x 342 (Manuel Leon-Leon v. Loretta Lynch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manuel Leon-Leon v. Loretta Lynch, 652 F. App'x 342 (6th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge.

Manuel Leon-Leon is a Mexican citizen who entered the United States without inspection in 1996 and has lived here ever since. With the exception of a trip to Mexico for his father’s funeral, Leon-Leon has remained in the United States, marrying a United States citizen in 1998, and moving to Michigan in 1999, where he was employed for over a decade as a landscaper. In 2011, Leon-Leon was issued a Notice to Appear by the Department of Homeland Security. He conceded that he could be removed from the country, but sought cancellation of removal, arguing that his removal would severely impact his wife because she has a rare and debilitating medical condition and is therefore reliant on his income and assistance with daily tasks. The Immigration Judge (“IJ”) found that the evidence provided by Leon-Leon and his wife was unconvincing because their testimony was not credible. The IJ therefore denied Leon-Leon’s request for cancellation of removal, and the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) affirmed. Leon-Leon petitions for review of this de *344 nial. We lack jurisdiction over some of his arguments because they seek only to contest the BIA’s weighing of facts, while our jurisdiction is limited to reviewing questions of law. We therefore DISMISS the petition in part. To the extent that Leon-Leon raises arguments regarding the legal standard applied by the BIA, we DENY his petition because the BIA applied the correct legal standard.

I. BACKGROUND

Leon-Leon is a Mexican citizen who entered the United States without inspection on April 1, 1996. See Administrative Record (“AR”) at 442^3 (Appl. for Cancellation of Removal at 1-2). On May 12, 1998, he married Isabel Vega (“Isabel Leon”), a United States citizen. See id. at 443 (Appl. for Cancellation of Removal at 2); id. at 461 (Marriage Certificate). 1 In 1999, the two moved to Michigan, where Leon-Leon began work as a landscaper. See id. at 444 (Appl. for Cancellation of Removal at 3).

On June 2, 2011, the Department of Homeland Security issued Leon-Leon a Notice to Appear for removal proceedings. See id. at 518-19 (Notice to Appear). Leon-Leon appeared before an IJ, conceded removability, and submitted an application for cancellation of removal. See id. at 112-13 (Tr. of Aug. 16, 2011 Hr’g at 2:23-3:13); id. at 442-51 (Appl. for Cancellation of Removal). He requested cancellation on the basis that his wife would suffer “exceptional and extremely unusual hardship” from his removal. See id. at 442 (Appl. for Cancellation of Removal at 1). The IJ ultimately denied the request, largely because the IJ seized on the following arguable inconsistencies to find that neither Leon-Leon nor Isabel Leon provided credible testimony:

Trip to Mexico: During Leon-Leon’s first hearing, the IJ noticed that Leon-Leon’s application for cancellation of removal mentioned that he had been absent from the United States on one occasion since entering the country in 1996, but did not describe the purpose of the travel or the dates on which he was out of the country. See id. at 114 (Tr. of Aug. 16, 2011 Hr’g at 4:10-20). The IJ directed Leon-Leon to complete the missing information during a recess, id. at 116 (Tr. of Aug. 16, 2011 Hr’g at 6:7-14), and Leon-Leon’s application ultimately stated that the trip was for a funeral, and that he was out of the country from January 10, 2002 through January 26, 2002, id. at 443 (Appl. for Cancellation of Removal at 2). But the evidence and testimony — at a hearing held over one year later — did not match this account. Leon-Leon could not remember whether he left before or after Christmas in 2001 or whether he returned in January or February of 2002. See id. at 231-35 (Tr. of Oct. 29, 2012 Hr’g at 120:3-124:11). Leon-Leon also testified that he was caught crossing the border and sent back to Mexico, only to enter the United States successfully the following day. See id. at 210-11, 249 (Tr. of Oct. 29, 2012 Hr’g at 99:6-100:4, 138:21-25). Department of Homeland Security records show that Leon-Leon was caught crossing the border on January 4, 2002, id. at 439-40 (Department of Homeland Security Border Apprehension Record), but, when confronted with this, Leon-Leon could not say whether he truly returned the following day, or on January 26, 2002, as his application for cancellation of removal suggested, *345 see id. at 250 (Tr. of Oct. 29, 2012 Hr’g at 139:1-11).

Those same records also reflect that Leon-Leon told the Border Patrol that his name was Arturo Hernandez-Hernandez. See id. at 439-40 (Department of Homeland Security Border Apprehension Record). During a June 2, 2011 interview with Department of Homeland Security personnel, he initially “claimed to never have been encountered by Immigration or Border Patrol, to have never used any other names and that his last entry to the United States was in 1996,” but later admitted that he was “Arturo Hernandez-Hernandez.” Id. at 438 (Department of Homeland Security Record of Deportable Alien at 2). Nonetheless, during his first hearing before the IJ, Leon-Leon again denied ever having been known by the name Arturo Hernandez-Hernandez, id. at 111 (Tr. of Aug. 16, 2011 Hr’g at 1:14-17), and his application for cancellation of removal stated that he had never been known by another name, id. at 442 (Appl. for Cancellation of Removal at 1).

Hardship to Isabel Leon: In seeking to show that his removal would cause severe and unusual hardship to his wife, Leon-Leon introduced evidence of her dependence on him due to her pseudotumor cerebri, which causes her to suffer severe headaches, blurred vision, dizziness, and nausea. See id. at 138, 141-42 (Tr. of Oct. 29, 2012 Hr’g at 27:20, 30:3-31:13). Isabel Leon indicated that this condition prevents her from driving, id. at 144 (Tr. of Oct. 29, 2012 Hr’g at 33:1-4), that Leon-Leon takes her to the doctor, id. (Tr, of Oct. 29, 2012 Hr’g at 33:5-8), and that she did not have anyone else in the United States who could help care for her, id. at 157 (Tr. of Oct. 29, 2012 Hr’g at 46:1-19). Isabel Leon is also largely unable to work or attend to household chores, which Leon-Leon takes care of. See id. at 148-52 (Tr. of Oct. 29, 2012 Hr’g at 37:22-41:23). In finding Isabel Leon not credible, the IJ seized on her admission that she has driven a car on one recent occasion, when traveling from Michigan to Maryland with a friend, for approximately one hour. See id. at 193 (Tr. of Oct. 29, 2012 Hr’g at 82:21-25). The IJ also relied upon the fact that, although Leon-Leon and Isabel Leon testified that her moving to Mexico with him would be a hardship because she would not be able to receive adequate medical care in Mexico, id. at 140, 218 (Tr. of Oct. 29, 2012 Hr’g at 29:2-3, 107:13-22), Leon-Leon later stated that he had never investigated the availability of appropriate medical treatment for Isabel Leon’s condition in Mexico, see id. at 291-92 (Tr. of Oct.

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