Margerita Martini v. Michael Mukasey

314 F. App'x 819
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 20, 2008
Docket07-4469
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 314 F. App'x 819 (Margerita Martini v. Michael Mukasey) 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
Margerita Martini v. Michael Mukasey, 314 F. App'x 819 (6th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge.

Petitioners, Margerita Martini (“Martini”) and her three children, Gjoneto Martini (“Gjoneto”), Antoneta Martini, and Ni-koleta Martini (collectively “the Martinis”), seek review of the Board of Immigration Appeals’ (“BIA”) order affirming the immigration judge’s (“IJ”) denial of their applications for asylum and withholding of removal. The Martinis argue that the IJ abandoned her neutral role when questioning Martini and that the BIA abused its discretion when it affirmed the IJ’s decision to deny the Martinis’ petition for asylum and withholding of removal on the grounds that Martini was not credible. For the reasons discussed below, we DENY the petition for review of the BIA’s order denying the Martinis asylum and withholding of removal.

I. BACKGROUND 1

Martini, an Albanian citizen, was born in Kosan, Albania in 1966. She married Ar-ben Martini in 1986, and the couple has three children. Both her family and her husband’s family opposed Communist rule in Albania and, as a result, suffered assassination attempts, imprisonment, and other forms of persecution while the Communists controlled the country. Martini and her husband were active in the Democratic Party (“DP”) and participated in demonstrations and protests against the Communist government. 2

From 1992 to 1997, when the DP controlled the government, the Martini family was not persecuted. The events supporting the Martinis’ petition for asylum began after the Socialist Party (“SP”), a coalition party that evolved from the former Communist Party, gained power. According to Martini’s statement accompanying her family’s application for asylum and withholding of removal, the Martinis’ problems began with threatening phone calls and letters. Martini’s statement asserts that these threats “became more concrete” when, on June 20, 1999, Communists attempted to kill her husband by shooting at his car. Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) at 382 (Martini Stmt, at 2); J.A. at 200-05 (Hr’g Tr. at 73-78). At her merits hearing, Martini testified that six months before this shooting, the nephew of the head of the SP tried to kill her husband by forcing his car off the road. J.A. at 200-05 (Hr’g Tr. at 73-78). During this period her husband was also beaten by the police.

As a result of these events, Martini’s husband left Albania for the United States on June 29, 1999. J.A. at 207-08 (Hr’g Tr. at 80-81). Martini testified that shortly after her husband left Albania, two attempts were made to kidnap her son, Gjoneto. The first time, four days after her husband left the country, some men approached Gjoneto and told him that they were friends of his father and that they wanted to give him a ride. Gjoneto ran away from these men and was not harmed. The second time, a Muslim-Communist man that Martini knew approached her while she was walking home with Gjoneto and told her that he was going to “replace” *821 her husband and kidnap her son. J.A. at 210-11 (Hr’g Tr. at 83-84). Gjoneto also testified regarding these events.

Martini testified that, in response to these incidents, her husband returned to Albania on July 9, 1999 to try to get Gjoneto out of Albania. J.A. at 220 (Hr’g Tr. at 93). Because the American embassy in Albania was closed at the time, the Martinis tried to get their son a visa in Bulgaria. The first time her husband and son tried to go to Bulgaria, the border officials would not let them leave Albania without permission from the child’s mother. Martini executed a letter giving her permission for Gjoneto to leave Albania, 3 and Gjoneto and her husband went to Bulgaria but were unable to obtain a visa. Following this failure, Martini and her husband sent Gjoneto out of Albania with a friend, hoping that the friend could get their son to the United States. Because Gjoneto had no documentation, he was stopped in Italy and held in a center for nine months before he was returned to Albania on July 26, 2000. Gjoneto also testified regarding the attempts to get him out of Albania.

In February 2000, Martini’s husband returned to the United States. 4 The final persecution that Martini described was her rape on October 16, 2000. Martini testified that as she was leaving a DP Women’s Union meeting, a police van stopped her. Officers got out, called her and her husband “rotten Democrat[s],” and forced her into the van with a gun. J.A. at 242-43 (Hr’g Tr. at 115-16). She testified that the masked officers 5 who took her continued to touch and insult her once she was in the van. These men took her to the police station where she was raped by four or five men over the course of a few hours. Martini testified that after this violent event, she moved in with her relatives and did not go out in public until she came to the United States. Martini first testified that she did not see a physician in Albania after she was raped, but when she was shown a report from an Albanian doctor, Martini admitted that she saw a criminology doctor in Albania after the assault, but was later treated in Yugoslavia only. 6 J.A. at 254-66 (Hr’g Tr. 127-39). On redirect examination, Martini stated that as a result of the rape she became pregnant and had an abortion in Yugoslavia. She testi *822 fied that she had not told anyone about this pregnancy or its termination before this redirect examination. J.A. at 309 (Hr’g Tr. at 182:18-25).

On April 30, 2001, Martini and her three children left Albania. After spending a night in Yugoslavia, the family arrived in the United States on May 1, 2001. The Martinis lacked valid documents, and the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”), the agency responsible for immigration matters at the time the Martinis arrived in the United States, started removal proceedings against them. See 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(7)(A)(i). Martini appeared before an IJ on August 28, 2002, and conceded removability. 7 A merits hearing was held on December 8, 2005. Martini testified regarding the events described above, and she told the IJ that she was afraid to return to Albania because the people who had threatened and hurt her family were still alive and powerful.

On December 8, 2005, the IJ issued an oral decision denying the Martinis asylum and withholding of removal on the grounds that Martini’s testimony was not credible. In addition to detailing a number of specific inconsistencies, the IJ found that the “complete lack of corroborating evidence” “further undermined” Martini’s credibility. J.A. at 66 (IJ Decision at 36). The IJ explained that she would have expected testimony from Martini’s husband and from some of their family members who had ostensibly been granted asylum in the United States.

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314 F. App'x 819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/margerita-martini-v-michael-mukasey-ca6-2008.