Maria Claudia Cardoza v. U.S. Atty. Gen.

203 F. App'x 284
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 30, 2006
Docket06-11708
StatusUnpublished

This text of 203 F. App'x 284 (Maria Claudia Cardoza v. U.S. Atty. Gen.) 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
Maria Claudia Cardoza v. U.S. Atty. Gen., 203 F. App'x 284 (11th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Petitioner Maria Claudia Cardoza, a citizen of Colombia, seeks review of the Board of Immigration Appeals’s (“BIA”) decision affirming the Immigration Judge’s (“IJ”) order denying her application for asylum and withholding of removal. 1 The BIA held that Cardoza failed to establish past persecution or a well-founded fear of future persecution based on a protected ground, and failed to show that it is more likely than not that she will be persecuted in the future. Because substantial evidence supported the BIA’s decision, we DENY Cardoza’s petition.

I. BACKGROUND

Cardoza entered the United States at Miami, Florida, on 6 October 2002. See AR at 266. Cardoza admitted to the Immigration and Naturalization Service 2 (“INS”) that she was a citizen and native of Colombia and that she had come to the U.S. to apply for asylum. Id. at 273-74. She also admitted that she had overstayed her visitor’s visa the last time she had been in the country, and that she had paid 200,000 Colombian pesos to get a fraudulent back-dated stamp on her passport to hide this fact. Id. at 276. She stated that she left Colombia because the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (“FARC”) guerillas had been threatening to kill her family since 1998, and she feared returning to Colombia. Id. at 276, 278.

At a credible fear interview, Cardoza testified that she “was involved with” the Liberal Party in Colombia, that she “help[ed] peasants and farmers in the rural areas with various activities[,] in-cludfing] farming, education, etc.,” and that the FARC threatened to harm her if she continued to help the farmers. Id. at *286 268. She further testified that her husband was a police officer, and that the FARC also wanted to harm her and her husband “because he refused to provide them with information about police operations.” Id. Finally, she stated that in December 1998, “several men went to [her] house” looking for her and her husband and beat her mother. Id.

The INS subsequently issued a Notice to Appear (“NTA”) to Cardoza. Id. at 287-88. The NTA charged that Cardoza was removable pursuant to INA § 212(a)(6)(C)(i), 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i), as “an alien who, by fraud or willfully misrepresenting a material fact, [sought to procure] admission into the United States.” Id. The NTA also charged that she was inadmissible pursuant to INA § 212(a)(7)(B)(i)(II), 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(7)(B)(i)(II), “because [she was] a nonimmigrant who [was] not in possession of a valid nonimmigrant visa or border crossing identification card at the time of application for admission into the United States.” Id.

On 10 June 2003, Cardoza filed an application for asylum and for withholding of removal. See id. at 216-17. She sought asylum based on her political opinion and her membership in a particular social group. Id. at 216-20. Her asylum application contained many of the same allegations Cardoza made in her credible fear interview, including persecution by the FARC due to her political activity in the Liberal Party and her husband’s employment as a police officer. Id. She also stated that she was persecuted because her daughter was born in the United States, and the FARC had designated her daughter a military target, as they had all U.S. citizens. Id.

At her removal hearing, Cardoza admitted to proper service and receipt of the NTA and admitted all but one of the allegations and the second charge. Id. at 72-73. The IJ found that the charge Cardoza did not concede was true “based on her admissions.” Id. at 73. Cardoza also submitted copies of a number of documents, including her membership card in the Liberal Party, dated 30 March 2000. 3 Id. at 161-62. However, the IJ found that this evidence was untimely under the immigration court’s local rules, and did not admit the documents into evidence. Id. at 89-97.

Cardoza testified that in 1990, while living in Bogota, she joined the Liberal Party. Id. at 104-05. After that, she visited Tolima every two or three weeks. Id. at 105. There she “participated in ... political activities, ... checking the IDs of the peasants and telling them where they had to go to vote” and organizing education for “the peasants” in “agricultural techniques for better farming.” Id. at 106-07.

In response to questions regarding when the threats from the FARC began, Cardo-za stated the threats “[had] always been there more or less since 1986.” Id. at 106. However, when questioned again she stated that they began in 1998. Id. at 108. When this discrepancy was pointed out to her, she stated that “the threats [had] always been there since 1982, when two of my brother’s cousins were kidnaped” and taken to a distant village by the FARC, never to be seen again. Id. at 109-11. She further testified that, in 1986, when her stepfather died, the guerillas wanted to take Cardoza’s stepfather’s four children. Id. at 111. To avoid this, her family took the children to the Bogota. Id.

*287 When asked about the next time she had contact with the FARC, Cardoza testified that in 1998, prior to her first trip to the United States, she began receiving threatening phone calls at her home in Bogota. Id. at 112. She stated that the first time the FARC called her, they told her that “it would go well” for her if her husband at the police station helped them. Id. at 113. In subsequent calls, the caller would simply tell Cardoza that they were going to kill her. Id. at 113-14. Cardoza stated that she received approximately five such calls in 1998. Id. at 114. In addition to the phone calls, Cardoza testified that people to whom she delivered bread would tell her that “they had been asking about [her].” Id. at 112.

In response to the threats, and because she was pregnant and feared miscarrying, Cardoza traveled to the United States in July 1998. Id. at 105-06. She gave birth in November 1998, and in December 1998 she returned to Colombia after learning that her mother had been attacked her home in Bogota by FARC guerillas. Id. at 114-15. She testified that after her return, she received phone calls threatening to kill her and her family, and asking her to influence a local politician in Tolima with whom she was acquainted, Alvaro Esquivel, in order to help the guerillas. Id. at 116,119-20.

Cardoza visited the United States for a second time in October 1999. Id. at 103, 122.

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