Martin Gonzalez-Mendez v. Loretta Lynch

613 F. App'x 529
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 2, 2015
Docket14-3831
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 613 F. App'x 529 (Martin Gonzalez-Mendez 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
Martin Gonzalez-Mendez v. Loretta Lynch, 613 F. App'x 529 (6th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge.

Martin Ruben Gonzalez Mendez (“Gonzalez”), a native and citizen of Mexico, seeks judicial review of a decision by the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”). The BIA affirmed the decision by an Immigration Judge (“IJ”) denying Gonzalez’s application for cancellation of removal under 8 U.S.C. § 1229b or voluntary depar *531 ture under 8 U.S.C. § 1229c. For the reasons set forth below, we DISMISS the petition in part for lack of jurisdiction and DENY the remainder of the petition.

I. BACKGROUND

The Department of Homeland Security began removal proceedings against Gonzalez after he was arrested in 2010 for driving with a suspended license. Gonzalez was charged with entering the United States without admission or parole. Gonzalez conceded removability and sought cancellation of removal or voluntary departure.

The IJ held hearings on two separate dates with two different interpreters to assess Gonzalez’s petition. Two witnesses testified, Gonzalez (in Spanish) and Penny Burillo (in English). Gonzalez testified that he arrived in the United States in April 2000. 3/7 Hr’g Tr. at 70 (AR 268). He initially testified that his first job was at Burmeister Farms beginning in 2001, but then he later testified that he began working there in 2000 under his cousin’s name. Id. at 81-86 (AR 279-84). He claimed his three U.S. citizen children would face significant hardship if he were removed to Mexico, explaining that their mother cannot support them because she cannot drive and does not work. Id. at 94 (AR 292). Although Gonzalez initially testified that his children would remain in the United States if he were removed because of the violence in Mexico and because he could not obtain work there to support them, he later testified that they “[mjaybe” would stay in the United States. Id. at 95, 114 (AR 293, 312). Burillo testified that she met Gonzalez in September 2000 when she was working as a translator for the Michigan Department of Human Services. Id. at 17 (AR 215). She explained that one of Gonzalez’s roommates at the time died in a car accident, and she met Gonzalez when she went to his residence to obtain help in completing the necessary paperwork for transporting the deceased back to Mexico. Id. at 17-18 (AR 215-16). Burillo also testified that she knew Gonzalez because they attend the same church. Id. at 22 (AR 220).

On October 2, 2012, the IJ denied Gonzalez’s requests for cancellation of removal or voluntary departure. IJ Decision at 41 (AR 107). The IJ found that neither Bu-rillo nor Gonzalez was credible. Id. at 12, 40 (AR 78, 106). The IJ noted several inconsistencies between Burillo’s and Gonzalez’s testimony or application, including that the address Burillo gave for where Gonzalez was living when she first met him, 96 Ferry Street, was not listed on his application, and that she thought his current address was 62 Elliott Street, when in fact he had listed his address as 62 Ellis Street. Id. at 13-14 (AR 79-80). As for Gonzalez, the IJ focused on multiple inconsistencies between Gonzalez’s application and Gonzalez’s testimony at the hearing, as well as documentary evidence he submitted, including that Gonzalez’s father filed a visa petition on his behalf stating that Gonzalez had arrived in the United States in 1997; that the dates during which Gonzalez testified he lived at various addresses were inconsistent with his application, and that his only explanation for failing to list the 96 Ferry Street address on his application was that he forgot to include it; that Gonzalez first denied working at Burmeister Farms prior to 2001 and then testified later that he started working there in 2000; that Gonzalez did not list any aliases in his application, but then testified at his hearing that he had worked at Burmeister Farms in 2000 under his cousin’s name; that Gonzalez first testified that his cousin’s name was Roberto, but, after the W-2s for this period of employment Gonzalez produced at the second *532 hearing listed his cousin’s name as Norberto, changed his testimony to say his cousin’s name was Norberto; and that Gonzalez included only farm jobs on his application but then testified at his hearing that he had also worked in a grocery store for eleven years. Id. at 20-26, 34-35, 39-40 (AR 86-92, 100-01, 105-06). The IJ further emphasized that Gonzalez spelled Burillo’s name as Murillo, despite testifying that he had known her since 2000. Id. at 28 (AR 94). Finally, the IJ noted that one of the earning statements submitted by Gonzalez listed an address that was not included in his application and was in an entirely different town than the rest of the other addresses he had listed. Id. at 32 (AR 98).

As a result of these adverse-credibility findings, the IJ found that Gonzalez had not demonstrated continuous presence in the United States for at least 10 years, and instead suggested that Gonzalez likely arrived in 2001 or 2002. Id. at 39-40 (AR 105-06). The IJ also found that Gonzalez had “not demonstrated the requisite degree of hardship to his children, and that they would, in fact, go back with him to Mexico because his wife is here illegally.” Id. at 38 (AR 104). The IJ explained that Gonzalez had not demonstrated that he could not get a job in Mexico, that his children speak' Spanish and are in good health, and that Burillo had testified that the children could attend school through high school in Mexico. Id. at 38-39 (AR 104-05). Finally, the IJ found that Gonzalez had not demonstrated good moral character because he had “quite clearly prevaricated in his testimony about working under Roberto’s name ... and never working at Burmeister Farms prior to the year 2001.” Id. at 40 (AR 106).

The IJ also denied Gonzalez voluntary departure. Id. at 41 (AR 107). The IJ found that because “he prevaricated to the Court intentionally about working at Bur-meister Farms under the name Roberto,” he cannot demonstrate the statutorily required good moral character. Id.

The BIA affirmed the IJ. The BIA found that the IJ’s adverse credibility determinations were not clearly erroneous. BIA Decision at 2 (AR 4). Although the BIA acknowledged that Gonzalez might have innocently forgotten to include all of the places he lived given the many times he had moved, the BIA emphasized that Gonzalez’s “errors are much more substantial” than that, and listed many of the same inconsistencies highlighted by the IJ. Id. at 1-2 (AR 3-4). The BIA found that Gonzalez’s children would not face “significantly greater” hardship because his children do not have any serious health problems and they are doing, well in school. Id. at 2 (AR 4). And the BIA determined that the IJ appropriately denied voluntary departure because “[t]he record shows the respondent and his witness were not entirely truthful with the court.” Id.

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