Masse v. Holder, Jr.

340 F. App'x 489
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 6, 2009
Docket08-9561
StatusUnpublished

This text of 340 F. App'x 489 (Masse v. Holder, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Masse v. Holder, Jr., 340 F. App'x 489 (10th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT **

MARY BECK BRISCOE, Circuit Judge.

Chantal Milford Masse, the lead petitioner, and her children, Sandy Lawrence Masse, Murielle Hussen Masse, and Mous-sa Scotty Masse, are citizens of Haiti. 1 They seek review of a final order of removal issued by the Bureau of Immigration Appeals (BIA), affirming a determination by an Immigration Judge (I J) denying the petitioners’ application for asylum, restriction on removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture (CAT). This court has previously denied petitioners’ motion for stay of voluntary departure and for stay of removal. We have jurisdiction under 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a), and we deny the petition for review.

Background

All of the petitioners entered the United States on B-2 visitor visas, albeit on different dates. Sandy entered on July 6, 2001, then Chantal arrived on August 28, 2004, with Murielle and Moussa entering on September 29, 2004. All overstayed their visas. After they were served with a notice to appear, they conceded removability, but requested asylum, restriction on removal, and CAT protection. Chantal Masse is the lead respondent, with her children being derivative applicants. Therefore, we do not consider the children’s applications separately from Chantal’s. See Witjaksono v. Holder, 573 F.3d 968, 972 n. 2 (10th Cir.2009).

Petitioners sought asylum based on their relationship to Guy Masse, husband of the lead petitioner and father of the children. They contend that they have suffered past persecution and have a well-founded fear of persecution based on Guy Masse’s political opinions and activities in Haiti.

The IJ held a hearing on March 22, 2007, at which the petitioners were represented by counsel. Chantal, Sandy, then *491 aged 19, and Murielle, then aged 15, testified. Chantal explained that Guy was elected mayor of Jaemel, Haiti, the town in which the family lived, and served in that capacity from 1995 to 2000. According to Chantal, he supported the then-president of Haiti, Jean Bertand Aristide, and was a member of the Labalas political party until 2003, when he changed his political affiliation and criticized Aristide and Labalas.

Chantal described an occurrence in 1991 where unidentified men came for Guy, but took her hostage and later released her. She said they came back a month later, so she and the children fled to the mountains for three months. She reported that the attackers had killed a dog and left it on her bed.

Chantal reported no politically motivated incidents between 1991 and 2004. She described a telephone call to her at home on August 13, 2004, in which the caller threatened to come get her. She testified that later that day, several hooded men shot guns in front of her house and then entered her house and destroyed property. She stated that before the men entered the house, she fled with the children out the back gate. Chantal then left her two youngest daughters, Murielle and Moussa, with her sister and flew to the United States. (Daughter Sandy had been in the United States since 2001).

During Chantal’s testimony, she produced a police report describing the home invasion dated July 2003, over a year before she claimed the incident occurred. At first, Chantal testified that she went to the courthouse and filed the report. Admin. R. at 225. Later, she stated that it was her sister who filed the report. Id. at 238. Furthering the apparent inconsistencies, the report reads as if Guy filed it: “a group of individuals ... forced the[ir] way into my privat[e] residence ... and with the help of my neighbor, I managed to save my life and my family; ivife and children.” Id. at 441 (emphasis added). But Chantal testified that it was “not possible” that Guy filed the report. Id. at 238.

Chantal and Murielle testified that a short time after the home invasion, a man 2 followed Murielle, then aged 14, after she left school. 3 She was able to elude him by running into the open door of a house. Thereafter, Chantal’s sister said she could no longer keep Murielle and Moussa, so she sent them to Chantal in the United States.

Sandy testified that she arrived in the United States in 2001, and stayed with her aunt until she moved to Philadelphia. She said she was afraid that if she returned to Haiti she would be kidnapped. Chantal, Sandy, and Murielle all testified that they did not know Guy’s whereabouts, that they would like to know where he is, but none had tried to reach him by telephone.

The IJ denied the application for relief, finding that Chantal was not credible for several reasons, including the discrepancies between her testimony about the 2004 home invasion and the police report.

The BIA issued a brief opinion by a single member, upholding the IJ’s determination that Chantal was not credible, stating, “[i]n sum, we find that the [IJ] *492 reasonably relied on [petitioners’] submission of a dubious police report in concluding that [they] have not presented a credible claim of past persecution on account of a protected ground.” Admin. R. at 3. Petitioners had submitted to the BIA another police report documenting the home invasion that precipitated their flight to the United States. The second police report was dated August 13, 2004. Id. at 97. But the second report, like the first, reads as if Guy filed it: “with the help and assistance of the nearest neighbors that we were able to save our life and that of our little kids as well as my wife, whereas I have gone underground.” Id. (emphasis added); see also id. (“Signed by GUY MASSE and Mrs. CAROLLE M. NO-VEMBRE”).

The BIA denied a remand based on this document because petitioners had not explained how the second report had been obtained, why there were two versions of the same report, or why there were discrepancies in the content. The BIA also affirmed the IJ’s ruling that petitioners had not established a well-founded fear of persecution, nor had they met their burden to establish eligibility for restriction on removal or CAT protection. Consequently, the BIA dismissed the appeal.

Petitioners appeal to this coui*t, challenging only the agency’s adverse credibility finding and arguing that the record as a whole does not support the finding. They characterize the police report as merely “flawed,” and argue that the report cannot supply the sole ground to affirm the agency’s credibility determination.

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340 F. App'x 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/masse-v-holder-jr-ca10-2009.