Mathusala Menghistab v. Merrick Garland

37 F.4th 1240
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 21, 2022
Docket21-2099
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 37 F.4th 1240 (Mathusala Menghistab v. Merrick Garland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mathusala Menghistab v. Merrick Garland, 37 F.4th 1240 (7th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 21‐2099 MATHUSALA MENGHISTAB, Petitioner, v.

MERRICK GARLAND, Attorney General of the United States, Respondent. ____________________

Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals. No. A026‐649‐212 ____________________

SUBMITTED JANUARY 5, 2022 — DECIDED JUNE 21, 2022 ____________________

Before KANNE,1 WOOD, and BRENNAN, Circuit Judges. WOOD, Circuit Judge. Petitioner Mathusala Menghistab, at the time a lawful permanent resident of the United States, pleaded guilty to rape in Indiana state court in 2011. Soon thereafter, the Department of Homeland Security (the

1 Circuit Judge Kanne died on June 16, 2022, and did not participate in the decision of this case, which is being resolved under 28 U.S.C. § 46(d) by a quorum of the panel. 2 No. 21‐2099

Department) began the process of removing him to Ethiopia. Because of his rape conviction and resulting sentence, Men‐ ghistab was barred from most forms of relief, including asy‐ lum, discretionary withholding of removal, and waiver of re‐ movability. He was eligible only to apply for deferral of re‐ moval under the Convention against Torture, and he did so. An immigration judge denied him relief and the Board of Im‐ migration Appeals (the Board) affirmed. But the removal pro‐ cess was interrupted when Ethiopia refused to issue Men‐ ghistab a travel document. He was released from custody in 2013 and continued to live in the United States until, in late 2020, Ethiopia changed course and agreed to issue the travel document. That development prompted Department officials to de‐ tain Menghistab pending removal. He moved to reopen his case, citing the changed circumstances in Ethiopia since his proceedings closed, occasioned by the outbreak in November 2020 of the civil war in the Tigray region in northern Ethiopia. The Tigray War has resulted in widespread attacks on civil‐ ians. Ethnic Eritreans, such as Menghistab, have suffered par‐ ticularly severe human‐rights violations. The Board denied the motion without an evidentiary hearing, and Menghistab petitioned this court for review. We conclude that a new hear‐ ing is needed to address two key issues: the materiality of the war to Menghistab’s risk of torture; and the question whether Menghistab is an Ethiopian citizen. We therefore grant Men‐ ghistab’s petition for review and remand for further proceed‐ ings. I The events giving rise to this case date back hundreds of years, to the emergence of the numerous ethnolinguistic No. 21‐2099 3

groups that together make up modern Ethiopian society. In the interest of brevity, though, we begin the story in 1977, when Colonel Mengistu Haile Mariam took power in Ethio‐ pia. Colonel Mengistu ruled Ethiopia as a Marxist dictator, imprisoning many political prisoners. One of them was Men‐ ghistab’s father, who was detained and jailed on several occa‐ sions during the late 1970s and early 1980s. The Menghistab family is of Eritrean origin, and during that period Eritrean revolutionaries were waging a war of independence against the Ethiopian government. Menghistab’s father apparently was detained because he was suspected of supporting the in‐ dependence movement. Shortly after a stint behind bars ended in 1982, Menghistab’s father was able to obtain a stu‐ dent visa, which the family used to flee to the United States. In 1988, Menghistab and his family were granted asylum. Menghistab adjusted status to become a lawful permanent resident a year later. He has resided in the United States ever since. Menghistab’s parents became naturalized citizens around 2000, but Menghistab never took that step. In 2010, Menghistab’s parents traveled to Ethiopia on U.S. passports. They were detained briefly at the airport but were then per‐ mitted to enter and were not subjected to any further adverse treatment during their trip. As best we can tell from the rec‐ ord, Menghistab himself has not traveled to Ethiopia since his family fled the country in 1982. In 2011, in an Indiana state court, Menghistab was charged with and pleaded guilty to rape. Upon learning of that con‐ viction, the Department of Homeland Security asserted that he was removable as an aggravated felon. See 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii) (“Any alien who is convicted of an aggra‐ vated felony at any time after admission is deportable.”); id. 4 No. 21‐2099

§ 1101(a)(43)(A) (defining “aggravated felony” to include “rape”). Because of his rape conviction and resulting six‐year sentence, Menghistab was ineligible for asylum, discretionary withholding of removal, and a waiver of removability. He sought and was denied deferral of removal pursuant to the Torture Convention, but, as we have explained, he was not removed in 2013 because Ethiopia refused to issue an appro‐ priate travel document. To explain events since 2013, we must briefly return to the historical narrative. In 1991, Eritrea won de facto independence from Ethiopia, with de jure independence following two years later. Since that time, Eritrea has been ruled by an oppressive dictatorship led by Isaias Afwerki. Also in 1991, an Ethiopian revolutionary coalition overthrew Colonel Mengistu. The Tig‐ ray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) spearheaded that coali‐ tion. The word “Tigray” in that organization’s name refers to a region in Ethiopia’s far north, along the border with Eritrea. Tigrayans, who reside mainly in that region, are the fourth‐ largest ethnic group in Ethiopia, making up about six percent of the population. Despite their limited population share, Tig‐ rayans have dominated post‐revolutionary Ethiopian politics because of the TPLF’s central role in overthrowing the Men‐ gistu dictatorship. Importantly for our purposes, Tigrayans are not the same ethnic group as the Tigrinya or the Tigre, the two largest ethnic groups in Eritrea. (That said, the Eritrean Tigrinya and the Ethiopian Tigrayans speak different dialects of the same language, which is—confusingly—also called Ti‐ grinya, while the Tigre speak a closely related but not mutu‐ ally intelligible language called Tigre.) Ethiopia, led by the TPLF, and Eritrea, led by Afwerki, fought a bloody war from 1998 to 2000. (A cold(er) war No. 21‐2099 5

continued until 2018.) During the period of active belliger‐ ence, the Ethiopian government expelled thousands of ethnic Eritreans, including many who held Ethiopian citizenship. A substantial population also moved in the other direction. As a result of the violence and destabilization along the border during the war, as well as the depressed economic conditions in Eritrea and the oppressive practices of the Afwerki regime, a large Eritrean refugee community wound up in Ethiopia. Before the ongoing Ethiopian civil war broke out, many of those refugees were residing in camps in Tigray. In April 2018, Abiy Ahmed Ali became the prime minister of Ethiopia. Abiy is an ethnic Oromo, not a Tigrayan. The Oromo are the plurality ethnic group in Ethiopia, accounting for about 35 percent of the overall population. They reside mainly in the south, south‐central, and west‐central portions of the country. Though he was a member of a party in the rul‐ ing coalition when elected, Abiy’s election marked a sea change in Ethiopian politics, because it brought about the end of Tigrayan domination of that coalition. Since he took office, Abiy has marginalized the TPLF and its political supporters, designating the organization as a terrorist group and recon‐ stituting the ruling coalition to exclude Tigrayans.

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