Matte v. Gonzales

158 F. App'x 726
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 20, 2005
Docket04-3908
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 158 F. App'x 726 (Matte v. Gonzales) 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
Matte v. Gonzales, 158 F. App'x 726 (6th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

R. GUY COLE, Jr., Circuit Judge.

The petitioners seek review of a final order of the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) dismissing the petitioners’ appeal of the Immigration Judge’s (IJ) denial of their application for asylum. For the following reasons, we DENY the petition for review.

I.

Lead petitioner Khzel Jameel Yousif (“lead petitioner,” or ‘Yousif’), his spouse Ahlaam Yousef Matte, and their son Saohan Khzel Jameel (collectively, “the petitioners”), are natives and citizens of Iraq. They identify their ethnicity as Chaldean and their religion as Christian. According to State Department reports, Christians comprise less than three percent of the Iraqi population, and Chaldean Christians comprise a smaller subset of that percent. At the time the petitioners last resided in Iraq, political power rested in the Arab Ba’ath Socialist Party, controlled by Saddam Hussein and his family.

In April 2001, the petitioners left Iraq with the intent to relocate to the United States. The petitioners traveled first to Jordan, Ecuador, Guatemala, and Mexico before entering the United States in December 2001 and requesting asylum. The Immigration and Naturalization Service (now the Department of Homeland Security, both referred to hereinafter as the “Service”) initiated removal proceedings within a week of the petitioners’ arrival, and the petitioners admitted they had arrived as aliens and were subject to removal but requested the opportunity to file an application for asylum, request for with *728 holding of removal, and request for relief under the Convention Against Torture.

The applications were consolidated into the lead petitioner’s application and a hearing was conducted on April 29, 2003. The following facts were established through Yousifs written asylum application and hearing testimony: Yousif was granted refugee status in the United States in 1976 because of fear of the Ba’ath political party then in power in Iraq, but eleven months after obtaining asylum returned to Iraq to get married. Yousif again visited the United States in 2000 for fifty-nine days, but returned to Iraq without seeking permission for a longer stay. Yousifs 2001 application for asylum describes “mistreatment, harm, and threats throughout [his] life in Iraq because of [his] religion and race.” Yousif was jailed for over a month in 1991 for allegedly “bad mouthing” Saddam Hussein. The incident arose when a cousin of Hussein arrived at Yousifs restaurant and physically assaulted the workers. The next day Yousif arrived at his restaurant to find it surrounded by men with machine guns who took Yousif and his employees away in trucks. When Yousif asked why he and his employees were being detained, he was cursed at and told that they had insulted the president. After over a month, Yousif and his workers were transported to another facility where they were searched and told that Hussein was releasing them. Yousif said the release was characterized as an amnesty for those imprisoned for political reasons, but he disclaims doing or saying anything to insult Hussein. Upon his release from prison, Yousif decided to close his restaurant.

Approximately seven years later, Yousif opened a liquor store. Yousifs application for asylum claims that he was routinely called upon to supply free liquor to the Iraqi police. Yousif testified that on one occasion a captain with three stars on his shoulder demanded a free bottle of whiskey and instructed Yousif to report to the station the next day. When Yousif arrived at the station, it was indicated to him that his supply of free liquor was expected to become routine. In or around July 2000, on a day when Yousifs store was closed, a cousin of Hussein and a second, large man came to Yousifs home demanding alcohol. When Yousif refused to serve them because of legal restrictions on liquor sales, the official struck him and one of the men pointed a gun at Yousif and threatened to shoot him. The altercation ended with the two men laughing and leaving. The incident was witnessed by Yousifs son. Yous-if also testified that his liquor store was burned down in November 2000. He indicated that the police performed a cursory investigation. Yousif presented no evidence concerning who started the fire, but testified, “I don’t know if it was the government or Islam. But mostly I would think it was because of Islam.” When asked why he believed this, he responded “because they hate us as Christians in general.”

After the fire Yousif sold his liquor license and what remained of his store. Yousif did not mention this incident in his asylum application, and when asked the reason, explained that he did not include every incident on his application because he expected to elaborate when he came to court. Yousifs testimony also included a description of health problems and mobility limitations, his concern that his children would be forced to serve in the Iraqi military, his brother’s imprisonment on a firearms charge arising apparently from self-defense to an assault by guards, Yousifs generalized fear of the majority Islamic community, and Yousifs second-hand account of a recent Muslim attack upon a Chaldean Christian home.

*729 Between the time of the petitioners’ departure from Iraq in April 2001 and the time of their asylum hearing in April 2008, Iraq underwent a dramatic regime change. At the hearing, neither Yousif nor the Service introduced written documentation of current events in Iraq. The IJ asked whether the Service had information on “the fall of the regime, which is critical to this application,” and the Service responded that it assumed judicial notice would be taken of those events. In its cross-examination of Yousif, the Service asked why he could not return to Iraq now that Hussein’s government was no longer in power. Yousif first expressed a desire to stay with his siblings in the United States, described his physical disability and lack of economic resources in Iraq, and then expressed a generalized fear of the Shi’a Muslim majority and the type of new government that would be imposed.

The IJ delivered an oral decision denying petitioners’ application for asylum and withholding of removal, and denying their requests for relief under the Convention Against Torture. The IJ’s detailed opinion stressed inconsistencies between Yous-if s testimony and application, and suggested that the testimony was embellished. The IJ took judicial notice of the fall of Saddam Hussein’s regime, the power vacuum in Iraq, and the two-thirds majority of Shi’a Muslims, but noted Yousif s failure to provide documentary evidence of Shiite attacks on Christians or significant enmity between the two groups. The IJ concluded that the recent regime change eliminated the grounds for Yousif s alleged fear of persecution, and that there was no objective evidence in the record to support a fear of persecution from the Shiite majority. In evaluating the significance of Yous-ifs claims of past persecution, the IJ stressed Yousif s voluntary returns to Iraq in 1976 and 1990 as well as the lengthy stretches of time when Yousif lived in Iraq without incident. The IJ also observed that no conclusions could be reached regarding the cause of the store fire and therefore this incident could not support a claim of persecution.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ablaye Mbodj v. Eric H. Holder, Jr.
394 F. App'x 239 (Sixth Circuit, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 F. App'x 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matte-v-gonzales-ca6-2005.