Melaj v. Mukasey

282 F. App'x 354
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 6, 2008
Docket06-3629
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 282 F. App'x 354 (Melaj v. Mukasey) 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
Melaj v. Mukasey, 282 F. App'x 354 (6th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

CLAY, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner Gjovalin Melaj, a citizen of Albania, appeals the Board of Immigration Appeals’ (“BIA”) determination that he was not entitled to asylum pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1158, or withholding of removal pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1281(b)(3). Because substantial evidence supports the BIA’s determination that Petitioner was not entitled to relief, we AFFIRM the decision of the BIA denying Petitioner relief.

BACKGROUND

A. Statement of Facts

Petitioner Gjovalin Melaj was an Albanian policeman from 1990 until 1996. On December 5, 1996, Petitioner was ordered to provide security for government buildings and property during a sizable political protest in Shkodra, Albania. During the second day of the protest, some of the demonstrators became “very aggressive” and began throwing stones at Petitioner and his fellow police officers. As a result, Petitioner was ordered to fire upon the crowd. (J.A. 268) Petitioner, however, felt it would be wrong to shoot people for engaging in a political protest, and he refused to follow this order. Instead, Petitioner turned in his weapons to his supervisor, and informed the supervisor that he was leaving because “I was not going to shoot against the people for any political reason.” (Id.)

On the morning of December 24, 1996, Petitioner’s home was surrounded by “more than 50 or 60 police” who forcibly entered the home and took Petitioner into custody. (J.A. 269-70) For the next 48 hours, Petitioner was detained at the police station, where he was tied up by police officers wearing masks, kicked and beaten with fists and a rubber stick. As a result of these two days of torture, Petitioner suffered headaches, trouble breathing, a full-body bruise and a shoulder injury that prevented him from moving his hand or his arm. Petitioner was released and told to report for a court hearing on January 3, 1997. Because he feared that police would again seize him if he returned home, however, Petitioner fled to his aunt’s home in the village of Kastrat.

While Petitioner was in hiding, his brother enlisted the aid of the city of Shkodra’s “Kryeplaku,” a kind of ombudsman who represents the people of a region in their grievances against the government. Through the Kryeplaku, Petitioner and his family learned that police were searching for him, and Petitioner and his family soon decided that he needed to leave the country for his own safety. Petitioner’s parents sold their home and their land to raise money for Petitioner’s exodus. Petitioner’s brother used this money to acquire an airplane ticket to New York and a passport for Petitioner.

On the night of January 11, 1997, Petitioner left his pregnant wife Tatiana and his sixteen month-old daughter behind, and traveled under cover of darkness to the city of Tirané, where he was placed on a plane to Germany. After a three-hour layover in Germany, Petitioner boarded another plane to New York. Back in Albania, Petitioner’s brother eventually arranged for Tatiana to join Petitioner in the United States, and the couple’s second child is an American citizen born in the United States.

At the time of Petitioner’s detention, torture and eventual exodus from Albania, the country was governed by Albania’s Democratic Party. Shortly after Petitioner’s departure, however, financial strains on the Albanian people led to a near-total *356 collapse of the Democratic government. According to the State Department, “[t]he collapse in mid-January [1997] of various “pyramid” schemes that cost the life savings of many Albanians led to fighting and disorder, bringing the country to the edge of anarchy.” (J.A. 387) On June 29, 1997, the nation held an emergency election in an effort to rebuild a government with a mandate to rule, and the Democratic government was replaced by one led by Albania’s Socialist Party.

According to the Immigration Judge’s (“IJ”) findings below, Albania made “slow and steady progress towards democratization and stabilization,” under the Socialist government. (J.A. 20) The IJ found that there were no reports of politically motivated killings or disappearances under the Socialists, and specifically that there is no evidence to suggest that the Socialist government would persecute a former police officer for refusing an order to fire upon demonstrators protesting the previous Democratic government. 1

On July 3, 2005, another election returned the Democratic Party to power in Albania.

B. Procedural History

On April 9, 1998, Petitioner filed an application for asylum and withholding of removal, including his wife Tatiana as a dependant. The government responded by initiating deportation proceedings against Petitioner, and in a June 26, 1998 hearing Petitioner conceded removability but again raised his claim for asylum and withholding.

In a November 2, 1998 order, the IJ denied Petitioner’s claims. In so holding, the IJ concluded that when Petitioner’s supervisor ordered him to open fire on a crowd of civilians, this order was “not something for a police officer in [Petitioner’s] shoes to question unless the act was patently illegal or obviously illegal.” (J.A. 53) Moreover, the IJ held that when Petitioner was detained and tortured for refusing this order, such punishment “was not done for any imputed political reasons, and it certainly wasn’t disproportionate given the nature of his acts.” Based on his determination that the nation of Albania was justified in torturing officers who refuse to fire on largely defenseless civilians, and his determination that Petitioner’s decision to refuse this order had no political content, the IJ denied Petitioner’s claims for asylum and withholding of removal.

Petitioner appealed the IJ’s determination to the BIA, and in a June 24, 2003 order, the BIA reversed. Assuming, without deciding, that Petitioner’s description of his actions was credible, the BIA held that a police officer’s refusal to fire upon civilian political demonstrators was itself a political act. Accordingly, “any disproportionate punishment he consequently might have received should be considered to be persecution on account of enumerated ground.” (J.A. 65) Nevertheless, the BIA remanded this case to the IJ to determine whether or not Petitioner credibly testified as to his actions during the political protest and his subsequent detention and torture.

On remand, the IJ determined that Petitioner’s testimony was credible, finding that “what he claimed happened to him, happened to him in Albania.” (J.A. 17) Nevertheless, the IJ remained unconvinced that Petitioner was entitled to asy *357 lum or withholding of removal. Though acknowledging that he could not directly contradict the BIA’s remand order, the IJ expressed incredulity towards that order, complaining that he “is unable to see how a laying down of a weapon and abandoning a post by a police officer is a political act.” (J.A. 18) Restricted as he was, however, by the BIA’s determination, the IJ turned his attention to the legal significance of Petitioner’s detention and torture.

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Related

In re the Extradition of Mujagic
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304 F. App'x 382 (Sixth Circuit, 2008)

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