Melvin Hercules-Torres v. Matthew Whitaker

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 29, 2018
Docket17-2071
StatusUnpublished

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Melvin Hercules-Torres v. Matthew Whitaker, (4th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

UNPUBLISHED

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

No. 17-2071

MELVIN BLADEMIR HERCULES-TORRES,

Petitioner,

v.

MATTHEW G. WHITAKER, Acting Attorney General,

Respondent.

On Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals.

Argued: September 25, 2018 Decided: November 29, 2018

Before KING and KEENAN, Circuit Judges, and John A. GIBNEY, Jr., United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia, sitting by designation.

Petition for review denied by unpublished per curiam opinion.

ARGUED: Benjamin R. Winograd, IMMIGRANT & REFUGEE APPELLATE CENTER, LLC, Alexandria, Virginia, for Petitioner. Patricia E. Bruckner, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Respondent. ON BRIEF: Laura Jacobson, L&L IMMIGRATION LAW, PLLC, Alexandria, Virginia, for Petitioner. Chad A. Readler, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Bernard A. Joseph, Senior Litigation Counsel, Office of Immigration Litigation Civil Division, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Respondent.

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit. PER CURIAM:

Petitioner Melvin Blademir Hercules-Torres, a native of El Salvador, petitions for

appellate review of the September 2017 decision and order of the Board of Immigration

Appeals (the “BIA”) that rejected his applications for asylum, withholding of removal,

and protection under the Convention Against Torture (the “BIA Decision”). As

explained below, we deny the petition for review.

I.

A.

In April 2014, Hercules-Torres departed El Salvador at the age of seventeen,

seeking to escape a violent gang called Mara 18. In May 2014, Hercules-Torres entered

the United States as an unaccompanied minor child. Later that month, the immigration

authorities apprehended him in Texas and initiated removal proceedings before an

Immigration Judge (the “IJ”).

In October 2015, Hercules-Torres applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and

protection under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). He sought relief for several

reasons, including fear of violence due to religion, anti-gang political opinions, and

membership in a social group of “young tattooed Salvadoran men,” as well as his belief

that he would be tortured if he returned to El Salvador. See A.R. 269-315, 982-83. 1 In

1 Citations herein to “A.R.__” refer to the contents of the Administrative Record filed in this proceeding.

2 order to allow a full administrative assessment of his claims, the IJ closed the removal

proceedings.

While Hercules-Torres awaited further action on his claims for relief from

removal, he resided with an aunt in Virginia. During his time there, he attended high

school and worked at a Mexican restaurant. After being arrested three times, however,

the immigration authorities again detained Hercules-Torres and resumed removal

proceedings. On February 7, 2017, the authorities determined that he was not eligible for

asylum and referred his case to the IJ for handling of the removal process.

B.

On February 8, 2017, the IJ conducted a hearing on the removal issues.

Conceding removability before the IJ, Hercules-Torres pursued his requests for asylum,

withholding of removal, and CAT protection. By his testimony (which was credited by

the IJ), that of his brother Wilfredo, and other evidence, Hercules-Torres sought to prove

to the IJ that, upon being returned to El Salvador, he would be harmed due to religion,

political opinions, and social group. He also claimed that he would be persecuted and

tortured. The following factual background was developed in the IJ proceedings.

1.

Hercules-Torres was born in 1997 in Apopa, San Salvador, where he lived with

his father, mother, and siblings. While growing up in El Salvador, Hercules-Torres lived

a productive and law-abiding life. He held a job with an auto repair shop and attended

school, studying to be a mechanic. Hercules-Torres was a Christian who attended church

three or four times a week and participated in religious programs for vulnerable youth.

3 Despite his background, however, Hercules-Torres could not escape the gang-related

activities in that country.

Members of the Mara 18 gang first approached Hercules-Torres in the fall of

2013, when he was sixteen years old. Consistent with the practices of such gangs in El

Salvador, Mara 18 recruited students of about that age to deepen its roster. After making

contact with Hercules-Torres, the gang members approached him several times a week,

trying to get him involved with their illicit activities.

Hercules-Torres resisted the Mara 18 recruitment efforts. He informed the gang

members that he could not join because of his religion. More specifically, Hercules-

Torres said he would not join because he was a Christian and did not “want to be a part of

the things they do.” See A.R. 330. Despite those repudiations, Mara 18 did not abandon

its recruitment efforts. The gang members offered Hercules-Torres clothing, and they

asserted that it was better for him to be a part of the gang than to attend church. This

pattern — the gang’s request that he join, followed by Hercules-Torres’s explanation to

them that he could not join due to his religious beliefs — occurred multiple times. As the

gang members pursued him, Hercules-Torres feared that his refusal to join would lead to

violence against him and his family.

One day as Hercules-Torres was leaving school, he was approached by a member

of Mara 18 who was in his early twenties. At first, the gangster asked Hercules-Torres to

“hang out.” See A.R. 207. After Hercules-Torres rebuffed the offer and declined to join

the gang on religious grounds, the gang member — wielding a knife — warned that “it

was better to be with the gang than to be a Christian.” Id. at 330. The gangster told

4 Hercules-Torres that, if he did not join Mara 18, its members would not only kill him,

they would also make certain that his “family would see the consequences.” Id. A group

led by the older gang member then restrained Hercules-Torres and tattooed him. The

tattoo — three dots on Hercules-Torres’s right middle finger — is the Mara 18 symbol

representing “jail, death, [and] hospital.” Id. at 209. According to Hercules-Torres, the

gang tattooed him because he is “a Christian and in [his] church [they] spoke against

being a gang member and against [the gang], because . . . they are no good for [his]

country.” Id. Prior to the tattooing, the gang members had never physically harmed

Hercules-Torres but had made a series of escalating threats.

Hercules-Torres was not alone in experiencing such tactics by Mara 18. Some of

his schoolmates were forcibly tattooed by gang members who wanted to leave their

victims with no choice but to join the gang. And a friend of Hercules-Torres was

subjected to a parallel course of abuse. The Mara 18 gang forcibly tattooed — and later

killed — the friend, who had refused to join “because he was a Christian.” See A.R. 210.

After Hercules-Torres’s tattooing, he dropped out of school and did not leave his

house, except to attend church, for about seven months. He did not report the threats or

assaults to the police, however, because he feared they would consider him a member of

Mara 18 based on his tattoo. Before being tattooed, the police had stopped Hercules-

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