Mema, Ferdinant v. Gonzales, Alberto

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 11, 2007
Docket05-2570
StatusPublished

This text of Mema, Ferdinant v. Gonzales, Alberto (Mema, Ferdinant v. Gonzales, Alberto) 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.

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Mema, Ferdinant v. Gonzales, Alberto, (7th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 05-2570 FERDINANT MEMA, Petitioner, v.

ALBERTO R. GONZALES, Respondent. ____________ Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals. No. A79-442-784 ____________ ARGUED FEBRUARY 21, 2006—DECIDED JANUARY 11, 2007 ____________

Before BAUER, KANNE, and ROVNER, Circuit Judges. ROVNER, Circuit Judge. An immigration judge granted Spartak Mema political asylum in January 2002, and now his identical twin brother Ferdinant seeks that same protection. Ferdinant Mema (Ferdinant)1, a native and citizen of Albania, was detained at Fort Lauderdale Inter- national Airport when he tried to enter this country with an illegitimate Italian passport. He seeks asylum claiming that he suffered persecution at the hands of

1 We refer to the asylum applicant by his first name to distin- guish him from the other members of his family whose experi- ences figure prominently in Ferdinant’s claim. 2 No. 05-2570

Albanian authorities in retaliation for his and his family’s association with the Democratic Party in Albania. After a hearing, an immigration judge denied Ferdinant asylum and withholding of removal, and the Board of Immigra- tion Appeals (BIA) affirmed. We remand for considera- tion of relevant, probative evidence central to Ferdinant’s claim that the immigration judge failed to consider the first time around. Ferdinant, born in 1982, lived in Albania with his parents, his identical twin brother Spartak, his older brother Edmond, and Edmond’s wife Suela. Edmond, Spartak, and Suela all fled Albania—Edmond in 1997, and the others in 1999—and later received asylum in this country based on the persecution they suffered as mem- bers of the Democratic Party of Albania and children of an activist leader with that Party. Ferdinant, on the other hand, left Albania for Greece in 1997, and lived there, without permission, doing a variety of odd jobs, before returning to Albania in 1999 and finally fleeing to this country in 2002. At his hearing before the immigration judge, Ferdinant testified that his family members had been subject to persecution at the hands of government authorities in retaliation for their membership and participation in the Democratic Party in Albania and specifically, as retribu- tion for activist and leadership roles assumed by Sabri Mema, Ferdinant’s father. In his supplement to his application for asylum, Ferdinant recalls several instances in which family members were singled out and harassed based on an affiliation with the Democratic Party or their relationship to Sabri Mema. For example, Ferdinant described an incident in 1998 when his identical twin brother Spartak was stopped by police officers on his way to a Democratic Party meeting. The officers detained Spartak for five or No. 05-2570 3

six hours, beat him and threatened him. Just a few weeks later, Sabri had a run-in with Socialist authorities while working as a poll watcher in an important election. After reporting voting irregularities, Sabri was detained, instructed to remain silent, and threatened with unspeci- fied consequences. In defiance of the threats, Sabri re- ported his experiences to the Democratic Party which later filed a suit challenging the results of the election. Sabri received a summons to appear in court for the trial, but when he appeared the matter had been continued. Accord- ing to Ferdinant, members of the Socialist Party had manipulated the court dates to garner time to strong-arm those who might testify against the Party in the suit. Indeed, Ferdinant explained, two days after his father, Sabri, was scheduled to testify, Albanian police arrested Sabri and brought him to the police station where officers issued threats in an attempt to influence his testimony. Three weeks later, Spartak received a subpoena to appear at the prosecutor’s office. When he arrived, he was detained, beaten, and told he would be prosecuted unless he convinced his father to alter his anticipated testimony. Spartak received a second subpoena the following month and again appeared at the prosecutor’s office where officials accused him of giving false testimony on the earlier occasion. Again, officials beat him, threat- ened him, and accused him of disrupting the referendum vote. Ferdinant’s supplemental application also describes the events that pushed Spartak and Suela to flee for their safety. On April 23, 1999, Spartak received a summons to appear as a defendant in a criminal proceeding initi- ated by the Ministry of Internal Affairs. While Spartak awaited his court appearance, Sulea Mema, Ferdinant and Spartak’s sister-in-law, also received a subpoena to appear at the prosecutor’s office. Once there, Suela refused orders to sign a document denouncing her father-in-law as 4 No. 05-2570

a liar and troublemaker. Despite threats of criminal prosecution, Suela held firm. Although she was released on that day, a few days later, on May 10, 1999, she was arrested and taken to the prosecutor’s office where officials again ordered her to sign the papers. When she refused, she was attacked, beaten, and raped. Ferdinant, who had recently returned from Greece, went with the rest of his family to a hospital in Tirana to seek treatment for Suela. While the family was away, Albanian police destroyed the Mema home. In response to these events, the family decided that Spartak and Suela had to leave Albania. On May 19, 1999, the two left Albania, leaving Ferdinant behind to stay with their parents. Ferdinant went to stay with relatives to avoid further trouble, but Sabri’s troubles continued, and it was not long before police arrested him again after speaking at a rally. This time they held him for four days. The bulk of Ferdinant’s claim of past persecution cen- ters on the events of June 20, 2001. Ferdinant testified that on that day five masked police officers forced him into a car at gunpoint, took him to an abandoned house, and asked him why he had come back to cause trouble. Accord- ing to Ferdinant, the officers repeatedly referred to him by his twin brother, Spartak’s, name. When Ferdinant insisted that he was not Spartak the officers beat him. The masked men demanded that Ferdinant gather informa- tion about his father and other Democratic Party support- ers and told Ferdinant to warn his father that if Sabri interfered with voting, Ferdinant would pay the price. After this, they continued to beat Ferdinant until he passed out. Two days after the attack, Ferdinant testified, his father described his family’s suffering at a pro-democratic rally. The following day, the family received word that the police were looking for Ferdinant. That news sent No. 05-2570 5

Ferdinant and his mother into hiding in a small town in Northern Albania. Ferdinant’s father continued with his activities and even decided to run for office in the local elections, but changed his mind after March 10, 2002, when he was approached by several officers who had a warrant for Ferdinant’s arrest. Meanwhile, Ferdinant and his mother, having been tipped off that the police had come looking for Ferdinant, moved to yet another small town until Ferdinant was able to secure passage out of Albania on May 25, 2002. He arrived at Fort Lauderdale International Airport on May 31, 2002. After a hearing on November 20, 2002, the immigra- tion judge issued an order denying Ferdinant’s applica- tions and ordering his removal to Albania. The BIA adopted and affirmed the decision of the immigration judge adding a few sentences describing why the im- migration judge’s credibility determination was supported by the record and noting that Ferdinant received due process of law. (R. at 2-3). Where the BIA affirms, adopts, and supplements, we review both the immigration judge’s decision and any additional reasoning of the BIA. Giday v. Gonzales, 434 F.3d 543, 547 (7th Cir. 2006).

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