Mocktar Tairou v. Matthew Whitaker

909 F.3d 702
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 30, 2018
Docket17-1404
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 909 F.3d 702 (Mocktar Tairou v. Matthew Whitaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mocktar Tairou v. Matthew Whitaker, 909 F.3d 702 (4th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

GREGORY, Chief Judge:

Mocktar Tairou ("Tairou") petitions this Court to review a final removal order by *704 the Board of Immigration Appeals ("BIA") denying his asylum and withholding of removal application and ordering his removal to Benin. Tairou contends that the BIA erred in finding that he was not subjected to past persecution and that he lacked a well-founded fear of persecution were he to return to Benin. Our binding precedent explicitly holds that a threat of death constitutes persecution. Because Tairou experienced multiple death threats in Benin, we hold Tairou established that he was subjected to past persecution. We therefore grant the petition for review and remand to allow the BIA to consider whether, in light of Tairou's demonstrated past persecution, he has a well-founded fear of future persecution.

I.

A.

Tairou was born in Benin in 1977. Although Tairou is married to a woman, he testified that in 2007, he developed affectionate feelings for a man and "figured out [he] was a homosexual." J.A. 73. In 2008, Tairou met a French man named AY through a website. * The two men eventually developed a romantic relationship. In 2009 and again in 2013, AY came to visit Tairou in Cotonou, Benin, where Tairou rented an apartment for AY. Tairou informed his wife and his father about his relationship with AY, and they both accepted it. After learning of the relationship, Tairou's wife informed him that she in fact viewed herself as a lesbian. Although Tairou was open with his wife and father about his romantic relationship with AY, Tairou and AY generally kept their relationship a secret.

Despite the general secrecy surrounding their relationship, Tairou and AY were openly affectionate with each other in front of Tairou's cousin, Djamiou, during a night out in Cotonou in August of 2013. Because Tairou was very close with his cousin, he did not think that Djamiou would have a problem with his relationship. During the evening, Djamiou took pictures of AY and Tairou hugging and kissing in a restaurant booth.

Shortly after the evening out, Tairou's uncle called to tell Tairou that he needed to come to his father's home village due to a family emergency. When he arrived, Tairou was directed to the backyard of his father's house where he encountered a group of approximately 40 men, including his two uncles, Aminou and Djibril, cousins of Tairou's father, ministers from the mosque, and other villagers unrelated to Tairou. Tairou's uncle, Aminou, asked him how things were going with AY and showed Tairou the pictures Djamiou had taken of Tairou and AY kissing and hugging.

The crowd kept Tairou in the backyard, threatening and harassing him for five hours. During that time, members of the group threatened to cut off his penis if they saw Tairou and AY together again. "One after the other," the people in the backyard took turns pulling Tairou's ears and slapping him in the face. J.A. 86. They "forbid [him] from keeping on with this relationship" and told him that he was "bringing a bad name on their family." J.A. 86. In Tairou's declaration attached to his application for asylum, he asserted that several of the people at the village gathering said that he "should die," and "some of them outright threatened to kill [him]." J.A. 210. In addition to threatening and taunting Tairou about his relationship with AY, the men in the backyard offered Tairou a beer, consumption of which is forbidden in Islam. Djamiou had reported to his uncle that Tairou was consuming alcohol.

*705 Tairou declined the beer and begged the group to let him go. Tairou promised that he would not continue the relationship with AY, saying "everything [he] could say so they would just let me go." J.A. 87. Finally, after five hours, the crowd allowed Tairou to leave.

Approximately one week later, Tairou's cousins Djamiou and Sefou knocked on Tairou's door in Cotonou. When Tairou opened the door, Djamiou and Sefou pushed him inside and closed the door. Djamiou told Tairou that "despite everything we told you at the village, you are keeping on going with [AY]." J.A. 91. Tairou's cousins then began to beat him with curtain holders that were on the floor. Id. In his declaration, Tairou asserted that Djamiou and Sefou threatened to "kill [him], to shame [him] publicly again," and to harm his wife and children. J.A. 210. On their way out of Tairou's home, Djamiou showed Tairou a knife at his belt and told Tairou that if he did not stop his relationship with AY, "this is what's going to happen." J.A. 95.

During the attack, Tairou's youngest son, Lufti, sustained head and arm injuries trying to protect his father. Tairou took Lufti to the hospital where Lufti stayed overnight to receive medical treatment. Tairou sustained a wound to his arm during the attack but did not seek medical treatment. Tairou testified that he could not report the threats from his relatives to the police and that he felt the Beninese police would be unwilling to protect him.

After the home invasion, Tairou and his family heard knocking at the door approximately every two days, but no one was there when they opened the door. Tairou and his family also received several threatening phone calls from an unknown number warning him: "Watch out. Be careful. You keep going with this watch out, we will come back." J.A. 96. The calls continued even though Tairou's family changed their number twice. Due to the knocking and threatening phone calls, Tairou and his family "decided to leave and to try to find a more secure place to stay." J.A. 96. Tairou's wife and children are still in hiding at this location in Cotonou.

In the wake of the incident in the village and home invasion, AY told Tairou that two policemen came to his apartment to inform AY that he had been "turned in as a homosexual." J.A. 99. As a result, AY left Benin. Tairou is no longer in contact with AY. When he left Benin, AY told Tairou "that he wanted to forget about Benin completely." J.A. 99.

If Tairou goes back to Benin, he fears his relatives will find him and "keep on hurting [him]," because they know he is bisexual and has bisexual and homosexual friends. J.A. 99. Tairou further testified that because of what AY told him about the police officers who arrived at his place, he will not be able to depend on any police protection should anything happen.

B.

Tairou applied for admission to the United States at the Washington, D.C. port of entry on March 9, 2014. On March 18, 2014, an asylum officer found that Tairou demonstrated a credible fear of persecution or torture as a member of a sexual minority in Benin and referred Tairou to an immigration judge ("IJ"). The Department of Homeland Security initiated removal proceedings, charging that Tairou was inadmissible to the United States due to his lack of a valid entry document pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1182 (a)(7)(A)(i)(I). Before the IJ, Tairou conceded removability and applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture ("CAT").

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Bluebook (online)
909 F.3d 702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mocktar-tairou-v-matthew-whitaker-ca4-2018.