Morales Lopez v. Garland

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 19, 2021
Docket18-60251
StatusUnpublished

This text of Morales Lopez v. Garland (Morales Lopez v. Garland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morales Lopez v. Garland, (5th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

Case: 18-60251 Document: 00515788451 Page: 1 Date Filed: 03/19/2021

United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

FILED March 19, 2021 No. 18-60251 Lyle W. Cayce Clerk

Marisela Carolina Morales Lopez; Gretel Juliana Mejia Morales,

Petitioners,

versus

Merrick Garland, U.S. Attorney General,

Respondent.

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

Before Southwick, Graves, and Engelhardt, Circuit Judges. James E. Graves, Jr., Circuit Judge:* Marisela Carolina Morales Lopez and her minor daughter G.J.M.M. are citizens of Honduras. They petition for review of the denial of their asylum applications. We grant, in part, and deny, in part, the petition; vacate the immigration judge’s (“IJ”) order of removal; and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

* Pursuant to 5th Circuit Rule 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5th Circuit Rule 47.5.4. Case: 18-60251 Document: 00515788451 Page: 2 Date Filed: 03/19/2021

No. 18-60251

I. Morales Lopez and her daughter were charged with illegally entering the United States. They conceded that they are removable and sought asylum. Their application1 for asylum was denied.2 The application presented two bases for relief. First, in February 2013, Morales Lopez was living with her husband Jose Carlos Mejia Murillo and children 3 when members of Los Olanchos—a gang—broke into Morales Lopez’s home, beat Morales Lopez, and raped her repeatedly in front of her family. Second, in April or May 2015, members of Los Vatos Locos—another gang—tortured and murdered Morales Lopez’s husband and then began threatening Morales Lopez and her family. The petition for review concerns only the incidents connected to Los Vatos Locos. Los Vatos Locos first threatened Mejia Murillo in 2013 because he had an aunt who was a member of an opposing gang. Mejia Murillo was not involved in any gang himself. Although Mejia Murillo made efforts to avoid Los Vatos Locos, in April or May 2015, a third party lured him to an area where Los Vatos Locos members tortured and killed him. Community members who witnessed Mejia Murillo’s death told Morales Lopez that Los Vatos Locos members “hit [Mejia Murillo] with pipes on his face and head, [] broke his knees open until you could see the bones; [] split his head open

1 Morales Lopez’s daughter is a derivative-asylum applicant. All references to Morales Lopez or her application pertain to her daughter’s application as well. See 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(3)(A) (“A spouse or child . . . of an alien who is granted asylum under this subsection may, if not otherwise eligible for asylum under this section, be granted the same status as the alien if accompanying, or following to join, such alien.”). 2 Morales Lopez and her daughter had applied for additional relief that was denied but not at issue in their petition for review. See Soadjede v. Ashcroft, 324 F.3d 830, 833 (5th Cir. 2003) (deeming issues not raised in a petition for review abandoned). 3 Morales Lopez has four children in total: three sons and one daughter.

2 Case: 18-60251 Document: 00515788451 Page: 3 Date Filed: 03/19/2021

and his face was so disfigured that he was unrecognizable. They also placed a rope around his neck and tied it to his hands behind his back and to his feet.” Morales Lopez examined photos of Mejia Murillo’s body and “saw that his head had been totally destroyed.” She “could see his brain through a large crack in his skull.” He was also shot six times. Morales Lopez did not report her husband’s death to the police lest the police share that information with the gang, stating that, in Honduras, gang-related murders “cannot be reported” because “[t]he police will inform . . . the gang members[.]” On the day of Mejia Murillo’s burial—which was one or two days after his murder—Morales Lopez received a voicemail message from her husband’s phone number. Los Vatos Locos’ leader, an individual Morales Lopez refers to as “Abram,” sent her the message, which was a recording of Mejia Murillo pleading with Los Vatos Locos members not to kill him because he had a wife and a daughter. Two days later, Morales Lopez visited her mother-in-law’s house with her children. Shortly after Morales Lopez left the house, three Los Vatos Locos members surrounded her. They told her that she was not allowed to “go there anymore” and had “three seconds to leave[.]” Sometime the next week, Abram called Morales Lopez from Mejia Murillo’s phone number and told her that “they would kill [her].” Abram said that “[Mejia Murillo] hadn’t been killed because he still had his wife and daughter alive” and “everything from that dog would disappear,” 4 which Morales Lopez interpreted as a threat against her and her daughter, the only one of her children fathered by Mejia Murillo. Morales Lopez told Abram

4 In her affidavit, Morales Lopez phrased Abram’s statement somewhat differently, stating that Abram said that “everything that had to do with this dog would disappear.”

3 Case: 18-60251 Document: 00515788451 Page: 4 Date Filed: 03/19/2021

that “[her] daughter didn’t know anything and had nothing to do with this.” Abram responded that “it didn’t matter, that even his mother didn’t matter to him.” Abram then texted Morales Lopez—again from her husband’s phone number—stating, “[W]hy are you afraid of us? Come to our neighborhood.” Mejia Murillo’s brother also received death threats from Abram following Mejia Murillo’s murder. A week or two after Mejia Murillo’s murder, Los Vatos Locos members confronted Morales Lopez’s son at his school, asking him where Morales Lopez was and forbidding him to return to the school. None of Morales Lopez’s children returned to school that year. Then, a few weeks to a month after Mejia Murillo’s murder, Mejia Murillo’s mother and brother abandoned their house at the direction of Los Vatos Locos members who implied that they would kill them if they did not leave the house within 72 hours of their order to vacate.5 In June 2015, Morales Lopez and her daughter moved in with Morales Lopez’s cousin because of Los Vatos Locos’ threats. Morales Lopez sent her sons to live with her sister because she thought it would be safer for them to live apart from her. In January or February 2016, Morales Lopez saw a Los Vatos Locos gang member in a bus or car that was passing by her cousin’s house. Later that same week, her cousin was attacked. The assailants “cut the side of his

5 The IJ stated only that Mejia Murillo’s mother and brother were ordered to leave the house in this incident. Morales Lopez’s affidavit stated that Mejia Murillo’s sister was also ordered to leave the house. But, when Morales Lopez testified, she did not mention Mejia Murillo’s sister and, instead, mentioned her “mother-in-law and my brothers-in- law[.]” Like the IJ, Morales Lopez does not mention Mejia Murillo’s sister in recounting the incident in her opening brief on review; Morales Lopez mentions only Mejia Murillo’s mother and brother.

4 Case: 18-60251 Document: 00515788451 Page: 5 Date Filed: 03/19/2021

face with a machete and cut his wrist so badly that his tendons were cut and he could not move his fingers.” Morales Lopez and her cousin suspected that Los Vatos Locos was behind the attack in part because her cousin “hadn’t had any problems with gangs or anyone else[.]” Soon after her cousin’s attack, Morales Lopez left for the United States with her daughter. Morales Lopez’s sons remained in Honduras with relatives.

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Morales Lopez v. Garland, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morales-lopez-v-garland-ca5-2021.