Mykola Khrystotodorov v. Michael Mukasey

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 29, 2008
Docket08-1012
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Mykola Khrystotodorov v. Michael Mukasey, (8th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ________________

No. 08-1012 ________________

* Mykola Mykolayevich * Khrystotodorov; Oksana * Khrystotodorova; Viktoriya * Petition for Review of an Order of Khrystotodorova, * the Board of Immigration Appeals. * Petitioners, * * [PUBLISHED] v. * * * Michael B. Mukasey, Attorney * General of the United States, * * Respondent. *

________________

Submitted: September 24, 2008 Filed: December 29, 2008 ________________

Before RILEY, HANSEN, and MELLOY, Circuit Judges. ________________

HANSEN, Circuit Judge.

Mykola Mykolayevich Khrystotodorov ("Mykola"), his wife Oksana, and his daughter Viktoriya (collectively, "the Petitioners") are citizens of the Ukraine who sought asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture ("CAT"), based on persecution on account of their Baptist religion. The Immigration Judge (IJ) denied their applications and refused to reopen the proceedings for the submission of additional evidence. The Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) dismissed their appeal, and the Petitioners seek judicial review. We granted a temporary stay of removal and of voluntary departure, and now, having fully considered the claims, we deny the petition for review and dissolve the temporary stay order.

I.

Mykola and his family entered the United States in early December 1999 as nonimmigrant visitors with permission to remain in this country until January 9, 2000. They remained longer than authorized, and removal proceedings commenced on June 14, 2001. They admitted the allegations, conceded removability, and filed an application for asylum, withholding of relief, and relief under the CAT, asserting that they had suffered persecution in the Ukraine on the basis of their Baptist religion and that they have a well-founded fear of persecution on this basis if they are returned to the Ukraine. At a hearing before the IJ on October 30, 2002, Mykola testified that he and his family are citizens of the Ukraine and lived in the city of Izmayil. They became Baptists in 1996, and he asserted that as a result of their faith, they suffered persecution by members of the Ukranian National Assembly-Ukranian National Self Defence (UNA-UNSO), whom he described as hit-men for the ruling National Democratic Party. Mykola recounted four principal incidents.

First, in August 1998, his sister was attacked on account of her faith by classmates who were members of UNA-UNSO. Mykola was a crew member on a ship and away at sea at the time. Although the incident was reported to police, they took no action. Second, in September 1998, Mykola was walking in the market with his wife, sister, and brother-in-law when they were attacked by four members of UNA- UNSO, one of whom had attacked his sister the previous month. They punched

-2- Mykola in the face, and he spent the night and the next day in bed, but the injury did not require significant medical treatment. Because the police had not responded to his sister's complaint the previous month, Mykola complained to the mayor about the incident. Mykola wrote two letters to the mayor with no meaningful response.

Third, Mykola described an incident at a rally on October 8, 1998. He and some other individuals who had been beaten by UNA-UNSO members decided to organize a rally to protest this abuse. They garnered support from local churches and other religious minorities, including Baptists, Jews, and Pentacostals, and a group of 150 to 200 people gathered across the street from the mayor's office in protest. Mykola said that they were interrupted when attacked by UNA-UNSO hit-men who arrived in a bus carrying batons and yelling, "Beat the Baptists!" (Petitioners' Add. at 7.) Mykola testified that he was hit in the face, kicked to the ground, and knocked unconscious, and that his injuries required him to stay at the local hospital, the Danube Basin Hospital, for nine days. He alleged that he suffered a concussion, a broken nose, and cuts that required stitches near his mouth and ear. He filed a report with the police and in turn was questioned by them about who had sponsored the demonstration and whether he was receiving help from the United States. No one was arrested in regard to this incident.

The fourth incident occurred on November 20, 1998. He returned home to find red paint on his gate warning him to get out of the Ukraine, and the family dog had been beaten to death. Mykola referenced other threats as well and some vandalism to his home. He and his wife and child left the Ukraine for the United States in December 1999. His parents still live in Izmayil. Mykola said his parents have had some windows broken in their house and that his mother had been fired from her job.

At the close of the October 30, 2002, hearing, the IJ indicated that further documentation was needed and continued the hearing, giving the parties an opportunity to obtain documentation of the October 1998 rally at Izmayil and Mykola's injuries.

-3- (See R. at 633.) On November 14, 2003, the IJ heard further evidence and again continued the hearing, noting that the medical records were in conflict (id. at 722) and that there was no documentation to support a conclusion that the UNA-UNSO was tied to the government (id. at 719-20). The IJ continued the hearing yet again, pointedly informing Mykola that he was being given another "opportunity to dig around some more" to find documents to help his case. (Id. at 724.)

Following the final hearing in March 2004, after nearly 18 months of continued hearings and ample opportunity to submit exhibits, the IJ expressed unresolved credibility concerns with the case and concluded that the claims lacked adequate corroboration. The background country information submitted was plentiful, but it made no mention of the October 1998 rally or of any serious incident of this sort, although more minor isolated incidents involving some discrimination, loss of jobs, and verbal harassment were reported. The IJ stated he was "at a loss to try to understand why the respondent has no corroborating evidence of such a major incident." (Petitioners' Add. at 22.) The IJ also noted that while a great deal of country background information was presented, it showed a lack of serious abuses of similarly situated people in general in the Ukraine, and the country background documents did not support Mykola's claim that the UNA-UNSO fighters were hit-men for the government.

Mykola offered some evidence of receiving medical treatment after the October 1998 incident to corroborate his claim. A note from the Danube Basin Hospital dated January 29, 2000, and signed by two doctors, certified that Mykola had been a patient at the hospital from October 8, 1998, to October 17, 1998, but the State Department's initial inquiry had found no records of his treatment at the Danube Basin Hospital. Also, the credibility of the hospital note was challenged with a letter from the director of the hospital, stating that Mykola did not apply for medical assistance at the hospital and that the signatures on the certificate he offered were not genuine. No other medical records verified his hospitalization, and he said that his family was recently told his

-4- records had been lost. One document indicates that Mykola received outpatient stitches at a dental clinic for a cut wound on his lower lip in October 1998.

The IJ lamented the lack of corroboration, noting that if there had been undisputed medical evidence of a nine-day hospital stay clearly showing he was the victim of a mob attack by political extremists, "that would go a long way to support the respondent's claim. Unfortunately, the records don't go that far." (Id.

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