Peter Udo v. Merrick Garland

32 F.4th 1198
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMay 4, 2022
Docket20-70078
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 32 F.4th 1198 (Peter Udo v. Merrick Garland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peter Udo v. Merrick Garland, 32 F.4th 1198 (9th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT PETER DONATUS UDO, No. 20-70078 Petitioner, Agency No. V. A208-309-125 MERRICK B. GARLAND, Attorney General, OPINION Respondent.

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

Argued and Submitted November 18, 2021 San Francisco, California

Filed May 4, 2022

Before: Sidney R. Thomas and M. Margaret McKeown, Circuit Judges, and Donald W. Molloy,* District Judge.

Opinion by Judge McKeown

* The Honorable Donald W. Molloy, United States District Judge for the District of Montana, sitting by designation. 2 UDO V. GARLAND

SUMMARY™

Immigration

Granting in part, and denying in part, Peter Donatus Udo’s petition for review of a decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals, and remanding, the panel held that the Board erred in affirming an immigration judge’s frivolous asylum application determination and the denial of protection under the Convention Against Torture.

Udo asserted a fear of persecution or torture in Nigeria based on his status as a gay man, and the harm he suffered after being discovering having sex with his boyfriend in a hotel. The IJ found that Udo was not credible because he “misrepresented” the name of the hotel where he and his boyfriend were discovered and because Udo was often unresponsive and inconsistent in his testimony. As a result, the IJ found that Udo failed to establish that he is gay or that he was ever harmed in Nigeria for being a gay person. The IJ also found that Udo’s asylum application was frivolous because he deliberately fabricated a material element of his asylum application—the location where Udo and his boyfriend were discovered.

Before this court, Udo did not challenge the agency’s credibility determination or the denial of asylum relief. Instead, he argued that the agency (1) erred by failing to consider potentially dispositive evidence concerning his CAT claim; (2) violated due process in its CAT

*“ This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader. UDO V. GARLAND 3

determination; and (3) erred in concluding that he had filed a frivolous asylum application.

The panel agreed with Udo that the Board erred by failing to consider potentially dispositive evidence concerning his CAT claim. The panel noted that the Board did not mention at all an excommunication notice from the “Council of Traditional Rulers” of Udo’s Nigerian community stating that he was subject to execution for being gay, and the Board made only fleeting reference to a collection of letters and affidavits from Udo’s family members describing in detail the attacks Udo suffered, his escape from Nigeria, and the threats Udo and his family members received after his sexuality was publicly revealed. The panel wrote that this evidence was potentially dispositive of Udo’s CAT claim because it provided the missing factual finding—that Udo was gay and persecuted on that basis. The panel wrote that Udo’s adverse credibility determination was not necessarily a death knell to his CAT claim, and that because the evidence he submitted was potentially dispositive of his claim, the agency erred by failing to give “reasoned consideration” to it.

In light of its determination that the agency’s denial of CAT relief could not stand, the panel did not reach, and therefore denied the petition as to, whether the agency’s failure to consider the documentary evidence violated Udo’s Fifth Amendment due process rights in addition to immigration regulations.

The panel also held that the Board erred in concluding that Udo had filed a frivolous asylum application, because any fabrication concerning the name of the hotel where Udo was discovered did not concern a material element of Udo’s asylum claim. Acknowledging that the location where Udo’s past persecution occurred could have been relevant to 4 UDO V. GARLAND

the agency’s credibility determination, the panel wrote that the location of the hotel was at best ancillary to the elements Udo needed to prove to succeed on his asylum claim.

COUNSEL

David C. Casarrubias (argued), Alexandra V. Atencio, and Breana L. Burgos, Hanson Bridgett LLP, San Francisco, California, for Petitioner.

Sheri R. Glaser (argued), Trial Attorney; Jonathan Robbins, Senior Litigation Counsel; Brian Boynton, Acting Assistant Attorney General; Office of Immigration Litigation, Civil Division, United States Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.; for Respondent.

OPINION McKEOWN, Circuit Judge:

Peter Donatus Udo is a citizen of Nigeria who applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”) in the United States on the grounds that he feared violence in Nigeria as a gay man. Specifically, the Council of Traditional Rulers of Udo’s community in Nigeria decreed that he was subject to “public execution” because he was found = “practicing homosexuality.” Although the immigration judge (“IJ”) and the Board of Immigration Appeals (the “BIA” or the “Board”) denied relief on the grounds that Udo was not credible, the BIA failed to give reasoned consideration to key evidence that was independent of Udo’s testimony, namely the Council’s decree and a collection of letters and UDO V. GARLAND 5

affidavits supplied by Udo’s family members. The BIA also erred in deeming Udo’s asylum application frivolous because any fabrication was not of a material element of Udo’s asylum claim.

I. Background

Before the IJ, Udo testified to the following: Being gay is a crime in Nigeria punishable by over ten years in prison. Udo is gay. In 2015, he and his boyfriend had a clandestine meeting at a Sheraton hotel in Ikot Ekpene, Nigeria. In the early morning hours, a waiter delivering breakfast opened the door without knocking to find Udo and his boyfriend having sex. The waiter screamed and called hotel security, which detained the couple and called a local “community security” group to report the incident. The security group tied Udo and his boyfriend by their hands and legs, threatened to kill them for committing an “abomination,” and took them away. For the next six hours, the group beat the couple with sticks and metal rods, spit on them, threw sand in their eyes, and yelled anti-gay slurs. The beating caused Udo to bleed and eventually scar. Udo was taken to a detention center from which he escaped. He then traveled to a distant town where he was treated for his injuries at a hospital with the help of a stranger.

After recovering, Udo contacted his mother, who told him that the Nigerian police had come looking for him at his home. She also told him that the leaders of his village had asked her to turn in Udo because he had committed an abomination and should be put to death. Udo’s mother met him at a bus stop the next day, gave him clothes and money, and told him to flee. Udo traveled to the United States.

Udo submitted documentary evidence to support his application. Most important for this appeal are (1) the 6 UDO V. GARLAND

“excommunication notice” from the “Council of Traditional Rulers” of Udo’s Nigerian community stating that he is subject to execution for being gay, and (2) a collection of letters and affidavits from Udo’s family members describing in detail the attacks Udo suffered after his discovery at the hotel, his escape from Nigeria following the incident, and the threats Udo and his family members received from Nigerian police and local security groups after his sexuality was publicly revealed.

On cross-examination, the government asked Udo the name of the hotel where he and his boyfriend were found together. Udo testified that it was the Sheraton Hotel in Ikot Ekpene, Nigeria.

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Bluebook (online)
32 F.4th 1198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peter-udo-v-merrick-garland-ca9-2022.