Preldakaj v. Keisler

252 F. App'x 79
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 24, 2007
Docket06-4179
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 252 F. App'x 79 (Preldakaj v. Keisler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Preldakaj v. Keisler, 252 F. App'x 79 (6th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge.

The petitioner, an Albanian citizen, petitions this court to review the Board of Immigration Appeals’s (“BIA”) denial of her claim for asylum and her claims for withholding of removal under the Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”) and the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). The BIA concluded that she was not credible on the basis of inconsistences between her application for asylum and her various testimonies. We conclude that the BIA had substantial evidence to support this finding, and we therefore DENY the petition for review.

I. BACKGROUND

On August 30, 2000, Lume Preldakaj and her two small children entered the United States after leaving their home in Albania. Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) at 179 (Sworn Stmt. of Aug. 30, 2000 at 2). The INS conducted an initial interview after she arrived at Chicago’s O’Hare airport without any of the appropriate documents. At this interview, the officer asked Preldakaj several questions about her motivations for traveling to the United States, and Preldakaj’s answers were largely economic. For instance, when asked to describe her purpose in entering the United States, she stated: “I have no job. There’s no income. I cannot buy food for my kids. I came here for a better life.” J.A. at 179 (Stmt. at 2). She also said that she intended to stay only long enough to make enough money to return to Albania and “make a good life.” Id. She did, however, state that she feared being harmed if she returned to Albania. J.A. at 181 (Stmt. at 4).

The day after her arrival, she had the opportunity to elaborate on those concerns during her credible-fear interview. J.A. at 182 (Credible Fear Worksheet at 1). She claimed that her family was mistreated in Albania and that she feared the Albanian authorities, J.A. at 184 (Worksheet at 3), but when asked for details, her answers had an economic focus. For instance, she said: “I was from a persecuted family. We could not find jobs[.] We weren’t allowed to work. I had to come to the United States.” J.A. at 188 (Asylum Pre-Screening Interview at 4). She also mentioned that she was fired from her teaching job in 1998. Id.

The interviewing officer pressed Preldakaj for information on specific types of abuses. When asked if the Albanian authorities had arrested anyone in her family, she responded: “No one in the last 10 *81 years.” J.A. at 189 (Interview at 5). The officer asked whether her husband’s affiliation with the Democratic Party caused problems, and she said: “No, but he was threatened by the Socialists. ... He was threatened before I married him.” Id. When asked if she was ever threatened or harmed in Albania, she responded: “No.” Id. She also denied worrying about being tortured in Albania. J.A. at 190 (Interview at 6). Instead, her worries about returning to Albania were more general: “I don’t know what will happen. I am afraid. If there is voting soon there will be a war.” Id.

On March 7, 2003, Preldakaj filed an application for asylum, in which she explained:

I left Albania because my family and I have been continually persecuted by the members of the Albanian Socialist Party due to my husband’s beliefs and involvement in the Democratic P[a]rty. We have been beaten, threatened and persecuted till [sic] we were foced [sic] to flee our own country. My husband (Simon Preldakaj) was arrested on several occasions, severely beaten; our store was shut down, our house was threatened to be exploded; I was fired from my job as a teacher by the socialist agents and party members, only because my husband refused to stop his participation with the democratic party movement. ...

J.A. at 321 (I-589 at 5). She provided some specifics on her husband’s problems, describing three times that he was arrested and beaten, once in 1991, 1997, and 1998. J.A. at 322 (I-589 at 6). She also mentioned that he received threats due to his participation in the 2000 election campaign. Id. Because of these events, she feared for the lives of her family members if they returned: “If we return to our own country, my family and I would be killed.... If we returned, I am convinced that my daughter are [sic] going to be kidnapped, phisically [sic] harmed, I will be killed and my husband will also be assassinated.” J.A. at 321 (I-589 at 5).

On January 28, 2005, the IJ conducted a hearing to assess Preldakaj’s claims. Preldakaj elaborated on some of the statements that she had made previously. For instance, Preldakaj described the circumstances under which she was fired from her teaching job and suggested that it was politically motivated. See J.A. at 123 (Jan. 28, 2005 Hr’g Tr. at 43:7-23). She also described her husband’s arrests in 1997 and 1998 and the accompanying beating. J.A. at 124-26 (Tr. at 44:1-46:9).

In the hearing Preldakaj also mentioned some incidents that she had previously not discussed. For example, she described how Socialists interrupted her teaching to threaten her. J.A. at 118 (Tr. at 38:19-24). She also testified that a few weeks later, people remarking about her affiliation with the Democratic Party broke items in her store, J.A. at 121 (Tr. at 41:14-21), called her a bitch, J.A. at 122 (Tr. at 42:9-10), and threw her out of the store and onto the ground where she hit her head on broken glass. Id. (Tr. at 42:18-23). She also described an incident on August 25, 2000, during which three officers entered her home, grabbed her coat, and asked “where is the enemy” as they searched the house for her husband. J.A. at 126 (Tr. at 46:12-25). To Preldakaj, these events were “terrors,” J.A. at 131 (Tr. at 51:21-23), and she did not want to return to Albania out of fear of being killed. J.A. at 133 (Tr. at 53:19-21).

On cross-examination, the government challenged Preldakaj on the previously undisclosed events. When asked why she did not mention the school harassment in her application, she said “I did not know what to leave out and [what] to put in.... *82 Maybe I did not review it very well.” J.A. at 136-37 (Tr. at 56:13-57:2). When asked why she did not mention the August 25, 2000 incident, she said it was because she thought it was going to be in her husband’s application. J.A. at 138 (Tr. at 58:1-3). She also claimed that she did not initially mention many of these events because she was afraid to tell the information to immigration officials, J.A. at 144 (Tr. at 64:10-11), and because she was “very sad in those days.” Id. (Tr. at 64:25).

"When the government pushed her on the parts of her story that had changed, Preldakaj sometimes offered a reason. See J.A. at 139 (Tr. at 59:19-22) (“I was very stressed out and my youngest child had not been eating or drinking anything for three days and he was crying.”). More often than not, however, she could not explain the discrepancies. Frequently, her response was “I don’t know” or “I don’t remember.” See, e.g., J.A. at 141 (Tr. at 61:16, 61:21, 61:25); J.A. at 142 (Tr. at 62:13, 62:20).

On February 15, 2005, the IJ denied Preldakaj’s applications for asylum and withholding of removal. The IJ did not even consider the asylum claim, declaring it time-barred. J.A. at 62 (Dec. and Order at 2 n. 2).

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Bluebook (online)
252 F. App'x 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preldakaj-v-keisler-ca6-2007.