Reyes-Hoyes v. Garland

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 25, 2023
Docket20-60133
StatusUnpublished

This text of Reyes-Hoyes v. Garland (Reyes-Hoyes 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
Reyes-Hoyes v. Garland, (5th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

Case: 20-60133 Document: 00516725246 Page: 1 Date Filed: 04/25/2023

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

FILED April 25, 2023 No. 20-60133 Lyle W. Cayce Clerk

Darlin Maribel Reyes-Hoyes; Antony Josue Hernandez- Reyes,

Petitioners,

versus

Merrick Garland, U.S. Attorney General,

Respondent.

Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals BIA No. A208 981 842 BIA No. A208 981 844

Before Dennis and Higginson, Circuit Judges. † Per Curiam: * Darlin Maribel Reyes-Hoyes (“Reyes-Hoyes”) and her minor child Antony Josue Hernandez-Reyes (“Antony”) petitioned this court to review the denial of their applications for asylum. For the following reasons, the petition for review is GRANTED in part and DISMISSED in part. The

† This appeal is being decided by a quorum. 28 U.S.C. § 46(d). * This opinion is not designated for publication. See 5th Cir. R. 47.5. Case: 20-60133 Document: 00516725246 Page: 2 Date Filed: 04/25/2023

No. 20-60133

decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) is VACATED, and the case is REMANDED to the BIA for further proceedings. I. Background Reyes-Hoyes and Antony are natives and citizens of Guatemala. They entered the United States without inspection on May 2, 2016. Reyes-Hoyes conceded removability and applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). Antony was listed as a derivative on the application. Reyes-Hoyes briefly explained in her application that her common-law husband, Federico Alfonso Hernandez Barrios (“Federico”), was a political candidate who was shot and killed during his campaign for mayor of their town, Pajapita, and that she feared she would be killed as well if she returned to Guatemala either on account of her political opinion or because of her membership in the particular social group (“PSG”) comprised of “Family Members” or “Domestic Partners of Politicians in Guatemala running for office within the Government.” In support of the application, Reyes-Hoyes submitted numerous documents, including:

• A death certificate showing that Federico was killed by a gunshot wound on November 10, 2010; • An affidavit from Reyes-Hoyes explaining that she and Federico lived together in a common-law marriage prior to Federico’s murder; • Affidavits from (1) Reyes-Hoyes’s neighbor in Pajapita, (2) the minister of her church, and (3) the Deputy Secretary of El Torito Civic Committee, the political party to which Federico belonged, all stating that Federico was murdered for political reasons and that Reyes- Hoyes received threats, including death threats; and • An affidavit from Reyes-Hoyes’s older son Kevin, attesting that his father was murdered in November 2010; that his family thereafter left Pajapita because they lacked protection and were afraid; and that his

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family was immediately threatened and beaten upon returning to Pajapita in January 2016. Reyes-Hoyes also submitted country condition evidence, including:

• The State Department’s Guatemala 2016 Human Rights Report and Amnesty International’s 2017/2018 Report, both of which discuss corruption among the police and judiciary; • Various newspaper articles reporting on corruption, organized crime, and political violence directed against candidates and activists, including the murder of local candidates; • Newspaper articles reporting on drug trafficking and anti-drug police activity; and • Newspaper articles reporting on the assassinations of politicians, including mayors and mayoral candidates, as well as death threats and attacks directed at their families. At a hearing held on April 5, 2018, Reyes-Hoyes testified in support of her application. She stated that she and Federico had three children, an older son and daughter—twins Kevin and Fanny—and a younger son, Antony. Federico belonged to the El Torito political party and ran for mayor of the town of Pajapita in 2010; Reyes-Hoyes helped him and campaigned alongside him. During the last two weeks of Federico’s life, he received threatening voicemail and text messages stating that he should end his mayoral campaign. Two weeks after the threats began, Federico was shot and killed. Reyes-Hoyes testified that she went to the police after Federico’s murder and told them that she recognized the voice on one of the threatening voice messages as belonging to Marvin DeLeon, the son of a rival candidate for mayor, Isidro DeLeon. Based on the messages, Reyes-Hoyes told police that she believed the DeLeons were responsible for Federico’s murder. A policeman named “Polito” told her “you better leave the things the way they

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are if you don’t want the same thing that happened to your husband to happen to you.” El Torito members asked Reyes-Hoyes to take Federico’s place as a party leader, but she declined. Isidro DeLeon won the mayoral election that year. Reyes-Hoyes testified that, after she made her complaint to the police, she began to receive threatening text messages and letters telling her to “leave the things as they were” and “stop doing everything.” People passed by her house and shot guns into the air. Later, Marvin DeLeon and another man attempted to kidnap Reyes-Hoyes’s daughter outside of her school. Other girls and their mothers intervened and prevented the kidnapping. Reyes-Hoyes did not report the attempted kidnapping to the police because she thought it would be futile—“I already reported the first time and I didn’t receive any support”—or would make things worse. She testified that “I think the biggest mistake that I made was to go to the police to make a complaint” because “after I made the complaint to the police the threats began.” Reyes-Hoyes testified that, following the attempted kidnapping, she and her three children moved away to another town, Mesata, because she was afraid to stay in Pajapita. She testified that she lived in Mesata without harm for two years. Then, two of Isidro DeLeon’s sons appeared in the market in Mesata where Reyes-Hoyes worked selling clothes. When they saw Reyes- Hoyes, they approached her, threw her merchandise on the ground, and beat her, cursing and calling her a “wicked bitch.” After the attack, Reyes-Hoyes and her children moved to another town, Raul, because she feared she would be found and harmed again if she stayed in Mesata. Reyes-Hoyes testified that her family lived unmolested in Raul for a little less than two years. Reyes- Hoyes then spotted Marvin DeLeon in Raul but was unsure if his presence was coincidental or not. She decided to move her family again, to Guatemala City, where she and her children lived with her brother-in-law, but because

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was not adequate space or other housing available for her and her three children, they did not stay for long. Reyes-Hoyes testified that, in January 2016, Reyes-Hoyes moved back to her unoccupied house in Pajapita, hoping that the danger had passed. But the same day that Reyes-Hoyes returned home, the DeLeon sons came and attacked her. She was beaten in the presence of her children, and her older son Kevin had a pistol pointed at his head. The next day, she went to Mexico with all three of her children, where they stayed for three months. Reyes- Hoyes and her youngest child, Antony, then came to the United States.

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