Rezaul Karim v. Eric H. Holder, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 4, 2010
Docket08-3684
StatusPublished

This text of Rezaul Karim v. Eric H. Holder, Jr. (Rezaul Karim v. Eric H. Holder, Jr.) 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.

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Rezaul Karim v. Eric H. Holder, Jr., (8th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 08-3684 ___________

Rezaul Karim; Zannatul Karim; * Neamulzannat Neela, * * Petitioners, * * Petitions for Review from the v. * Board of Immigration Appeals. * Eric H. Holder, Jr., Attorney General * of the United States, * * Respondent. * ___________

Submitted: November 17, 2009 Filed: March 4, 2010 ___________

Before MELLOY, BEAM, and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges. ___________

MELLOY, Circuit Judge.

Lead petitioner Rezaul Karim ("Karim"), along with his wife and daughter, are natives and citizens of Bangladesh. They petition for review of an order of the Board of Immigration Appeals ("BIA") denying asylum and withholding of removal.1 We deny the petition.2 I.

Karim and his family entered the United States as visitors in September 1993 with permission to remain until March 26, 1994. Karim applied for asylum in December 1993 based on allegations of persecution due to his membership in the Jatiya political party in Bangladesh. Removal proceedings began more than twelve years later with the issuance of Notices to Appear dated January 4, 2006. During a November 2006 immigration hearing, the petitioners conceded removability for overstaying their visas and added a claim under the Convention Against Torture ("CAT"). A hearing on the merits occurred on March 6, 2007.

1 The BIA opinion states that petitioners did not dispute the Immigration Judge's ("IJ") denial of relief under the Convention Against Torture ("CAT") or denial of voluntary departure. The BIA also noted that the CAT claim was based on the same evidence as the unsuccessful asylum claim.

Petitioners make no argument regarding CAT relief in their opening brief, and we consider the claim waived. Hasalla v. Ashcroft, 367 F.3d 799, 805 (8th Cir. 2004). A discussion of voluntary departure is also absent from the opening brief, though some question about it arose in the petitioners' reply brief and at oral argument. Even if we were to consider it, as a practical matter, we have held that we lack jurisdiction to review the denial of voluntary departure. E.g., Tebit v. Holder, 321 F. App'x 525, 526 (8th Cir. 2009) (unpublished per curiam). 2 Petitioners have motions pending before the BIA related to ineffective assistance of counsel at earlier stages of their proceedings. We deny this petition without prejudice to those motions.

-2- The record indicates Karim joined the Jatiya party in 1982, became a supervisory secretary in 1985, and ran into problems because of his political affiliation when a rival political group, the Bangladesh National Party ("BNP"), came to power. In May 1991, BNP militants threw rocks at Karim's home. In July 1991 BNP members assaulted him, and in December 1991, BNP members allegedly took him to their local office, beat him again, and detained him for half a day. Karim did not suffer significant injuries from the 1991 incidents. The most serious attack allegedly occurred in March 1992, when Karim stated he was again taken to a local BNP office and beaten so severely that he remained hospitalized for two months. He testified that he reported each incident to the police, who refused to help.

Karim also claimed that in May 1993, he learned that a BNP leader had filed a criminal complaint falsely accusing him of carrying a weapon illegally and that police had gone to his home to look for him. These incidents prompted his flight to the United States. According to Karim, he considered returning to Bangladesh in 1997, but his brother obtained and sent him the police report for the May 1993 incident. Karim submitted the police report to corroborate this aspect of his claim in January 2007, less than two months before the merits hearing.

The Department of Homeland Security ("DHS") sent the police report to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Document Forensic Laboratory for testing. Forensic testing was not completed in time, so DHS asked the fraud section of the U.S. embassy in Dhaka to verify the authenticity of the report. The resultant Consular Investigation Report ("consular report") indicated that Karim's police report for the weapons charge was "a totally false case."

During the merits hearing, Karim's attorney moved to continue or adjourn because DHS had not submitted the consular report until about a week before. Counsel argued that proceedings should at least wait until forensic testing could be completed. The Immigration Judge ("IJ") denied the motion and admitted the consular report into evidence over Karim's objection. Karim attempted to rebut the -3- consular report by asserting that the investigator had perhaps failed to look in the right records or go to the right police station when creating it.

Karim testified that he feared returning to Bangladesh because of ongoing violent conflict between the political parties, which he had learned about from the news and from his brother who lived there. Background evidence in the record includes a 2005 State Department country condition report and a 2005 State Department profile of Bangladeshi asylum cases, both submitted by the government. The record also contains a 2006 report from an international NGO that the IJ had suggested the parties consider during the initial November 2006 hearing. The 2005 State Department country conditions report and the 2006 NGO report indicate that the Jatiya party had joined a BNP-led coalition government in 2001, suggesting that the BNP was unlikely to persecute members or low-level leaders of the Jatiya party, like Karim. Karim maintained that he belonged to a different Jatiya faction than the one aligned with the BNP; however, evidence indicated that Karim was a member of the faction that had joined the coalition government.

The IJ denied all forms of relief in an oral opinion. The IJ noted "the point of departure for this decision are country conditions"3 and then turned to Karim's

3 We note that Karim argued in his opening brief that the IJ erroneously inverted the burden of proof by finding changed country conditions at the outset and requiring Karim to refute them before considering his claim of persecution. Upon careful review of the IJ opinion, we disagree. Although the IJ made this remark at the beginning of the opinion's analysis section and failed to outline the burden-shifting analysis discussed in Part II, infra, the substance of the opinion allocated this initial burden properly.

The IJ then conducted a separate well-founded-fear analysis. It is here that the IJ considered country conditions in Bangladesh as relevant to Karim's case. In this regard, the IJ first stated:

Turning to the respondent's confession that he faces likely mistreatment -4- claims of past persecution. The IJ believed that Karim held a supervisory secretary position in the Jatiya party and had been beaten on a number of occasions. However, the IJ found Karim not credible as to the most severe beating in 1992 due to inconsistencies in his statements about the incident. The IJ determined the other, less severe beatings and threats did not rise to the level of persecution. Additionally, the IJ found Karim had submitted a false police report and stated that Karim had given "misleading testimony in that regard." Considering these problems, the IJ determined that Karim had failed to establish past persecution. The IJ also found that Karim lacked a well-founded fear of future persecution. Further, the IJ denied asylum as a matter of discretion based on the submission of the fraudulent police report. The IJ next found Karim had failed to meet the higher burdens of proof for withholding of removal and CAT relief.

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