Ru Xiu Chen v. Holder

579 F.3d 73, 2009 WL 2621607
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 27, 2009
Docket08-2398
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 579 F.3d 73 (Ru Xiu Chen v. Holder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ru Xiu Chen v. Holder, 579 F.3d 73, 2009 WL 2621607 (1st Cir. 2009).

Opinion

LYNCH, Chief Judge.

Ru Xiu Chen and his wife Xiu Jin Zheng, both natives and citizens of China, petition for review of a final order by the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”), denying their applications for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). The BIA affirmed the decision of an Immigration Judge (“IJ”), who denied their applications on the basis of an adverse credibility finding. We deny their petition.

I.

We briefly summarize petitioners’ testimony before an IJ. Chen and Zheng were married on August 5, 1989. Zheng soon became pregnant with her first child and gave birth to a son on May 1,1990.

Zheng then became pregnant again, in violation of China’s policy of allowing only one child per couple. On May 18, 1991, when Zheng was eight months pregnant, government officials learned of her second pregnancy and came to her mother-in-law’s house, where she and Chen were living, to force her to have an abortion. Chen and Zheng protested, and seven or eight government officials forcibly removed Zheng from the home. Zheng was taken to a hospital, where she received an injection directly below her bellybutton. Seven or eight hours later, Zheng felt intense pain; about ten hours later, Zheng *75 gave birth to a stillborn baby. Chen had followed Zheng to the hospital, and Zheng later saw Chen at the hospital.

Shortly thereafter, Zheng became pregnant for a third time. She went into hiding and secretly gave birth to a daughter on April 16, 1992. During her pregnancy, Zheng received medical care from a “private” doctor in China. Zheng provided no medical records to document the care that she had received from this doctor.

Government officials learned of Zheng’s second birth and came to the home of Zheng’s mother-in-law in June 1992, looking to sterilize Chen and Zheng. Zheng testified that family planning authorities had come to her mother-in-law’s home a total of three times. The first time was the incident in 1991 when family planning officials forced Zheng to have an abortion. The second time was the June 1992 incident. According to Zheng, the most recent time that family planning authorities visited her mother-in-law’s home was in 1999 when they came to collect a fine for having more than one child per couple. Zheng also described a fourth incident in which the family planning officials had visited her mother-in-law’s home in 1994 to collect the overbirth fine. Zheng’s mother-in-law submitted a letter, which described only the 1992 incident.

After the June 1992 incident, Chen chose to leave China, and Zheng moved away from her mother-in-law’s house. Zheng lived with a family friend from July 1992 until October 1992. She then lived with her younger brother, where she stayed for more than two years, beginning in October 1992. Zheng took her newborn daughter with her but left her son to live with her mother-in-law.

A friend helped Chen leave China. Initially using a Chinese passport in his own name, Chen traveled through Hong Kong, Bolivia, and Peru before arriving in the United States on July 27, 1992. He presented a fraudulent Japanese passport, and U.S. immigration officials denied him admission to the United States. Chen applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the CAT on January 25, 1993. His application alleged that Chinese officials had forced his wife to have an abortion during the eighth month of her pregnancy. Chen also claimed that if he were returned to China, he would be forcibly sterilized for violating China’s policy of allowing one child per couple.

About one-and-a-half years later, Zheng, who was still living in hiding at her brother’s home in China, told Chen that his father in China was dying of liver cancer. Chen chose to return to China to visit his father and applied for advanced parole from U.S. immigration officials. The agency granted Chen advanced parole on June 24, 1994. Chen obtained a passport in his own name from U.S. immigration officials, and he traveled to China under his own name for approximately two weeks, returning to the United States on August 4, 1994. The ease with which Chen was able to return to China conflicts with his statement in the affidavit he filed in support of his asylum application that he had been “smuggled” out of China and had been “blacklisted” by the family planning authorities.

When Chen returned to China, he stayed with Zheng for five days in a hotel under his own name near the hospital where his father was receiving treatment. Family planning officials were “hiding in the entrance of the hospital, tryfing] to catch [him].” Chen’s mother warned him that the family planning officials were at the hospital, and Chen left the area and stayed in the town where his wife had been hiding for several days. Family planning officials never came to Chen’s hotel looking *76 for him and did not pursue him further during the time he remained in China.

Zheng joined her husband in the United States approximately a year later, entering the country without inspection on July 20, 1995. Before coming to the United States, Zheng left her two children with her mother-in-law in China. On April 26, 1996, Chen filed a second asylum application, listing his wife , as a derivative beneficiary. Chen attached to his second asylum application the same affidavit describing his experiences in China that he had used for his original asylum application in 1998. He did not mention the 1994 incident in which family planning officials were allegedly hiding at the hospital where Chen’s father was receiving treatment.

The agency referred Chen’s asylum application to an IJ on April 15, 2004 and simultaneously issued Zheng a Notice to Appear (“NTA”), charging her with removability under 8 U.S.C. § 1158(a)(6)(A)(i). On December 22, 2004, Zheng appeared before an IJ, admitted the facts contained in the NTA, and conceded removability.

On February 22, 2005, Zheng filed a separate asylum application, listing Chen as a derivative beneficiary. Zheng’s application claimed that Chinese officials had forced her to have an abortion when she was eight months pregnant in 1991. She also alleged that government officials came looking for her husband following the birth of their second child in 1992 and wanted to sterilize him for violating China’s one-child policy.

Petitioners’ applications subsequently were joined for hearing purposes but were not consolidated. Zheng and Chen testified before an IJ at a hearing on September 6, 2005. At the close of the testimony, the IJ noted that she was “a little troubled by the changing testimony ... and ... at [Zheng’s] hesitancy in answering some of the questions that were put to her.” At the hearing, Zheng testified that she had a miscarriage in 2004 while she was living in the United States. Zheng presented no medical records to corroborate this claim, and her lawyer had only learned of the miscarriage from Zheng as they were talking on the way to the hearing that morning. Although Zheng had been seeing a gynecologist annually since living in the United States and claimed that she was still suffering side effects, such as dizziness, from her 1991 forced abortion, she did not mention the 1991 abortion to her gynecologist until she suffered the miscarriage in 2004.

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Bluebook (online)
579 F.3d 73, 2009 WL 2621607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ru-xiu-chen-v-holder-ca1-2009.