Selamawit Kifleyesus v. Alberto Gonzales

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 12, 2006
Docket05-3304
StatusPublished

This text of Selamawit Kifleyesus v. Alberto Gonzales (Selamawit Kifleyesus v. Alberto Gonzales) 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.

Bluebook
Selamawit Kifleyesus v. Alberto Gonzales, (8th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 05-3304 ___________

Selamawit Kifleyesus, * * Petitioner, * * Petition for Review of an Order of v. * the Board of Immigration Appeals. * * Alberto Gonzales, Attorney General of * the United States, * * Respondent. * ___________

Submitted: June 16, 2005 Filed: September 12, 2006 ___________

Before MURPHY, MELLOY, and COLLOTON, Circuit Judges.

MELLOY, Circuit Judge.

Selamawit Kifleyesus, an Eritrean citizen, petitions for review of an order of the Board of Immigration Appeals. In the order, the Board found that she was not credible; denied her application for asylum, withholding of removal and relief under the Convention Against Torture; and found that her application was frivolous. We deny the petition. I. Background1

The petitioner entered the United States at Detroit on July 6, 2000, on a 90-day nonimmigrant fiancé visa. She was authorized to stay in the United States through October 5, 2000. She did not marry her fiancé, and she overstayed her visa. On July 17, 2001, the INS served the petitioner with a notice to appear charging removability.

In a first hearing, on September 27, 2001, the petitioner conceded removability and sought asylum, withholding of removal, relief under the Convention Against Torture and, in the alternative, voluntary departure. The IJ designated Eritrea as the country of removal.

On January 7, 2004, the IJ held another hearing, received evidence, permitted the petitioner to amend her asylum application, and received testimony from the petitioner. The petitioner amended her asylum application regarding her education, employment, and places of residence in the United States. She then declared and swore that contents of the application were true. The petitioner did not amend several

1 The record in this case is a mix of admittedly false statements, statements that an immigration judge (“IJ”) rejected as false but that the petitioner maintains are true, and explanations from the petitioner for the false statements. The explanations for the false statements are based on the assertion that the petitioner was raped by a police officer in Sudan while displaced from her native Eritrea and that she was eventually mistreated and abused by her fiancé in the United States. The petitioner claims that her situation as a rape victim and a victim of domestic abuse made her particularly dependent upon, and subject to manipulation by, the fiancé, and that all false statements and omissions in her application and testimony are attributable to his advice and her desire not to disclose the rape. Based on this record, the IJ made some express findings of fact, but did not clearly articulate findings as to every aspect of the petitioner’s history. Accordingly, we find it necessary to describe the evidence as it was presented to the IJ and to discuss the infirmities that the IJ identified in petitioner’s evidence.

-2- items on her asylum application even though she later admitted that these items were false.

In her testimony at the January 7, 2004 hearing, the petitioner described the following history. She is an Eritrean citizen who was born in an area of Ethiopia that eventually became Eritrea. She left the country with her family in 1978, at the age of eight, during a time of civil war. The family fled to Kassala, Sudan where the petitioner spent the remainder of her childhood and graduated from high school. She received her education in schools run by members of a political group, the Eritrean Liberation Front (“ELF”). Her parents were members of the ELF, and she eventually joined and became active in the group. In 1988, after high school, she moved to Khartoum, Sudan, received vocational training, and obtained a job as a secretary at a YMCA. She worked in that capacity for three years. The petitioner’s family returned to Eritrea in 1992 when Eritrea obtained its independence from Ethiopia. The petitioner remained in Sudan.

While in Sudan, she met a man named Mehretab Abraha. Mr. Abraha moved to Egypt to attend college and eventually moved to the United States and became a United States citizen. The petitioner stated she remained in Sudan until November 1996, at which time she returned to Eritrea and lived in hiding until April 1998. She did not explain what she did between the time that she stopped working as a secretary in Khartoum and the time that she returned to Eritrea in 1996. She left Sudan for Eritrea in order to procure an Eritrean passport so she could travel to the United States to marry Mr. Abraha.

The petitioner claimed that while in Eritrea between 1996 and 1998, she lived in hiding because her active participation in the ELF made her a target of the Eritrean government. She did not, however, claim that her mother lived in hiding or was targeted for having previously been active with the ELF. The petitioner also claimed that she feared harm from the government of Eritrea and could not obtain an Eritrean

-3- passport or identification card due to her failure to participate in compulsory national service. She does not claim that she actually suffered any harm during that time.

She claimed that, in April 1998, she fled to Ethiopia where she lived in hiding for six months with an uncle and attempted to obtain an Ethiopian passport. Eventually, the uncle arranged for a passport and travel to Germany with a Somali businessman. She then traveled to Germany where she lived from September 1998 until July 2000. While there, she met other Eritreans and became active in a local branch of the ELF. She applied for an Eritrean passport at the Eritrean embassy, but her application was denied. She applied for and was denied asylum in Germany. She did not state why Germany denied her application for asylum. She claimed to have filed an appeal of the German decision but to have withdrawn the appeal in order to obtain German travel documents that would allow her to join Mr. Abraha, by then her fiancé, in the United States. The petitioner testified that she and Mr. Abraha originally had planned to marry in Germany before she traveled to the United States, but that he changed the plan after she arrived in Germany and decided instead to apply for a fiancé visa for her admission to the United States.

When she arrived in the United States, she stayed with Mr. Abraha’s sister. She stated that Mr. Abraha refused to marry her and instead insisted that she marry his older brother. She claimed that when she refused to marry his brother, Mr. Abraha became angry, held her down, tied her in rope, demanded that she give him her documents and photos, and then forcefully took her photos and documents. In fact, she filed a domestic violence complaint against him and obtained a protective order from law enforcement in Minnesota. The immigration judge noted at the January 7 hearing that she had read the materials and the order arising from the domestic violence complaint.

The petitioner then stated that she was active in the ELF in Minnesota and had participated in numerous ELF events throughout the United States. She also described

-4- the basis for her fears of persecution if returned to Eritrea. She claimed her nephew lives in hiding with her mother and sleeps on the roof to avoid detection from officials who come looking for him every morning. She also claimed that her brother and brother-in-law were forced to participate in national service in Eritrea. She did not claim that only ELF members were forced into service. Instead, she admitted that all Eritreans within a certain age range are required to participate in national service. She identified national service as a reason she did not want to return to Eritrea.

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