Shaomei Dong v. Attorney General of United States

450 F. App'x 204
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedNovember 10, 2011
Docket11-2228
StatusUnpublished

This text of 450 F. App'x 204 (Shaomei Dong v. Attorney General of United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shaomei Dong v. Attorney General of United States, 450 F. App'x 204 (3d Cir. 2011).

Opinion

*205 OPINION

PER CURIAM.

Shaomei Dong petitions for review of a Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) decision that, based on an adverse credibility determination entered by an Immigration Judge (IJ), rejected her application for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the United Nations’ Convention Against Torture (CAT). Having conducted careful review of the relevant record evidence, we will grant the petition for review and remand for further administrative proceedings.

I.

Dong, who hails from the Lianjiang region of China, entered the United States without inspection near Hidalgo, Texas in September of 2005. She was swiftly apprehended and issued a Notice to Appear. Administrative Record (A.R.) 461-62. In a December 6, 2005 hearing in Newark, New Jersey, in front of now-retired IJ Daniel A. Meisner, Dong conceded removability and announced her intention to file an application for asylum and associated relief. A.R. 51. The application was timely filed in August of 2006. A.R. 448-60. Following several false starts, which yielded more than two years of delay, a merits hearing before IJ Margaret Reichenberg was held with the assistance of a translator on April 29, 2009.

Dong’s story, which she developed at this hearing, began in 1999, when anti-Falun-Gong sentiment reached her school in Lianjiang; told that Falun Gong was an “evil cult,” she was warned not to associate with the movement. A.R. 452. Later, in 2003, Dong encountered an old friend whom she remembered as a walking exemplar of poor health and foul habits. Much to her astonishment, he was markedly transformed and credited Falun Gong with his improvement. A.R. 459. Dong became interested in the plight of Falun Gong practitioners, and helped her friend distribute flyers while speaking of the mistreatment of Falun Gong members to fellow villagers. A.R. 452, 460. But in June 2004, Dong’s activities drew the attention of authorities, who arrested her, beat her severely enough to require brief hospitalization, and warned her to cease her Falun Gong advocacy. In the aftermath of her beating, she became more resolute, leading to friction in her marriage and divorce from her anti-Falun-Gong husband. A.R. 460. Despite this turn of events, Dong continued to support Falun Gong. In May 2005, she was arrested again, beaten, and held by the village cadres. A.R. 453; see also A.R. 107-14. They demanded a list of names of Falun Gong practitioners within three days as a condition of Dong’s release from custody and imposed a 2,000 Yuan fine. A.R. 115-16, 453, 460. Fearing for her safety, Dong fled, and upon hearing from her family that the authorities were visiting her home, A.R. 118, 129, she left China for Holland and then Mexico, before crossing over into the United States.

In support of her testimony, Dong submitted numerous exhibits. The first was an affidavit from Bao Jia Yang, the friend she met in 2003, who substantially corroborated her story of mistreatment in China. A.R. 314-15. The second was án affidavit from her father, who described his daughter as being “still young, and ... not cautious,” as she “told the truth in public that the Chinese government was suppressing Falun Gong followers.” A.R. 302. Dong’s father also revealed that, after she left, “Government cadres came to our home every ... few days, wanting] to arrest my daughter and jail her.” A.R. 303. The third submission was a police warning dated September 30, 2005 (after Dong’s departure from China), stating in translation: “Dong Shaomei of this village *206 still wants to practice and propaganda [sic ] evil cult Falun Gong. Even after the government’s warning, she is still unregenerate. It is now imperative to inform her family and to inform her that Dong Shao-mei surrender herself immediately to the police station. If not, she will be punished severely and she will be responsible for [ ] all consequences.” A.R. 265. Finally, Dong included two hospital records from June 2004 (after the first beating), and a “Notice of Fine” stemming from the second incident. A.R. 259, 262, 256. Also attached were visual exhibits and photographs of Dong at Falun Gong rallies and events, as she had since begun to practice Falun Gong (as opposed to merely supporting it) in the United States. A.R. 288-92.

The story as detailed above and as elicited at the 2009 hearing differed in several respects from the version reported on Dong’s 1-598 asylum application. Several additional details — such as her hospitalization, for example — were not discussed in her 1-598 statement.

During the hearing, the IJ was troubled by what appeared to be inconsistencies and implausibilities in Dong’s tale. 1 The IJ wanted to know why Dong did not practice Falun Gong in China. A.R. 121— 22. Dong responded that she didn’t “have a good teacher” in China, had no complaints about her health at the time, and was afraid of more severe reprisals from the government cadres. A.R. 121-22. Much discussion also focused on the aforementioned omissions in her 1-598 application — specifically, her failure to mention her stay at the hospital, and her failure to discuss her year-long practice of Falun Gong in the United States at the time of filing. A.R. 144. For the most part, Dong attributed those omissions to her desire not to worry her family members, see A.R. 142, although she also seemed to suggest that she simply forgot to include that information, see A.R. 146.

The IJ also expressed frustration with Dong’s choice of witness to demonstrate her Falun Gong practice in the United States. Fa Qi Ni, a friend of the family who now lived in New York, had submitted an affidavit in which he claimed to be familiar with Dong’s Falun Gong activities. 2 Dong intended to present Ni’s live testimony to that effect. But the IJ attacked his credentials, doubting his ability to judge whether Dong was practicing Fa-lun Gong because he was not himself a Falun Gong practitioner. A.R. 140. The IJ asked why Dong had not bothered to submit more evidence of her affiliation with Falun Gong groups and activities, to which she said “I didn’t know it’s necessary.” A.R. 149. Dong explained that she did not keep in touch with many of her Falun Gong co-practitioners, that they were quite busy, and that many “don’t want too many people to know that they practice Falun Gong.” A.R. 150. At the point when the witness was to be called, the following exchange took place:

Q: Counsel, are we hearing from the brother’s friend?
A: We can.
*207 Q: Sure we can hear him tell us how he doesn’t know anything about Falun Gong and all he knows is what she told him, and she has a disk.
A: We don’t really think so.
Q: It is up to you, ma’am, whether you want him to testify or not.
A: I mean, I can bring him but I don’t understand the point of the Court.
Q: She provided zero foundation for him knowing anything.

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450 F. App'x 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaomei-dong-v-attorney-general-of-united-states-ca3-2011.