Siqeca, Eriketa v. Gonzales, Alberto R.

157 F. App'x 912
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 9, 2005
Docket04-2472
StatusUnpublished

This text of 157 F. App'x 912 (Siqeca, Eriketa v. Gonzales, Alberto R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Siqeca, Eriketa v. Gonzales, Alberto R., 157 F. App'x 912 (7th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

ORDER

Eriketa Siqeca and her son, Xhemil, both Albanian citizens, applied for asylum, withholding of removal and protection under the Convention Against Torture after they attempted to enter the United States in April 2000 with fraudulent passports. Siqeca claims that government officials threatened, beat and raped her because of her involvement in the Democratic Party (“DP”). The Immigration Judge (“IJ”) denied her application, finding her testimony too inconsistent to be credible. The Board *913 of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) summarily affirmed the IJ’s decision, and Siqeca and her son seek review in this consolidated petition. 1 We affirm the decision of the BIA.

In her asylum application, Siqeca stated the following. Her husband was a leader of the DP in Albania until Socialists shot and killed him while on party business on June 8, 1991. In October 1998, police “grabbed” her at a rally at which she had given a speech. The officers “beat me on my back and head, forcing me to enter the [squad] car,” and placed her in a cell alone. A masked police agent then beat her at the police station, warned her not to hold any more DP meetings and threatened to kill her if they picked her up again. After three hours, Siqeca was released and went to the DP headquarters to report the incident and take photographs of her injuries. She said she was “horribly frightened” because the police had known her by name.

Just one month later, Siqeca represented the DP as a poll watcher in the November 1998 elections. On her way to the voting center the secret police warned her that if she reported any abnormal activity, she would “end up like [her] husband.” Nonetheless, after she noticed some people voting twice, Siqeca refused to sign a report stating the elections were “clean and honest,” and instead signed a DP petition to sue the Socialist Party for “false elections.”

On May 7, 1999, Siqeca received a notice to appear before the prosecutor in Tirana. When she arrived (the date is not specified in her affidavit), she said the prosecutor threatened her and asked her to withdraw her statement regarding the November 1998 elections. She refused, the prosecutor left the room, and a masked man entered who beat and raped her. Afterward, she was thrown out on the street. Once outside, she “walked slowly, sobbing, to a hospital” where she remained until 1:00 p.m. the next day. She then went to the DP offices to report her mistreatment and to take photos of her injuries. Soon, Siqeca began to receive threatening letters at home. Fed up, she finally moved her eldest children to her mother’s house and left for the United States in April 2000 with her youngest son.

Three assertions in Siqeca’s asylum application differed from the version she had offered to an immigration officer at her credible fear interview when she first entered the United States. First, at her interview she said she was raped at the prosecutor’s office in August 1997. In her application, she said the rape occurred in 1999. Second, Siqeca told the officer that she had worked for the DP in the local election in June 1997; in her application she said the election was in November 1998. Third, Siqeca asserted at her interview that the government summoned her in August 1997 and threatened her. In her application, she said the summons and threat occurred in June 1999.

Siqeca’s story changed again when she testified before the IJ. First, Siqeca stated that after she had reported voting irregularities on the day of the November 1998 elections, the secret police picked her up and warned her against doing so. According to her interview statement, she did not report the voting irregularities at all because, the day after the election, a car full of masked men scared her. In her application she claimed that the secret police threatened her before the election.

Second, Siqeca testified that she had been raped on June 18, 1999 and not in August of 1997 as she had stated in her *914 credible fear interview. She claimed that she had only been able to give approximate dates at her interview because she “did not have all the documents” with her at the time. Third, although Siqeca explained in her application that her rapist always wore a mask, at the hearing she described him as 35 years old with short, black hair and stated that “[sjimply by looking at his face, I realized that he was a criminal.” When confronted with this inconsistency, she claimed he removed his mask on his way out, a claim she had not asserted in her application.

Finally, Siqeca gave a different account about what happened after her rape. At the hearing, she testified that she went first to the DP headquarters and that her brother then drove her to the hospital, which discharged her after four hours. This contradicted her application in which she reported that after the rape she walked directly to the hospital and was not discharged until 1:00 p.m. the following day, at which time she went to the DP offices.

During her hearing, Siqeca submitted a hospital discharge sheet and a medical report which stated that she was discharged on June 18, 1999, that her body and head were beaten, and that she suffered cuts, scratches and swollen tissues. The medical report did not mention rape. Siqeca submitted a letter from the DP dated November 16, 1998, appointing her as poll watcher for the November 22 election. Siqeca also submitted the four subpoenas regarding that election. The first subpoena was dated November 9, 1998, seven days prior to her appointment as poll watcher and thirteen days before the election occurred. Finally, she submitted her photos of June 18, 1999, the day of her hospital discharge.

Siqeca also submitted affidavits from two experts. The first was from Dr. Bernd J. Fischer, a professor of Balkan history. Dr. Fischer opined that Siqeca had established past and future persecution. He based his opinion on Siqeca’s statements and “supporting documentation,” which the IJ interpreted to mean her application and her hearing exhibits. The second affidavit was from Dr. Ahmad Bastani who diagnosed Siqeca as having had “Major Depression” for “several years,” after evaluating her on December 5, 2002, three days after she had finished testifying before the IJ. According to Dr. Bastani’s one-page assessment, Siqeca’s symptoms included “[vjery significant memory loss which has affected both short-term and long-term memory processes.”

Where the BIA summarily affirms the IJ’s decision denying relief, this court will evaluate the IJ’s findings as if it were the BIA’s. Tolosa v. Ashcroft, 384 F.3d 906 (7th Cir.2004). This court will uphold an IJ’s adverse credibility determination if it is supported by “reasonable, substantial, and probative evidence on the record considered as a whole.” Prela v. Ashcroft, 394 F.3d 515, 518 (7th Cir.2005) (quoting INS v. Elias-Zacarias, 502 U.S. 478, 481, 112 S.Ct. 812, 117 L.Ed.2d 38 (1992)).

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