Stalin Vasquez-Barahona v. Attorney General United States

596 F. App'x 131
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 17, 2014
Docket14-1739
StatusUnpublished

This text of 596 F. App'x 131 (Stalin Vasquez-Barahona v. Attorney General 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
Stalin Vasquez-Barahona v. Attorney General United States, 596 F. App'x 131 (3d Cir. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION *

PER CURIAM.

Stalin Omar Vasquez-Barahona (“Vasquez-Barahona”) petitions for review of the Board of Immigration Appeals’ final order of removal. For the reasons that follow, we will deny the petition for review.

Vasquez-Barahona, a native and citizen of Honduras, entered the United States without inspection in July, 2009, and during a credible fear interview with an asylum officer he expressed a fear of returning to Honduras. On September 21, 2009, the Department of Homeland Security commenced removal proceedings with the filing and service of a Notice to Appear, which charged that he is removable pursuant to Immigration & Nationality Act § 212(a)(7)(A)©©, 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(7)(A)©®, as an alien who was not in possession of a valid visa or other entry document. Venue was changed to Philadelphia, and Vasquez-Barahona applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture, expressing a fear that gang members in his home country would find and kill him.

On September 15, 2011, Vasquez-Bara-hona appeared for his merits hearing and testified in support of his application. Either in his testimony or in his statement in support of his asylum application, he relayed that he previously resided with his siblings and nephews in Villa Nueva Cortes. The household consisted of him, an older sister named Jennyfer, a younger stepsister named Fany, another younger stepsister, a younger stepbrother, and Jen-nyfer’s two children. His mother had abandoned the family, leaving Jennyfer in charge. His father, who lives in Carson City, Nevada, provided financial support by sending them money every week. Vasquez-Barahona stated that he became friends with a man named Melvin, who began a romantic relationship with his sister Jennyfer in March, 2008. He subsequently found out that Melvin was a mem *133 ber of the Mara Salvatrucha (“MS-13”) gang after gang members started coming to his house to see Melvin.

Vasquez-Barahona stated that Jennyfer eventually broke up with Melvin in August, 2008, after he asked her to engage in criminal activities for his gang. After Jen-nyfer ended the relationship, she received three threatening telephone calls. The caller told Jennyfer to leave or she and her family would be killed. Vasquez-Baraho-na and his siblings believed that the caller was a gang member. In response to the call, he and his family moved in December, 2008 to his hometown of San Pedro Sula, which was approximately twenty minutes by car from their old home. Jennyfer also changed her cell phone number. However, shortly after moving to their new home, Jennyfer received a second call in January, 2009. Vasquez-Barahona stated that the anonymous caller told Jennyfer that it did not matter where she went because they would find her. Jennyfer received the third and final call in February, 2009. Vasquez-Barahona stated that the anonymous caller told Jennyfer that it did not matter if they could not find her because her brother [Vasquez-Barahona] would be the first one to go “to the cemetery,” since they knew the places where he went. A.R. 167. The family then raised $3,800 from aunts and uncles and $200 from Vasquez-Barahona’s father to pay a smuggler, and, in June, 2009, Vasquez-Barahona left Honduras for the United States.

In support of his application, Vasquez-Barahona submitted statements from Jen-nyfer and Fany, the 2008 and 2009 State Department Human Rights Reports for Honduras, and other country conditions evidence, which he argued showed that the Honduran Government is unable to control the gangs within its borders. The record also contains the 2010 Country Report for Honduras. Vasquez-Barahona’s counsel also filed a pre-hearing brief, in which he argued that Vasquez-Barahona’s family constituted a particular social group entitled to protection under the INA pursuant to Crespin-Valladares v. Holder, 632 F.3d 117, 125 (4th Cir.2011) (family ties provide prototypical example of particular social group). 1

In an oral decision issued on February 22, 2012, the IJ denied relief, finding' Vasquez-Barahona’s testimony to be incredible. The IJ made the alternative determination that Vasquez-Barahona did not establish past persecution because the unfulfilled telephone threats were insufficiently imminent and menacing to constitute persecution. The IJ noted that Vasquez-Barahona was not harmed during the four months that he remained in Honduras after the third and final telephone threat in February, 2009, and that none of his family members in Honduras were harmed. The IJ further found that Vasquez-Barahona did not establish a well-founded fear of persecution. Specifically, the IJ found that Vasquez-Baraho-na’s family members who remain in Honduras, including Jennyfer, Fany, his other two stepsiblings, and two nephews, had not been harmed in any manner since he left. In addition, the IJ determined that Vasquez-Barahona failed to provide reasonably available corroborating evidence or sufficiently explain why he could not submit such evidence. The IJ found that corroboration should have been provided from his aunt and father, who were residing legally in the United States. Last, *134 the IJ determined that Vasquez-Baraho-na’s testimony and documentary evidence were insufficient to establish that the Honduran government would be willfully blind to any gang violence or torture against him.

Vasquez-Barahona appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals. Among other claims, he contended that the IJ lacked impartiality and showed it by cross-examining him. On February 26, 2014, the Board dismissed the appeal. The Board declined to address the IJ’s adverse credibility finding and instead based its decision on the IJ’s alternative determination that Vasquez-Barahona had not met his burden of proof. The Board, citing Li v. Att’y Gen. of U.S., 400 F.3d 157, 164-65 (3d Cir.2005), agreed with the IJ that Vasquez-Barahona did not establish past persecution because the three telephone threats that his sister received were insufficiently imminent and menacing to constitute persecution. The Board noted that, regardless of whether gangs in Honduras were known to carry out their threats, Vasquez-Barahona was not “harmed in the months he remained in Honduras following the third and final threat, and none of his family members [had] been harmed in the years since his departure.” A.R. 4.

Furthermore, the Board determined that Vasquez-Barahona did not have a well-founded fear of persecution because he did not establish that his fear was objectively reasonable. The Board observed again that he was not harmed in Honduras and that his family members, including the sister who actually received the death threats, were not physically harmed in the five years since the last telephone call. The Board reasoned that Vasquez-Barahona’s claimed fear was undercut by the fact that similarly situated family members had remained in Honduras without harm.

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Related

Crespin-Valladares v. Holder
632 F.3d 117 (Fourth Circuit, 2011)
Abou Cham v. Attorney General of the United States
445 F.3d 683 (Third Circuit, 2006)
Tehram Roye v. Atty Gen USA
693 F.3d 333 (Third Circuit, 2012)

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Bluebook (online)
596 F. App'x 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stalin-vasquez-barahona-v-attorney-general-united-states-ca3-2014.