Tchoukhrova v. Gonzales

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 20, 2005
Docket03-71129
StatusPublished

This text of Tchoukhrova v. Gonzales (Tchoukhrova v. Gonzales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tchoukhrova v. Gonzales, (9th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

VICTORIA TCHOUKHROVA, DMITRI  TCHOUKHROVA, and EVGUENI No. 03-71129 TCHOUKHROVA, Agency Nos. Petitioners, v.  A75-772-599 A75-772-600 ALBERTO R. GONZALES,* Attorney A75-772-601 General, OPINION Respondent.  On Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals

Argued and Submitted September 1, 2004—Pasadena, California

Filed April 21, 2005

Before: Stephen Reinhardt, A. Wallace Tashima, and Kim McLane Wardlaw, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Reinhardt

*Alberto R. Gonzales is substituted for his predecessor, John Ashcroft, as Attorney General of the United States, pursuant to Fed. R. App. P. 43(c)(2).

4557 TCHOUKHROVA v. GONZALES 4561

COUNSEL

Jonathan D. Montag, Law Offices of Jonathan D. Montag, San Diego, California, for the petitioner.

Peter D. Keisler, Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division; Margaret J. Perry, Senior Litigation Counsel; William C. Erb, Jr. and Frances M. McLaughlin, U.S. Department of Justice, Civil Division, Office of Immigration Litigation, Washington, D.C., for respondent.

OPINION

REINHARDT, Circuit Judge:

The question before us is whether under our immigration laws asylum may be granted to the parents of a disabled child who has been persecuted in his native land on account of his disability or whether, instead, we are compelled to force the family to return involuntarily to its home country where the child is likely to face further persistent and debilitating perse- cution. To answer that question, we must decide (1) whether disabled children and their parents who provide care for them may constitute a particular social group within the meaning of our immigration laws and (2) whether, in order to protect a disabled child from persecution, a parent of such child may apply for asylum and withholding of removal and may rely 4562 TCHOUKHROVA v. GONZALES during the administrative proceeding on the past persecutory conduct directed against the child.

We hold that disabled children and their parents constitute a statutorily protected group and that a parent who provides care for a disabled child may seek asylum and withholding of removal on the basis of the persecution the child has suffered on account of his disability. We also hold that, given the record before us, the parent who is seeking asylum and with- holding in this case is eligible for the former relief and enti- tled to the latter. Finally, we hold that the parent’s spouse and the disabled child are eligible for asylum by virtue of their derivative applications and are also entitled to withholding of removal.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Evgueni Tchoukhrova was born in 1991 in Vladivostok, Russia with infantile cerebral paralysis, or cerebral palsy. His disability resulted chiefly from the negligence of members of the staff of the Russian state-owned hospital, who first induced his mother’s labor and then abandoned her for the entire night, during which time the fetus did not receive suffi- cient oxygen. The next morning, because the induced labor had stopped, hospital personnel decided to forcibly extract the child from its mother’s body, breaking its neck in the process. Instead of giving the newborn child medical care, they ini- tially threw Evgueni into a container holding abortion and other medical waste, telling his mother that “they didn’t see the reason why he needed to live.” The mother, Victoria Tchoukhrova, having lost a lot of blood, fell into a state of unconsciousness.

Against all odds and despite the staff’s neglect, Evgueni survived, and was retrieved from the disposal bin. As soon as she became conscious again, Victoria commenced pleading to see her son, without success. She was told that he was severely disabled and that she should “refuse” him. After five TCHOUKHROVA v. GONZALES 4563 days, Victoria managed to convince a nurse to break the rules and let her visit her child in the middle of the night because she “wanted desperately to see him and to hold his lifeless body close to [her] heart.”

Despite Victoria and her husband Dmitri’s attachment to their newborn son, government officials tried to intimidate the couple into abandoning him to a state-run orphanage. Not- withstanding his parents’ refusal to give their consent, Evgueni was transferred to an institution for orphaned chil- dren with birth defects. Victoria and Dmitri repeatedly sought to visit their son, but were denied permission for the first two months.

When the Tchoukhrovas finally gained entrance to the “hospital” for children with birth defects, the conditions were horrifying. The children were wrapped in old, wet, dirty lin- ens and cried out from hunger. No one cleaned or otherwise took care of them. Some children writhed in pain but received no treatment. Despite their cries and obvious plight, the “chil- dren were simply abandoned.” The Tchoukhrovas would not allow their child to remain in confinement under such deplor- able conditions and, notwithstanding intense pressure from state authorities to consent to Evgueni’s permanent institu- tionalization, Victoria and Dmitri secured his release and put him in a private clinic.

Evgueni’s parents’ struggles had still not ended. Once Evgueni was diagnosed as having infantile cerebral palsy, he was permanently labeled as disabled and was consequently banned from receiving any public medical support for his condition. In search of better medical care for their child, the family traveled three times to the Osteopathic Center for Chil- dren in San Diego. As a result of the treatment that he received in the United States, Evgueni was able to walk for the first time in his life. When the family returned to Russia, Victoria and Dmitri, in accordance with the recommendation of his American doctor, refused to allow Evgueni to be vacci- 4564 TCHOUKHROVA v. GONZALES nated. The doctor was concerned about the boy’s fragile immune system. Because Evgueni was not vaccinated, it became difficult for him to obtain any medical care in state- run medical facilities.

The diagnosis of cerebral palsy resulted in Evgueni’s being denied access to public school, despite the fact that his dis- ability was a physical and not a mental one.1 The Russian government doctor recommended that, if Evgueni’s parents insisted on refusing to allow him to be institutionalized, he “be isolated at home” and not taken out into public places, a recommendation that was understandable given the extreme degree of societal prejudice against the disabled in Russia. When Victoria took Evgueni out in public, he was subjected to verbal abuse and spat upon. Victoria would often hear par- ents say to their children: “Get away from that boy, can’t you see that he’s abnormal” or “Don’t get near him, he’s sick.” Children would throw things at him. Although many of the interactions were simply frightening and humiliating, two assaults resulted in Evgueni’s hospitalization. On one visit to a park when he was six years old, several young men attacked him. The broken arm and severe head trauma that he suffered due to this incident required him to be hospitalized for two months and led to insomnia, spontaneous crying, shaking, and paranoia. Victoria and Dmitri filed a report with the police, but they never investigated the incident. On another occasion, a women yelled at Victoria, “Get your ugly imbecile out of here,” and shoved Evgueni to the ground. He was rushed to the emergency room and received several stitches in his head, from which he still has a visible scar. Victoria again filed a police report; this time, the police told her the case was insig- nificant and to settle it herself.

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