Thierno Barry v. Eric H. Holder, Jr.

327 F. App'x 611
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 20, 2009
Docket08-3660
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 327 F. App'x 611 (Thierno Barry v. Eric H. Holder, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thierno Barry v. Eric H. Holder, Jr., 327 F. App'x 611 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

FORESTER, Senior District Judge.

Petitioner-Appellant, Thierno Amadou Barry, seeks review of a Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) order affirming an Immigration Judge’s (“IJ”) denial of his claims for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). For the reasons set forth below, we DENY the petition for review.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Barry is a native of Guinea and claims that he entered the United States on June 9, 2001, using someone else’s passport. There is no record of Barry’s entry into the United States and he did not produce an airline ticket or 1-94. Barry filed an application for asylum and withholding of removal based on political opinion and the CAT on August 7, 2001.

*612 Barry provided background information in his application. He stated that he lived in Mamou, Guinea from 1971 to 2000, before fleeing to Conarky, Guinea and then to the United States in 2001. At the time that Barry left Guinea, the government of Lasaña Conte dominated politics. 1 In his application, Barry claims that he is a member of the Union pour le Progres et la Renouveau or Union for Progress and Renewal (“UPR”), an opposition party. He stated that, in Guinea, he was a truck driver and used his skill as such to provide transportation to UPR members who were in need of a ride from their villages to vote in elections held on June 25, 2000. (JA 265) Since the “people of Mamou” felt that the election results were corrupt, they decided to protest and Barry provided transportation to them to the protest. (JA 265) As a result of the protest, members of the military arrested him, burned his truck and sent him to a military camp where he was tortured and humiliated. He stated that he was transferred to Kindia the next day where he was imprisoned in poor living conditions and was tortured until he had the chance to escape and come to the United States. (JA 271)

An asylum officer interviewed Barry and completed an Assessment to Refer the case to Immigration Court for further proceedings. (JA 125) The INS (now the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”)) issued a Notice to Appeal on February 20, 2003, charging Barry with removability under § 212(a)(6)(A)(i) of the Immigration and Nationality Act. An initial decision denying Barry’s requests for relief was issued on February 12, 2004, but a portion of the transcript from that hearing was blank so the BIA remanded the case for a new hearing. A second hearing was held on November 13, 2006, before Immigration Judge Charles E. Pazar sitting in Memphis, Tennessee.

During his oral testimony at the hearing, Barry provided additional details about his experiences in Guinea. He testified that he drove UPR members to the mayoral elections on June 25, 2000, and to the prefect office to hear the results on June 26, 2000. (JA 93-94) The UPR members were upset about the election results and believed there was cheating involved in the elections so they began shouting. (JA 80) Due to the shouting, the prefect office called the police and the military from Kindia and the military began beating and shooting the protesters. (JA 81) Barry identified two individuals that he saw die as a result of the military’s actions. (JA 83) The military arrested Barry and others and transferred them to Kindia where they held Barry at Camp Kang Keme Ibrahama, a military camp, for one week. (JA 82-84) Barry testified that he was beaten every morning and his leg was injured as a result of the beating. (JA 84-85) Barry’s brother worked out a deal with the military to allow Barry’s escape from the military camp. (JA 86) One morning as Barry was taking out the garbage, the military guard told him to wait in a certain location, which he did, and then the military guard met him and gave him back his truck and took him to Conakry. (JA 86-87) Barry stayed in Conakry for a year but fled to the United States when people coming to Conakry from Mamou told him that the military was looking for him. (JA 88) Barry testified that he did not feel safe in Conakry because he believed that the military would kill him if they found him. *613 (JA 89) He also believes that if he returned to Guinea, the military would kill him. (JA 89)

On cross examination, the government attorney highlighted a number of inconsistencies in Barry’s description of the events preceding his arrival in the United States. First, the government attorney told Barry that despite his testimony that he joined the UPR when it started in 2000, the UPR was formed in 1998 and asked Barry if that was possible. Barry responded that it was formed before 2000 but that he joined in 2000. (JA 91-92)

Second, the government attorney asked Barry about his testimony regarding what happened to Barry’s truck after he was arrested. On cross, Barry stated that he never saw “that truck” again but in response to his attorney’s question, he stated that “his truck” was returned to him when he was taken to Conarky after being released from Camp Keme. In his application, however, Barry said that the truck was burned. When asked about these inconsistencies, Barry testified that when he was arrested, the military destroyed his truck and he did not know what happened to it after it was destroyed. (JA 97-98)

Third, the government attorney questioned him about who assisted him with his escape. In response to his attorney’s question, Barry testified that his brother helped him escape. (JA 86) The government attorney asked Barry whether he told the asylum officer that his father helped in his escape. (JA 99) In response to the government attorney’s question, Barry testified that both his father and brother assisted him. (JA 99)

Fourth, the government attorney questioned Barry about where he was taken after his arrest. In response to his attorney’s question, Barry said that he was taken to Camp Keme in Kindia, which was a military camp, and that he was held there for one week. (JA 83-84) The government attorney asked him if he told the asylum officer that he was taken to Camp Abatoir after his arrest. (JA 99) Barry responded that he was first taken to Abatoir in Mamou for one night, then to Camp Keme and was to be transferred to Camp Alpha Yaya but was released before the transfer could happen. (JA 100)

Fifth, the government attorney highlighted Barry’s testimony about where he was arrested. In his initial testimony and again on cross, Barry stated that he was arrested in his truck. (JA 81, 97) The government attorney asked Barry if he told the asylum officer that he was arrested in his home. (JA 101) Barry stated that his house was not far from the prefect’s office and that he drove to his house and the military went inside his house when they arrested him. (JA 102)

Finally, the government attorney questioned Barry about a letter from Siradiou Diallo which was submitted by Barry’s attorney. The letter states that Barry is a member of UPR and was persecuted on several occasions as a result of his membership. Barry initially stated that he did not know who Siradiou Diallo was and that, although the letter came to his house, it was for someone else. (JA 103-104) After seeing the letter, Barry testified that he did know the author and that it was for him and explained that he did not understand what name the attorney and interpreter said to him. (JA 105)

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327 F. App'x 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thierno-barry-v-eric-h-holder-jr-ca6-2009.