Valentina Mitreva v. Alberto Gonzales

417 F.3d 761, 6 A.L.R. Fed. 2d 587, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 16463, 2005 WL 1863417
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 8, 2005
Docket04-1707
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 417 F.3d 761 (Valentina Mitreva v. Alberto Gonzales) 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
Valentina Mitreva v. Alberto Gonzales, 417 F.3d 761, 6 A.L.R. Fed. 2d 587, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 16463, 2005 WL 1863417 (7th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

ILANA DIAMOND ROVNER, Circuit Judge.

Valentina Mitreva, a Bulgarian and ethnic Rom (gypsy), applied for asylum on account of her nationality based on her participation in a rally for Romani equality that led to a confrontation with the police. The Immigration Judge (IJ) denied the application, which Mitreva’s family joined, and the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) affirmed. The Board found that Mitreva failed to establish a nexus between the harm she suffered and a protected ground, and that she did not have a well-founded fear of future persecution because she could not prove that Bulgarian Roma are the victims of a pattern and practice of persecution. Mitreva petitions for review of the Board’s order. We deny the petition and affirm the Board’s judgment.

Mitreva’s petition includes claims of persecution based on employment discrimination, as well as several incidents of harassment during her childhood, but her most serious charges stem from a police interrogation. In November 1999 Mitreva participated with her parents and sister in a rally for Romani equality at the city hall in the town of Kresna. Between 30 and 50 other Roma attended. The next day Mi- *763 treva received a subpoena to appear at the Kresna police station. She reported as requested, and was accused by investigators of burglary. The investigators called her a “black gypsy” and a “dirty bitch,” and aggressively pressed her to sign a confession. When she refused, an officer grabbed her by the hair and slammed her face on the edge of a table, drawing blood. The interrogation ended, and Mitreva was taken to a hospital where she was treated for a 1.5-centimeter cut on her forehead.

For the next two or three months, Mi-treva received “a series of telephone calls” threatening that if she revealed “what happened in the police station,” she would be killed. Then, in June 2000, she was “attacked by two people with masks” while walking home from an aunt’s house. One assailant struck her on her head and the other pinned her arms behind her back, yelling, “Don’t try to run you dirty gypsy. Now you will pay for everything!” Mitre-va recognized the man’s voice as the same she had heard in the telephone threats, and she screamed loudly. This attracted the attention of nearby residents, who turned on the lights of their house, scaring the attackers away. Rattled by the incident, Mitreva moved in with her mother-in-law in a nearby village and left for America in August. There she learned by letter from her sister that the threatening phone calls continued back in Bulgaria. Her sister also wrote that in an apparently unrelated incident, her grandmother had died several weeks after being shoved by two men who brusquely passed her in the road, saying, “get [out] from our way, uh, old gypsy.”

The IJ denied the asylum application, finding Mitreva’s narrative credible but ruling that she had not demonstrated that her Romani ethnicity was related to the mistreatment she had suffered or the persecution she feared if returned. The BIA affirmed in a separate opinion. The Board agreed that Mitreva had failed to establish a nexus tying her misfortunes to her ethnicity, stating that the violent interrogation, subsequent phone calls, and attack appeared to be based on a criminal investigation and an effort to cover up the abusive officer’s behavior. The Board also sua sponte raised and rejected the possibility that Mitreva might demonstrate a well-founded fear of future persecution by showing that Roma face a pattern and practice of persecution in Bulgaria, see 8 C.F.R. § 208.13(b)(2)(iii), noting that anti-Roma discrimination is largely practiced by private actors. To support this point, the Board observed that the Bulgarian government has launched several initiatives to combat anti-Roma discrimination.

In this petition Mitreva first challenges the Board’s determination that she failed to demonstrate that the harm she suffered was “on account of’ her Romani ethnicity. 1 She contends that she proved her interrogators’ anti-Roma motives by showing that she was issued a subpoena immediately after the Romani rights protest, and that she and another Romani demonstrator were singled out as leaders because they were the only protesters who were educated and held posters. Mitreva also argues that her interrogators’ and attackers’ use of anti-Roma ethnic slurs proves that they mistreated her because of her ethnicity.

It is true that the issuance of the subpoena so soon after the Romani protest could support the inference that the inter *764 rogation was prompted by Mitreva’s ethnicity, and not an alleged burglary. But this is not the only conclusion the Board was entitled to reach, and under the deferential substantial evidence test, reversal is warranted only if the evidence compels a different outcome. Ciorba v. Ashcroft, 323 F.3d 539, 544 (7th Cir.2003); Petrovic v. INS, 198 F.3d 1034, 1037 (7th Cir.2000). Mitreva’s parents and sister attended the rally as well, and they were not summoned. Mitreva’s explanation that she was singled out because of her poster and her university education only goes so far: her affidavit discloses that she and her parents together held the poster, so that would not have distinguished her or suggested that she was a leader. Thus the only explanation for summoning Mitreva and not her family is that she had a better education; this point is not so convincing as to meet her high burden of providing evidence that would convince any reasonable factfinder that the policemen were motivated by her ethnicity.

Similarly, although the use of ethnic slurs by the interrogators and Mitreva’s assailant could support a finding that she was mistreated because of her ethnicity, the record does not compel that conclusion. When a persecutor utters an ethnic slur during an encounter that appears to be motivated by other factors, the slur does not necessarily prove a nexus to a protected ground. See Lie v. Ashcroft, 396 F.3d 530, 535-36 (3d Cir.2005). Here, the BIA was permitted to conclude that because the officers appeared to be investigating a burglary, their use of an epithet does not prove that they were harassing Mitreva because she was a Rom. And the Board reasonably found that her attacker, who called Mitreva a “dirty gypsy,” was in league with the police officers in an effort to cover up the malfeasance during the interrogation, not to attack Roma. Again, although we might reach a contrary conclusion on this evidence, a reasonable fact-finder could disagree.

Mitreva next argues that the Board erred by finding that the anti-Roma discrimination she suffered as a child does not amount to persecution. We agree with the Board’s conclusion. The incidents from Mitreva’s childhood — a child’s toy set on fire in her family’s backyard when she was eight years old and several incidents in which street toughs threw rocks through her faniily’s windows' — are better characterized as harassment and discrimination than persecution.

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Bluebook (online)
417 F.3d 761, 6 A.L.R. Fed. 2d 587, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 16463, 2005 WL 1863417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valentina-mitreva-v-alberto-gonzales-ca7-2005.