Vargas-Salazar v. Garland

119 F.4th 167
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedOctober 17, 2024
Docket23-2097
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 119 F.4th 167 (Vargas-Salazar v. Garland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vargas-Salazar v. Garland, 119 F.4th 167 (1st Cir. 2024).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit

No. 23-2097

LUIS EFRAIN VARGAS-SALAZAR; WILMA JEANETH VARGAS-LASSO; M.V.V.,

Petitioners,

v.

MERRICK B. GARLAND, United States Attorney General,

Respondent.

PETITION FOR REVIEW OF AN ORDER OF THE BOARD OF IMMIGRATION APPEALS

Before

Gelpí, Lynch, and Montecalvo, Circuit Judges.

Kevin P. MacMurray and MacMurray & Associates on brief for petitioner. Thankful T. Vanderstar, Senior Trial Attorney, Bryan M. Boynton, Principal Deputy Assistant General, and Aimee J. Carmichael, Acting Assistant Director, Office of Immigration Litigation, U.S. Department of Justice, on brief for respondent.

October 17, 2024 LYNCH, Circuit Judge. Luis Efrain Vargas-Salazar and

his derivative beneficiaries -- his wife Wilma Jeaneth

Vargas-Lasso, and their son Maykel Eliab Vargas-Vargas -- natives

of Ecuador, petition for review of the Board of Immigration Appeals

("BIA") order affirming the Immigration Judge's ("IJ") denial of

their applications for asylum. Vargas-Salazar also petitions the

denial of his application for withholding of removal. See 8 U.S.C.

§§ 1158(b)(1)(A), 1231(b)(3)(A).

The BIA upheld the IJ's denial of relief, finding, inter

alia, that the petitioner failed to satisfy the requirements for

asylum and withholding for removal on two grounds: (1) the

petitioner had not shown harm rising to the level of past

persecution and (2) also had not shown the required nexus between

his asserted harm and particular social groups.

Because substantial evidence supports the BIA's finding

that the petitioner failed to show harm rising to the level of

past persecution and any well-founded fear of future persecution

was not on account of a protected ground, that suffices to deny

the petition for review.

I.

The petitioner, his wife, and son entered the United

States without inspection on June 28, 2021, and were served with

Notices to Appear on September 27, 2021, charging them with

removability pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(6)(A)(i). They

- 2 - conceded removability through counsel on March 3, 2022. On

March 17, 2022, the petitioner1 filed an application for asylum,

withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention

Against Torture ("CAT"), naming his wife and child as derivative

beneficiaries. The IJ held a hearing on the application on May 25,

2023. The petitioner, represented by counsel, was the sole witness

to testify.

The IJ found the following facts, accepting the

petitioner's testimony as credible. Around 2020, the petitioner

joined or formed a taxi company with his cousin and about 30

coworkers in Quito, Ecuador. Sometime in 2020, five members of a

gang called "the Teachers" (in English) arrived at the company

with pistols and ordered Vargas-Salazar's manager to pay three

thousand dollars or risk losing "the car or [his] life or something

like that." The manager and the company decided to pay the sum

and the extortion attempts temporarily stopped.

Some time passed before members of the same gang made a

second extortion attempt. This time, the extortion attempt was

accompanied by death threats to the petitioner and his family and

1 We refer to Vargas-Salazar as the "petitioner." Vargas-Lasso and Vargas-Vargas are not eligible for withholding of removal or protection under the Convention Against Torture because these forms of relief do not carry derivative benefits and they did not file separate applications. See Mariko v. Holder, 632 F.3d 1, 3 n.1 (1st Cir. 2011).

- 3 - language targeting the petitioner as an indigenous person. The

petitioner and his company's workers decided not to pay this

extortion demand. Sometime thereafter, the same five gang members

who made the first extortion attempt initiated a fight with and

made accompanying death threats to the petitioner, his cousin, and

his coworkers while out in a public place. The petitioner, his

cousin, and other company members fought back, and the petitioner

was injured on the top of his head. Police were called and arrested

the petitioner's cousin but none of the gang members. The

petitioner did not testify that the gang members had pistols during

the altercation.

The petitioner went to a community clinic and received

stitches on his head. He has a permanent scar at the injury site.

The petitioner did not testify that he received medical treatment

for his bruises and strikes from the fight. The petitioner and

his family made plans to come to the United States immediately

after the physical altercation and arrived in the United States

shortly thereafter.

In denying relief, the IJ held that "[the] injuries and

threats that the [petitioner] suffered individually or combined

together . . . [do] not rise to the level of past harm in this

case." The IJ explained that "[t]he physical harm that the

[petitioner] suffered was treated with a brief visit to the local

clinic and did not further require any hospitalization or enduring

- 4 - debilitation." "The threats that [the petitioner] received from

the gang members on himself and his family, while distressing,

also [did] not rise to the level of past harm because the threats

in this case were not so menacing as to cause significant actual

suffering or harm[.]" The IJ also noted the petitioner's testimony

that he had not "received any further threats or communications

from th[e] gang members" after the second altercation and that

"the gang members target other taxi companies because they are

seen as having the type of money to be able to pay the extortion."

The IJ found that the "serious threat and the injuries to the

[petitioner] were the direct result of the unpaid extortion demands

that the gang made on the [petitioner's] company the second time."

The IJ separately addressed the petitioner's claim that

he had been persecuted on account of being an "indigenous male"

and he and his family had been persecuted as being "members of the

Vargas nuclear family" and found the petitioner had not established

nexus between the enumerated grounds and the harm he had suffered.

The IJ found that "there's insufficient evidence on this record to

support that the gang's targeting of [the petitioner] and their

efforts to extort money from [the petitioner] was on account of

his ethnicity or his membership to his family member, nuclear

family group, or his race, or any of the other protected grounds

as enumerated by the [petitioner] in this case," and so the

- 5 - petitioner and his family "did not meet their burden of

establishing a well-founded fear of future persecution."

The IJ also denied the petitioner's application for

withholding of removal, as he had not met its higher bar. The IJ

denied his claim for protection under the CAT because he had shown

neither that he had ever been, nor that he was likely to, if

returned to Ecuador, be "detained or tortured by any governmental

official acting under the color of law."

The BIA affirmed. 2 It adopted the IJ's findings of fact

and cited to this Court's decisions.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Maldonado-Ruiz v. Bondi
First Circuit, 2026
De La Cruz-Quispe v. Bondi
First Circuit, 2025
Rosa v. Bondi
131 F.4th 44 (First Circuit, 2025)
Urias-Orellana v. Garland
121 F.4th 327 (First Circuit, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 F.4th 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vargas-salazar-v-garland-ca1-2024.