WILLIAMS

16 I. & N. Dec. 697
CourtBoard of Immigration Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1979
DocketID 2695
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 16 I. & N. Dec. 697 (WILLIAMS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Board of Immigration Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
WILLIAMS, 16 I. & N. Dec. 697 (bia 1979).

Opinion

Interim Decision #2695

MATTER OF WILLIAMS In Deportation Proceedings A-20201790 Decided by Board March 30, 1979

(1) Respondent applying for withholding of deportation to Haiti under section 242(h) of the Act did not meet burden of proving probable persecution by a preponderance of the evidence. Henry v. INS, 552 F.2d 130 (5 Cir. 1977). (2) 1976 Amnesty International Report entitled "The Situation in Haiti" was not entitled to more evidentiary weight than that accorded by immigration judge in view of the fact that the report was not significantly probative on the likelihood of persecution to this respondent_ Flanrinor v. INS ,5115 F 2c1 129 (5 Cir 197R) (3) 1976 Amnesty International Report on Haiti does not establish probable persecution by the Haitian Government against either all Haitians or any Haitian who left that country without permission. (4) Evidence presented by Service, including State Department reports submitted both to the Service and to Congress, found more credible, probative, and timely as to current conditions in Haiti than the 1976 Amnesty International Report. CHARGE: Order: Act of 1952—Section 241(a)(2) 18 U.S.C. 1152(a)(2))—Entered without inspec- tion

ON BEHALF OF RESPONDENT: ON BEHALF OF SERVICE: Dale Swartz, Esquire Goerge W. Masterton Suite 427 Appellate Trial Attorney 733 – 15th Street, N.W. Washington, D. C. 20005 Donald I. Bierman, Esquire Bierman, Sonnett, Beiley & Shohat, P.C. Suite 500 200 S.E. First Street Miami, Florida 33131 BY: Milhollan, Chairman; Maniatis, Appleman, and Maguire, Board Members. Board Member Farb abstains.

This is an appeal from an immigration judge's decision of June 15, 1978, in which he denied, on reconsideration, the respondent's applica- tion for withholding of deportation under section 243(h) of the Immigra- 697 Interim Decision #2695

tion and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. 1253(h), but reinstated voluntary departure.' The appeal will be dismissed. The respondent is a 27-year-old native and citizen of Haiti. She entered the United States without inspection in October 1973. An Order to Show Cause was issued on September 25, 1975, but deportation proceedings were delayed to give her the opportunity to apply to the District Director for political asylum and temporary refuge in the United States. Her request was denied by the District Director on December 8, 1976. At deportation proceedings held in February and April 1977, the respondent conceded deportability under section 241(a)(2) of the Act, 8 U.S.C. 1251(a)(2), but applied for withholding of deportation to Haiti under section 243(h). The evidence presented relating to the section 243(h) application included the respondent's testimony, her Request for Asylum (Form 1-589) dated January 5, 1976, which included her own affidavit of the same date, and a "Petition to Withhold Deportation" filed by her counsel on February 11, 1977. The respondent's testimony and her 1976 affidavit reflect the following information: She was born in La Tortue, Haiti, in April 1951. She has 14 brothers and sisters, 11 of whom still reside in La Tortue. 2 When she was 16 years old, her father's brother was arrested by the Tontonmacoutes. Be was jailed, mistreated, and then released, but later died from the beatings received in prison. She did not know what problems her uncle had with the macoutes because these events occurred when she was "a kid." That same year (1968), someone filed a complaint against her father accusing him of being against the government. The respondent stated that that "wasn't true," but he was arrested and jailed for one month before being released. In 1970, some 18 months after her father's release, the respondent left Haiti for Nassau because her father was constantly being threatened with rearrest and she was frightened. She stated, however, that neither The immigration judge's original order denying withholding of deportation, dated April 1, 1977, was affirmed in a per curiam order of this Board on August 22, 1977. An appeal was then taken to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. In November 1977, the respondent applied to the came court for leave to adduce additional evidence in the administrative proceedings in light of Coriolan v. INS ,559 F.2d 993 (5 Cir- 97'7). That motion was granted on December 13, 1977, and by order of the Board, dated April 27, 1978, the proceedings were reopened and the record remanded to the immigra- tion judge to permit consideration of additional evidence concerning withholding under section 243(h). The petition for review in the Fifth Circuit has been held in abeyance P' ending disposition of the reopened proceedings. The respondent's statements concerning her parents were inconsistent. In her 1976 affidavit she indicated that her parents were then living in La Tortue. In her testimony at ttrie deportation hearing, she initially indicated that her mother was dead and her father Wving in Haiti, but later testified that she believed that her father was also dead. She sated, however, that she had not heard from her family for some time.

698 Interim Decision #2695

she nor anyone else in her family had problems with the Tonton- macoutes and that she had never been threatened by anyone while living in Haiti. She did not know if her father had any more problems with the macoutes after she left, nor whether her family had any problems with the Haitian Government, as only her sister "used to write" and she did not discuss the conditions in Haiti. The respondent stated that she was afraid to return to Haiti because she might be arrested or harmed because the authorities "know [she] left the country [and] . . . because [she's] against them." The Form 1-589 indicated that the respondent believed she would be persecuted because of her political opinions. That form reflected, how- ever, that she had never belonged to any organizations hostile to the interests of Haiti, that she had never expressed any political opinions or acted in a manner which was regarded by the Haitian authorities as opposed to the interests of that country, that her family had never suffered because of her absence, her actions, or her political opinions, and that the then conditions in Haiti did not affect her freedom more than the rest of the Haitian population. She farther submitted that the Haitian authorities knew of her request fur aylinn because of a letter she had written to her father and that she believed she would be killed if returned to that country.' Except for these notations, the Form 1-589 included no explanatory matters in support of the application (other than the previously discussed affidavit) and no further evidence or documents in support of the claim were alleged to exist. The final document included in the record at the initial deportation proceeding regarding the persecution claim was the "Petition to With- hold Deportation" prepared by respondent's counsel and filed prior to the April 1977 hearing. That petition alleged that certain factual mat- ters would be shown, which in fact were not thereafter supported in the record and which were in part inconsistent with both the respondent's previous statement and her subsequent testimony.

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16 I. & N. Dec. 697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-bia-1979.