Xiu Lin v. Sessions

682 F. App'x 674
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMarch 21, 2017
Docket16-9535
StatusUnpublished

This text of 682 F. App'x 674 (Xiu Lin v. Sessions) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Xiu Lin v. Sessions, 682 F. App'x 674 (10th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT **

Scott M. Matheson, Jr. Circuit Judge

Xiu Lin, a native and citizen of the People’s Republic of China and proceeding pro se as petitioner, seeks review of a Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) order affirming an Immigration Judge (IJ) removal order. The BIA dismissed Ms. Lin’s requests for asylum, restriction on removal, *675 and protection under the Convention Against Torture (CAT). Exercising jurisdiction under 8 U.S.C. § 1252, we deny the petition for review.

I. BACKGROUND

Ms. Lin entered the United States in March 2008 and was taken to Denver, Colorado. Her parents had hired a smuggler to transport her from China but had not paid his full fee, so the smuggler required Ms. Lin to work in a restaurant without pay for two years. In 2005, she married a Chinese national. They have two children who I are United States citizens.

In October 2010, Ms. Lin was charged with removability as an alien present in the United States without admission or parole. She conceded removability and requested asylum, withholding of removal, and CAT protection. She claimed she would be persecuted and tortured if returned to China because she is a practicing Catholic.

A. Asylum Application, Pretrial Statement, and Immigration Court Testimony

Ms. Lin’s case hinges on her account of her 1998 arrest in China for participation in an underground Catholic church.

In her asylum application, Ms. Lin described how the Chinese police treated her: “During the interrogation, the police beat me, mistreated me and suppressed me.” Admin. R. at 424. Her pretrial statement similarly recounted the episode: “During her detention, she was interrogated, beaten, and mistreated by the police. After her release, the police often went to her home to harass her.” Id. at 405.

The IJ held several hearings. Ms. Lin was represented by counsel and expanded on these allegations. She testified that she and her sister attended an underground Catholic house church. In November 1998, Ms. Lin was arrested for printing church calendars. She testified that the police detained her for seven days, slapped her across the face, grabbed her hair and slammed her head on the table, and beat her hand with a baton. The pain caused her to scream and lose consciousness. The beatings, she said, damaged her legs and prevented her from attending the church for half a year. She told no one of the beatings except her sister.

Ms. Lin testified that she initially did not reveal to the police the identity of anyone in her underground church who directed her to print the calendars, but later in the police interrogation after the beatings she identified a church member who had done so. In contrast, on redirect examination at a later hearing, Ms. Lin testified that, although the local priest took the lead in printing and distribution of the church calendars, she told the police that she alone had done so.

Ms. Lin also testified that her sister was arrested in China for conducting a Catholic mass. Although Ms. Lin had stated in her asylum application that this arrest had occurred in January 2011, at the August 4, 2011 hearing she said her sister’s arrest happened in January 2010. On further questioning by her attorney, Ms. Lin stated that the arrest was in January 2011, seven months before the hearing.

B. Immigration Judge Credibility Determinations

The IJ found Ms. Lin’s testimony not credible, citing discrepancies between her testimony and her application documents concerning her November 1998 arrest. The IJ also found internal inconsistencies in Ms. Lin’s testimony:

• she testified that she identified to the police the person who had instructed *676 her to print the church calendars and later testified that she acted alone;
• she claimed that she was a devout Catholic, but she did not know the identity of the Pope, and
• she testified that she and her husband belonged to the same Catholic church, but later testified that her husband was a Protestant and did not go to church with her.

The IJ also noted that Ms. Lin testified her sister’s arrest occurred in January 2010 and that she did not change her testimony until confronted with her pretrial statement, which stated that the arrest happened in January 2011. The IJ rejected Ms. Lin’s explanation that the inconsistency was a mistake given the proximity of the arrest to the hearing (seven months).

The IJ found other inconsistencies. Ms. Lin testified that her mother paid 45,000 yuan to obtain her sister’s release from jail, contradicting her pretrial statement and her sister’s letter, which both asserted the amount was 20,000 yuan. The IJ rejected Ms. Lin’s explanation as to why she did not include that fact before she testified that ⅞5,000 of the 45,000 yuan payment was an unofficial bribe.

Ms. Lin testified that her sister was a church leader in China in 2001, but a letter from her sister stated that she had become a church leader in 2010. The IJ also noted that Ms. Lin did not respond to questions about why her family had paid for her to leave China but had not done the same for her sister.

Ms. Lin’s counsel called Ms. Lin’s co-parishioner and the principal at her nephew’s school to testify about Ms. Lin’s practice of Catholicism in the United States. But the IJ gave diminished weight to the testimony of this witness because she had been in the hearing room at a prior hearing when Ms. Lin testified.

The IJ found implausible Ms. Lin’s testimony that she told no one at her underground church in China, including the priest, that the police had beaten her. She claimed she told only her sister, who eventually told church members. The IJ also found implausible:

• that the church members would not know about such a serious beating, inflicted on an allegedly active church member while providing a service to the church, that prevented her from walking or attending church for half a year;
• that the. Chinese police checked on Ms. Lin every week following her release from custody but did not arrest, inquire after, or search for the individual she identified as the person who instructed her to print the calendars;
• Ms. Lin’s claim that her family would not help her sister leave China given Ms. Lin’s claims that her sister also suffered a police beating; and
• Ms. Lin’s inability to remember the name or denomination of the church where she was married when these details would be important to her in light of her Catholic faith, for which she was allegedly persecuted.

C. Immigration Judge and Board of Immigration Appeals Decisions

Having found Ms. Lin not credible, the IJ denied Ms. Lin’s application for asylum, withholding of removal, and CAT protection. Accordingly, the IJ ordered Ms.

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