Xiu Xia Zheng v. Holder

502 F. App'x 13
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedFebruary 11, 2013
Docket12-1325
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 502 F. App'x 13 (Xiu Xia Zheng v. Holder) 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
Xiu Xia Zheng v. Holder, 502 F. App'x 13 (1st Cir. 2013).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Petitioner Xiu Xia Zheng seeks judicial review of a decision by the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) denying her late-filed motion to reopen proceedings on her application for political asylum. We hold that the BIA did not abuse its discretion in holding that Zheng’s untimely motion to reopen, filed some seven years after denial of her asylum petition, did not meet the exception to the 90-day filing requirement for changed country conditions material to the claims for asylum.

Zheng left her home in China on September 7, 2000, and journeyed to Detroit, Michigan, where she attempted to enter the United States on someone else’s passport. The Immigration and Naturalization *14 Service (“INS”) detained Zheng at the airport and then placed her in removal proceedings on the ground that she was an arriving alien not in possession of a valid entry document. See 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(7)(A)(i)(I) (2006). The INS paroled Zheng into the United States under the custody of her father, who lived in Boston, Massachusetts, and then transferred her case to that jurisdiction.

Zheng admitted the INS’s allegations and conceded her removability. She then submitted an application for political asylum. See id. § 1158. Zheng claimed that she feared persecution if she returned to China due to her membership in the Roman Catholic Church, which operates underground in China in defiance of an official government prohibition. According to Zheng, she was kicked out of her school in China due to her religious beliefs, and later was threatened and interrogated by the police after she had her picture taken with a Catholic Archbishop. Zheng also applied for withholding of removal and for protection under the United Nations Convention Against Torture. See id. § 1231(b)(3)(A).

On September 18, 2002, in an oral decision, the Immigration Judge (“IJ”) found that Zheng had failed to meet her burden of establishing a well-founded fear of future persecution in China based on her religion, and so denied her application for asylum. He emphasized that the rest of her family in China practiced Roman Catholicism and attended church services without any trouble from the government. The IJ also found that Zheng had failed to establish her eligibility for withholding of removal or protection under the Convention Against Torture. Zheng appealed the IJ’s decision to the BIA, which dismissed her appeal on May 13, 2004. Zheng subsequently filed a timely motion for reconsideration with the BIA, which was also denied. 1 Zheng, however, did not leave the country, despite a final order of removal.

Seven years later, on August 25, 2011, Zheng, still in the United States, filed a motion with the BIA to reopen her removal proceedings based in part on a claimed change in country conditions in China that was material to her asylum application. 2 Ordinarily, Zheng would have to file a motion to reopen removal proceedings within 90 days of the final order of removal. See id. § 1229a(c) (7) (C) (i). That time period had long since passed in this case, since the previous proceedings concluded in May 2004.

However, there is no time limit on filing a motion to reopen asylum proceedings if the motion “is based on changed country conditions arising in the country of nationality or the country to which removal has been ordered, if such evidence is material and was not available and would not have been discovered or presented at the previous proceeding.” Id. § 1229a(c)(7)(C)(ii); 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(c)(3)(ii) (2012). Zheng carried the burden of demonstrating that her motion to reopen should be granted. See INS v. Abudu, 485 U.S. 94, 110-11, 108 S.Ct. 904, 99 L.Ed.2d 90 (1988). Her new evidence had to be material, which means it “would likely change the result in the case,” In re Coelho, 20 I. & N. Dec. 464, 473 (B.I.A.1992), and also, “at a bare *15 minimum, establish a prima facie case sufficient to ground a claim of eligibility for the underlying substantive relief,” Raza v. Gonzales, 484 F.3d 125, 128 (1st Cir.2007).

Zheng’s motion to reopen contained a sworn affidavit from herself, an unsworn letter from her mother in China, a written notice given to her mother by the Xiguan Village Committee in Fujian Province, China, and several articles on recent country conditions in China. According to Zheng, in March 2011 she mailed a package containing religious materials to her relatives in China, which included pictures showing her participation in Roman Catholic activities and a letter criticizing the Chinese government’s restrictions on religion and human rights and stating that she had applied unsuccessfully for asylum in the United States. Allegedly, Chinese customs officials intercepted the package and local officials went to her mother’s house to tell her that Zheng was “participating in the counter-revolution[ary] church activities in America.” According to Zheng, the officials gave her mother a written notice from the Village Committee ordering her to instruct Zheng to cease applying for asylum in the United States, to stop her “reactionary conduct of inciting Chinese Catholics to become resentful towards the Chinese government’s current policy on religion,” and to “immediately return to China to accept stringent punishment from the government.” The notice warned that if Zheng did not return voluntarily to China to accept punishment, once she was caught she “not only would be stringently punished, but would also be imprisoned.”

On February 23, 2012, the BIA denied Zheng’s motion to reopen. It found that her motion was untimely because Zheng’s evidence was not material to her case, so that Zheng had not carried her burden of showing the changed country circumstances exception applied. Specifically, the BIA found that Zheng’s documentary evidence was merely speculative as to what will happen to her in China, and that it did not demonstrate that her possible treatment in China, including arrest, would amount to persecution. It noted that the letter from Zheng’s mother was unsworn and that the written notice from the Village Committee was unauthenticated. The BIA concluded that this evidence was not sufficient to meet Zheng’s burden to show that the result of her application for asylum would likely change if the proceedings were reopened. The BIA also found that Zheng’s background evidence showed no more than that the Chinese government continued to take repressive actions against Roman Catholics, and did not show that conditions for Roman Catholics in China had materially worsened since her previous hearing in 2002.

Zheng now petitions for review of the BIA’s denial of her motion to reopen. We review the BIA’s decision on this matter for abuse of discretion, see 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(a); INS v. Doherty,

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Bluebook (online)
502 F. App'x 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/xiu-xia-zheng-v-holder-ca1-2013.