Yan Fang Zhang v. Gonzales

452 F.3d 167, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 15580
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 21, 2006
DocketDocket No. 03-40653-AG
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 452 F.3d 167 (Yan Fang Zhang v. Gonzales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Yan Fang Zhang v. Gonzales, 452 F.3d 167, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 15580 (2d Cir. 2006).

Opinion

RAGGI, Circuit Judge.

Chinese national Yan Fang Zhang (A 77 122 634) petitions for review of the September 8, 2003 order of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”), summarily affirming a July 24, 2002 order of Immigration Judge (“IJ”) Adam Opaciuch, denying Yan Fang Zhang’s claims for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief pursuant to the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”).3 Petitioner contends that the IJ erred in finding that she failed to demonstrate past political persecution based on her union activities in China. She further contends that the IJ erred in failing to recognize that, having borne two children in the United States, petitioner had a well-founded fear of future political persecution, specifically, sterilization, if returned to China. Because the IJ’s findings on Yan Fang Zhang’s past persecution claim are supported by substantial evidence, no extended discussion is necessary for us to deny further review of this argument. On her feared future persecution claim, however, we are compelled to remand for further proceedings to allow the BIA to explain why it denies Yan Fang Zhang relief from removal when, on apparently identical facts, the agency granted such relief to her husband. As we explain herein, absent such an explanation, we cannot determine whether the denial in this case is arbitrary.

I. Background

A. Alleged Past Persecution for Union Activities

On June 9, 1999, Yan Fang Zhang left the Fujian Province of China and illegally entered the United States. Approximately one year later, on June 6, 2000, she applied for asylum on the ground of past political persecution connected with union activities at her former place of employment.

[170]*170At her asylum hearing, petitioner testified that, in January 1999, her employer laid off 40-50 workers, including petitioner. To protest these layoffs, Yan Fang Zhang and several of her terminated coworkers staged a protest at the employer’s factory. When the discharged workers refused to leave the premises, factory supervisors called the police to remove the protesters. A scuffle ensued during which petitioner struck a supervisor (she claims accidentally) and was, in turn, struck by him.

B. The Alleged Fear of Future Sterilization

On June 7, 2001, immigration authorities served Yan Fang Zhang with notice of removal. See 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(7)(A)(i)(I). The following year, on May 31, 2002, petitioner amended her asylum application to claim that she feared future persecution, including sterilization, if returned to China. To support this claim, Yan Fang Zhang offered evidence of her March 2002 marriage to Jian Di Zheng, another Chinese immigrant, whom petitioner met in the United States and by whom she had two daughters, the first born in September 2000 and the second born in April 2002.

At the outset of Yan Fang Zhang’s removal hearing, the IJ inquired as to the immigration status of petitioner’s husband. Counsel informed the IJ that petitioner’s spouse had been denied relief from removal but granted voluntary departure in 1998. In July 2000, however, he had filed a motion to reopen his petition based on petitioner’s first pregnancy, which motion remained pending. In light of these circumstances, the IJ initially considered consolidating the couple’s cases, but ultimately decided to proceed only with Yan Fang Zhang’s application for relief:

The family planning is really, it deals with future persecution being that she’s got two kids now. I mean that just gets her real main argument and that’s going to be the husband’s argument now that he’s married and he [has] two kids. I should do them together rather [than] piece[meal] but, you know. Who knows. Maybe [his] motion [to reopen] will be denied.

Tr. of IJ Hearing, July 24, 2002, at 12.

Testifying in support of her claimed fear of future persecution, Yan Fang Zhang stated that the Chinese government considered children born to its nationals in the United States to be Chinese citizens. Because she now had two children, she feared that, if returned to China, she would be fined, detained, and sterilized because of China’s restrictive family planning policies. Although these policies were not strictly applied in some rural areas, Zhang explained that, if returned to China, she could not relocate from her former urban home because she would then be unable to see her family.

Petitioner’s husband did not testify at her hearing; nevertheless, the parties stipulated that his testimony regarding China’s family planning policies would be consistent with that offered by petitioner.

C. The IJ’s Ruling,

In an oral decision rendered the same date as the hearing, the IJ denied petitioner’s application for relief from removal. Although the IJ assumed that petitioner had testified credibly about her union activities, he concluded that she failed to demonstrate either that the actions of which she complained constituted persecution or that she was targeted on account of her political opinion. The IJ found that (1) the challenged layoffs were prompted by the employer’s financial difficulties, not workers’ political beliefs; (2) petitioner [171]*171was laid off because she had relatively little seniority, not because her parents had failed to join the Communist party; (3) when, during a union protest pf the layoffs, factory supervisors called the police, the only official action taken against the protesters was to remove them from the premises, which conduct did not constitute persecution; and (4) a physical altercation between petitioner and a- factory supervisor during the union demonstration, and that supervisor’s subsequent visits to petitioner’s parents’ home, were attributable to personal anger, not politics. The IJ found no evidence that the public security bureau or any other government official ever threatened petitioner.

With respect to petitioner’s claimed fear of future persecution, the IJ concluded that, although petitioner had a subjective fear of future persecution based on China’s restrictive family planning policies, she failed to demonstrate that this fear was objectively reasonable. Citing country reports on conditions in China, the IJ concluded that petitioner would, “most likely,” be fined if she returned to China with two children born in the United States, action that “does not amount to persecution.” IJ Ruling, July 24, 2002, at 9-11. Further noting China’s “very large floating population,” the IJ found that, on return to China, petitioner might well relocate to an area where state family planning policies are “not strictly enforced.” Id. at 11.

Accordingly, because the IJ found that petitioner failed to establish past persecution or a well-founded fear of future persecution, he denied her application for asylum and withholding of removal. Similarly finding no evidence to indicate that petitioner would be tortured if returned to China, the IJ denied her CAT relief.

D. Petitioner’s BIA Appeal

Yan Fang Zhang appealed the IJ’s decision to the BIA.

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452 F.3d 167, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 15580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yan-fang-zhang-v-gonzales-ca2-2006.