Yan Qin Xiao v. Michael Mukasey

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 27, 2008
Docket08-1120
StatusPublished

This text of Yan Qin Xiao v. Michael Mukasey (Yan Qin Xiao v. Michael Mukasey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh 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 Qin Xiao v. Michael Mukasey, (7th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 08-1120

Y AN Q IN X IAO, also known as H UI C HING C HUANG, and SUN C HENG JIANG, Petitioners, v.

M ICHAEL B. M UKASEY, Attorney General of the United States, Respondent.

Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals. Nos. A97-385-000, A79-087-464

A RGUED S EPTEMBER 25, 2008—D ECIDED O CTOBER 27, 2008

Before P OSNER, F LAUM, and E VANS, Circuit Judges. F LAUM, Circuit Judge. Petitioner Yan Qin Xiao and her husband Sun Cheng Jiang seek review of a final order of removal issued by the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”). The BIA upheld the Immigration Judge’s (IJ) finding that petitioners’ testimony was not credible and denied their asylum claim. For the reasons explained below, we affirm. 2 No. 08-1120

I. Background Xiao and Jiang are Chinese nationals. They were boy- friend and girlfriend in China. They were never married there. Jiang entered the United States before Xiao. He applied for asylum in September 2002, after the one year filing deadline—which requires an applicant to file within one year of his last entry in the United States—expired. In his application, Jiang claimed that in 1998, government family planning officials forced his then-girlfriend Xiao to undergo an abortion, and he was fined for arguing with family planning officials about the forced abortion. Xiao arrived in the United States at Miami International Airport on June 5, 2003. She stated to the immigration officer at the airport that she was fleeing China because the Chinese government sought to arrest her for the practice of Falun Gong. On June 9, 2003, in a credible fear interview with an asylum officer, Xiao again main- tained that she fled China because she feared arrest because of her Falun Gong practice. Xiao did not mention a forced abortion on either occasion. Xiao was placed in removal proceedings. She conceded charges of removability and filed an application for asylum, with- holding of removal, and protection under Article III of the United Nations Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (“CAT”). She later requested removal of her case to Immigration Court in Chicago, and this request was granted. No. 08-1120 3

In 2005, Jiang and Xiao were married in Missouri. Xiao gave birth to their son during that year. Because he had not met the one-year deadline, Jiang abandoned his independent asylum claim and sought derivative asylum through Xiao’s application. Xiao had her individual merits hearing, which included Jiang’s derivative claim, in Immigration Court on May 24, 2006. Xiao testified that she had met Jiang in April 1997 when they worked together at a furniture company, Hua Mei, in Guang Tou town in the Fujian Province of China. Xiao stated she stopped working at the furniture store in 1997. Xiao stated that she became pregnant in January 1998 and that Jiang was the father. In March 1998, because Xiao was pregnant and unmarried in violation of China’s family planning policies, she began hiding at the house of a friend, Zho Song Li, who lived in a different village. Xiao stated that she was unable to marry Jiang because they could not obtain a marriage license as Jiang was not registered locally in Guang Tou town, where he worked, or in the nearby village of Nan Tian, where he lived with his parents. He was not registered locally because his household registration remained in Shanghai where he attended college, and there was a delay in transferring it. Xiao testified that while hiding at her friend Li’s home, on June 28, 1998, five officials from the family planning office “charged into the house” and dragged her to the Guang Tou town health clinic where she underwent a forced abortion. She states that she was released from the hospital the next day. Xiao stated that she then went 4 No. 08-1120

to her parents’ home in the Yang Qi village. Although she was not given an abortion certificate at the time of the abortion, Xiao stated that her parents obtained an abortion certification on July 8, 1998. According to Xiao’s testimony, her friend called her boyfriend Jiang after Xiao had gone to the Guang Tou town health clinic. Xiao indicated that Jiang was very upset and went to the family planning office in his own village and argued with family planning officials. After the argument, Xiao testified that Jiang received a fine notice of 10,000 RMB from the family planning office. Xiao stated that after the argument, the public security bureau was looking for Jiang, so he fled China. Xiao testified that after the abortion, feeling sad and helpless, she turned to Falun Gong. She stated that she was introduced to Falun Gong by a friend, Qui Hong Gang. Xiao identified herself as a “beginner” practitioner and described Falun Gong as “a way to cultivate one’s body and its part of Buddhism.” Xiao stated that initially she practiced Falun Gong in her own home, but that she soon learned that her friend Qui had been arrested for Falun Gong practice. She testified he was arrested in September of 2001. She stated that public security officials later came to her house in an attempt to arrest her, but she was able to escape because her friend’s mother called and told her she should hide. Xiao testified that she feared arrest, so she moved in with her aunt, who lived an hour and a half away. She testified that she avoided arrest for almost two years until her departure to the United States. No. 08-1120 5

In 2003, Xiao testified, her mother and friends arranged for her transport to the United States by payment of a sum to a smuggler. Xiao admitted that her sister, Yan Duan Xiao, had obtained asylum in the United States in 2004 on a forced abortion claim, but that she did not know her sister had applied for asylum before her own arrival in the United States in June 2003. Xiao admitted that she did not mention the forced abortion in the sworn statement she gave when she arrived at the Miami airport or at her credible fear inter- view a few days later. She claimed that she did not cite the forced abortion because she “felt shamed for her premarital pregnancy and felt humiliated by the abortion procedure.” Jiang also testified at the merits hearing. Jiang testified that he met Xiao in April 1997. He stated he was living with his parents in Nan Tian at that time. He had been a student in Shanghai and had graduated in 1994. He testified that he had not yet been able to transfer his registration back to Nan Tian or Guang Tou town, where he worked. As to the forced abortion, Jiang stated that Xiao had been hiding at the house of a friend, and that the friend had called him when Xiao was taken away. Jiang stated that he was upset and went to argue with local family planning officials in Nan Tian (although his written application stated that he argued with family planning officials in Guang Tou town). He stated that on the same day local family planning officials delivered a 10,000 RMB fine for violation of China’s birth control policy. The fine was 6 No. 08-1120

delivered by the village leader. Jiang said he showed the fine to his parents, who advised that he go into hiding the next morning. The IJ issued his oral decision immediately following the merits hearing. The IJ found that petitioners were removable by clear and convincing evidence, and he denied their applications for relief and protection. The IJ found Xiao’s and Jiang’s testimony not credible and “not supported by specific detailed information that overcomes their lack of credibility.” The IJ stated that he did not believe “that the respondents have estab- lished that the female respondent was forced to undergo an involuntary abortion in 1998 or that she fled China in 2003 because of her practice of Falun Gong.” The IJ cited several specific reasons for the adverse credibility finding.

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