Yanbo Liu v. William P. Barr

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 17, 2019
Docket19-1101
StatusUnpublished

This text of Yanbo Liu v. William P. Barr (Yanbo Liu v. William P. Barr) 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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Yanbo Liu v. William P. Barr, (7th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit Chicago, Illinois 60604

Argued July 9, 2019 Decided July 17, 2019

Before

MICHAEL S. KANNE, Circuit Judge

DAVID F. HAMILTON, Circuit Judge

MICHAEL Y. SCUDDER, Circuit Judge

No. 19-1101

YANBO LIU, Petition for Review of an Order of the Petitioner, Board of Immigration Appeals.

v. No. A087-867-164

WILLIAM P. BARR, Attorney General of the United States, Respondent.

ORDER

Yanbo Liu, a 47-year old Christian man from China, seeks asylum and withholding of removal based on his fear that he will face religious persecution if he returns to China. An immigration judge determined that Liu was not credible and denied him relief. The Board of Immigration Appeals affirmed that decision and dismissed Liu’s appeal. Because substantial evidence, supports the IJ’s adverse credibility finding, we deny Liu’s petition for review.

Nearly two decades ago, Liu left China to work in South Korea, where he took a job in a manufacturing plant and, with a colleague named Yong Zhang, began attending a Catholic church. Liu gave inconsistent timelines for these events: he testified before an No. 19-1101 Page 2

IJ that he went to South Korea in 2000 and started going to church in 2004, but he wrote in his asylum application that he went to South Korea in 2003 and was introduced to Christianity in 2006. Upon returning to China in 2007, he studied Christianity at weekly home gatherings with classmates.

Police burst in on one gathering, seized the group’s bibles, and beat and arrested Liu and his classmates. Liu again inconsistently recalled when that occurred: he testified that he was arrested, alternatively, in 2008, July 2009, and October 2007; in his application, he wrote that the arrest occurred in February 2009. When the IJ asked about the inconsistent dates, Liu clarified that he began attending weekly gatherings in October 2007. Yet another discrepancy regarding the arrest surfaced: Liu testified at the hearing that police arrested 14 people, though he wrote 16 in his application.

Liu testified that police locked him up at the police station, where, for three days, officers interrogated him and periodically kicked and beat him. Liu said first that the police “didn’t ask much,” and he later added that they asked him why the group gathered. In his application for asylum, though, Liu asserted that police questioned him about the dates when he began attending gatherings, the identity of the group’s leaders, the number of participants, and whether the group had international ties. When the IJ asked him to explain the discrepancies in his accounts, Liu said that the events transpired “too long ago” and “most likely” took place as he described them in his application. Liu testified that police fined and released him but called him to report to the police station three to four Sundays per month.

At the hearing, Liu also recounted a conversation with his wife, who told him that police looked for him at his house in China “several days ago.” But when government counsel asked him on cross-examination whether anyone had searched for him, Liu replied that no one had in three years.

Liu left China in 2009, and he arrived in in Chicago where he resumed going to church. He testified initially that he attended the church “[i]n Chinatown, under the Arch.” He then clarified that he was thinking of another organization and that he attended “Chinese Christian church,” though he did not pay a membership fee. Government counsel asked Liu if he knew other people who attended the church, and he testified that he knows of one unnamed “colleague.” Liu works Sundays, so he has not been to church in a few years.

Liu overstayed his six-month tourist visa and applied for asylum and withholding of removal based on anticipated religious persecution if he returns to No. 19-1101 Page 3

China. He also applied for relief under the Convention against Torture, but that application was denied, and he says nothing about that relief in this petition, so we do not discuss the matter further. He supplemented his application with letters from his wife and from two of his classmates in China. His wife wrote about Liu’s arrest, time in custody, and decision to leave China, while his classmates each wrote a few sentences about the arrest.

The IJ concluded that Liu was not credible and denied his petition. She identified inconsistencies in Liu’s timeline, including the dates when he said that he arrived in South Korea and converted to Christianity. She also highlighted discrepancies in Liu’s accounts of his interactions with police, including the dates of his arrest, the number of people arrested, the nature of the police interrogation, and the date when police last looked for him. The IJ then characterized Liu’s testimony about his practice of Christianity as “vague and incomplete.” She added that Liu’s corroborating evidence was insufficient to meet his burden of proof under the REAL ID Act; the corroboration lacked detail about his religious practice, and Liu did not include other, likely available corroborating evidence, such as a letter from his former coworker Zhang. The IJ wrote that she “[was] left unsure of certain material facts and, therefore, believes [Liu’s] claim might be fabricated.”

The Board of Immigration Appeals adopted and affirmed the IJ’s decision. The Board agreed with the IJ that Liu’s corroboration “did not rehabilitate his credibility nor did it independently establish” his claims for asylum or withholding of removal.

Liu focuses his petition on the IJ’s adverse credibility finding. The credibility assessment is critical because credible, specific, and persuasive testimony can establish a petitioner’s claim, whereas an adverse credibility finding will doom it. See 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(1)(B)(ii); Alvarenga-Flores v. Sessions, 901 F.3d 922, 925 (7th Cir. 2018); Tao Chen v. Lynch, 810 F.3d 466, 472 (7th Cir. 2016). Liu asserts that the IJ “placed outsized importance on an applicant’s uncertainty about dates and times, the sorts of minor details that are most vulnerable to the vagaries of human memory.” Cojocari v. Sessions, 863 F.3d 616, 622 (7th Cir. 2017). Any inconsistencies in his account’s details, he says, have “little bearing on the reliability of his broader narrative.” Id. at 623.

Petitioners who challenge adverse credibility findings face a steep evidentiary burden. We will overturn a credibility determination only under extraordinary circumstances in which the IJ and Board did not support their conclusions with specific evidence and the facts compel the opposite conclusion. See Tao Chen, 810 F.3d at 471; Tawuo v. Lynch, 799 F.3d 725, 727 (7th Cir. 2015). When making a credibility assessment, No. 19-1101 Page 4

an IJ may consider the consistency, detail, and plausibility of the petitioner’s testimony, regardless of whether the given testimony goes to the heart of the petitioner’s claim. See 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(1)(B)(iii); Alvarenga-Flores, 901 F.3d at 925–26.

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Cojocari v. Sessions
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