Yu Xia v. U.S. Attorney General

608 F.3d 1233, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 12425, 2010 WL 2402854
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJune 17, 2010
Docket08-13849
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 608 F.3d 1233 (Yu Xia v. U.S. Attorney General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yu Xia v. U.S. Attorney General, 608 F.3d 1233, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 12425, 2010 WL 2402854 (11th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:

Petitioner Yu Xia petitions this court for review of the decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) affirming the denial, by an Immigration Judge (“IJ”), of her claims for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the United Nations Convention Against Torture (“CAT”), and ordering her removal. We deny Xia’s petition.

I.

Yu Xia was born on September 10, 1985, in Lianjiang County, Fujian Province, China. Xia entered the United States at Los Angeles International Airport without a visa on March 20, 2005, and, four days later, received a notice to appear in removal proceedings. Xia conceded removability based on the allegations of the notice. 1 On January 11, 2006, however, she filed an *1235 application for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the CAT, claiming past persecution based on her political opinion. Specifically, Xia claimed that she became pregnant while in a relationship with her boyfriend; as she was eighteen years old at the time and he was twenty-one, both were too young to marry under Chinese law. She claimed that on November 10, 2004, agents of the county government came to her home, told her she had violated the Chinese family planning law (because she was unmarried and became pregnant without government permission), and took her to a local hospital where they forced her to undergo an abortion. She further claimed that, after complaining to the local family planning office about her forced abortion, officials there chased her out and threatened her with arrest and violence if she complained again. As a result, Xia feared harm or mistreatment at the hands of the national and local Chinese governments if she were returned to China; she feared she could be arrested for having left China illegally and would once again be subject to China’s family planning law and forced to have an abortion if she became pregnant again.

On September 28, 2006, Xia, represented by counsel, appeared before an IJ for a hearing on her asylum application. On direct examination, Xia’s attorney asked her about the circumstances surrounding her forced abortion: 2

Q. Okay. Now you stated Government persecution. When did it start?
A. Since November 10th, 2004.
Q. Why was the Government persecuting you on or about November 10th, 2004?
A. I was, was pregnant before marriage, prior, before marriage. The pregnancy was before the mandatory age of China, to get pregnant.
Q. Now how old were you when you got pregnant if you remember.
A. 18 year old.
Q. So what year did you get pregnant?
A. 2004.
Q. And ma’am, who impregnated you?
A. My boyfriend.
Q. Okay. Now you stated earlier that you had problems studying [sic] around November 10th, 2004. What happened to you on that date?
A. On November 10th, I was alone at home. A few people from Family Planning Department came to my home wanted to take me to the hospital doing tests to make sure that, to check and see if I was pregnant.
Q. Okay. What happened when these officials came to your house?
A. I was forcibly taken into a seven passenger van and taken to a local hospital.
Q. What do you mean you were taken forcefully?
A. They dragged me. They pushed me into the van.
Q. And where were you taken to?
A. Local county hospital.
Q. Do you remember the name of the local county hospital?
A. Yen Chow Hospital (phonetic sp.)
Q. And what happened when you got to the hospital?
A. I was forced to take urine test.
*1236 Q. What do you mean you were forced to take a urine test?
A. One, a nurse went into the restroom with me and watched to make sure that I did the urine test.
Q. Okay. Then what happened after that?
A. One hour later they got test results and she confirmed that I was pregnant and I was forced, I was taken, forcefully taken to the operation room.
Q. Did you have an abortion?
A. At that time not yet but later two nurses hold me, hold my legs down and two other people hold down my arms and then the doctor plugged a tube into me, forced me to do the abortion.
Q. Now were you ever asked whether or not you wanted an abortion? Were you asked whether or not you wanted to have an abortion?
A. No.

To corroborate her claim that she was forced to have an abortion, Xia attached to her asylum application a document purporting to be a “Family Plan Birth Control Operation Certificate,” in both Mandarin and an English translation thereof. This “abortion operations certificate,” as the IJ termed it, listed Xia’s name and gave a doctor’s signature dated November 10, 2004. The abortion certificate had spaces to list a patient’s age and sex, 3 both of which were blank on Xia’s certificate.

On cross-examination, the Government’s attorney questioned Xia about when she discovered she was pregnant, as well as her age when she had the abortion:

Q. And you say you got pregnant in July of 2004. Is that correct?
A. Yes.
Q. When did you learn that you were pregnant?
A. When I supposed to, my period supposed to start, I knew.
Q. So was that in July or August?
A. July.
Q. And whom did you tell you were pregnant?
A. My boyfriend.
Q. Anyone else?
A. No.
Q. And you didn’t tell your parents, correct?
A. No.
Q. So they didn’t know you were pregnant?
A. They later found out and the reason I was vomiting responding to the pregnancy. They found out on their own but I did not tell them.
Q. When did they find out?
A. Two months later.
Q. In September?

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608 F.3d 1233, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 12425, 2010 WL 2402854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yu-xia-v-us-attorney-general-ca11-2010.