OLEKSANDR BOYANIVSKYY, Petitioner, v. ALBERTO R. GONZALES, Respondent.
No. 05-2813
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED NOVEMBER 29, 2005—DECIDED JUNE 9, 2006
Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals. No. A78-110-767
Before MANION, WILLIAMS, and SYKES, Circuit Judges.
Boyanivskyy raises several issues in his petition for review; we need address only one. He argues that the immigration judge denied him a fair hearing by excluding key evidence supporting his persecution claim. We agree that Boyanivskyy‘s immigration hearing was statutorily insufficient because the immigration judge excluded critical material evidence bearing directly on his claim of persecution. We therefore grant his petition for review, vacate the BIA‘s decision, and remand for further proceedings.
I. Background
Boyanivskyy first attempted to cross from Mexico into the United States on February 13, 2000. United States border agents were not fooled by the photo-altered Austrian passport he showed them and they sent him back to Mexico. On February 24, 2000, Boyanivskyy tried to cross the border again, this time showing up with no documentation at all and telling border agents he lost his papers in Mexico. Border agents interviewed Boyanivskyy at some length and generated several documents relating to Boyanivskyy‘s
A border agent specifically asked Boyanivskyy if he had any “fear or concern about being returned” to Ukraine. He answered: “Yes. I fear to go back because I can not feed my family; I can not earn enough money to feed my family.” When the agent followed up by asking whether he had any concerns “[o]ther than economic concerns,” Boyanivskyy simply repeated his financial worries: “Yes. My salary in Ukraine was fifteen dollars per month. I could not support my family with the amount of money that I made.” During the entire February 24 interview, Boyanivskyy never mentioned anything about being persecuted on account of his marriage to a Jewish woman.
The government initiated removal proceedings against Boyanivskyy that culminated in an immigration hearing that began on October 31, 2002, and continued on January 6 and 8, 2004. At the hearing Boyanivskyy conceded he was removable because he lacked the required entry documents. The immigration judge also found Boyanivskyy was removable for falsely claiming United States citizenship during his second attempt to enter the country. The remainder of the hearing focused on Boyanivskyy‘s effort to persuade the immigration judge to grant him asylum, withholding of removal, or relief under the CAT because he had been persecuted in Ukraine on account of his marriage to a Jewish woman and would face further persecution if returned.
Boyanivskyy planned to show a likelihood of persecution through his own testimony about past persecution he had suffered, including several violent beatings; the testimony
Lay witnesses Zarichnyak and Yakovishak would have testified to the ill treatment Boyanivskyy and his wife, Ivanna, endured in Ivano-Frankivsk. Zarichnyak‘s statement gave a general description of the harassment and discrimination Boyanivskyy suffered from the time he married Ivanna; it also said Ivanna had endured anti-Semitic discrimination all her life. Yakovishak‘s statement likewise described the verbal abuse, threats, and insults Boyanivskyy and his wife experienced in Ivano-Frankivsk. He also indicated in his statement that while driving home on the evening of September 21, 1998, he witnessed six men beating Boyanivskyy “in the vicinity of the station.” (The context suggests he meant the police station.) According to his written statement, Yakovishak recognized at least one of the attackers as an Ivano-Frankivsk police officer, though the man wore civilian clothing. Yakovishak says he found Boyanivskyy lying unconscious on the ground and called an ambulance to take him to the hospital.
Boyanivskyy said he reported as requested, and shortly after he left the police station, six men in civilian clothing assaulted him. The attackers made it clear they knew he had reported his car stolen and that he was targeted for attack because he was married to a Jewish woman. They repeatedly called Boyanivskyy and his wife “kikes” while they punched and kicked him. The beating left him with a concussion, a dislocated jaw, bruised ribs, and eyes that were swollen shut. Boyanivskyy recalled that his friend Yakovishak called an ambulance that took him to a hospital where he remained for fifteen days. For a week and a half, Boyanivskyy had trouble walking. He could not say for certain whether his attackers were police officers, but he suspected they were at least connected with the police because they knew his car had been stolen and the attack occurred shortly after he had been called to the police station.
The second beating came on May 12, 1999, as Boyanivskyy walked home from work. Three men attacked him and told him he could not “have kids with a kike.” Ivanna was five months pregnant at the time. This assault was so violent that Boyanivskyy was hospitalized for over a month with injuries ranging from a brain hematoma to a dislocated collar bone.
Boyanivskyy suffered a third assault the next month, in December 1999. As he left his workplace, two men confronted him and one threatened him with a gun, pointing it between his eyes. The men wore civilian clothes, but Boyanivskyy recognized the man with the gun as a “militia” man whom he had seen many times wearing a police uniform and patrolling the train station. The man with the gun told Boyanivskyy he would kill him because he had been “warned on several occasions” yet he “continue[d] living with a kike” and had a child with her. He then struck Boyanivskyy in the head with the gun, causing great pain and swelling. It is unclear whether Boyanivskyy was hospitalized following this incident, but he reported seeing a doctor daily for about two weeks. He says his doctor x-rayed his head, put him on an “IV,” and gave him “injections” and medication. The record contains medical documentation verifying Boyanivskyy‘s treatment for serious injuries after each of the three beatings. Boyanivskyy left Ukraine the next month, January 2000, and made his failed attempts to enter the United States one month after that.
The immigration judge then rendered an oral decision denying all relief sought by Boyanivskyy and ordering him removed from the country. This decision flowed from the judge‘s finding that Boyanivskyy‘s testimony lacked credibility. The immigration judge cited the following reasons for the adverse credibility determination: Boyanivskyy‘s failure to mention any marriage-related persecution to the border agents who interviewed him on February 24, 2000; his denial that he falsely claimed United States citizenship; and his testimony that he filed a report with the police when his family received death threats after the birth of his son, which the judge perceived as irreconcilable with Boyanivskyy‘s professed fear of the police.
II. Analysis
When the BIA affirms an immigration judge‘s decision without opinion, we review the immigration judge‘s decision as the final agency determination. Georgis v. Ashcroft, 328 F.3d 962, 966-67 (7th Cir. 2003). The procedural sufficiency of an immigration hearing is a legal question, which we review de novo. See Kerciku v. I.N.S., 314 F.3d 913, 917 (7th Cir. 2002).
Boyanivskyy argues that the immigration judge‘s refusal to continue his hearing to enable his three witnesses to testify prejudiced his claims for asylum and withholding of removal by excluding critical corroborating evidence in
Boyanivskyy argues that the immigration judge‘s arbitrary refusal to continue the hearing to a day when his witnesses were available denied him the opportunity to present critical evidence in support of his claims for relief. His right to a reasonable opportunity to present all relevant evidence at an impartial hearing is protected by statute,
Boyanivskyy‘s witnesses were available to testify during the first two days of his immigration hearing, but the pace of the proceedings kept them from giving their testimony. Although Boyanivskyy made it clear he anticipated the need for his witnesses to testify during the third day of the hearing, the immigration judge inexplicably chose to continue the hearing to January 8, a day on which he knew the witnesses would be unavailable. When the hearing resumed on January 8, the immigration judge denied Boyanivskyy‘s motion for a continuance and declared that “[t]he respondent would rest” without his corroborating witnesses. This left Boyanivskyy himself as his only witness. The judge then rendered an oral decision denying all forms of relief based on his conclusion that Boyanivskyy‘s testimony lacked credibility. The immigration judge held that because Boyanivskyy‘s story was not believable, there was no need to hear his other witnesses. This was error.
When an immigration judge finds an alien‘s testimony incredible, the alien carries the burden of explaining any discrepancies or introducing credible corroborating evidence. Capric v. Ashcroft, 355 F.3d 1075, 1086 (7th Cir. 2004). “Without such an explanation or corroboration . . . the applicant cannot meet his burden of proof and his
The immigration judge continued the hearing to a date when he knew Boyanivskyy‘s witnesses were unavailable and then declared the hearing at an end, denying a further continuance, without which he knew Boyanivskyy could not present essential corroborating evidence. By doing so, the judge denied Boyanivskyy the opportunity to present evidence on his own behalf,
These errors by the immigration judge entitle Boyanivskyy to relief only if he can show prejudice. Rehman, 441 F.3d at 509. We have no difficulty concluding that his case was harmed by the exclusion of his corroboration witnesses. Dr. Burds would have testified that
Accordingly, we GRANT the petition for review, VACATE the BIA‘s decision, and REMAND this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
A true Copy:
Teste:
Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
USCA-02-C-0072—6-9-06
