Lead Opinion
Francisco Ornelas-Chavez timely petitions this court for review of a Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) final order affirming the Immigration Judge’s (“IJ”) denial of his application for withholding of removal under the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (“IIRIRA”), 8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3), and the United Nations Convention Against Torture (“CAT”).
We have jurisdiction under 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a). We conclude the BIA applied the wrong legal standards to Ornelas-Chavez’s claims for withholding of removal under IIRIRA and CAT; therefore, we grant his' petition with respect to those claims. Because we remand to the BIA
I.
Ornelas-Chavez is a Mexican national who came to the United States illegally in 1998 to escape a lifetime of abuse suffered on account of his female sexual identity.
Ornelas-Chavez suffered a great deal of abuse in his youth because of his homosexuality and female sexual identity. As a young boy, his mother beat him for dressing in her clothes. On several occasions, his father became so enraged at discovering evidence of his homosexuality that he beat Ornelas-Chavez savagely enough to leave noticeable injuries. Once, his father conspired with a friend to humiliate Ornelas-Chavez by permitting the friend to rape the boy after drugging him. When Ornelas-Chavez was six, two cousins raped him after seeing him dressed in women’s clothes and playing with dolls. The cousins repeated this abuse until Ornelas-Chavez was twelve years old. A worker on his grandfather’s hacienda who witnessed the cousins’ abuse also raped him several times between the ages of seven and nine. Ultimately, Ornelas-Chavez fled his parents’ home and lived in hiding from most of his family.
From his childhood through his adulthood in Mexico, Ornelas-Chávez’s dealings with government officials and employees was marked by either animus toward his female sexual identity or tacit acceptance of the abuse he received because of it. After he reported to his second-grade teacher that his mother beat him for putting on her clothes, the teacher told him only “fags” dressed up in women’s clothes. When he told the teacher that he had performed sexual intercourse with older men, she told him he “shouldn’t do that because only homosexuals did that.” The teacher never reported the sexual abuse to the proper authorities. When OrnelasChavez was sixteen, his father arranged to have the local police , chief arrest and detain him for .six hours to “teach[him] to behave.” (The father was apparently on close terms with the local police, even renting a home to some of the officers.) Upon releasing Ornelas-Chavez, the police chief threatened to detain him longer if he found out again he was sexually involved with men. In 1989 Ornelas-Chavez took a job as a correctional officer at a state-run prison in Uruapan. Co-workers there repeatedly threatened and beat him, telling him that homosexuals discredited the work. Three times Ornelas-Chavez complained to his supervisor who, instead of disciplining the co-workers, encouraged him to quit, saying the job was “for men and not for homosexuals.” Ornelas-Chavez did quit but, two years later, returned because he thought conditions had improved. Soon after returning, however, four or five of his co-workers tried to smother him with a pillow, boasting they were “finally going to get rid of another homo.” When he reported this incident to his new supervisor, the man offered Ornelas-Chavez the choice of changing his shift or quitting but, again, took no action against the co-workers. Finally, while Ornelas-Chavez was living in Uruapan, the police killed two of his acquaintances who were homosexuals. The men were found stabbed to death with sticks inserted in their rectums.
In 1993, Ornelas-Chavez went to live with a sympathetic aunt in Mexicali. Though occasionally taunted in the streets, Ornelas-Chavez was able to live there rel
In July 2003, United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement began removal proceedings against him. Ornelas-Chavez then filed an application for asylum and with-holding of removal on the basis of a well-founded fear of persecution and torture on account of his female sexual identity.
At his removal hearing, the IJ held that Ornelas-Chavez was ineligible for asylum because he failed to show exceptional circumstances for filing his application later than one year after entering the United States. The IJ also found Ornelas-Chavez failed to establish eligibility for withholding of removal under IIRIRA and that he “provided no evidence of past torture or any mental or physical intentionally inflicted severe pain or suffering that is sanctioned by a public official or by a State Actor.” Accordingly, the IJ denied the petition for withholding of removal.
Ornelas-Chavez appealed the IJ’s withholding of removal decisions to the BIA. He also claimed that the IJ’s hostile comments and stereotypes about the way a gay man should appear and sound prevented him from receiving a fair hearing. In affirming the IJ’s section 1231(b)(3) decision, the BIA found that Ornelas-Chavez
suffered one incident of harm, a detention of several hours apparently at [the] request of his father, at the hands of government agents. This single incident does not rise to the level of persecution. All of the other harm suffered by the respondent occurred at the hands of private citizens. The respondent did not report any of these incidents to government authorities.
The BIA also found that some of Ornelas-Chavez’s extensive documentation on the conditions of gay men in Mexico described only general police abuse, not necessarily against gay people, and some described only “individual incidents that do not reflect a pattern in any particular police force.” It further found that some of the documentation actually reflected “improvements in the situation of gay people in Mexico.” The BIA concluded:
[W]here the respondent never reported his incidents of harm to government authorities, and where the background evidence in the record is inconclusive, the Immigration Judge properly found that the respondent did not prove that the Mexican government is unwilling or unable to control those who harmed or may harm him.
As to Ornelas-Chavez’s CAT claim, the BIA affirmed the IJ’s decision in a one-sentence ruling. Finally, the BIA held that Ornelas-Chavez did not establish a due process violation. This timely petition for review followed.
II.
We review the BIA’s construction and application of the law de novo, subject to established principles of deference. See Murillo-Espinoza v. INS,
We review the BIA’s determination that Ornelas-Chavez did not establish eligibility for withholding of removal for substantial evidence. Andriasian v. INS,
III.
A.
Ornelas-Chavez claims the BIA applied the wrong legal standard in determining that he was not eligible for withholding of removal based upon the alleged persecution he suffered in Mexico at the hands of private persons. We agree.
Under IIRIRA, Ornelas-Chavez may not be removed to Mexico if his “life or freedom would be threatened ... because of [his] race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.” 8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3)(A). Ornelas-Chavez is entitled to the presumption that such a threat exists if he can show he suffered past persecution on account of his membership in a protected social group.
In concluding that Ornelas-Chavez did not establish he was persecuted in the past by private parties the Mexican government was unable or unwilling to control, the BIA cited only two pieces of evidence: background country conditions and OrnelasChavez’s failure to report the incidents to the authorities.
Evidence of background country conditions alone cannot establish that specific acts of persecution did or did not occur. See Duarte de Guinac v. INS,
We must therefore conclude that the only credible testimonial evidence the BIA considered in determining that the Mexican government was unwilling or unable to control Ornelas-Chavez’s alleged persecutors was the fact that Ornelas-Chavez did not report the incidents of abuse he suffered to the police. Such treatment of the evidence was tantamount to making the reporting of private persecution a sine qua non for the success of Ornelas-Chavez’s withholding of removal claim.
Neither IIRIRA nor the regulations implementing it require that an alien seeking withholding of removal based on third-party persecution must have reported that persecution to the authorities. In fact, any such requirement would contradict the BIA’s own precedent. See, e.g., In re SA-, 22 I. & N. Dec. 1328, 1335,
Moreover, a reporting requirement conflicts with the way this court has implicitly handled a petitioner’s evidence of governmental unwillingness or inability to control private persecution. It is true that “where non-governmental actors are responsible for persecution ... we consider whether an applicant reported the incidents to police.” Baballah,
We now make explicit what was implicit in these earlier cases: an applicant who seeks to establish eligibility for withholding of removal under section 1231(b)(3) on the basis of past persecution at the hands of private parties the government is unwilling or unable to control need not have reported that persecution to the authorities if he can convincingly establish that doing so would have been futile or have subjected him to further abuse.
Ornelas-Chavez argues that, when reviewed under the correct legal standard, the evidence in the record supports a finding that he is entitled to withholding of removal under section 1231(b)(3). But where the BIA applies the wrong legal standard to an applicant’s claim, the appropriate relief from this court is remand for reconsideration under the correct standard, not independent review of the evidence. See INS v. Orlando Ventura,
Because the BIA improperly applied a reporting requirement in its analysis of Ornelas-Chavez’s section 1231(b)(3) claim, we grant his petition on this claim and remand to the BIA for reconsideration of the evidence under the correct standard.
B.
The BIA rendered its CAT decision in a single sentence, saying simply that it “agree[d] with the Immigration Judge that the respondent did not prove that, if removed to Mexico, he more likely than not will suffer torture as specifically defined by regulation.” “[Tjhis court has required the Board to ‘state its reasons and show proper consideration of all factors when weighing equities and denying relief.’ ” Hassan v. INS,
The IJ concluded that OrnelasChavez did not meet his burden of proof under CAT because the evidence did not establish that the government “sanctioned” his torture. This decision is deficient, requiring us to remand, because the IJ applied the wrong legal standard.
The government claims the IJ’s “misstatement” of the law was harmless because “none of the mistreatment of which [Ornelas-Chavez] complains occurred by or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official ‘who ha[d] custody or physical control’ of him.” The government relies on In re J-E-, 23 I. & N. Dec. 291 (BIA 2002) (en banc), for the proposition that 8 C.F.R. § 208.18(a)(1) requires an applicant to have been in the custody or control of a public official at the time of his torture. But we clearly rejected that interpretation of the regulation in Azanor. See
The dissent argues that the IJ’s “errant word choice” amounts to harmless error since a closer inspection of the IJ’s actual “mode of analysis” reveals that she did not review the evidence under a different standard than the regulations dictate. Op. at 1067. The dissent bases this argument on the IJ’s finding that Ornelas-Chavez “presented no evidence that the authorities refused to protect him or that the authorities did not protect him, since he never reported any of these incidents to authorities.” But the dissent’s argument is unpersuasive because the standard implicit in this finding is also higher than that dictated by CAT.
Like the dissent, we have our doubts about whether the record evidénce supports a claim for relief under CAT. But it is not our job to make that determination. Our job is to ensure that the IJ employed the proper legal standards in reaching her decision and that her conclusions are supported by substantial evidence. In performing this task, we are limited to “granting] or denying] the petition for review based on the [IJ’s] reasoning rather than our independent analysis of the record.” Azanor,
Because the IJ’s decision is fatally flawed, we must reverse the BIA’s decision and remand. See Tukhowinich,
We hold that the BIA applied impermissibly strict standards to both Ornelas-Chavez’s section 1231(b)(3) claim and his CAT claim. Accordingly, we grant OrnelasChavez’s petition for review and remand the case to the BIA for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
PETITION GRANTED IN PART, REMANDED.
Notes
. Article 3 of CAT, implemented by the Foreign Affairs Reform and Restructuring Act of 1998, § 2242, Pub.L. No. 105-277, Div. G, 112 Stat. 2681, 2681-761 (Oct. 21, 1998), provides that a signatory nation will not "expel, return!,] or extradite” an alien to another country “where there are substantial grounds for believing that he would be in danger of being subjected to torture.” See Khourassany v. INS,
. Because the IJ found Ornelas-Chavez’s testimony credible and the BIA did not make a contrary finding, we accept the facts given by Ornelas-Chavez and all reasonable inferences to be drawn from them as true. See Zheng v. Ashcroft,
. Whether Ornelas-Chavez belongs to a protected social group is not at issue in this appeal. See generally Hernandez-Montiel v. INS, 225 F.3d 1084, 1094 (9th Cir.2000) (recognizing as a distinct social group "gay men with female sexual identities in Mexico”).
. BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 1369 (8th Ed.2004) ("To approve, authorize, or support”).
. Id. at 25 ("[Tjacit or passive acceptance; implied consent to an act").
. MERRIAM-WEBSTER’S COLLEGIATE DICTIONARY 81 (10th Ed.1998) ("[Rjealization, perception, or knowledge” and "vigilance in observing or alertness in drawing inferences from what one experiences”).
. BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1630 ("Deliberate avoidance of knowledge of a crime, esp[ecially] by failing to make a reasonable inquiry about suspected wrongdoing despite being aware that it is highly probable.”).
.We also note that the IJ’s finding, which simply ignores Ornelas-Chavez’s testimony, is unsupported by substantial evidence. Ornelas-Chavez said at his hearing both that he told his second-grade teacher he had sexual intercourse with a man and that he repeatedly told his supervisor at the state prison that coworkers harassed and beat him because he was gay. Thus, the record shows, in direct contradiction to the IJ's finding of fact, that Ornelas-Chavez did report his alleged torture.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
In this case our modest task is to decide whether the Board of Immigration Appeals’ (“BIA”) decision to deny Petitioner Ornelas-Chavez’s claims was free of legal error and supported by substantial evidence. Because neither sympathy for the petitioner nor distrust of the BIA or the Immigration Judge (“IJ”) should compromise a careful assessment of the administrative decisions and record evidence, I respectfully dissent.
I
First, the court holds that the BIA applied the wrong legal standard to OrnelasChavez’s claim to withholding of removal under 8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3) because it imposed a strict “reporting requirement” to establish government persecution. Maj. Op. at 1056-58. With respect, it did no such thing.
A
Any fair reading of the BIA’s decision demonstrates that it applied the proper legal standard. In relevant part, the BIA stated:
The respondent suffered an incident .of harm, a detention of several hours apparently at this [sic] request of his father, at the hands of government agents.. This single incident does not rise to the level of persecution. All of the other harm suffered by the respondent occurred at the hands of private citizens. The respondent did not report any of these incidents to government authorities. '
... Accordingly, where the respondent never reported his incidents of harm to government authorities, and where the background evidence in the record is inconclusive, the Immigration Judge properly found that the respondent did not prove that the Mexican government is unwilling or unable to control those who harmed or may harm him.
(Emphasis added.) The majority, adopting Ornelas-Chavez’s argument wholesale, seems to fixate on the last sentence of the first quoted paragraph: “The respondent did not report any of these incidents to government authorities.” Indeed, with only a passing nod to the sentence’s context, the majority distorts entirely the BIA’s reasoning.
The BIA did not apply nor did it adopt a strict “reporting requirement.” True, it observed that there was no evidence that Ornelas-Chavez reported the alleged incidents. However, as the majority concedes, it then considered this dearth of evidence in combination with the background country conditions evidence, which failed to demonstrate a pattern of indifference by the government. The BIA concluded, in light of these categories of evidence, that the IJ could appropriately find “that the respondent did not prove that the Mexican government is unwilling or unable to control those who harmed or may harm him.”
Under our circuit’s case law, this is an entirely proper mode of analysis. The persecution of which Ornelas-Chavez complains must be shown to have been perpetrated by the government, or else OrnelasChavez must show that the government “is unwilling or unable to control those elements of its society responsible for targeting a particular class of individuals.” Ave
In this light, it is clear that the BIA’s consideration of general country conditions stood to confirm its conclusion that Ornelas-Chavez did not meet his burden. That the BIA considered such background evidence itself conclusively demonstrates that the inquiry was not terminated by any rigid reporting requirement. Ultimately, I think it clear that the BIA asked and answered the right question: whether Ornelas-Chavez’s alleged persecutors were parties whom the Mexican authorities were unwilling or unable to control. The BIA was correct to treat Ornelas-Chavez’s failure to report the alleged persecution as relevant to that question.
In arriving at its errant conclusion, the majority observes that the BIA “cited only two pieces of evidence,” and since one of them was inconclusive, it must have been improper that the other — the alleged “reporting requirement” — was “a sine qua non for the success of Ornelas-Chavez’s withholding of removal claim.” Maj. Op. at 1057, 1058. But where, I wonder, is the flaw in the BIA’s analysis?
Presumably Ornelas-Chavez had two options: to prove that the government was unwilling or unable to control such persecution generally, or to prove that it was unwilling or unable to control his persecutors specifically. See, e.g., Castro-Perez v. Gonzales,
The BIA did not, as the majority seems to suggest, improperly consider background country conditions as “establishing] that specific acts of persecution occurred or did not occur.” Maj. Op. at 1056. Although the BIA, having made no adverse credibility determination, was required to accept Ornelas-Chavez’s testimony as factually true, it was not required to adopt his preferred legal conclusion: that the authorities would not have acted to curb the persecution he alleges took place. The background evidence in the record was obviously relevant to the merits of that issue, and the BIA was entitled, if not obligated, to consider it. See Castro-Perez,
Our standard of review in immigration cases is well-established: we must affirm the BIA if the record contains substantial evidence for its decision; we cannot justify granting the petition for review merely by pointing to other record evidence which, in our own view, supports the alien’s claim. See INS v. Elias-Zacarias,
In short, the majority goes to great lengths to divine in the BIA’s analysis some kind of per se rule, which it can then merrily reject. As I have sought to demonstrate, such “reporting requirement” is of the majority’s own imagining. Surely one may infer much from the typically brief text of an administrative decisionespeeially when one is all too eager to conjure a meaning that will justify granting the petition for review. Cf. Kumar v. Gonzales,
B
Had the majority given the BIA’s decision a fair reading, it could not then hold that Ornelas-Chavez met his burden of showing that the evidence would compel any reasonable fact finder to conclude that he was more likely than not to suffer persecution upon his return to Mexico. Singh v. INS,
1
There is no evidence of past persecution, as defined by the regulations, in this case. The Mexican government was not involved in any persecution of Ornelas-Chavez; the single, six-hour detention by a reluctant local police chief, at the request of Ornelas-Chavez’s father, does not rise to that level. See, e.g., Prasad v. INS,
Critically, the evidence also falls short of compelling a finding that any past private “persecution” at issue was perpetrated by parties whom the government was unwilling or unable to control. Ornelas-Chavez has not “convincingly established” — or proven by any standard — that his resort to government authorities would have been futile. Cf. Korablina v. INS,
Even assuming that a few individual police officers were beholden to OrnelasChavez’s father because they rented a house on his land, Ornelas-Chavez makes no allegation that this potential bias somehow seeped into all (or even most) persons holding Mexican authority. It is true that Ornelas-Chavez’s teacher failed to take any action in response to his allegations of sexual contact. But at best, this testimony establishes one teacher’s ineptitude; it does not compel a finding that the Mexican authorities generally would have been indifferent to the rape of a young child.
The various items of evidence OrnelasChavez put forth fail to support his claim because his subjective perceptions of government officials are not relevant — much less dispositive. The critical inquiry as to government responsiveness is objective, and we have always considered the “unwilling or unable to control” requirement in that context. See, e.g., Malty v. Ashcroft,
In sum, while I do not discount nor make light of the harms Ornelas-Chavez has apparently suffered, I must also eon-
2
Having failed to produce compelling evidence of past persecution by actors whom the government was unwilling or unable to control, Ornelas-Chavez would not be entitled to a presumption' of future persecution. See 8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(b)(1). His claim to withholding of removal would then fail if he also falls short of independently establishing a clear probability of future persecution. See Lim v. INS,
a
On this record, there simply is insufficient showing that homosexuals are currently subject to official persecution in Mexico. The U.S. Department of State’s June 1997 country report documented “no evidence of systematic official persecution of homosexuals,” and Ornelas-Chavez’s other evidence was not to the contrary. A report from a private group, dated May 2000, stated that “repression by ... authorities is now the exception, not the rule,” and noted that societal attitudes are trending towards tolerance.
The record evidence further demonstrates extensive legal, political, and cultural advances by homosexuals in Mexico, including the enactment of legislation prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, wide acceptance of participation by homosexuals in two of the three major political parties, and the election of openly homosexual government representatives. To the extent private persecution occurs, the record suggests that the government’s response has changed. One news report in the record, for example, notes that the Mexico City police “have set up a unit specializing in dealing with homophobic crimes, and are to get sensitivity training.”
b
Nor was the evidence so compelling that any rational fact finder must conclude that Ornelas-Chavez, individually, would more likely than not be subject to persecution by actors whom the government was unwilling or unable to control. 8 C.F;R. § 1208.16(b)(l)-(2); see Sael v. Ashcroft,
Read as a whole, the record is not such that a reasonable fact finder must conclude that Ornelas-Chavez is more likely than not to be persecuted in the future if he is returned to Mexico.
II
I must also dissent from the majority’s holding that the BIA applied an incorrect legal standard as to the level of government involvement required for relief under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). Maj. Op. at 1058-61. Again, the majority’s reading of the relevant administrative decision is partisan and inaccurate. Further, there is absolutely no evidence of torture of homosexuals by the Mexican government (or by private parties with the government’s consent or acquiescence) in this record. Random incidents of private violence simply cannot support the notion that official torture of homosexuals is systematic or even common. As such, the IJ’s decision on the CAT claim is supported by substantial evidence.
A
The applicable regulations define “torture” as “severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental” when intentionally inflicted “with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in an official capacity.” 8 C.F.R. § 208.18(a)(1) (emphasis added). In this case, the IJ found that Ornelas-Chavez had “provided no evidence of past torture or any mental or physical intentionally inflicted severe pain or suffering that is sanctioned by a public official.” (Emphasis added.) The majority seizes upon the word “sanctioned” to assert an erroneous application by the IJ of a legal standard “higher” than that prescribed in the regulations. Maj. Op. at 1058.
While the IJ may have employed imprecise diction in that passage, the majority is again too keen to find fault in the agency decision we now review. Earlier in its order, the IJ explained, in part, that “[t]he Respondent presented no evidence that the authorities refused to protect him or that the authorities did not protect him, since he never reported any of these incidents to the authorities.” Id. at 1059. This phraseology indicates that the IJ considered whether the authorities were aware of the alleged abuses such that they could possibly “consent or acquiesce.” Thus, the IJ necessarily found that Ornelas-Chavez’s evidence fell short of even the proper “consent or acquiescence” standard. Although the word “sanctioned” arguably suggests affirmative approval by the government, there is no indication in the opinion that the IJ actually reviewed the evidence for conduct beyond the government’s “tacit or passive acceptance” or “implied consent to an act.” I also find it significant that the IJ’s errant word choice was simply part of its summary declaration at the end of the opinion, not in any way enmeshed in the actual analysis of the facts.
There was not, as the majority suggests, implicit in the IJ’s finding a standard “also higher than that dictated by CAT.” Maj. Op. at 1059. In so asserting, the majority again lays bare the analytical flaw that infects its entire opinion: it posits that “the IJ’s decision rests on the unwarranted premise that the only way a public official
In sum, a fair reading of the decision leads to the conclusion that the word “sanctioned” was inconsequential to the analysis and ultimately harmless.
B
Because, in my view, the IJ did not apply an erroneous standard to his CAT claim, the final step in our review is to consider whether the record evidence is so compelling that any rational finder of fact would conclude that Ornelas-Chavez more likely than not would be tortured, with the consent or acquiescence of the government, upon his return to Mexico. Ochoa v. Gonzales,
1
The majority seeks to curtail such inquiry by suggesting that “the IJ concluded simply that Ornelas-Chavez failed to show that the authorities ‘sanctioned’ his alleged torture because he did not report it,” and that we therefore cannot affirm the IJ’s decision on any other ground even if supported by substantial evidence. Maj. Op. at 1060.
But the IJ’s decision was not so cabined. She found no past torture because, in part, Ornelas-Chavez did not report any abuse. But the majority ignores at least four paragraphs in which the IJ discussed the facts that she felt undermined OrnelasChavez’s claims of future harm. She considered “[Petitioner’s] testimony and evidence offered by the[Petitioner],” and concluded that Ornelas-Chavez had “not shown that he is more likely than not to be tortured if he were to be removed to Mexi
As such, we should consider any record evidence that supports the IJ’s finding that Ornelas-Chavez failed to meet his burden of showing a likelihood of torture upon his return to Mexico. See Turcios v. INS,
2
As already noted, the regulations define torture for CAT purposes as severe pain or suffering “inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in an official capacity.” 8 C.F.R. § 208.18(a)(1) (emphasis added). In turn, “[ajcquiescence of a public official requires that the public official, prior to the activity constituting torture, have awareness of such activity and thereafter breach his or her legal responsibility to intervene to prevent such activity.” Id. § 208.18(a)(7) (emphasis added); see Kamalthas v. INS,
Past torture does not create a presumption of entitlement to CAT relief, although it is relevant to the ultimate inquiry: whether “it is more likely than not that [the petitioner] would be tortured if removed to the proposed country of removal.” 8 C.F.R. § 208.16(c)(2); see Mohammed v. Gonzales,
As to the ultimate question, the likelihood that Ornelas-Chavez will be tortured in the future if removed to Mexico, the evidence utterly falls short. It is first worth noting that the sexual abuse took place during Ornelas-Chavez’s youth, specifically between the ages of six and twelve. Circumstances have so fundamentally changed — he is now an adult — 'that Ornelas-Chavez is rather unlikely to be subjected to future injury in the form of rape. As.noted, the same conclusion applies to the beatings to which OrnelasChavez was subjected by his father. And as to the attempted assault by OrnelasChavez’s co-workers at the state prison, there is simply no indication that these would-be torturers have singled out Ornelas-Chavez such that he would again be a target.
The evidence of general country conditions as it pertains to Mexican homosexuals does not paint a picture so dire as to compel reversal of the BIA decision. See 8 C.F.R. § 1208.16(c)(3)(iii)-(iv). Quite the contrary, the record contains numerous references to an ever-improving situation. And although there have been some homosexuality-related murders documented over five years, there are, according to this record, as many as 12,600,000 Mexicans of homosexual orientation.
I would affirm the determination that Ornelas-Chavez failed to meet his burden of showing that he was more likely than not to be tortured, as specifically defined by the regulations, if returned to Mexico.
For all of the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
. There is no evidence that the authorities had (or should have had) knowledge of the rapes or beatings. Ornelas-Chavez presented evidence that government officials witnessed a couple incidents of harassment, but no incidents of persecution or torture.
. The majority’s attempt to limit the use of background country conditions evidence to credibility determinations, see Maj. Op. at 1056, is entirely without authority.
. Quite the contrary, the administrative record includes a U.S. Department of ■ State country report, dated March 31, 2003, which documents extensive efforts by the Mexican government to promote the well-being of the country’s children. The government has in place the National Institute for the Integral Development of the Family, which fields complaints of abuse against children. A 2000 law provides for imprisonment of up to ten years for the sexual corruption of a minor under 16 years of age; parents convicted of such crimes are stripped of custody over their children. Accomplices to sexual abuse face similar prison terms. In ,2000, the Mexican Congress also passed a constitutional amendment "to protect the rights of children and teenagers and ensure respect for their dignity.” Moreover, the Protection of the Rights of Children and Adolescents Law "provides for the right to life, nondiscrimination, healthy living conditions, protection against threat to liberty and physical abuse, a healthy family life, health services, equal treatment for persons with disabilities, education, pursuit of happiness, and freedom of thought and expression.” Penalties for violation include fines and imprisonment.
The same State Department country report also documents ongoing dangers faced by Mexico's youth, but the record evidence falls far short of compelling the conclusion that the government is "unwilling or unable to control” persecution of the type primarily alleged here.
. It is true that Ornelas-Chavez’s father may be the lone exception. But the record discloses no evidence that his father is seeking him out for the purpose of persecution such that it is likely to happen again. Cf., e.g., Mendoza-Perez v. INS, 902 F.2d 760, 762 (9th Cir.1990). Since Ornelas-Chavez reached adulthood, he has had only one run-in with his father. This incident, a 1998 altercation, was an isolated occurrence; it took place when the two encountered each other by chance at the home of Ornelas-Chavez’s aunt. Ornelas-Chavez himself acknowledged living in Mexico without incident for many years prior. As such, the incident does not compel a conclusion contrary to the one reached by the BIA.
. The showing made by Ornelas-Chavez is not nearly as compelling as those we have considered previously. In Boer-Sedano v. Gonzales,
. The majority rejects the harmlessness of the misstatement on the basis of the government's argument, under an invalidated BIA decision, that Ornelas-Chavez must have been in the "custody or physical control” of a public official. Maj. Op. at 1059. But the IJ never asserted that Ornelas-Chavez must have been in the custody of a public official; rather, it applied the correct legal standard-that he must have been in the custody or physical control "of a perpetrator.” See Azanor v. Ashcroft,
. First, the IJ did indeed find that the rapes and beating Ornelas-Chavez suffered in his youth did not qualify as "torture,” because no government actor was aware of such abuses before they occurred. Second, the IJ found that Ornelas-Chavez had failed to prove the likelihood that he would be tortured if returned to Mexico. Third, the IJ’s finding that Ornelas-Chavez did not report any abuses to the government necessarily means that she found he did not inform anyone of torture "prior to” its occurrence.
. The cases cited by the majority say only that we will not apply in the first instance the correct legal standard where the agency applied an erroneous standard, see Azanor v. Ashcroft,
. For purposes of this discussion, I assume that the rapes and beatings Ornelas-Chavez suffered at the hands of his cousins and father, respectively, constitute torture. See Al-Saher v. INS,
As to the prior knowledge of a public official, it is true that the police detained OrnelasChavez for six hours when he was 16 years old. But this action was in no way connected to an incident of torture.
. For this reason, the majority is clearly incorrect to suggest that the IJ’s finding was unsupported by substantial evidence. Ornelas-Chavez told his teacher that he “had had
. Record evidence included an estimate that between eight and twelve percent of the Mexican population of 105 million persons is homosexual in orientation. See U.S. Department of State Homepage, Background Note: Mexico, at http:// www.state.gOv/r/pa/ei/bgn/35749.htm (last visited June 28, 2006) (providing statistics as to total population).
The record, of course, also includes an observation that the number of homosexuality-related homicides (1) mirrors the homicide rate for the Mexican population generally, and (2) has been in sharp decline since the early 1990s.
