In re J-F-F-, Respondent
Interim Decision #3532
Office of the Attorney General
May 1, 2006
23 I&N Dec. 912 (A.G. 2006)
FOR RESPONDENT: Pro se
FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY: Tara Naselow-Nahas, Deputy Chief Counsel
BEFORE THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
(May 1, 2006)
Respondent, a native and a citizen of the Dominican Republic and a permanent resident of the United States, was convicted of rape by force and found removable because his rape conviction qualifies as an aggravated felony under section 101(a)(43)(A) of the Immigration and Nationality Act,
In a brief order, the Board of Immigration Appeals affirmed.1 On February 10, 2006, pursuant to my authority under
I.
I review de novo all aspects of the Board‘s and Immigration Judge‘s decisions in this case. See Deportation Proceedings of Joseph Patrick Thomas Doherty, 12 Op. O.L.C. 1, 4 (A.G. 1988) (“[W]hen the Attorney General reviews a case pursuant to
II.
A.
Respondent was born in the Dominican Republic in 1961, and he was admitted to the United States as a lawful permanent resident in 1970. Although his parents and siblings became naturalized United States citizens, respondent never completed the naturalization process he initiated around 1980.
On January 9, 1986, while living at his parents’ home in Los Angeles, respondent raped his 55-year-old neighbor. Having learned that his neighbor was home alone becausе her husband was in the hospital, respondent tied her up, threatened her at knifepoint, and repeatedly raped and sexually assaulted her over the course of 4 hours. When he was later interviewed about the incident, he explained that he committed the crime because he “was drunk on beer and wine.” After serving a 15-year sentence for the rape, respondent was released in November of 2001. While incarcerated, he attacked a fellow inmate on one occasion and threatened to kill a female corrections оfficer on another.
On December 11, 2003, respondent was issued a notice to appear for removal proceedings charging him with being removable from the United States under section 101(a)(43)(A) of the Act,
Between March 23 and June 3, 2004, respondent appeared before the Immigration Judge for five hearings in his removal proceedings. In these proceedings, respondent admitted the allegations and the charge of removability; he confirmed that he was a native and citizen of the Dominican Republic and admitted that he had been convicted of rape by force. The Immigration Judge suggested on April 14 that respondent might be eligible for a waiver under former section 212(c) of the Act,
The Board reversed the Immigration Judge‘s termination of prоceedings. It first noted that the psychiatric evaluation of respondent in the record and respondent‘s testimony before the Immigration Judge suggested that respondent was fit for trial. It pointed out that at the Immigration Judge‘s request, the Government had introduced a psychiatric evaluation, dated February 19, 2004, in which the psychiatrist “cleared [respondent] to stand trial,” although this report stated that respondent had schizoaffective and bipolar disorders and observed that respondent had been admitted to various hospitals as a result of his mental illness. It also noted respondent‘s hearing testimony confirming the psychiatrist‘s assessment that he fully understood the proceedings and wanted to proceed. The Board then went on to note that the Immigration Judge‘s principal concern with respect to respondent‘s competence appeared to be that the alien would be unable effectively to present his claim for section 212(c) relief, but that because respondent‘s felony forcible rape conviction made him ineligible, this concern was unfounded and the Immigration Judge should not pursue cоnsideration of this claim further. See
On remand, the Immigration Judge introduced the prospect of CAT relief, questioned respondent on the subject until he decided to make the claim, and ultimately granted CAT relief on grounds respondent had not mentioned in his application. When the Immigration Judge first asked respondent whether he was “afraid of being persecuted or tortured in the Dominican Republic,” he responded, “Uh, no, ma‘am.” Respondent said he was aware that his admission required that the Immigration Judge order him removed and deported to the Dominican Republic. After asking a series of questions to which respondent gave answers that did not support deferral of removal under the CAT, the Immigration Judge asked, “So, what do you wish to do?” He replied, “The reason that I don‘t wanna get deported [is] because I have nobody in [the] Dominican Republic. All my family‘s in the United States.” The Immigration Judge then presented respondent with his choices: “[T]he Board of Immigration Appeals has determined that you do not qualify for the
Respondent then submitted the Form I-589 (Application for Asylum and Withholding of Removal) necessary to apply for deferral of removal under the Convention Against Torture. Respondent‘s application for CAT relief did not mention fear of police brutality, nor did his initial testimony at the 1-day hearing. In answer to the Form I-589 question, “Why [do] you believe you would or could be harmed or mistreated,” respondent wrote, “They might try to kill me. Communists might try to kill me. They might know me.” In answer to the form question, “Why [are] you . . . afraid and describе the nature of the torture you fear, by whom, and why it would be inflicted,” he wrote, “They was after the family who work for the government to kill us.” At the hearing, respondent maintained that he feared harm or mistreatment on return to the Dominican Republic at the hands of “[f]ormer people that used to be under the Communists” or “criminals” who “would use a machete to kill people to rob them.” The Immigration Judge asked whether he thought the police would “bother” him in the Dominican Republic. Without specifying whether he feared Communists, criminals, the police, or other actors, he agreed that there is “torture in [the] Dominican Republic, they mistreat people over there very bad, especially if you [are] a stranger.”
In response to questioning by the Immigration Judge about his mental condition, respondent testified that he takes the medication Xyprexa once a day, which he buys with the aid of state benefits. He admitted that there have been a few times when he has stopped taking his medication—on occasion simply “[t]o see what would happen“—and that when he did stop “[n]othing happened.” He said that he had been “perfеctly fine” without his medication when he spent 8 months in a county jail. When asked whether “anything happen[s]” when “you‘re not in jail, and you don‘t take your medication,” he responded, “No.” Specifically, the Immigration Judge asked whether respondent was “not taking medication,” when he committed the rape. He responded that he was “[t]aking medication” at the time.
The Immigration Judge then asked respondent whether he thought he needed his medication. After stating that “nothing happened” when he was not medicated and agreeing that he was “perfectly fine” without it, respоndent finally agreed that he needed his medication to “keep [him] in balance”
On the basis of this testimony, and the State Department‘s Country Report on the Dominican Republic, discussed below, the Immigration Judge granted respondent‘s application for deferral of removal.
B.
“In considering an application for [deferral] of removal under the Convention Against Torture, the Immigration Judge shall first determine whether the alien is more likely than not to be tortured in the country of removal.”
In granting respondent deferral of removal under the Convention Against Torture, the Immigration Judge strung together a series оf suppositions: that respondent needs medication in order to behave within the bounds of the law; that such medication is not available in the Dominican Republic; that as a result respondent would fail to control himself and become “rowdy“; that this behavior would lead the police to incarcerate him; and that the police would torture him while he was incarcerated. The evidence does not establish that any step in this hypothetical chain of events is more likely than not to happen,
First, respondent gave contradictory testimony about his behavior when unmedicated. Respondent originally insisted that his behavior does not change when he fails to take his medication, claimed that he had been “perfectly fine” when he had not taken his medication in the past, and confirmed that he had been taking his medication when he committed the violent rape that rendered him removable (suggesting that his “rowdiness” does not depend on lack of medication). Moreover, respondent‘s testimony reveals that he chooses on occasion to forego medication even when it is available. Only after persistent questioning by the Immigration Judge did respondent indicate that he got “a little rowdy” without his medication. It may be that respondent‘s behavior worsens when he is unmedicated, but the evidence presented indicates that, if anything, lack of medication is not a good predictor of respondent‘s violent actions.5
Second, based on respondent‘s admittedly uninformed guess that he could not procure his medication in the Dominican Republic, and a single sentence about the general shortage there of mental health resources from the State Department‘s Country Report, the Immigration Judge presumed that respondent would not receive medication while in the Dominican Republic.6 This is a far cry from proving the point. It may be that state-supplied drug
Third, in concluding that these first two points would lead to respondent‘s arrest in the Dominican Republic, the Immigration Judge relied on her belief—contrary to respondent‘s testimony—that respondent “without his medication, has found himself in the hands of the police in this country.” In fact, the crime for which the Government seeks to remove him was committed while he was “taking medications.” The Immigration Judge speculated that “rowdy” behavior would lead to arrest, but when the Immigration Judge asked respondent “what happens if somebody gets rowdy?“, respondent did not reply that rowdy behavior attracted the attention of the authorities. To the contrary, he responded that “they leave them on the streets,” and “don‘t bother them. They let them be in the streets.” Again, the evidence presented by respondent is contradictory; he does not show that it is likely—with or without medication—that he would attract the attention of the Dominican police, and therefore cannot show that torture by the police is more likely than not.
Next, there is the central question how police in the Dominican Republic would treat respondent if they had cause to interact with him. Respondent has admitted that the Dominican Government has never tortured either him or, to his knowledge, anyone in his family.7 Putting aside whether he is more likely than not to find himself in police custody, respondent did not present any direct evidence that the police would more likely than not torture someone in
The only evidence presented therefore came from respondent‘s brief reading and the Immigration Judge‘s more complete reading of the Country Report.8 Based on the Country Report, the Immigration Judge found that “some security forces, primarily mid-level and lower ranking police officers continued to torture, beat, and otherwise physically abuse detainees and prisoners.” The report indicates that police and military mistreatment of prisoners has been an ongoing problem in the Dominican Republic, but it also stresses that the Dominican Government takes prohibitions against torture seriously and refers such cases to civilian courts. The Immigration Judge acknowledged that the State Department report established that the Dominican Republic‘s constitution and laws prohibit torture and other forms of physical abuse, that senior police officials take these requirements seriously by regularly investigating torture and abuse allegations, and that prosecutors had filed charges alleging torture against military and police officials in the past. Both the Immigration Judge and resрondent critically failed to address the ultimate question whether this mistreatment is common enough to make it more likely than not that respondent would be so treated.9
The United States has embraced important treaty obligations under the CAT that are consistent with our values as a democratic society. The possibility of
III.
At the Immigration Judge‘s urging, respondent has speculated that he may lack access to appropriate psychiatric medication in the Dominican Republic, that the lack of medication may affect his behavior, that his behavior may cause him to be arrested, and that once arrested he may faсe mistreatment at the hands of criminals or lower-level police officers. Taken together these speculations do not amount to a likelihood of torture. Because respondent has failed to carry his burden, I disapprove the Board‘s decision, deny the respondent‘s application for deferral of removal, and affirm the Immigration Judge‘s February 3, 2005, order of removal and deportation to the Dominican Republic.
An alien may file a motion seeking to reopen a final order of removal within 90 days pursuant to section 240(c)(7) of the Act,
It is appropriate for Immigration Judges to aid in the development of the record, and directly question witnesses, particularly where an alien appears prо se and may be unschooled in the deportation process, but the Immigration Judge must not take on the role of advocate. See section 240(b)(1) of the Act,
