A father and two sons, all illegal immigrants from Bulgaria, were denied asylum and have appealed. They claim to have been persecuted in Bulgaria because of their opposition to communism and to fear that if they return there they will again be persecuted because even though Bulgaria formally abandoned communism in' 1989 along with the rest of the Soviet Union’s European satellites, the “samé people” are, according to the Gramatikovs, still in charge.
We do not understand the Gramatikovs to be arguing that the persecution they experienced in Bulgaria was so severe that they should be granted asylum even if they have no well-founded fear of persecution should they be returned to their country.
Bucur
v.
INS,
But when aliens try to rebut the State Department with .self-serving, unsubstantiated, uncorroborated evidence about current political conditions in a country they left years ago, they will not convince the INS, and will certainly not furnish grounds upon which a reviewing court can reverse the agency given the ’ deference that we are obliged to give decisions of the Board of Immigration Appeals.
INS v. Elias-Zacarias,
There is a little more here than just the Gramatikovs’ self-serving and insufficiently grounded testimony about current political conditions in Bulgaria, but far too little to count. There is a 1993 report by Amnesty International that discusses an incident of police brutality in Bulgaria, and a 1992 newsletter that discusses the difficulties that ethnic and religious minorities are encountering in Bulgaria’s “anything but smooth” transition to democracy. Neither report is current; neither bears on the Gramatikovs’ claim that the communists are still running things and making life hard for anticommunists; neither has, in fact, the slightest probative value. In these circumstances, the filing of these petitions for review was an exercise in futility, and we hereby warn the immigration bar that lawyers who file petitions for review of denial of asylum that are as thin as this one will be courting sanctions. See Fed. R.App. P. 1, 38.
Affirmed.
