OSCAR ADILIO CRUZ-QUINTANILLA v. MATTHEW G. WHITAKER, Acting Attorney General
No. 17-2404
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
February 1, 2019
PUBLISHED
On Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals.
Argued: October 31, 2018
Decided: February 1, 2019
Before MOTZ, KEENAN, and HARRIS, Circuit Judges.
Petition for review dismissed in part, granted in part, and remanded for further proceedings by published opinion. Judge Harris wrote the opinion, in which Judge Motz and Judge Keenan joined.
ARGUED: Abraham Fernando Carpio, CARPIO LAW FIRM, LLC, Hyattsville, Maryland, for Petitioner. Sara J. Bayram, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Respondent. ON BRIEF: Chad A. Readler, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Melissa Neiman-Kelting, Assistant Director, Jessica A. Dawgert, Senior Litigation Counsel, Office of Immigration Litigation, Civil Division, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Respondent.
Oscar Adilio Cruz-Quintanilla, a native of El Salvador and legal permanent resident of the United States, faces removal as a result of two criminal convictions. As a former gang member, Cruz-Quintanilla fears he will be tortured if forced to return to El Salvador, and thus seeks relief under the Convention Against Torture. To qualify, he must establish not only that it is more likely than not that he will be tortured if removed, but also that the government will acquiesce in that torture.
We conclude that the Board applied the wrong standard of review. Whether Cruz-Quintanilla established that the government would acquiesce in his torture under
I.
A.
At the age of twelve, Oscar Adilio Cruz-Quintanilla lawfully entered the United
Cruz-Quintanilla continued to live in the Montgomery County area, and in 2013 a grand jury in Maryland state court indicted him in connection with a home robbery. A jury later convicted Cruz-Quintanilla on three counts: reckless endangerment; conspiracy to commit robbery with a dangerous weapon; and wearing, carrying, and transporting a handgun. Cruz-Quintanilla spent three years in prison as a result of these convictions. Following his release, the Department of Homeland Security took him into custody and initiated the removal proceedings that give rise to this appeal.
B.
Under
Cruz-Quintanilla sought relief from removal under the United Nations Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (the “Convention“),
The second, “acquiescence” prong of the torture inquiry – directly at issue here – comes from the regulatory definition of “torture.” That definition requires not only that the petitioner will endure “severe pain or suffering,” but also that the harm will be “inflicted by . . . or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official.”
An immigration judge heard Cruz-Quintanilla‘s case in June 2017. Cruz-Quintanilla testified that given his former membership in MS-13, he believed he would not be safe if removed to El Salvador. He feared that MS-13 would kill him for leaving the gang, or, given his visible gang-related tattoos, that a rival gang would attack him. Cruz-Quintanilla testified that gang members have extorted members of his family, and that one of Cruz-Quintanilla‘s cousins, a member of a rival gang, was shot because of his gang affiliation.
On the “acquiescence” prong of the torture inquiry, Cruz-Quintanilla alleged that Salvadoran officials would turn a blind eye to any efforts by either MS-13 or rival gang members to target him – and that government officials might even actively target him themselves, due to his former gang affiliation. He testified that police in El Salvador offer little protection in gang disputes, and that officers sometimes attack individuals with gang-related tattoos as vengeance for violence inflicted on the police by gangs. Cruz-Quintanilla also introduced into evidence the United States State Department‘s 2015 Human Rights Report on El Salvador, which details complaints received by the Salvadoran Office of the Ombudsman for Human Rights. According to that report, during the preceding year the Ombudsman received 17 complaints of alleged extrajudicial killings by government officials. In the same time period, it also received 2,202 complaints of human rights violations, more than 90 percent of which alleged misconduct by the Salvadoran police and military. Based on that evidence and his testimony, Cruz-Quintanilla argued that it is more likely than not that if removed to El Salvador, he would be tortured by or with the acquiescence of the Salvadoran government.
The immigration judge found Cruz-Quintanilla credible, and agreed that Cruz-Quintanilla had “valid concerns that he might be harmed by MS-13 for no longer participating in his gang or by a rival gang, especially since he has MS-13-related tattoos.” A.R. 131. She further recognized “serious concerns about crime, violence, and instances of official corruption in El Salvador.” Id. Ultimately, however, the immigration judge concluded that the evidence was not “sufficient to show that it is more likely than not that [Cruz-Quintanilla] would be tortured with the consent or acquiescence of the government in [] El Salvador,” pointing out that the State Department‘s Human Rights Report “indicates that the government of El Salvador is taking steps to address gang violence and instances of official corruption there.” Id. (emphasis added). Accordingly, the immigration judge denied relief under the Convention, and ordered Cruz-Quintanilla removed to El Salvador.
Cruz-Quintanilla appealed the immigration judge‘s removal order to the Board of Immigration Appeals. He did not challenge the immigration judge‘s finding that he was removable, arguing instead that the immigration judge erred in finding him ineligible for relief under the Convention.
In a single-member decision, the Board dismissed Cruz-Quintanilla‘s appeal. The Board began by summarizing Cruz-Quintanilla‘s argument that “as a tattooed former gang member, deported from the United States, he is at risk of torture and death by gang members and will not be able to obtain protection from the police.” A.R. 3. That claim, the Board held, could not succeed because Cruz-Quintanilla could not establish “clear error” in the immigration judge‘s “factual finding that the Salvadoran government would not acquiesce in
Cruz-Quintanilla timely noticed his petition for review, and we granted Cruz-Quintanilla‘s motion for stay of removal pending appeal.
II.
Cruz-Quintanilla raises two principal arguments before this court. First, he contends that the immigration judge and Board of Immigration Appeals incorrectly assessed the record evidence, and wrongly concluded that he had not established a likelihood that he would be tortured by or with the acquiescence of the Salvadoran government. Second, Cruz-Quintanilla argues that the Board used the wrong standard of review when it affirmed the immigration judge‘s decision. Although we lack jurisdiction over Cruz-Quintanilla‘s first argument, we may review his second. And because the Board improperly characterized the immigration judge‘s finding regarding government acquiescence as a purely factual determination subject only to clear error review, we grant Cruz-Quintanilla‘s petition for review on that ground and remand his case so that the Board may apply the correct standard.1
A.
Cruz-Quintanilla‘s first argument is that he produced sufficient proof that it is more likely than not that he will be tortured by or with the acquiescence of the Salvadoran government if he is removed, and that the immigration judge and Board erred in finding otherwise. Our jurisdiction over Cruz-Quintanilla‘s appeal is limited, however, and this claim falls outside those limits.
Removal orders – like this one – that involve noncitizens convicted of aggravated felonies or specific firearms offenses generally are not subject to judicial review.
Here, the immigration judge found that Cruz-Quintanilla had been convicted of a qualifying aggravated felony and firearms offense, triggering
We addressed precisely this question in Saintha v. Mukasey, 516 F.3d 243, 249–50 (4th Cir. 2008), and held that an argument almost identical to Cruz-Quintanilla‘s constituted a challenge to a factual determination over which we lacked jurisdiction. Like Cruz-Quintanilla, the petitioner in Saintha argued that the Board “erred in finding insufficient evidence to conclude that the [] government would likely acquiesce in his torture.” Id. at 247–48. We concluded that we lacked jurisdiction over that claim, as “determinations regarding governmental acquiescence” are “properly characterized as factual, not legal, in nature” under
B.
Cruz-Quintanilla next contends that the Board applied the wrong standard of review in affirming the immigration judge‘s determination that he is ineligible for relief under the Convention. As we have explained before, whether the Board has applied the proper standard of review is a question of law for purposes of
The Board‘s review of immigration judges’ decisions is governed by
Our precedent makes clear that it is the latter. We already have held that the first prong of the torture inquiry – whether a petitioner has shown “likely future mistreatment” that satisfies the regulatory definition of “torture” – is a mixed question of law and fact under
Here, we consider whether Turkson‘s hybrid approach to the first prong of the torture inquiry applies also to the second, “acquiescence” prong. We conclude that it does. As Turkson explained with respect to a petitioner‘s future treatment, the “acquiescence” prong, too, first requires that an immigration judge make an essentially factual prediction as to “what would likely happen” upon removal – here, a “factual finding or findings as to how public officials will likely act in response to the harm the petitioner fears,” Myrie v. Att‘y Gen., 855 F.3d 509, 516 (3d Cir. 2017). Those factual findings are reviewable by the Board only for clear error, consistent with the relevant regulations.
Indeed, we can find no way to differentiate Turkson on this point. The regulations establish a legal definition for “acquiescence” just as they define the suffering necessary to constitute “likely future mistreatment,” Turkson, 667 F.3d at 530. See
Our conclusion follows the holding of the only other court of appeals to address this question. See Myrie, 855 F.3d at 516–17 (holding that an immigration judge‘s assessment of whether the likely response from public officials qualifies as acquiescence is a legal question subject to de novo review by the Board). It also is fully consistent with a line of cases from this court treating very similar immigration judge determinations as mixed questions of law and fact. In Massis, for instance, we applied the same bifurcated approach to an immigration judge‘s grant of a discretionary waiver, holding that while the clearly erroneous standard applies to the determination of “what happened’ to the individual,” the Board reviews de novo “application of the law to those facts – to determine, for example, whether those facts amount to ‘exceptional and extremely unusual hardship.‘” 549 F.3d at 636 n.6 (quoting Board of Immigration Appeals: Procedural
The Board did not follow that approach here. Instead, it treated government acquiescence as a solely factual finding subject to clear error review, citing our holding in Saintha for support. It is true, as discussed above, that Saintha describes an immigration judge‘s determination as to government acquiescence as a factual finding that we lack jurisdiction to review. 516 F.3d at 250. But whether a court has jurisdiction to review an agency acquiescence determination is a separate question from how the Board should review the acquiescence findings of an immigration judge, and Saintha speaks only to the first question, not the second.
At issue in Saintha was
Here, on the other hand, we consider a different question: not the division of authority between the Executive and the judiciary, to which Congress spoke in
Given this regulatory assignment of broad inter-agency review authority to the Board, Turkson properly characterized an
Although we take this opportunity to explain our holding in some detail, we note that the government does not dispute its essentials, agreeing that Turkson‘s hybrid standard of review applies in this case, as well. Instead, the government defends the decision here by arguing that the Board in fact did apply that hybrid standard, and did not, as Cruz-Quintanilla contends, treat the immigration judge‘s acquiescence determination as a purely factual finding subject only to clear error review. We cannot agree. The Board‘s opinion is unambiguous on this point: After setting out Cruz-Quintanilla‘s position, the Board rejects it because “[Cruz-Quintanilla] has not established clear error in the Immigration Judge‘s factual finding that the Salvadoran government would not acquiesce in his torture.” A.R. 3 (emphases added). The Board follows with a citation to Saintha for the proposition that “whether the government acquiesces in torture is a factual finding,” and then concludes that it “discern[s] no clear error [in] the Immigration Judge‘s finding that the Salvadoran government does not acquiesce in torture.” Id. A fair reading of the opinion leaves no doubt that the Board reviewed the immigration judge‘s acquiescence determination only for clear error, failing to bring to bear its “independent judgment,” Upatcha, 849 F.3d at 184 (internal quotation marks omitted), as to whether the predictive facts found by the immigration judge satisfied the regulatory standard for government acquiescence.2 Accordingly, we remand so that the Board may review the immigration judge‘s acquiescence determination under the correct standard of review.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we dismiss in part and grant in part Cruz-Quintanilla‘s petition for review, and remand the case to the Board for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
PETITION FOR REVIEW DISMISSED IN PART AND GRANTED IN PART; REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS
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