Preet Kaur (“Kaur”) petitions for review of a decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”), affirming the Immigration Judge’s (“IJ”) decision denying her requests for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). The IJ denied Kaui*’s application because he found her not credible. Kaur asserts that the IJ’s adverse credibility determination was based upon impermissible grounds and was not supported by substantial evidence. Specifically, she argues that the IJ relied on inconsistencies that may have weakened her claim for asylum, but that had no bearing on her credibility.
The question presented here is significant: Must an IJ ignore repeated and blatant inconsistencies throughout an alien’s hearing testimony and applications, simply because, when viewed individually, each inconsistency actually served to weaken her eligibility for relief? We conclude that nothing in our case law mandates such a technical approach to credibility determinations. Accordingly, we hold that, in light of the facts of this case, the IJ’s adverse credibility determination was supported by substantial evidence. We deny the petition.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
Petitioner Kaur, a native and citizen of India, entered the United States in March of 1993. Subsequently, in January 1995, Kaur applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the CAT. In her initial application, Kaur provided certain *1063 biographical information about herself, specifically representing that she was not married. She claimed that she was persecuted because her brother and father were members of the All India Sikh Student Federation (“Federation”) and had been active in local political affairs. Kaur described in her application how, in December of 1991, more than 65 Punjabi police officers raided her home and arrested her brother and father. She also stated that she had personally campaigned for the boycott of the February 1992 state assembly election in the Punjab region of India. She recalled that she was arrested, in May of 1992, taken to a police station, and raped twice by a local police officer. She represented that she subsequently fled India by traveling first to Nepal, then to Singapore, Canada, and finally, the United States.
After submitting her application, an INS officer interviewed Kaur on February 15, 1995. During this interview, Kaur testified to the officer consistent with her original application. She also swore that the contents of her asylum application and the attached declaration were true.
At a hearing on the merits of her asylum application, Kaur submitted a revised application accompanied by another written declaration. In her second application, Kaur’s recitation of her biographical information as well as the events leading up to her departure from India changed dramatically. Kaur now stated that she was not in fact single, but married with a child. Rather than actively campaigning for the February 1992 election boycott, Kaur now maintained that her political activities were limited to voting in the November 1989 elections. In addition, Kaur stated that instead of the 65-70 police officers she originally claimed raided her home in December of 1990, there were actually only 8-12 officers, and the year was 1991. Kaur went on to declare that it was her brother and grandfather, not her father, who were active in Indian politics and who had been arrested and beaten by the Punjabi police.
Importantly, in her second application, Kaur stated that, in fact, she was not raped during the May 1992 arrest, but only interrogated, threatened, and released to her family the next day. One of the few consistencies between the two written statements that Kaur offered was that she had fled India by way of Nepal, Singapore, and Canada before entering the United States. But even this minor point of agreement vanished during her oral testimony.
At a hearing before an IJ on the merits of her asylum application further inconsistencies emerged. Kaur testified first that her grandfather was a member of the Federation, but later represented only that it was “possible” that he was a member. She also changed the route by which she arrived in the United States. In contrast to her first and second asylum applications, Kaur testified at the hearing that she traveled first to Germany, then to Canada, and finally to the United States. Significantly, Kaur admitted to the IJ that she knowingly lied to the INS officer, in particular stating that she was single, for the express purpose of ensuring that her husband could file an asylum application if hers was denied.
Reviewing the numerous contradictions between her oral testimony and her asylum applications, the IJ ruled that Kaur was not credible. Accordingly, the IJ denied her applications for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the CAT. The BIA affirmed the IJ’s decision without opinion and this timely petition for review followed.
*1064 II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
When the BIA affirms an IJ’s decision without opinion, we review the IJ’s decision as the final agency determination.
See Desta v. Ashcroft,
III. ANALYSIS
In this case, the issue is not whether the IJ provided specific and cogent reasons to support his credibility determination, but rather whether the proffered reasons were based on impermissible grounds. We conclude that they were not.
It is well settled in our circuit that minor inconsistencies that do not go to the heart of an applicant’s claim for asylum cannot support an adverse credibility determination.
Akinmade v. INS,
Later cases have expanded the principle beyond dates, language problems and typographical errors, elevating its status to that of a general rule. See,
e.g., Stoyanov v. INS,
The petitioner in this case would have us ignore the mass of serious, repeated and blatant inconsistencies in her testimony, and instead focus on the singular fact that one of the most damaging of her contradictions—the revelation that she was not in fact raped by the police—only served to weaken her claim. In other words, Kaur argues that because she eventually settled upon a story far less dramatic than its precursors, we must ignore her inconsistencies altogether. It strains credulity to hold that the evidence presented at the asylum hearing compels us to find Kaur believable for the sole reason that she admitted to being a liar.
We do not read our cases to mandate such a narrow approach. Our court has never articulated a
per se
rule that whenever inconsistencies technically weaken an asylum claim they can never serve as the basis of an adverse credibility finding. Rather, in each case where we have employed the rule first announced in
Da-maize-Job,
we have emphasized the “minor” or “trivial” nature of the alleged discrepancies.
See generally Wang,
Most notably, in the very case in which the rule was first proclaimed,
Damaize-Job,
the IJ’s adverse credibility finding was premised in part on “minor discrepancies.”
Likewise, in
Garrovillas v. INS,
we emphasized that “inconsistencies of less than substantial importance for which a plausible explanation is offered” cannot support an adverse credibility finding.
[T]here was no reason for Garrovillas to disavow the earlier statement other than a desire to correct an error of which he had not been aware. His revised story served to lessen the degree of persecution he experienced, rather than to increase it. In addition, there is nothing in the record to suggest that Garrovillas had any reason to fear that a false assertion would be exposed at the hearing. Thus, as far as we can tell from the record, the most likely explanation for the change is a desire to tell the truth and to correct a false statement that reflected no culpable conduct on his part.
Id. However, we were careful to emphasize that “[i]f the inconsistency were accompanied by other indications of dishonesty, we might deem the BIA’s finding justified.” Id. (emphasis added)
In short, our case law does not mandate that we, or the IJ for that matter, abandon our common sense in favor of rules of general application. It is well established in this circuit that false statements and other inconsistencies must be viewed in light of all the evidence presented in the case.
See Kaur v. Ashcroft,
“[0]ther indications of dishonesty” abound in this case.
Garrovillas,
Kaur also stated in her second asylum application that only 8 to 12 members of the Punjabi police entered her home; her first application listed the number between 65 and 70. The date of the raid on her home also changed from one application to the next. These discrepancies are significant because they concern one of the few interactions between Kaur and the Punjabi police.
Even during the asylum hearing, Kaur seemed unsure of her story, first stating that her grandfather was a member of the Federation, and then stating only that it was “possible” that he was a member. More significantly, however, in her second application Kaur retracted her original statement that she had been raped by the Punjabi police. This material inconsistency goes to the heart of Kaur’s claim of persecution—her mistreatment at the hands of the Punjabi police—regardless of whether it strengthens or weakens her claim. Importantly, this discrepancy cannot rationally be characterized as “minor;” it falls plainly outside the scope of the general rule announced in Damaize-Job.
It is of no consequence, in this case, that Kaur’s first application, containing many of the admitted falsities, was prepared by a third party. While we have previously observed that an “inconsistency does not prove much” if it is possible that the petitioner merely signed the application without demonstrating any awareness of its contents, the principle has little application to these facts.
Garrovillas,
We do not read our cases to mandate that the IJ ignore Kaur’s repeated and blatant inconsistencies. Rather, we hold that when inconsistencies that weaken a claim for asylum are accompanied by other indications of dishonesty—such as a pattern of clear and pervasive inconsistency or contradiction—an adverse credibility determination may be supported by substantial evidence. In the end, when reviewing an adverse credibility determination we must decide whether the IJ correctly labeled the applicant not credible. As we stated succinctly in
Sarvia-Quintanilla v. INS,
“[the IJ] is, by virtue of his acquired skill, uniquely qualified to decide whether an alien’s testimony has about it the ring of truth.”
*1068 IV. CONCLUSION
We are unable to conclude that the evidence in this case compels a finding that the petitioner was credible, or that the IJ’s credibility determination was based upon impermissible grounds. Rather, we hold that substantial evidence supports the IJ’s adverse credibility determination. Accordingly, Kaur’s petition for review is denied.
PETITION DENIED.
Notes
. With the passage of the Real ID Act, our review of an IJ's adverse credibility finding is significantly restricted. See 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(1)(B)(iii). However, the relevant provisions of that Act are not applicable to this case because Kaur applied for relief before May 11, 2005. See Pub.L. 109-13, Div. B, Title I, § 101(h)(2), 119 Stat. 231 (May 11, 2005).
