No. 17-2291
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
June 14, 2019
PUBLISHED. Argued: March 19, 2019
Before GREGORY, Chief Judge, and DIAZ and HARRIS, Circuit Judges.
Petition for review granted, reversed in part, vacated in part, and remanded for further proceedings by published opinion. Judge Harris wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge Gregory and Judge Diaz joined.
ARGUED: Martine Elizabeth Cicconi, AKIN GUMP STRAUSS HAUER & FELD LLP, Washington, D.C., for Petitioners. Paul Fiorino, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Respondent. ON BRIEF: Steven H. Schulman, David M. Coleman, Washington, D.C., Lauren Connell, Kate Powers, AKIN GUMP STRAUSS HAUER & FELD LLP, New York, New York, for Petitioners. Joseph H. Hunt, Assistant Attorney General, Rebekah Nahas, Office of Immigration Litigation, Civil Division, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT
PAMELA HARRIS, Circuit Judge:
Sindy Marilu Alvarez Lagos testified credibly that she and her then-seven-year-old daughter, natives and citizens of Honduras, were threatened with gang rape, genital mutilation, and death if they did not comply with the extortionate demands of a Barrio 18 gang member. Unable to meet those demands and fearing for their lives, Alvarez Lagos and her daughter fled to the United States, where they sought asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture.
Now, almost five years later, an immigration judge and the Board of Immigration Appeals have issued a total of three separate decisions denying Alvarez Lagos‘s claims. The government defends none of those decisions, including the most recent, which came after we agreed, at the government‘s request, to remand the case for reconsideration. Instead, the government admits that errors remain, but argues that we should leave them unaddressed and simply remand once again so that the agency may have a fourth opportunity to analyze Alvarez Lagos‘s claims correctly.
We decline that request. A remand is required here on certain questions that have yet to be answered, or answered fully, by the agency. But we take this opportunity to review the agency‘s disposition of other elements of Alvarez Lagos‘s claims. For the reasons given below, we reverse the agency‘s determination with respect to the “nexus” requirement for asylum and withholding of removal. And so that they will not recur on remand, we identify additional errors in the agency‘s analysis of the “protected ground” requirement for the same forms of relief, and in the agency‘s treatment of Alvarez Lagos‘s claim under the Convention Against Torture.
I.
In August of 2014, shortly after her daughter‘s eighth birthday, Sindy Marilu Alvarez Lagos and her daughter entered the United States without authorization. The Department of Homeland Security soon served them with a notice to appear, charging them with removability on the ground that they were present in the United States without valid entry documents, see
We begin by summarizing the testimony and evidence that Alvarez Lagos presented at her removal hearing and then outline the protracted legal proceedings that followed.
A.
According to the evidence presented by Alvarez Lagos, she and her daughter lived in Tegucigalpa, Honduras before they fled to the United States. For several years, they lived in the city‘s Fuerzas Unidas neighborhood with Alvarez Lagos‘s husband. But in October of 2012, Alvarez Lagos and her husband separated, and she and her daughter moved to a different
In April of 2014, approximately 18 months after Alvarez Lagos separated from her husband, she was approached for the first time by Barrio 18, when a gang member known as “Chuta” accosted her as she walked alone in her neighborhood. Chuta asked Alvarez Lagos where her daughter was, and demanded that she pay him 2,000 lempiras (approximately $100 at the time). When Alvarez Lagos told Chuta that she did not have the money, Chuta called her a “whore,” flashed a gun, and warned her of the consequences if she did not pay. Fearing that she and her daughter would be killed, Alvarez Lagos requested help from her family to gather the sum Chuta demanded. When she eventually delivered it to him, he praised her for being “obedient” and reminded her “what happens to women who don‘t obey.” A.R. 561.
Approximately one month later, in May of 2014, Chuta again approached Alvarez Lagos while she was walking alone in the neighborhood and demanded that she pay him – this time, 10,000 lempiras (approximately $475 at the time). When Alvarez Lagos again told him that she could not afford to pay, he threatened to kidnap her daughter from school, and said he would “do whatever he [wanted]” to her daughter before killing her in front of Alvarez Lagos. A.R. 305. He would then “do whatever he please[d]” to Alvarez Lagos before killing her, too. Id. As a final warning, he reminded Alvarez Lagos of “what [the gang] do[es] to women,” id., which Alvarez Lagos, based on her knowledge of Barrio 18‘s crimes against women, understood to mean that she would be gang raped and her genitals mutilated if she did not pay.
Alvarez Lagos never reported her encounters with Chuta to the police because she feared that the police in her neighborhood were working with Barrio 18. Indeed, Chuta had confirmed as much when he threatened her, warning her that if she went to the police he would “kill [her] faster, because [the gang] [would] find out.” A.R. 319. Instead, when she realized that she would not be able to meet Chuta‘s demands, Alvarez Lagos fled to the United States to save herself and her daughter.
At her removal hearing, Alvarez Lagos testified to the events that led to her flight to the United States from Honduras. She confirmed that she fears she and her daughter will be raped, tortured, and killed if returned to Honduras, noting that Barrio 18 members have continued to ask her family about her whereabouts since she fled. She also called Dr. Thomas J. Boerman, an expert on gangs in Honduras, to testify. Dr. Boerman opined that without husbands to protect them in Honduras‘s patriarchal society, unmarried women are especially vulnerable to gang attack, and that Barrio 18 targeted Alvarez Lagos because of her status as an unprotected female. Compounding the problem, he testified, Barrio 18 would view Alvarez Lagos‘s failure to comply with Chuta‘s demands as political opposition. As a result, Dr. Boerman concluded, Alvarez Lagos and her daughter would be “at high risk of egregious physical harm and death if returned to Honduras.” A.R. 602.
Alvarez Lagos also submitted voluminous documentary evidence, including a declaration from Dr. Max Manwaring, a retired professor of military strategy at the U.S. Army War College. In his declaration, Dr. Manwaring confirmed that Alvarez Lagos was at greater risk of gang
B.
Based on that evidence, the agency issued three decisions – one from an immigration judge (“IJ“) and two from the Board of Immigration Appeals (“the Board” or “BIA“) – each denying Alvarez Lagos‘s claims. Alvarez Lagos argues that those decisions suffer from significant flaws. And notably, the government does not defend those decisions, admitting that the agency has yet to analyze Alvarez Lagos‘s claims correctly. The only dispute here is over the appropriate remedy: whether we should hold that the agency erred in reaching its conclusions, or, as the government urges, remand the case without addressing the agency‘s errors to allow the agency a fourth opportunity to consider Alvarez Lagos‘s claims. To provide context for our answer to that question, we briefly summarize the agency‘s three prior encounters with this case, and then the proceedings on this appeal.
1.
The IJ was the first to consider Alvarez Lagos‘s claims for asylum, withholding of removal, and CAT protection. After summarizing the evidence presented at the removal hearing, the IJ found that Alvarez Lagos had testified credibly, and that she had produced corroborating evidence in support of her claims. Nevertheless, the IJ denied each of those claims.
The IJ began with Alvarez Lagos‘s asylum claim. To qualify for asylum, as the IJ explained, an applicant must establish that she has been “subjected to past persecution” or “has a well-founded fear of future persecution” “on account of” one of several grounds protected under the INA, including “race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.” Tairou v. Whitaker, 909 F.3d 702, 707 (4th Cir. 2018) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also
In support, Alvarez Lagos pointed to the testimony and declarations of her experts, who opined, based on their knowledge of gangs in Honduras, that Barrio 18 would view Alvarez Lagos‘s failure to comply with Chuta‘s demands as a form of political opposition and that the gang targeted Alvarez Lagos because she was an unmarried mother. And her encounters with Chuta, she argued, reflected that persecutory motive: When he approached Alvarez Lagos, Chuta not only exploited the fact that she was a parent by repeatedly threatening to kidnap and kill her daughter, but also focused specifically on the fact that she was a mother, using gender-based slurs like “whore” and making gender-based threats of rape and genital mutilation.
The IJ held, first, that neither of the reasons identified by Alvarez Lagos for her persecution qualified as protected grounds under the INA. Alvarez Lagos‘s proposed “particular social group” – unmarried mothers living under the control of gangs – was not legally cognizable, the IJ reasoned, because it was “not a small enough group,” A.R. 256, because it required a “past experience of being an unmarried mother living under the rule of gangs,” A.R. 257, and because “[Alvarez
In any event, the IJ went on to hold, even if Alvarez Lagos had identified a qualifying protected ground, she was ineligible for asylum for a second and independent reason: She had failed to satisfy the INA‘s “nexus” requirement, which requires that the persecution be on account of a protected ground. To meet that standard, the IJ explained, an applicant must show that a statutorily protected ground would be “one central reason” for the feared persecution. Id. Here, the IJ found, the only significant reason for Alvarez Lagos‘s persecution was general civil strife and private criminal activity in Honduras. Without addressing the relevant portions of the experts’ testimony or the nature of Chuta‘s threats, the IJ rejected Alvarez Lagos‘s argument that her status as an unmarried mother and her imputed political opinion contributed centrally to her past or feared persecution.
The IJ turned next to Alvarez Lagos‘s claim for withholding of removal. Withholding of removal, like asylum, depends on the applicant‘s showing of persecution on account of a statutorily protected ground, but applies a more stringent standard of proof to that showing. See Salgado-Sosa v. Sessions, 882 F.3d 451, 456–57 (4th Cir. 2018). It follows, the IJ reasoned, that an applicant who has failed to satisfy the standard of proof for asylum “is necessarily also unable to establish an entitlement to withholding of removal.” A.R. 261 (internal quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, for the same reasons articulated in its asylum analysis, the IJ denied Alvarez Lagos‘s withholding of removal claim.
Finally, the IJ addressed Alvarez Lagos‘s CAT claim, and denied that, as well. To be eligible for CAT relief, an applicant must make two showings: First, the applicant must establish that “it is more likely than not” that if removed she will suffer “future mistreatment” – that is, she “will endure severe pain or suffering that is intentionally inflicted“; and second, the applicant “must show that this likely future mistreatment will occur at the hands of government or with the consent or acquiescence of government.” Cruz-Quintanilla v. Whitaker, 914 F.3d 884, 886 (4th Cir. 2019) (internal quotation marks omitted). Considering general country conditions in Honduras and without fully addressing Alvarez Lagos‘s testimony or that of her experts, the IJ concluded that Alvarez Lagos had not made either showing, and so was not entitled to protection under the CAT.
2.
The second agency decision in this case was the Board‘s dismissal of Alvarez Lagos‘s appeal of the IJ‘s ruling. Alvarez Lagos argued on appeal that the IJ committed legal errors and arbitrarily ignored undisputed record evidence in analyzing her claims. The Board disagreed, and in a single-member opinion, “adopt[ed] and affirm[ed]” the IJ‘s decision. A.R. 145.
On the asylum and withholding of removal claims, the Board did not address the first ground for the IJ‘s holding: that Alvarez Lagos‘s proposed grounds were not protected under the INA. It did, however, address and add its own reasoning in support of the IJ‘s alternative finding that Alvarez Lagos had not established the necessary
The Board also affirmed the IJ‘s denial of Alvarez Lagos‘s CAT claim, finding without elaboration that there was no error in the IJ‘s findings under either prong of the CAT analysis.
3.
That brings us to the third and final agency decision in this case, which came after a remand from this court. Following the Board‘s decision, Alvarez Lagos filed a petition for review in our court, and sought a stay of removal pending consideration of that appeal, which we granted. But three weeks before we were to hear oral argument, the government asked us to return the case to the Board for reconsideration of its nexus determination.
According to the government, a remand was appropriate so that the Board could take account of our then-recent decision in Cruz v. Sessions, 853 F.3d 122 (4th Cir. 2017), in which we applied established precedent to reverse an agency finding of lack of nexus. The Board, we held in Cruz, had adopted an “improper and excessively narrow interpretation” of the statutory nexus requirement, focusing solely on the “immediate trigger” for persecution. Id. at 129 (quoting Oliva v. Lynch, 807 F.3d 53, 59–60 (4th Cir. 2015)). But an applicant‘s protected status, we reminded the Board, need not be the “sole” or even the “dominant motivation for her persecution,” id. at 127, and the record in that case compelled the conclusion that the protected ground of family membership was one of the “intertwined reasons” that a gang had targeted its threats against the applicant in question and not somebody else, id. at 129.
Alvarez Lagos did not oppose the motion, and so this court remanded to the Board “for consideration of [Alvarez Lagos‘s] asylum and withholding claims in light of” Cruz. A.R. 138. Before the agency, however, the government reversed course, arguing that Cruz had no bearing on this case. The Board agreed, and in another single-member decision, again found that Alvarez Lagos had not satisfied the nexus requirement for her asylum and withholding of removal claims. There was no clear error, the Board determined, in the IJ‘s finding that “the gang targeted [Alvarez Lagos] because of money,” and not a protected ground. A.R. 4. And Cruz did not require any further inquiry, the Board reasoned, because “there is insufficient circumstantial evidence” in this case connecting Alvarez Lagos‘s persecution to her proposed protected grounds. Id. In support, the Board noted two facts: first, that Alvarez Lagos was unmarried for almost two years before she first was approached by Chuta; and second, that gang members extort a large portion of the Honduran population. The Board again omitted any discussion of the nature of Chuta‘s threats or the relevant testimony of Alvarez Lagos‘s experts.
4.
After the Board issued its second decision, Alvarez Lagos again appealed to this court. To protect herself from being deported while we considered that appeal, she filed an emergency motion to stay her removal. Although the government had not
At that point, the government reversed course again. Having just defended the Board‘s nexus finding, the government now conceded that it was legally “incomplete.” Reply in Support of Respondent‘s Motion to Remand at 2. The Board, the government admitted, had overlooked material evidence in making that finding – including the nature of Chuta‘s threats and Dr. Boerman‘s expert testimony on the behavior of gangs – and had not considered whether there might be intertwined reasons for Alvarez Lagos‘s persecution. The government stopped short of confessing error. But it moved for a second remand, urging us to send the case back to the Board – without addressing any of Alvarez Lagos‘s claims on the merits – for yet another opportunity to assess the relevant record evidence, and to do so consistent with this court‘s precedent. We denied that motion, and instead went forward with this appeal.
II.
“When, as here, the BIA affirms the IJ‘s decision with an opinion of its own, we review both decisions.” Salgado-Sosa, 882 F.3d at 456. We review factual findings for substantial evidence, and will reverse them only if “any reasonable adjudicator would be compelled to conclude to the contrary.” Cabrera Vasquez v. Barr, 919 F.3d 218, 222 (4th Cir. 2019) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also
On appeal, Alvarez Lagos challenges the denial of all three of her claims – for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the CAT. Both asylum and withholding of removal, as noted above, are based on an applicant‘s showing of “persecution on account of a statutorily protected status.” Salgado-Sosa, 882 F.3d at 456. We thus address those claims together before considering Alvarez Lagos‘s challenge to the denial of her CAT claim.
III.
To be eligible for either asylum or withholding of removal, an applicant must establish that she has a status that is protected under the INA, and that a nexus exists between that protected status and her persecution. The IJ concluded, and the Board affirmed, that Alvarez Lagos failed to make either showing. We agree with Alvarez Lagos and the government that the agency erred in making those determinations. We also agree with Alvarez Lagos that the record compels a conclusion that she has satisfied the nexus requirement. Accordingly, we vacate the denial of both claims, reverse the agency‘s determination as to nexus, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.1
A.
We begin with the agency‘s finding that Alvarez Lagos failed to establish the required nexus between her persecution and her proposed protected statuses – that is, her membership in the “particular social group” of unmarried mothers living under the control of gangs in Honduras, and her imputed “political opinion.” See Oliva, 807 F.3d at 59 (starting analysis with agency‘s nexus finding). The government, as noted above, does not defend that finding. Instead, the government agrees with Alvarez Lagos that the Board‘s analysis of this issue was flawed in significant respects: The Board failed to discuss Dr. Boerman‘s expert opinion that Alvarez Lagos “faces a higher risk of harm because she is an unprotected woman in a country with high rates of gang violence against women,” and also failed to address Alvarez Lagos‘s testimony regarding the nature – and in particular, the “gender-based” nature – of Chuta‘s threats. Respondent‘s Br. at 20. Moreover, without “confessing error,” id. at 23, the government acknowledges that the Board has not yet considered, consistent with our case law, whether there is “evidence that Alvarez Lagos‘s status as a single mother was why she, ‘and not another person, was threatened,‘” id. at 24–25 (quoting Salgado-Sosa, 882 F.3d at 458).
The government‘s position is well taken; for the reasons the government gives, the Board‘s decision cannot stand. But that leaves the question of remedy, which the parties dispute. The government argues that we should do no more than remand the case to the Board for a second time, so that the agency may have another opportunity to “directly address this evidence in the first instance” and to “address this [c]ourt‘s nexus jurisprudence.” Id. at 20–21. Alvarez Lagos, on the other hand, argues that “a second remand for the Board to do precisely what it was asked to do the first time around” is unnecessary, Petitioner‘s Reply Br. at 8 (emphasis omitted), because unchallenged record evidence compels the conclusion that her proposed protected grounds are “at least one central reason” for her persecution, and the court can address and reverse the agency‘s contrary finding. Id. at 4 (quoting Zavaleta-Policiano v. Sessions, 873 F.3d 241, 248–49 (4th Cir. 2017)). We agree with Alvarez Lagos.
As a general matter, when the Board errs, “the proper course . . . is to remand to the agency for additional investigation or explanation.” INS v. Ventura, 537 U.S. 12, 16 (2002) (per curiam) (internal quotation marks omitted). But that is not an invariable rule.
When a Board finding that an applicant failed to meet the statutory nexus requirement rests on a failure to consider all relevant record evidence, and that evidence, once considered, would compel “any reasonable adjudicator” to reach the opposite conclusion, then a remand is unnecessary, and we will reverse the Board‘s finding. Cruz, 853 F.3d at 130; see id. at 128 (listing other cases doing same); see also Zavaleta-Policiano, 873 F.3d at 248-50. That is the case here. Unchallenged record evidence compels the conclusion that the protected statuses identified by Alvarez Lagos are a central reason why she, and not some other person, was (or will be) targeted for extortion and threats, and we therefore reverse the Board‘s contrary finding.
Here, the record evidence compels the conclusion that Alvarez Lagos‘s membership in her proposed social group – unmarried mothers in Honduras living under the control of gangs – was one reason why she, and not another person, was threatened. To start, Alvarez Lagos‘s two experts said precisely that in explaining why Barrio 18 would focus on Alvarez Lagos‘s status in targeting her for persecution. Barrio 18, as Dr. Boerman testified, operates in a “very patriarchal,” “very machista” culture “that largely sanctions violence against women.” A.R. 357. And when a woman, like Alvarez Lagos, is unmarried and thus without the protection of a “dominant male,” Dr. Boerman further explained, she is especially vulnerable to gang violence. A.R. 362-63. Indeed, the absence of a dominant male “predicts violence against women” in Honduras, making it “difficult to differentiate between the criminal victimization [Alvarez Lagos] experienced and her status as an unprotected female.” A.R. 363. Echoing Dr. Boerman, Dr. Manwaring attested that Barrio 18 threatens “vulnerable groups like single mothers” in order to “demonstrate its power to the people living within its regime.” A.R. 390–91.
Second, Alvarez Lagos‘s own testimony, deemed credible by the IJ, supported the conclusion that her status as an unmarried mother was at least one central reason why she, as opposed to another person, was targeted for extortion and threats. According to Alvarez Lagos, she never felt vulnerable to Barrio 18 when she was married, and it was not until her marriage ended that Barrio 18 first threatened her. Alvarez Lagos‘s sister-in-law supported this account, explaining that she – a married mother – never had been targeted by Barrio 18 despite living in the very same house as Alvarez Lagos. And Alvarez Lagos‘s detailed description of her encounters with Chuta and the nature of his threats showed that Chuta deliberately preyed on Alvarez Lagos‘s status as a mother (threatening to kidnap and kill her daughter), as an unmarried mother (calling her a “whore,” A.R. 302), and as a female (threatening to do to her what the gang
Similarly, the record evidence compels the conclusion that if, as Alvarez Lagos alleges, Barrio 18 has imputed to her an anti-gang political opinion, then that imputed opinion would be a central reason for likely persecution if she were returned to Honduras. On this point, Alvarez Lagos‘s experts were clear and unrebutted. Dr. Boerman explained that Alvarez Lagos‘s failure to comply with Chuta‘s extortionate demands and subsequent flight to the United States would be seen by Barrio 18 as “a direct challenge to its efforts to establish and maintain political domination within Honduras,” A.R. 583, and that as a “direct result,” A.R. 600, Alvarez Lagos would be “targeted for violence in a manner that was very graphic, and visible to the community,” A.R. 363. Dr. Manwaring concurred, opining that Barrio 18 “sees [Alvarez Lagos‘s] failure to pay as a political act,
not simply a refusal to pay a debt,” A.R. 397; that it feels compelled to “crush[]” what it views as political resistance, A.R. 390; and that as a result, Alvarez Lagos “reasonably fears persecution on account of her perceived political opposition to Barrio 18,” A.R. 391.
None of this unrefuted evidence was considered in either of the Board‘s decisions finding that Alvarez Lagos had not established the requisite nexus between her persecution and her proposed protected statuses. Instead, in its second decision, the Board noted two record facts on which the IJ had relied for her nexus finding: that Alvarez Lagos was “unmarried for approximately two years” – actually for 18 months – “without being approached by gang members,” and that “gang members target much of the [Honduran] population for extortion,” most of whom are not unmarried mothers. A.R. 4. But as we have explained, that the “criminal activities of [a gang] affect the population as a whole . . . is simply ‘beside the point’ in evaluating an individual‘s particular claim.” Zavaleta-Policiano, 873 F.3d at 248 (quoting Crespin-Valladares v. Holder, 632 F.3d 117, 127 (4th Cir. 2011)). And while the timing of threats can be relevant in determining a persecutor‘s motivation, id. at 249, it is not dispositive, particularly where there is a reasonable explanation for any delay – here, that it likely took time for the gang to identify Alvarez Lagos, who had moved to a new neighborhood, as an unmarried mother.3
The Board in this case “failed to appreciate, or even address, critical evidence in the record” bearing directly on the question of nexus, Zavaleta-Policiano, 873 F.3d at 248. When we view the case “holistically, with an eye to the full factual context,” Oliva, 807 F.3d at 60, and in light of our well-established case law construing and applying the statutory “one central reason” standard,
B.
We turn next to the IJ‘s alternative rationale for denying Alvarez Lagos‘s claims for asylum and withholding of removal: that neither of the grounds identified by Alvarez Lagos as central reasons for her persecution – her status as an unmarried mother living under the control of gangs in Honduras and the political opinion imputed to her by Barrio 18 – qualified as protected grounds under the INA. Again, the government does not defend the IJ‘s finding on appeal. Again, we agree with Alvarez Lagos that the IJ committed several significant legal errors in reaching its conclusion, affirmed by the Board without discussion. And again, the parties’ main dispute is over the scope of our
remedy: Alvarez Lagos asks us to reverse the IJ‘s finding and hold that both her proposed grounds are protected under the statute, while the government asks us not to address the issue at all – and instead to remand – because the Board has yet to provide any analysis of the IJ‘s “protected ground” finding. Because the Board “adopt[ed] and affirm[ed]” the IJ‘s opinion in full, A.R. 145, “the factual findings and reasoning contained in both decisions are subject to judicial review,” Ai Hua Chen v. Holder, 742 F.3d 171, 177 (4th Cir. 2014) (internal quotation marks omitted), and contrary to the government‘s suggestion, we are authorized to address the question of protected grounds. But the government is correct that the Board discussed only the nexus requirement in its two decisions, and so we do not have the benefit of the Board‘s thinking on that subject. See Ventura, 537 U.S. at 17 (recognizing that the Board‘s “informed discussion and analysis” of an issue can “help a court later determine whether its decision exceeds the leeway that the law provides“). Moreover, developments in the law since the Board issued its second decision might affect the Board‘s reasoning on remand: In Matter of A-B-, 27 I. & N. Dec. 316 (A.G. 2018), the Attorney General clarified the agency‘s interpretation of “particular social group,” considering whether it extended to a proposed group of women who are unable to leave their relationships because of domestic abuse. Accordingly, we apply the ordinary remand rule, vacating the agency decision on this issue and remanding for the Board to consider in the first instance whether Alvarez Lagos‘s proposed grounds are protected under the1.
The first basis Alvarez Lagos proposed for her persecution was her membership in the “particular social group” of unmarried mothers living under the control of gangs in Honduras. To constitute a “particular social group” protected under the2.
Alvarez Lagos also argues that if she is returned to Honduras, she will be persecuted on account of her imputed political opinion, a second protected ground. Her claim is straightforward: Barrio 18, she argues, will interpret her failure to pay Chuta and her flight to the United States as evidence that she possesses an anti-gang political opinion; and to punish that imputed political opinion and make an example of her, it will subject her to graphic violence on her return. But the IJ misinterpreted her claim, Alvarez Lagos contends, focusing its analysis on whether she in fact intended to express such an opinion and not on whether Barrio 18 would believe that she had. Again, we agree. Claims of persecution on account of imputed political opinion differ in an important way from those involving actual political opinion. When, as here, an applicant claims that she has been or will be persecuted on account of an imputed political belief, then the relevant inquiry is not the political views sincerely held or expressed by the victim, but rather the persecutor‘s subjective perception of the victim‘s views. See Haile v. Holder, 456 F. App‘x 275, 282–83 (4th Cir. 2011). The claim is examined from the perspective of the persecutor, not the victim, with the applicant required to show that her “persecutors actually imputed a political opinion” to her. Abdel-Rahman v. Gonzales, 493 F.3d 444, 450–51 (4th Cir. 2007) (internal quotation marks omitted). It does not matter, in other words, whether the victim in fact held a particular political opinion; what matters is that she proves that her persecutors believed that she held that opinion. Here, the IJ appears to have made a simple category mistake. Instead of analyzing whether Barrio 18 believed that Alvarez Lagos held an anti-gang political opinion, the IJ focused on whether Alvarez Lagos actually possessed that opinion. Alvarez Lagos‘s imputed political opinion claim was not cognizable under the* * *
Again, we leave it to the Board to analyze in the first instance whether Alvarez Lagos‘s proposed group of unmarried mothers living under the control of gangs in Honduras qualifies as a “particular social group,” and whether Alvarez Lagos has established an imputed political opinion protected by theIV.
Finally, we address Alvarez Lagos‘s challenge to the denial of her claim for protection under theV.
For the foregoing reasons, we grant the petition for review, vacate thePETITION FOR REVIEW GRANTED, REVERSED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS
