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            Title Liu v. Ashcroft

 

            Date 2004

            By Alito

            Subject Reproductive Rights & Abortion

                

 Contents

 

 

Page 1





LEXSEE 372 F3D 529


GUI CUN LIU; XIU DING LIU, Petitioners v. John Ashcroft, ATTORNEY GENERAL OF UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Respondent


No. 02-4334


UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT



372 F.3d 529; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 12697; 64 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 838


December 4, 2003, Argued

June 24, 2004, Filed


PRIOR   HISTORY:             **1        ON   PETITION   FOR REVIEW   OF   AN   ORDER   OF   THE   BOARD   OF IMMIGRATION APPEALS. (No. A73 168 631).


DISPOSITION: Petition for review was granted. Court vacated order of BIA, and remanded.


LexisNexis(R) Headnotes



COUNSEL:   JOSEPH   C.   HOHENSTEIN   (Argued), Nationalities Service Center, Philadelphia, PA, Counsel for Petitioner.


ROBERT D. McCALLUM, JR., TERRI J. SCADRON, ANTHONY   W.   NORWOOD   (Argued),         Office   of Immigration Litigation, Civil Division, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, DC, Counsel for Respondent.


JUDGES:  Before:                SLOVITER  and  ALITO,  Circuit

Judges, and OBERDORFER, District Judge *



* The Honorable Louis F. Oberdorfer,  Senior District Judge for the District of Columbia, sitting by designation.


OPINIONBY: ALITO


OPINION:


*530   OPINION OF THE COURT


ALITO, Circuit Judge:


Mr. Gui Cun Liu and Mrs. Xiu Ding Liu ("the Lius") petition for review of an order of the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) affirming the denial of their application for asylum and withholding of deportation. Specifically, the  Lius  allege  that  the  BIA  erred  in  (1)  affirming  the opinion of the Immigration Judge (IJ) without opinion,


in violation of their Due Process rights,  (2) improperly finding that the Lius' testimony was not credible, (3) re- jecting documentary evidence for failure to comply with the authentication procedures **2   detailed in 8 C.F.R.

§  287.6,  and  (4)  ignoring  favorable  new  evidence  sug- gesting increased likelihood of persecution in their home country.


We agree that the IJ's improper application of § 287.6 caused him to disregard evidence that, if duly considered in the first instance,  might have resulted in a favorable determination regarding credibility for the Lius. Because the adverse credibility finding was the crux of the order denying relief, we will grant the petition for review, vacate the order of the BIA, and remand.


I.


The Lius,  both citizens of the People's Republic of China,  seek asylum on the ground that they are unable to return to their native country "because of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion,  nationality,  membership  in  a  particular  social group, or political opinion." 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42). In particular, the Lius claim that Mrs. Liu was twice forced by the Chinese government to undergo an abortion,  n1 and that both face government persecution on account of their Christian faith.


n1 8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(42) provides: " A  person who has been forced to abort a pregnancy . . . shall be deemed to have been persecuted on account of political opinion . . . ." See also In Re Matter of C- Y-Z, 21 I. & N. Dec. 915, 918 (BIA 1997) (holding that past persecution of one spouse can be estab- lished  by  coerced  abortion  or  sterilization  of  the other spouse).


**3


The Lius presented to the IJ documentary evidence


372 F.3d 529, *530; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 12697, **3;

64 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 838

Page 2


supporting  their  claims,  including  a  pair  of  certificates purportedly confirming that the two abortions had in fact been performed in China on the dates specified. See A.R.

272-73, 445-46. The Lius' counsel explained, upon sub- mission of this evidence,  that it had proved impossible to comply with the regulatory authentication procedure set forth in § 287.6;  he had "attempted to comply with this procedure, but was  told by the Chinese officials at the provincial level that no such authentication was per- formed at that level." A.R. 268; see also A.R. 289 (letter from U.S. Consulate in China to Lius' counsel, explaining that no authentication can be performed until documents have been signed and notarized by a local Chinese foreign affairs official). The IJ nevertheless refused to accept this explanation:


The         regulations             are           specific,  Mr. Hohenstein.  It  says  they  shall  be  certified. There's little or no weight that I can give a document  that's  in  violation  of  the   *531  regulations,  whether  it  be  your  client's  in- ability to obtain proper certification of a doc- ument or whatever. The regulations say the documents shall be. There is **4  no wiggle room there. So, what you'll have to do is, I'll allow it to remain in evidence but there's not much weight or any weight that I can give a noncertified document.


A.R. 184-85.


After  hearing  and  considering  testimony  from  both Mr.  and  Mrs.  Liu,  the  IJ  rejected  their  claims  for  asy- lum and withholding of deportation. In so deciding, the IJ  relied  on  findings  of  several  internal  inconsistencies in the testimonies which rendered them "incredible." See A.R. 79 (noting "contradictions between the respondents' written applications and their testimony before the Court" as well as "contradictions in the testimony given by the respondents themselves"). In particular, the IJ noted one

"dramatic" inconsistency (see A.R. 76) in Mrs. Liu's tes- timony regarding her second abortion, as reproduced in part here:


Q. Do you know if the baby was born alive or if it was born dead?


A. They, the nurse told me that it was a baby girl but dead.


Q. What did the nurse tell you again?


A. No, she told me it was a boy and it's, it's dead.


JUDGE TO MRS. LIU


Q. Wait, why do you keep changing your tes- timony. You just told me the nurse told you it was a baby girl **5   and it was dead, then you say it was a baby boy and it was dead.


A. No, I meant that the nurse was a girl.


Q.  Ma'am,  just  look  this  way.  You  see  the word stupid written across my forehead?


A. No.


Q. You think I'm going to believe you when you change your testimony like that and give me such a half baked reason for changing the testimony?


A. No, I did not change.


A.R. 214-15; cf. A.R. 306 (affidavit of Mrs. Liu, stating that second aborted fetus was male). The IJ did not make reference to the abortion certificates in analyzing this or any other perceived inconsistency cited in the final deci- sion, although he did state at the opening of his opinion that he had considered "all of the documentation that has been submitted thus far by both sides in this matter." A.R.

66.


On appeal to the BIA, a single member of the BIA elected to affirm the IJ's decision without opinion, pur- suant to 8 C.F.R. § 3.1(e)(4). This appeal followed. n2


n2 Because the BIA affirmed without opinion, it is the reasoning and decision of the IJ that we re- view on appeal. See Dia v. Ashcroft, 353 F.3d 228,

243 (3d Cir. 2003) (en banc).


**6


II.


We begin our analysis by evaluating the IJ's interpreta- tion and application of § 287.6 in effectively excluding the abortion certificates. n3 We focus first on this evidentiary issue because we believe it follows from the IJ's reliance on Mrs. Liu's   *532   testimony regarding the gender of the fetus that the IJ was under the impression that the sec- ond abortion had, in fact, never occurred. In other words, if Mrs. Liu's confusion on this point is to be understood as  impugning  her  credibility,  it  must be  because  the IJ took her confusion as evidence that the inconsistently- described fetus never actually existed. n4 To the extent that there exists competent documentary evidence to the


372 F.3d 529, *532; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 12697, **6;

64 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 838

Page 3


contrary (that is, that the abortion was performed as de- scribed by Mrs. Liu), the credibility determination of the IJ must accordingly be called into question.


n3  We  speak  of  "exclusion"  even  though  we recognize that the IJ technically admitted the cer- tificates into evidence. See A.R. 185. While the IJ's evidentiary  rulings  are  ambiguous  as  to  whether he intended to give the certificates "little weight" or "no weight," see id.,  the fact that the IJ never referred to the certificates in his final decision sug- gests that they were not given any weight in making the ultimate decision. That the opinion contained boilerplate to the effect that "all of the documen- tation" had been considered seems to us irrelevant. See A.R. 66. Of course, if a document is admitted into evidence with the caveat that it will be given

"no weight," that is tantamount to an exclusion from evidence.

**7



n4 For example, it makes little sense to think that the IJ could have taken the inconsistency re- garding gender as evidence that Mrs. Liu did indeed have the abortion, but did so voluntarily.



The authentication regulation of 8 C.F.R. § 287.6 pro- vides, in pertinent part:


In any proceeding under this chapter, an of- ficial record or entry therein, when admissi- ble for any purpose,  shall be evidenced by an official publication thereof, or by a copy attested by an officer so authorized. . . . The attested copy, with the additional foreign cer- tificates if any, must be certified by an officer in the Foreign Service of the United States, stationed  in  the  foreign  country  where  the record is kept.


Id. (emphasis added). As noted earlier, the IJ focused on the word "shall" in applying the regulation, emphasizing that it left him with "no wiggle room," and that the abor- tion certificates could hence be accorded only little or no evidentiary weight. A.R. 185.


Our precedent states that "an agency's interpretation of its own regulation is 'controlling . . . unless **8    it is plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulation.'" Abdulai  v.  Ashcroft,  239  F.3d  542,  552  (3d  Cir  2001), quoting Bowles v. Seminole Rock & Sand Co., 325 U.S.

410, 414, 89 L. Ed. 1700, 65 S. Ct. 1215 (1945). At oral ar- gument, we specifically requested further guidance from


the government as to its official interpretation of the reg- ulation. In its supplemental brief submitted in response, the government contended that "8 C.F.R. § 287.6 is not an absolute rule of exclusion, and is not the exclusive means of authenticating records before an immigration judge." Letter Brief at 4. In so doing, it cited with approval Khan v.  INS,  237  F.3d  1143  (9th  Cir.  2001),  and  Georgis  v. Ashcroft, 328 F.3d 962 (7th Cir. 2003), which held that

"it was error to exclude . . . official records based solely on the lack of consular certification." Khan, 237 F.3d at

1144. n5


n5 At least one additional court of appeals has recently adopted the holding in Kahn. See Yongo v. INS, 355 F.3d 27, 31 (1st Cir. 2004).


**9


While the government's reading of § 287.6 may not be the most obvious one, we cannot say that it is plainly er- roneous or inconsistent with the regulation. n6 Moreover, we fully agree, as the government states in its supplemen- tal brief, that "asylum applicants can not always reason- ably be expected to have an authenticated document from an alleged persecutor." Letter Brief at 3; cf. Senathirajah v. INS, 157 F.3d 210, 215-16 (3d Cir. 1998) ("It is obvious that one who escapes persecution in his or her own land will rarely be in a position to bring documentary evidence or other kinds of corroboration to support a subsequent claim for asylum. . . . Common sense establishes that it is escape and flight, not litigation and corroboration,   *533  that  is  foremost  in  the  mind  of  an  alien  who  comes  to these shores fleeing detention, torture and persecution."). We believe that the Lius should have been allowed to at- tempt to prove the authenticity of the abortion certificates through other means, especially where (as here) attempts to abide by the requirements of § 287.6 failed due to lack of cooperation from government officials in the country of alleged persecution.


n6 Cf. Gutierrez de Martinez v. Lamagno, 515

U.S. 417, 434, 132 L. Ed. 2d 375, 115 S. Ct. 2227

(1995) ("Though 'shall' generally means 'must,' le- gal writers sometimes use, or misuse, 'shall' to mean

'should,' 'will,' or even 'may.'").


**10


The government contends that, in any event, the im- proper  application  of  §  287.6  was  not  prejudicial  here since there was evidence in the record indicating that of- ficial documents from Fujian (such as the abortion certifi- cates here) are commonly forged and thus are "virtually useless" as credible corroborating evidence. Letter Brief at 4; see A.R. 379 (State Department Country Report for


372 F.3d 529, *533; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 12697, **10;

64 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 838

Page 4


China). However, the government's suggestion that the IJ relied (at least, in part) on the Country Report in his re- jection of the abortion certificates is simply inaccurate. It is perfectly clear that the IJ based his decision on § 287.6 alone. See A.R. 184-85; cf. A.R. 95-96 (rejecting other evidence under § 287.6). We may not affirm the exclusion of evidence on grounds entirely different from those re- lied upon by the agency. See SEC v. Chenery Corp., 332

U.S. 194, 196, 91 L. Ed. 1995, 67 S. Ct. 1575 (1947) (" A  reviewing court, in dealing with a determination or judg- ment which an administrative agency alone is authorized to make, must judge the propriety of such action solely by the grounds invoked by the agency.").


We conclude that 8 C.F.R. § 287.6 is **11    not an absolute rule of exclusion, and is not the exclusive means of  authenticating  records  before  an  immigration  judge. Accordingly,  it  was  legal  error  for  the  IJ  to  reject  the abortion certificates on that ground alone.


III.


Against the background of this erroneous evidentiary ruling, we now evaluate the IJ's finding that the Lius were not credible. Because the abortion certificates, if found to be genuine, would corroborate Mrs. Liu's testimony that she had two abortions performed on her--whether or not she misspoke or got confused (or lied) on the point of the second fetus's gender--we believe that remand to the BIA to reconsider the credibility issue is appropriate.


Specifically, we do not believe that the other incon- sistencies cited by the IJ, even when viewed together as a whole, amount to substantial evidence that the Lius were not credible. For example:


. The IJ found a "diametrical contradic- tion" in the fact that Mr. Liu had listed only one child in his original I-589 application, but later testified that he had two children. A.R. 69. A cursory examination of the record reveals that, at the time that the original I-

589 was filled out (November 21, 1993), his

**12   second child had not even been born yet. n7


. The IJ found a discrepancy in the fact that  Mrs.  Liu  testified  that  she  was  (1)  re- quired  to  check  in  with  the  authorities  ev- ery three months following her first abortion and (2) required to check in with the authori- ties every three months following her second abortion. A.R. 78-79. Of course, as a logical matter, there is simply no conflict or incon- sistency between those two statements.


. The IJ found that Mr. Liu contradicted


himself  with  respect  to  the  date  and  loca- tion of his baptism. A.R. 70. Mr. Liu repeat- edly testified that he had been baptized in the United States in   *534    1996, see A.R. at

131, 137, which is consistent with the docu- mentary evidence presented, see A.R. at 313. It is true that Mr. Liu once responded with the date November 25, 1991, when asked when he had been baptized. A.R. 130. This confu- sion almost certainly resulted from the appar- ent difficulty the translator had in expressing the  concept  of  baptism.  See  A.R.  131-32. n8 Mr. Liu's subsequent answers made clear that  what  he  had  been  referring  to  in  con- nection with that date was the day on which he formally accepted Christianity (by "kneel- ing down and accepting **13     his  sin"), which occurred immediately before leaving China in November 1991. A.R. 131, 134; cf. A.R.  396.  Mr.  Liu  expressly  distinguished this confession of faith from the actual bap- tism which was performed later. A.R. 131. There is no basis for a finding of a discrep- ancy here.


. Likewise, the finding of a discrepancy where Mrs. Liu alternately testified that she was  (1)  four  months  and  (2)  five  months along with the pregnancy at the time of the second abortion is trivial, and does little or nothing to contribute to substantial evidence of  falsehood  on  the  part  of  the  Lius.  A.R.

78; see Gao v. Ashcroft, 299 F.3d 266, 272

(3d Cir. 2002) (minor inconsistencies not a proper foundation for adverse credibility de- termination).


.  The  IJ  relied  heavily  upon  Mr.  Liu's statement originally filed with his signed I-

589  form  (and  later  retracted  by  him),  in which it was claimed that he had been jailed and fined for failure to comply with the one- child policy. A.R. 71-72. The IJ noted that, under 8 C.F.R. § 208.3, Mr. Liu's signature on the form gave rise to a presumption that he was aware of the contents of that application. But the IJ did not **14    explain why this presumption had not been successfully rebut- ted by other evidence (most notably, the fact that the form is filled out in English, which Mr. Liu does not speak,  without listing the name of a third-party preparer, as well as Mr. Liu's testimony regarding the explanation of the statement before the asylum officer:  "I said I didn't know what it is"). A.R. at 162.


372 F.3d 529, *534; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 12697, **14;

64 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 838

Page 5





n7  In  fact,  the  second  child  was  added  to the form when it was later corrected by Mr. Liu. Compare A.R. 398, 402 (original I-589) with A.R.

393, 397 (amended I-589).


n8 It is evident that translation difficulties se- riously plagued the entire hearing. See, e.g., A.R.

103-104 (inconsistent testimony due to confusion regarding translation of "Catholic" and "Baptist"); A.R. 67-69 (repeated questions yielding absurdly nonresponsive answers).



The other inconsistencies cited by the IJ as evidence of incredibility are similarly ill-founded, trivial, or nonexis- tent. Absent the one glaring inconsistency regarding the baby's **15   gender (which may or may not be rendered less relevant in light of the consideration of documentary evidence on remand), we do not think that substantial evi- dence supports the finding that the Lius were not credible. Finally, we note that remand is appropriate where, as here, we have made a legal determination (e.g., regarding admissibility of evidence) that fundamentally upsets the balancing of facts and evidence upon which an agency's decision is based. We are obliged to remand to the agency to reconsider and reweigh the facts, rather than attempting to undertake that task ourselves. INS v. Ventura, 537 U.S.

12, 154 L. Ed. 2d 272, 123 S. Ct. 353 (2002). n9


n9 Specifically, our decision should in no way be read as requiring the BIA to find that the abor- tion certificates are genuine. Rather, the BIA may proceed on remand as it does with respect to any


evidentiary question, evaluating issues of material- ity, relevance, probity, and the general requirements of due process. See 8 C.F.R. § 1240.7(a); Bustos- Torres v. INS, 898 F.2d 1053, 1055 (5th Cir. 1990). For example, the BIA may (or may not) choose to order forensic testing of the original certificates (as proposed by the Lius),  take additional testimony, seek  guidance  from  State  Department  reports,  or evaluate the efforts the Lius took in attempting to avail themselves of the regulatory certification pro- cedure.


**16


*535   IV.


We grant the Lius' petition for review, vacate the order of the BIA, and remand to the BIA for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. n10


n10  Our  disposition  of  this  case  renders  un- necessary any inquiry into the other two arguments raised by the Lius on appeal. However, we note that the due process attack on the affirmance  without opinion procedures has essentially been foreclosed by our en banc decision in Dia v. Ashcroft, 353 F.3d

228 (3d Cir. 2003). We also note, with respect to the claim that the BIA failed to consider new evidence regarding "changed circumstances" in China, that while generally the "only vehicle for introducing new evidence post-decision is a motion to reopen," Walters v. Ashcroft, 291 F. Supp. 2d 237, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19715 (S.D.N.Y. November 3, 2003), the BIA may choose to consider this evidence on remand, if it deems such action appropriate.


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