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Martinez De Artiga v. Barr, 17-2898-ag (2020)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit Number: 17-2898-ag Visitors: 27
Filed: Jun. 10, 2020
Latest Update: Jun. 10, 2020
Summary: 17-2898-ag Martinez De Artiga v. Barr 1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 2 3 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT 4 5 August Term 2019 6 7 (Argued: January 8, 2020 Decided: June 10, 2020) 8 9 Docket No. 17-2898-ag 10 _ 11 12 PATRICIA XIOMARA MARTINEZ DE ARTIGA, NOE 13 ANTONIO ARTIGA MARTINEZ, 14 Petitioners, 15 16 v. 17 18 WILLIAM P. BARR, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY GENERAL, 19 Respondent. 20 21 _ 22 23 Before: KEARSE, CALABRESI, and POOLER, Circuit Judges. 24 25 Patricia Xiomara Martinez De Artiga challenges the d
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     17-2898-ag
     Martinez De Artiga v. Barr
 1                   UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
 2
 3                         FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
 4
 5                                 August Term 2019
 6
 7        (Argued: January 8, 2020                   Decided: June 10, 2020)
 8
 9                                Docket No. 17-2898-ag

10                                      ________

11
12         PATRICIA XIOMARA MARTINEZ DE ARTIGA, NOE
13                 ANTONIO ARTIGA MARTINEZ,
14                                                   Petitioners,
15
16                                          v.
17
18    WILLIAM P. BARR, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY GENERAL,
19                                                   Respondent.
20
21                                      ________
22
23   Before: KEARSE, CALABRESI, and POOLER, Circuit Judges.
24
25           Patricia Xiomara Martinez De Artiga challenges the denial of her
26   application for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the
27   Convention Against Torture (CAT). Martinez listed her son as a derivative
28   beneficiary on her application. The Immigration Judge (IJ) found that Martinez
29   testified credibly regarding serious, individualized threats against her and her
30   children by the infamous Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) gang. Nevertheless, the IJ
31   denied Martinez’s claims for asylum and withholding, concluding that the
32   gang targeted Martinez because she had frustrated the gang’s recruitment
33   efforts and not on account of membership in her son’s family. On the issue of
34   CAT protection, the IJ determined that Martinez failed to meet her burden for
35   relief because she fled El Salvador promptly after MS-13 threatened her. We
36   hold that the IJ erred as a matter of law when it penalized Martinez for her
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     Martinez De Artiga v. Barr

 1   prompt flight, and we cannot confidently predict that a remand would be
 2   futile. We therefore DENY the government’s motion for summary denial,
 3   GRANT Martinez’s petition for review, and REMAND the case. Judge Kearse
 4   dissents in a separate opinion.
 5
 6

 7             REBECCA R. PRESS, UnLocal, Inc., Community Immigration Legal
 8                Services, New York, NY, for Petitioners.

 9             EVAN P. SCHULTZ, Trial Attorney (Joseph H. Hunt, Assistant
10                Attorney General; Stephen J. Flynn, Assistant Director, on the
11                brief), Office of Immigration Litigation, U.S. Department of
12                Justice, Washington, D.C., for Respondent.
13

14

15   CALABRESI, Circuit Judge:


16         Petitioner Patricia Xiomara Martinez De Artiga is a citizen of El

17   Salvador. Martinez seeks relief from threats to her and her children’s

18   lives by the infamous Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) gang. She applied for

19   asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention

20   Against Torture (CAT) and listed her son Noe Antonio Artiga Martinez

21   as a derivative beneficiary. Martinez testified credibly concerning

22   serious, individualized threats against her and her children. The

23   Immigration Judge (IJ) denied CAT relief due to Martinez’s prompt

24   flight from El Salvador following the gang’s threats and the fact that


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 1   there had been no physical harm prior to her flight. The BIA affirmed. It

 2   was error for the IJ to penalize Martinez in this manner, and we cannot

 3   confidently predict that a remand would be futile. We therefore DENY

 4   the government’s motion for summary denial, GRANT Martinez’s

 5   petition for review, and REMAND the case to the BIA for further

 6   proceedings consistent with this opinion. Judge Kearse dissents in a

 7   separate opinion.

 8                                       I.


 9         In June 2014, members of MS-13 targeted Martinez’s son Noe as a

10   potential new recruit. Gang violence in El Salvador was pervasive at that

11   time (and still is) due to the rise of two warring groups, MS-13 and

12   Barrio-18 (B-18), both of which trace their origins to Southern California.

13   Their tactics are brutal and well-documented. Certified Administrative

14   Record (CAR) at 219–303.

15         Gang members first approached Noe, then 10 years old and in the

16   fifth grade, outside of his school in San Bartolomé Perulapía. They asked

17   Noe to sell drugs inside the school and to demand money from others

18   on behalf of the gang. When Noe refused the gang members’ requests,


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 1   they told him that they would kill him and his family. CAR at 113–14,

 2   169, 176. After this initial confrontation, the gang members threatened

 3   Noe several times each week in front of his school.
Id. at 176.
 4          Around the same time, the school’s principal held a meeting with

 5   parents to discuss threats against at least two other students in

 6   connection with MS-13’s recruitment efforts. Police officers were

 7   stationed in front of the school for a short period as a result of the

 8   meeting. Gang members returned to the front of the school after the

 9   police left.

10          It was at this point that Martinez began escorting Noe to and from

11   school in order to protect him. CAR at 122–23, 169. Martinez arranged

12   with the principal to pick up Noe at the rear entrance of the school. She

13   was able to avoid the gang members for a short time.

14          Approximately two weeks later, gang members confronted

15   Martinez outside her home. CAR at 123–24, 169. They told Martinez that

16   they knew she was protecting Noe and that they would kill Martinez

17   and Noe if Noe did not join MS-13.
Id. at 124,
169. One of the gang

18   members displayed a knife.
Id. at 124–25,
169.



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 1         That same day, Martinez gathered her children to discuss what

 2   had happened. CAR at 124. She decided that she would flee with Noe.

 3   They left for the United States within a week.
Id. at 125.
As Martinez

 4   explained before the IJ, she took the gang members’ threats seriously

 5   because she knew “the way that they punish people” and that “they

 6   always follow through with their threats.”
Id. at 115,
131.

 7         Documents submitted by Martinez to the IJ include a report by

 8   the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)

 9   describing how MS-13 and B-18 target children for recruitment and

10   punish their families for resisting. CAR at 292–93, 299. Martinez also

11   submitted news reports attesting to the particularly high frequency of

12   gang violence in San Bartolomé Perulapía and the surrounding area of

13   Cuscatlán.
Id. at 160–61,
198–217. Martinez provided the IJ with death

14   certificates for two people she identified as neighbors of hers whom MS-

15   13 had murdered.
Id. at 192–96.
The IJ, however, citing one of the news

16   reports Martinez supplied, questioned whether the deceased might

17   have been members of rival gangs.
Id. at 53,
119.




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 1         Martinez and Noe arrived in the United States in July 2014 after

 2   crossing the border without inspection at or near Eagle Pass, Texas. CAR

 3   at 348, 362. Agents of the Department of Homeland Security permitted

 4   them to reunite with family members in New York.

 5         Within months, the gang members began to harass Martinez’s

 6   daughter Gabriela verbally in an attempt to determine Martinez and

 7   Noe’s whereabouts. CAR at 158. The gang members’ threats included

 8   telling Gabriela that they would force her to be a “sex slave” if she

 9   refused to divulge her family members’ locations.
Id. 10 This
harassment culminated in a particularly frightening episode.

11   In September 2016, a group of gang members blocked Gabriela’s path

12   on her way home and ordered her to accompany them to a forested area

13   controlled by MS-13. CAR at 49, 158. They brandished knives and told

14   Gabriela, who was pregnant at the time, that if she did not comply they

15   would kill her and cut her child out of her body.
Id. 16 Fortuitously,
a relative of Gabriela’s happened to be walking

17   nearby. CAR at 49, 158. He called out to Gabriela and told her that her

18   grandmother did not like her walking alone.
Id. The gang
members



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 1   indicated to Gabriela that she should not tell anyone about the incident

 2   and permitted her to leave.
Id. at 158.
 3         That very same night, Gabriela made plans to flee El Salvador and

 4   stayed at her sister’s home. She left the country the next day. CAR at 49,

 5   158. Gabriela stated in an affidavit submitted to the IJ that she believes

 6   the MS-13 members would have raped and killed her if she had followed

 7   them to the forested area.
Id. at 158.
 8                                        II.


 9         DHS served Martinez and Noe with Notices to Appear upon their

10   arrival in the United States on July 19, 2014 and filed these notices in

11   Immigration Court on November 21, 2014. CAR at 348–49, 362–63.

12   Martinez applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and CAT

13   protection on July 16, 2015, listing Noe as a derivative beneficiary.
Id. at 14
  306-14.

15         Appearing without counsel, Martinez admitted at a preliminary

16   hearing on October 7, 2015, that she had entered the country without

17   lawful authorization. CAR at 86–87. At a merits hearing on November

18   16, 2016, and with the assistance of counsel, Martinez testified before the


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 1   IJ.
Id. at 48,
103–37. She also submitted extensive documentary evidence.

 2
Id. at 151–303.
 3         The IJ found Martinez to be credible and noted that her testimony

 4   “was detailed, plausible, internally consistent, and consistent with her

 5   documentary evidence.” CAR at 49–50. The IJ added that Martinez

 6   “sufficiently corroborated her testimony, including her submission of

 7   statements from her three children and mother.”
Id. at 50.
Nonetheless,

 8   in an unpublished decision issued on January 19, 2017, the IJ denied all

 9   forms of relief sought by Martinez.

10         The IJ rejected Martinez’s claims for asylum and withholding,

11   concluding that Martinez failed to demonstrate a nexus between the

12   persecution she alleged and a protected ground. CAR at 50–52. An

13   applicant for asylum “must establish that race, religion, nationality,

14   membership in a particular social group, or political opinion was or will

15   be at least one central reason for persecuting the applicant.” 8 U.S.C. §

16   1158(b)(1)(B)(i). Likewise, a person seeking withholding of removal

17   must show that his or her “life or freedom would be threatened in that

18   country because of the alien’s race, religion, nationality, membership in a



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 1   particular social group, or political opinion.”
Id. § 1231(b)(3)(A)
 2   (emphasis added). Assuming without deciding that Noe’s nuclear

 3   family is a cognizable social group, the IJ concluded that MS-13 had not

 4   targeted Martinez on account of her membership in this group. CAR at

 5   50. The IJ acknowledged that Martinez protected Noe from MS-13

 6   “because she is Noe’s mother,” but determined that “it was not

 7   Respondent’s status as a member of Noe’s nuclear family that the gang

 8   wanted to overcome, but her interference with the gang’s recruitment

 9   efforts.”
Id. at 50–51.
10          As to CAT protection, the IJ identified two sets of reasons for

11   denying relief. First, the IJ observed that Martinez “was only threatened

12   once before leaving El Salvador,” that “[s]he was never physically

13   harmed by MS-13,” and that “Gabriela and Noe were also threatened,

14   but not physically harmed.” CAR at 53. Second, the IJ determined that

15   Martinez failed to establish that her neighbors had been killed for

16   interfering with MS-13’s recruitment efforts.
Id. 17 The
BIA affirmed the IJ’s denial of relief in a single-member

18   decision on August 24, 2017. CAR at 2–3. The Agency agreed with the IJ



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 1   that asylum and withholding were not available because “the gang’s

 2   motivation was found to be to increase its ranks and not to punish the

 3   respondent because she is a member of her son’s family.”
Id. at 2.
On the

 4   issue of CAT protection, the Agency did not specify reasons for

 5   affirming beyond stating that Martinez and Noe had “not met their

 6   burden of proof.”
Id. 7 After
Martinez petitioned our Court for review, the government

 8   moved for summary denial. Dkt # 1, 38. A member of our Court, sitting

 9   on the non-argument calendar panel, transferred this case to our regular

10   argument calendar. Dkt #61. Following transfer, the government

11   renewed its motion for summary denial. Dkt # 93.

12                                      III.


13 A. 14
        We discuss Martinez’s claim for CAT protection first. An

15   applicant for CAT relief bears the “burden of proof . . . to establish that

16   it is more likely than not that he or she would be tortured if removed to

17   the proposed country of removal.” 8 C.F.R. § 208.16(c)(2). Torture means

18   “any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental,


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 1   is intentionally inflicted on a person . . . by or at the instigation of or with

 2   the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in

 3   an official capacity.”
Id. § 208.18(a)(1).
Severe pain or suffering includes

 4   “prolonged mental harm caused by or resulting from . . . [t]he threat of

 5   imminent death.”
Id. § 208.18(a)(4)(iii).
 6          We review the IJ’s findings of fact for substantial evidence,

 7   Gurung v. Barr, 
929 F.3d 56
, 60 (2d Cir. 2019), and “administrative

 8   findings of fact are conclusive unless any reasonable adjudicator would

 9   be compelled to conclude to the contrary,” 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(4)(B).

10   Findings of fact include determinations regarding the likelihood of

11   future events. Hui Lin Huang v. Holder, 
677 F.3d 130
, 134 (2d Cir. 2012).

12   But for the IJ or BIA to rule categorically that certain facts preclude CAT

13   protection may be erroneous as a matter of law. When such an error is

14   made, a remand is required unless remanding would be futile. Gurung,

15 929 F.3d at 62
(citing S.E.C. v. Chenery Corp., 
318 U.S. 80
(1943), and Li

16   Hua Lin v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice, 
453 F.3d 99
(2d Cir. 2006)). That is, we can

17   only avoid a remand where there has been an error of law if we are




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 1   “confident that the agency would reach the same result upon a

 2   reconsideration cleansed of errors.” Li Hua 
Lin, 453 F.3d at 107
.

 3         The IJ found Martinez’s testimony about the individualized

 4   threats against her and her children and her country conditions evidence

 5   detailing the power and brutality of MS-13 to be credible. Yet, relying

 6   on its observations that Martinez “was only threatened once before

 7   leaving El Salvador” and that she and her children were “threatened,

 8   but not physically harmed,” the IJ concluded that Martinez nevertheless

 9   failed to meet her burden. CAR at 53.

10         To hold categorically that an applicant for CAT relief must be

11   threatened more than once and that such a person must suffer physical

12   harm before fleeing is an error of law. See 8 C.F.R. § 208.16(c). Martinez

13   and her children left within days of when gang members threatened

14   them. The IJ credited Martinez’s testimony that the threats received

15   were believable and in no way remote. Under the circumstances, it was

16   error to require that the petitioners wait until they suffered physical

17   harm or until the threats recurred before they fled.




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 1         In light of the agency’s error, we must examine whether it is

 2   obvious that without this error the agency would have reached the same

 3   conclusion. That is, whether a remand would be futile. With this in

 4   mind, we examine the credible evidence that was before the agency to

 5   see whether we can say with confidence that the agency would have

 6   reached the same result absent the error. In doing so, we are not

 7   weighing the evidence against the standard for CAT relief ourselves.

 8   Rather, we consider only whether “a) [] the IJ articulate[d] an alternative

 9   and sufficient basis for her determination; b) [] her reliance on the

10   erroneous aspect of her reasoning is substantially tangential to her non-

11   erroneous findings; or c) [] overwhelming evidence in the record makes

12   it clear that the same decision is inevitable on remand.” Li Hua Lin, 
453 13 F.3d at 107
.

14          Here, we cannot confidently predict that the agency would reach

15   the same result without the error. Martinez’s testimony, which the IJ

16   credited, established that she and her children were facing a sustained

17   campaign of violent confrontations. These included when gang

18   members flashed a knife at Martinez and when they attempted to force



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 1   Martinez’s pregnant daughter into a secluded area and threatened to cut

 2   her child out of her body.

 3         The latter incident, though it occurred after Martinez had fled El

 4   Salvador, remains relevant to our analysis. The standard for CAT

 5   protection asks whether an applicant “would be tortured if removed to

 6   the proposed country of removal.” 8 C.F.R. § 208.16(c)(2) (emphasis

 7   added). MS-13’s continued targeting of Martinez’s family undoubtedly

 8   strengthens Martinez’s argument that she would have been tortured or

 9   killed had she remained in El Salvador longer and that she would be

10   tortured or killed upon returning.

11         We cannot say that the IJ’s second stated reason for denying

12   Martinez’s claim for CAT relief was “an alternative and sufficient basis”

13   for its decision. Li Hua 
Lin, 453 F.3d at 107
. The IJ discounted Martinez’s

14   country conditions evidence because death certificates and news articles

15   submitted by Martinez did not show that the individuals killed by MS-

16   13 in San Bartolomé Perulapía were murdered for interfering with gang

17   recruitment. CAR at 53. In other words, the IJ held against Martinez the

18   fact that she did not establish that MS-13 had killed people in her



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 1   hometown for precisely the same reason that they had threatened to kill

 2   her.

 3          That Martinez did not produce such evidence does not render

 4   remand futile, and indeed does not necessarily undermine her claim. In

 5   fact, her testimony regarding the individualized threats she and her

 6   children received provided some support for her argument that it is

 7   more likely than not that members of MS-13 would have retaliated

 8   against her had she stayed longer and would do so now if she returns to

 9   El Salvador. Consistent with the threats against Martinez, the country

10   conditions evidence—at the least—confirms that MS-13 retaliates

11   against perceived opposition by committing torture and murder.

12          Stripped of its error regarding Martinez’s prompt flight, the IJ’s

13   decision certainly recounts enough credible evidence such that it is more

14   than possible that the agency might have otherwise concluded that

15   Martinez met her burden for CAT relief. Accordingly, a remand on the

16   likelihood of torture cannot be deemed futile. The agency, in deciding

17   whether it would reach the same conclusion absent the erroneous




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 1   reliance on the speedy departure, might well wish to send the case back

 2   to the IJ for further factual development.

 3         An applicant       for CAT protection must, however, also

 4   demonstrate that “such pain or suffering [would be] inflicted by or at

 5   the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official

 6   or other person acting in an official capacity.” 8 C.F.R. § 208.18(a)(1).

 7   Under our cases, an applicant satisfies this requirement by showing that

 8   “government officials kn[e]w of or remain[ed] willfully blind to an act

 9   and thereafter breach[ed] their legal responsibility to prevent it.” De La

10   Rosa v. Holder, 
598 F.3d 103
, 109 (2d Cir. 2010) (quoting Khouzam v.

11   Ashcroft, 
361 F.3d 161
, 171 (2d Cir. 2004)). The IJ, having concluded that

12   Martinez failed to establish a likelihood of torture, never addressed

13   whether Salvadoran government officials were willfully blind to MS-

14   13’s actions and breached a legal responsibility to prevent harm to

15   Martinez. If on remand the agency finds that Martinez met her burden




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 1   of demonstrating a likelihood of torture, then fact-finding by the IJ on

 2   the question of government acquiescence will be needed. 1

 
3 Barb. 4
          In her application for relief, Martinez also sought asylum and

 5   withholding of removal. CAR at 50–52. Before this court, Martinez

 6   argues that she faces persecution on account of her membership in her

 7   son’s nuclear family and her political opinion opposing MS-13. The IJ

 8   and BIA, assuming without deciding that Noe’s family is a cognizable

 9   social group, ruled that Martinez failed to meet the nexus requirement

10   because MS-13 targeted her not on account of her membership in Noe’s

11   family but rather due to her efforts to stymie the gang’s recruitment

12   operations. Although the IJ acknowledged that Martinez protected Noe

13   from MS-13 “because she is Noe’s mother,” the IJ determined that “it




     1The dissent describes what the IJ held as a nuanced discussion of what suffices to meet the
     requirement for CAT relief. But, on any reading of the record, the IJ held that, without
     previous physical harm, a credible threat of being killed did not meet the requirement of
     torture. The IJ then went on to discuss why additional evidence presented by Martinez did
     not make that credible threat more than just a credible threat that she would be killed.

              We therefore do not see how the IJ’s decision is not a holding as a matter of law that
     more is necessarily required than a credible threat of death to establish a likelihood of torture.
     It is hence a holding that one must produce additional evidence that torture is sufficiently
     probable or that one must wait to be physically injured or be killed to qualify for CAT relief.

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     Martinez De Artiga v. Barr

 1   does not follow that gang members targeted her, even in part, on

 2   account of that relationship.”
Id. The IJ
and BIA did not address

 3   Martinez’s political opinion claim, and the government contends that

 4   this was proper, given that Martinez did not adequately raise and argue

 5   this claim.

 6           The cognizability of social groups defined by family membership

 7   and of political opinions defined by opposition to gangs are not only

 8   fact-intensive inquiries but also issues with respect to which the

 9   approaches of the BIA and of our Court are currently in a state of flux.

10   See Hernandez-Chacon v. Barr, 
948 F.3d 94
(2d Cir. 2020); Matter of L-E-A-

11   , 27 I. & N. Dec. 581 (U.S. Att’y Gen. 2019). Given our decision to remand,

12   we need not address these issues now. And, in view of the present

13   changing context, we deem it advisable to forgo any discussions at this

14   time.

15           Since our remand may require fact-finding on the CAT question

16   and the BIA may not engage in such fact-finding, 8 C.F.R. §

17   1003.1(d)(3)(iv), the case may ultimately return to the IJ. If this happens,

18   the IJ may consider Martinez’s political opinion and social group



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 1   arguments for asylum and withholding, along with any new evidence

 2   that Martinez might offer. See Diallo v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice, 
548 F.3d 232
,

 3   237 (2d Cir. 2008); Matter of Patel, 16 I. & N. Dec. 600, 601 (BIA 1978). Any

 4   consideration of these questions by us, if then appropriate, can await a

 5   more complete record.

 6                                CONCLUSION


 7         We DENY the government’s motion for summary denial,

 8   GRANT Martinez’s petition for review, VACATE the BIA’s decision,

 9   and REMAND the case to the BIA for further proceedings consistent

10   with this opinion.




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 1   KEARSE, Circuit Judge, dissenting:

 2          I respectfully dissent from the majority's view that the Immigration Judge

 3   ("IJ")--in denying the application of petitioner Patricia Xiomara Martinez de

 4   Artiga ("Martinez") for relief under the Convention Against Torture ("CAT")--

 5   ruled "as a matter of law," Majority Opinion ante at 11, that, in order to prevail,

 6   "an applicant for CAT relief must be threatened more than once and . . . such a

 7   person must suffer physical harm before fleeing,"
id. at 12.
The IJ stated before

 8   his rulings on Martinez's applications for asylum, withholding of removal, and

 9   protection under the CAT, that he had "considered the totality of the

10   circumstances," Decision of the Immigration Judge dated January 19, 2017 ("IJ

11   Decision"), at 3; and in dealing with her application under the CAT, his ruling

12   was simply that Martinez "did not meet her burden" of proving "that it is more

13   likely than not that she would be tortured if she returns to El Salvador. See

14   8 C.F.R. § 1208.16(c)(2)," IJ Decision at 7.

15          "[D]etermination[s] of what will occur in the future and the degree of

16   likelihood of the occurrence" are findings of fact. Hiu Lin Huang v. Holder, 677



                                                    1
 
1 F.3d 130
, 134 (2d Cir. 2012). An IJ's finding of fact is "conclusive unless any

 2   reasonable adjudicator would be compelled to conclude to the contrary."

 3   8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(4)(B). The majority cannot meet this standard to overturn the

 4   IJ's factual determinations in this case.

 5


 6                          WHAT THE IJ ACTUALLY DECIDED

 7         Martinez and her son Noe fled El Salvador in 2014 after members of the

 8   MS-13 gang attempted to recruit the then-10-year-old Noe to join the gang; Noe

 9   had refused, and MS-13 members threatened to kill him or his family members if

10   he did not agree to work for them. After Martinez began to walk Noe to and

11   from school to protect him against further MS-13 efforts, MS-13 members

12   threatened to kill Martinez and her family. About a week later, Martinez and

13   Noe left El Salvador. See IJ Decision at 2-3. After being found in the United

14   States, Martinez applied, on behalf of herself and Noe, for asylum, withholding

15   of removal, and protection under the CAT.

16         In addressing her application for asylum, the IJ found that the reason

17   Martinez had been threatened by MS-13 members was "to dissuade her from

18   (and punish her for) interfering with their recruitment efforts." IJ Decision at 5.



                                                 2
 1   In addressing Martinez's application for protection under the CAT, the IJ stated

 2   as follows:

 3                         The Convention Against Torture and its implementing
 4                  regulations provide that no person shall be removed to a
 5                  country where it is "more likely than not" that such person will
 6                  be subject to torture. See 8 C.F.R. §§ 1208.16, 1208.17, 1208.18.
 7                  "Torture" is "an extreme form of cruel and inhuman treatment,"
 8                  defined, in part, as the intentional infliction of severe pain or
 9                  suffering by, or at the instigation of, or with the consent or
10                  acquiescence of a public official. 8 C.F.R. § 1208.18(a)(1)-(2)
11                  . . . . The applicant for CAT protection bears the burden of
12                  proof. 8 C.F.R. § 1208.16(c)(2). In assessing whether an
13                  applicant has met her burden, the Court must consider all
14                  evidence relevant to the possibility of future torture, including
15                  evidence that the applicant has suffered torture in the
16                  past. . . . 8 C.F.R. § 1208.16(c)(3) . . . .
17
18                       Respondent did not meet her burden in establishing
19                  that it is more likely than not that she would be tortured if
20                  she returns to El Salvador. See 8 C.F.R. § 1208.16(c)(2).
21                  Respondent was only threatened once before leaving El
22                  Salvador. She was never physically harmed by MS-13.
23                  Gabriela and Noe were also threatened, but not physically
24                  harmed. Respondent provided evidence of individuals who were
25                  killed in [her home municipality]. However, the record does not
26                  show that these individuals were killed because they interfered
27                  with MS-13's attempts at recruitment. Respondent submitted
28                  two news articles suggesting that the individuals who died
29                  were gang members who were killed because of the rivalry
30                  between MS-13 and the Barrio 18 gang. Other documents,
31                  such as two death certificates, do not indicate that the deceased
32                  were killed by MS-13. Notwithstanding the ongoing gang
33                  violence in El Salvador as reflected in the record, the Court
34                  does not find that Respondent met the high burden

                                               3
 1                  necessary to find that she is likely to be tortured if she
 2                  returns to El Salvador. See 8 C.F.R. § 1208.16(c)(2).
 3
 4   IJ Decision at 6-7 (record citations omitted) (emphases mine). Thus, the IJ

 5   described the statutory contours of torture, pointed to the statutory burden of

 6   proof imposed on Martinez as a CAT applicant, described the sporadic and

 7   entirely nonphysical nature of the Martinez family's encounters with MS-13,

 8   remarked on the lack of probative value in the evidence that Martinez proffered

 9   as to treatment by MS-13--or by others--of other persons who were not similarly

10   situated to Martinez, and found that Martinez had not carried her burden of

11   establishing that it was more likely than not that if returned to El Salvador she

12   would be tortured. In sum, although the majority says that the IJ held

13   "categorically that an applicant for CAT relief must be threatened more than once

14   and that such a person must suffer physical harm before fleeing," Majority

15   Opinion ante at 12, the IJ's opinion does not purport either to establish or to apply

16   any such dogmatic principle.

17         Further, contrary to the majority's implication, there was nothing even

18   remotely inappropriate about the IJ's consideration of what had actually

19   happened to Martinez and her family. Substantively, as indicated above, the IJ

20   pointed out that "[t]orture" is defined in the CAT generally as "an extreme form

                                               4
 1   of cruel and inhuman treatment," involving the officially sanctioned, albeit

 2   unlawful, intentional infliction of "severe pain or suffering," 8 C.F.R.

 3   §§ 1208.18(a)(1) and (2). Further, mental torture involves "prolonged mental

 4   harm," including that caused by "[t]he threat of imminent death" to the applicant

 5   or another person.
Id. §§ 1208.18(a)(4)(iii)-(iv)
(emphases added). Being defined

 6   as "an extreme form of cruel and inhuman treatment," "[t]orture . . . does not

 7   include lesser forms of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment

 8   that do not amount to torture."
Id. § 1208.18(a)(2).
 9         Procedurally, as the IJ pointed out, the regulations governing applications

10   under the CAT include the instruction that

11                  [i]n assessing whether it is more likely than not that an
12                  applicant would be tortured in the proposed country of
13                  removal, all evidence relevant to the possibility of future torture
14                  shall be considered, including, but not limited to:
15                         (i) Evidence of past torture inflicted upon the
16                         applicant. . . .
17

18   8 C.F.R. § 1208.16(c)(3)(i) (emphases added). Of all the factors that could be

19   relevant to a claim of probable future torture, whether the applicant actually

20   suffered torture in the past appears to be the most pertinent: It is the first

21   example the regulation provides, and it is the only example that focuses on the



                                                5
 1   applicant and not, as do §§ 1208.16(c)(3)(ii)-(iv), on conditions in the country to

 2   which the applicant would be removed.

 3         It seems obvious that an IJ cannot determine whether the applicant had

 4   been subject to torture in the past without examining the past encounters

 5   between the applicant and the claimed offender. Thus, there was nothing

 6   punitive, see Majority Opinion ante at 2 ("the IJ . . . penalize[d] Martinez" because

 7   "there had been no physical harm prior to her flight"), in the IJ's finding that

 8   Martinez had experienced but a single, unprolonged, no-contact encounter with

 9   MS-13 members, which had consisted of a threat that could not itself conceivably

10   be construed as torture. The IJ made a factual evaluation called for by the

11   regulation.

12         And, as is obvious from the language of the IJ's decision denying CAT

13   relief, quoted above, the IJ did not view the facts that Martinez received only one

14   threat and that no one was harmed physically as dispositive. Rather, having

15   noted the facts as to Martinez and her family themselves, the IJ immediately

16   proceeded to consider Martinez's evidence of violence visited upon others.

17   Because some of her evidence apparently involved violence only by entities other

18   than MS-13, and some involved gang wars, and none of it indicated that the



                                               6
 1   victims had been targeted for interfering with MS-13's efforts at recruitment, the

 2   IJ found Martinez's other evidence not probative to show "that she," IJ Decision

 3   at 7 (emphasis added), would more likely than not be tortured. The majority

 4   characterizes that evaluation of Martinez's other evidence as "the IJ's second

 5   stated reason for denying Martinez's claim for CAT relief," Majority Opinion ante

 6   at 14 (emphases added), and suggests that the IJ ruled that the lack of similarity

 7   in the motivations for killing others disentitled her to CAT relief as a matter of

 8   law, see
id. at 14-15.
But a finding that proffered evidence is not probative on an

 9   issue is not a ruling that its proponent loses as a matter of law; and the majority's

10   suggestion that it became such a ruling here is not a fair reading of the IJ's

11   decision. The IJ began by saying he had considered the totality of the

12   circumstances; in the CAT section of his decision he discussed the events

13   experienced by Martinez and her family and then assessed the probative value of

14   Martinez's evidence of the experiences of others. At no point did the IJ rule that

15   Martinez failed to meet any standard other than her statutory burden to establish

16   the fact that if she were returned to El Salvador, it was more likely than not that

17   she would be tortured.




                                               7
 1         Finally, the majority attacks the IJ's findings as to the experiences of

 2   Martinez and her family--i.e., that there was little that occurred before she and

 3   Noe left El Salvador to suggest a likelihood of future torture--by stating that

 4   "Martinez's testimony, which the IJ credited, established that she and her

 5   children were facing a sustained campaign of violent confrontations." Majority

 6   Opinion ante at 13 (emphases added). The majority goes on to state that "[t]hese

 7   included when gang members flashed a knife at Martinez and when they

 8   attempted to force Martinez's pregnant daughter [Gabriela] into a secluded area

 9   and threatened to cut her child out of her body."
Id. at 13-14
(emphasis added).

10   As abhorrent as such threats are, I have several disagreements with the

11   majority's statement that there was such a "sustained campaign."

12         First, the period between the two incidents cited by the majority spanned

13   approximately 27 months. Yet Martinez and Noe left El Salvador a week after

14   the first incident. Thus, if there had been a "sustained campaign of violent

15   confrontations" for that period, Martinez would not have been a competent

16   witness to 99 percent of it.

17         Second, I do not see that Martinez in fact testified, even with hearsay, that

18   there was such a campaign of violent confrontations. Martinez testified that after



                                               8
 1   she left, her family was "bothered" by MS-13 gang members asking about Noe's

 2   whereabouts (Certified Administrative Record ("CAR") 126); but she mentioned

 3   no confrontation signifying violence, other than the one in 2016 involving

 4   Gabriela.

 5         Third, the record does not support the majority's characterization of any of

 6   the confrontations as "violent." Clearly there were threats of future violence; but

 7   I do not see any assertion by any member of Martinez's family that there was

 8   actual violence. Nor is it clear to me what additional "violent confrontations" the

 9   majority means to suggest occurred by its use of the word "included." Aside

10   from the flashing of knives in the summer of 2014 and the fall of 2016, I have not

11   seen in the record a claim that there was any other display of weapons.

12         Fourth, I cannot see that the record indicates that there was a "sustained

13   campaign" of even threats between the two cited events--which were more than

14   two years apart. First, after the summer-of-2014 threat to Martinez that led her

15   and Noe to leave El Salvador a week later, there were apparently no threats to

16   anyone in Martinez's family for months. Gabriela--the only family member

17   whose affidavit stated that she was even harassed by MS-13 gang members--said

18   that MS-13 members did not "start[] bothering" her until "[s]everal months after



                                              9
 1   [Martinez and Noe had] left El Salvador." (CAR.158, ¶ 3.) And though she said

 2   they threatened her, she did not describe their harassment as violent:

 3                       At first they would just stare at me as I was going to and
 4                  from school. After some time they started calling out to me and
 5                  demanding that I tell them the whereabouts of my mother
 6                  and my brother. They would call me ugly names and threaten
 7                  me. They told me that if I didn't tell them where my family
 8                  was, I was the one who was going to pay in their place.
 9                  They told me that if I didn't tell them where my family was,
10                  I would have to be their "jaina" (sex slave). They would
11                  follow me in the streets as they insulted me and threatened me.
12                  This went on (off and on) for about a year.
13
14   (Id. (emphases added).) See also IJ Decision at 5 (discussing Gabriela's statements).

15   Gabriela did not indicate that, after that "off and on" year, there were any threats

16   or unpleasant encounters--or any more inquiries as to the whereabouts of

17   Martinez and Noe--until her final encounter with MS-13 members in September

18   2016; and she did not suggest that there was any mention of Martinez or Noe in

19   that last encounter. (See CAR.158, ¶¶ 3, 4.)

20         In sum, the record in this case shows that Martinez was threatened once

21   before leaving El Salvador; that although MS-13 gang members threatened to kill

22   Martinez and her family, they plainly did not threaten "imminent" death; that

23   neither before nor after the departure of Martinez and Noe was she or anyone in

24   her family harmed physically; that after their departure it was several months

                                              10
 1   before MS-13 members even asked Martinez's daughter about their whereabouts;

 2   and that although there was MS-13 harassment of that daughter "off and on" for

 3   about a year, in the rest of the 27-month interim between the MS-13 members'

 4   flashing of knives, there were periods of months when there was not even verbal

 5   harassment. The majority's assertion that the IJ denied Martinez's application for

 6   CAT relief as a matter of law enables the majority to conclude that it may

 7   properly grant Martinez's petition for review on the basis that, on remand, "the

 8   agency might . . . conclude[] that Martinez met her burden for CAT relief,"

 9   Majority Opinion ante at 15 (emphasis added). But if the IJ's decision was, as I

10   view it, simply that on this record Martinez did not meet her burden of

11   establishing the likelihood that she would be tortured if she were returned to El

12   Salvador, that is a factual determination, and it cannot properly be overturned

13   because no "reasonable adjudicator would be compelled to conclude to the

14   contrary," 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(4)(B).

15         Accordingly, I would deny the petition for review.




                                             11

Source:  CourtListener

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