Salifu v. INS ( 1998 )


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    [NOT FOR PUBLICATION] [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]

    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 97-1714

    JAARAH SALIFU,

    Petitioner,

    v.

    IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE,

    Respondent.

    ____________________

    ON PETITION FOR REVIEW OF AN ORDER OF

    THE BOARD OF IMMIGRATION APPEALS
    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________

    Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Boudin, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________

    John J. Loscocco and Barker, Epstein and Loscocco on brief for _________________ _____________________________
    petitioner.
    Ellen Sue Shapiro, Senior Litigation Counsel, Office of ____________________
    Immigration Litigation, Civil Division, Department of Justice, Frank _____
    W. Hunger, Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division, and Richard M. __________ __________
    Evans, Assistant Director, on brief for respondent. _____


    ____________________

    February 19, 1998
    ____________________
    Per Curiam. Jaarah Salifu appeals a decision of the __________

    Board of Immigration Appeals, which affirmed an immigration

    judge's denial of her petition for asylum and withholding of

    deportation. 8 U.S.C. 1158, 1253(h). We affirm.













    Salifu, a native of Ghana, attempted to enter the United

    States through John F. Kennedy Airport in New York on July 1,

    1993. The Immigration and Naturalization Service paroled her

    into the United States and began exclusion proceedings. At

    an exclusion hearing on November 9, 1993, Salifu conceded

    excludability but petitioned for asylum and withholding of

    deportation, alleging that she feared persecution in Ghana on

    the basis of her political opinion. Evidentiary hearings on

    the petition were held before an immigration judge on March

    30 and August 25, 1994.

    Salifu's asylum affidavit states that she was a regional

    organizing secretary of Ghana's New Patriotic Party, which

    opposed the ruling junta in an election on November 3, 1992.

    The next day, Salifu participated in a demonstration

    protesting fraud in the election. The demonstrators were

    dispersed by army and police officers, and a curfew was

    imposed on the area. On November 6, police officers arrested

    Salifu at home and took her to a police station. The

    affidavit states that she was held for about two weeks,

    during which time she was raped twice. Salifu claims that

    the officers told her she was being held because of her

    participation in the demonstration.

    Salifu's affidavit states that a police officer told her

    that she would be transferred to Accra, Ghana's capital, and

    that many prisoners sent there never returned. The officer



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    agreed to help Salifu escape and took her home. Her mother

    suggested that she go to stay with her grandmother, which

    Salifu did.

    After three months with her grandmother, Salifu said

    that she decided to contact a friend in Accra. The friend

    took Salifu in and promised to help her escape from the

    country. The friend obtained a passport for Salifu in the

    name of Marian Bigelow and an airline ticket to the United

    States. The friend also gave her an envelope containing some

    photographs. During the flight, Salifu destroyed the

    passport, as her friend had instructed.

    Salifu was detained by an INS official upon arrival in

    New York. The official searched her bag and removed the

    envelope, which contained not only the photographs but also a

    handwritten letter. Salifu claims she did not write the

    letter, does not recognize the handwriting, and was unaware

    that the letter was in her possession until it was found.

    The letter narrates the experience of a New Patriotic Party

    activist who was raped; the details are similar in some

    respects, but not in others, to Salifu's statements in her

    asylum affidavit.

    The INS official then interrogated Salifu. She

    requested an interpreter who spoke Twi, her native language,

    but no interpreter was available. Salifu attempted to

    converse with the officer in English, although she maintains



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    her English was and remains very poor. The INS officer wrote

    Salifu's answers out in affidavit form, which Salifu signed.

    This "airport affidavit" was admitted into evidence at the

    hearing, as were the letter and photographs found in Salifu's

    possession and a memorandum that the INS officer wrote "to

    file" after interviewing Salifu.

    The immigration judge wrote a detailed opinion

    concluding that Salifu's testimony was not credible. This

    conclusion was based on Salifu's demeanor on the stand, her

    inability or refusal to answer simple questions, and

    inconsistencies between her live testimony, the airport

    affidavit, and the affidavit filed in support of her asylum

    petition. The immigration judge concluded that Salifu not

    carried her burden of proving that she had a "well-founded

    fear of persecution" on account of her political opinion.

    Alvarez-Flores v. INS, 909 F.2d 1, 3 (1st Cir. 1990). On ______________ ___

    appeal, the Board of Immigration Appeals affirmed the

    immigration judge's decision.

    Salifu's argument on appeal comprises an attack on the

    factfinder's credibility assessments, which must be upheld as

    long as they are "reasonably grounded in the record, viewed

    as a whole." Cordero-Trejo v. INS, 40 F.3d 482, 487 (1st _____________ ___

    Cir. 1994). We think that the immigration judge was not

    clearly erroneous in concluding that Salifu's testimony was

    not convincing. As the judge noted, there were "sufficient



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    inconsistencies in the testimony, asylum application, and

    affidavitalone to warrant a negative finding of credibility."

    Salifu argues that the Board violated the policy of our

    decision in Cordero-Trejo v. INS, 40 F.3d 482 (1st Cir. _____________ ___

    1994). In Cordero-Trejo, we reversed a denial of asylum, _____________

    noting that the immigration judge's adverse credibility

    findings were not based on "any perspectives offered by the

    unique vantage point of the factfinder, such as witness

    demeanor, conflicting or confused testimony, etc., from which

    credibility is typically assessed." Id. at 491. Rather, the ___

    immigration judge in Cordero-Trejo discredited the _____________

    petitioner's testimony with criticisms that we thought either

    patently unreasonable or directly refuted by documentary

    evidence in the record. Nothing like that occurred here.

    Salifu makes a related legal argument that her own lack

    of credibility does not dispose of her claim that she has a

    well-founded fear of persecution. Salifu quotes language

    from Cordero-Trejo to the effect that an asylum applicant's _____________

    testimony must be evaluated in the context of documentary

    evidence of the political situation in the applicant's home

    country. Salifu is right that such information is relevant

    to determine whether a petitioner's fear of persecution is

    objectively "well-founded." But as a threshold matter, the

    asylum petitioner must prove that she has an actual

    subjective fear of persecution. INS v. Cardoza-Fonseca, 480 __________ ___ _______________



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    U.S. 421, 430-31 (1987). The subjective element of an asylum

    claim must be "established via the applicant's credible ________

    testimony that his fear is genuine." Cordero-Trejo, 40 F.3d _________ _____________

    at 491 (emphasis added). In this regard a petitioner's lack

    of credibility can be dispositive, as it is here.

    Salifu argues that the immigration judge erred in

    admitting into evidence the handwritten letter and

    photographs seized from her at the airport, as well as the

    INS officer's "memorandum to file." Because the photographs

    and memorandum do not appreciably strengthen the case against

    Salifu, we believe their admission, if at all erroneous, was

    harmless. Rodriguez-Hernandez v. Miranda-Velez, 132 F.3d ___________________ _____________

    848, 855 (1st Cir. 1998).

    The handwritten letter, on the other hand, was damaging

    to Salifu. Salifu's sole objection below was that the letter

    was irrelevant. This objection is without merit. The letter

    tended somewhat to increase the chance that Salifu was

    "coached in her story" before leaving Ghana, and that the

    story was untrue in material respects. On appeal, Salifu

    asserts that there was no foundation for the letter,

    specifically, that there was no independent proof that the

    letter offered was the one found in her possession and that

    it had not been altered. However, this objection was not

    made at the time the letter was offered into evidence, so it





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    is deemed waived. United States v. Benavente-Gomez, 921 F.2d _____________ _______________

    378, 385 (1st Cir. 1990).

    Salifu makes other arguments regarding the definitions

    of persecution and political opinion. Because the Board

    correctly affirmed the immigration judge's conclusion

    regarding credibility, we do not reach Salifu's additional

    eligibility arguments. Because she does not qualify for

    asylum, Salifu also does not meet the more demanding standard

    for withholding of deportation. Alvarez-Flores, 909 F.2d at ______________

    4.

    Affirmed. ________































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