Ntamack v. Holder , 372 F. App'x 407 ( 2010 )


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  •                               UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 08-2398
    CALLIXTE JEAN MARIE NTAMACK,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    ERIC H. HOLDER, JR., United States Attorney General,
    Respondent.
    On Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration
    Appeals.
    Argued:   January 29, 2010                  Decided:   March 30, 2010
    Before TRAXLER, Chief Judge, NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge, and
    Jackson L. KISER, Senior United States District Judge for the
    Western District of Virginia, sitting by designation.
    Petition for review denied by unpublished per curiam opinion.
    ARGUED:   Danielle L. C. Beach-Oswald, BEACH-OSWALD IMMIGRATION
    LAW ASSOCIATES, PC, Washington, D.C., for Petitioner.      Carol
    Federighi, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington,
    D.C., for Respondent.   ON BRIEF:   Amy M. Grunder, BEACH-OSWALD
    IMMIGRATION   LAW   ASSOCIATES,   PC,   Washington,  D.C.,   for
    Petitioner.   Tony West, Assistant Attorney General, William C.
    Peachey, Assistant Director, Office of Immigration Litigation,
    UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for
    Respondent.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    2
    PER CURIAM:
    The       Board       of     Immigration        Appeals          (“BIA”)      denied     the
    application        of     Callixte       Ntamack,       a       native     and    citizen     of
    Cameroon,      for        asylum,       withholding             of   removal       under     the
    Immigration        and    Nationality         Act     (“INA”),       and    withholding       or
    deferral      of    removal        under      the     Convention           Against      Torture
    (“CAT”), based on the statutory “persecutor bar” to relief and
    on Ntamack’s failure to demonstrate that he will be tortured if
    returned to Cameroon.               The BIA found that Ntamack had been a
    longtime member of Cameroon’s national gendarmerie and judicial
    police force and had “ordered, incited, assisted, or otherwise
    participated”        in    the    persecution         of    others       based     on   grounds
    protected by the INA.
    Because        the     BIA’s       findings     are     supported       by     substantial
    evidence in the record, we deny Ntamack’s petition for review.
    I
    After      completing          high      school    in       1983,    Ntamack     became    a
    member   of    Cameroon’s          gendarmerie         and       entered     two     years    of
    professional schooling and training.                            Upon completion of that
    schooling and training, he served variously as an investigator,
    a noncommissioned officer in the anti-gang unit, and a judicial
    police   officer.              After    14    years        of    service,        Ntamack     fled
    3
    Cameroon in 1999 and entered the United States on a 6-month
    nonimmigrant visa, where he sought asylum.
    During     the   years     in   which   Ntamack     was    a    member    of   the
    gendarmerie and judicial police, the State Department country
    reports for Cameroon and reports from human rights organizations
    indicated that these organizations frequently committed human
    rights abuses, including unlawful killings, the use of harsh
    interrogation techniques, and torture.                   In his application for
    asylum, however, Ntamack stated that he was opposed to these
    abuses     and   refrained       from    using     the   violent       interrogation
    techniques employed by his colleagues.               While acknowledging that
    the   government       falsely    accused     innocent    people      for    political
    ends, Ntamack also denied that he participated in such cases.
    He justified his continued membership in the gendarmerie and the
    judicial    police      with   his    need    to   support      his   wife     and   six
    children.
    Shortly after entering the United States, Ntamack filed an
    application for asylum, but his application was denied.                        Because
    he was, at the time, still lawfully within the United States,
    removal proceedings were not initiated against him.
    In June 2002, Ntamack again applied for asylum, and again
    his application was denied.             At this time, however, his case was
    referred to an immigration judge as he had overstayed his visa.
    While Ntamack conceded removability at the hearing before the
    4
    immigration judge, he requested asylum, withholding of removal
    under both the INA and the CAT, and deferral of removal under
    the CAT.    In support of his application, Ntamack testified that
    he    had   been        imprisoned     three     times     in      Cameroon      for
    insubordination and suspicion of supporting the opposition to
    the government.         He stated that, on each occasion, his superiors
    believed that he was supporting the opposition because of his
    unwillingness      to    engage   in   repressive      conduct,     and   on    each
    occasion he was interrogated and beaten.
    His first imprisonment was in 1991, when his unit was sent
    to suppress a demonstration in the province of Bamenda.                     Rather
    than employ violent tactics, as he was ordered to do, Ntamack
    falsely claimed to be suffering from a stomach ache and was sent
    to a military hospital for testing.                  When the medical reports
    showed no evidence of a           problem, Ntamack was            imprisoned     for
    insubordination,        questioned     about   his    political     opinion,     and
    accused of sympathy with the opposition.                 During this stay, he
    was   handcuffed,       tied   up,     beaten,   and     whipped    while      being
    interrogated.      When he was tried, however, he was acquitted due
    to a lack of evidence, and, after being given a few days in the
    hospital to rest, he was allowed to return to work.
    The second imprisonment occurred in 1992, when Ntamack was
    dispatched with his unit to quell a student demonstration at the
    University of Yaounde, during which the students were demanding
    5
    democratic reforms and freedom.                   Ntamack stated that while he
    attempted to persuade his colleagues to refrain from violence
    and    sought     to    negotiate     with       the    students,      his       pleas   were
    rejected.        Instead, members of his unit arrested, beat, and
    wounded some of the students.                    Describing his own role during
    the    demonstration,          Ntamack     stated,      “We   made     a    line    and    we
    start[ed] going towards the students, and we start beating on
    those who did not want to obey the order.”                            When asked to be
    more specific about his own actions, he stated, “I held myself
    back a bit.        Since (indiscernible) student divided the campus, I
    tried (indiscernible) some of the group and asked them to go
    back,   to   go    back    into      the   classroom.”          Upon       his    return    to
    headquarters, Ntamack was again questioned about his political
    opinions and accused of not actively participating in orders to
    disperse     the       students.         Ntamack       was    again       imprisoned       for
    insubordination         and,    he   claimed,         was   beaten    and    interrogated
    under all kinds of conditions -- “bright lights day and night.”
    When he was taken before a tribunal, he was again acquitted for
    lack    of   evidence,         and   again       he    returned      to     work    in     the
    gendarmerie.
    Ntamack was imprisoned the third time in 1997 when he was
    assigned to assist at polling stations during the presidential
    election.       After he told election observers about irregularities
    and ballot-box tampering, his superiors questioned him about his
    6
    political views.         He was again sent to prison, interrogated, and
    beaten to the point of unconsciousness.                        Ntamack remained in
    prison until August 1999, when, with the assistance of friends,
    he escaped.       He stated that a friend, who worked at the prison,
    opened the cell, permitting Ntamack to exit through the front of
    the building.          Two friends waited there in a car and drove him
    away.       He    then     went   into     hiding,      where        he     remained   for
    approximately a month, before departing for the United States.
    In addition to giving his own testimony at the hearing,
    Ntamack also presented the testimony of Anne Catherine Enane,
    who confirmed some of what Ntamack stated, especially about the
    events     at    the     University   of       Yaounde.         He        also   presented
    documentary evidence in the form of prison discharge documents,
    letters from relatives, and the State Department country reports
    for Cameroon.
    After the hearing, the immigration judge denied Ntamack’s
    application for asylum, withholding of removal under the INA,
    and withholding of removal and deferral of removal under CAT.
    The   judge      found    Ntamack’s   testimony         not    to    be     credible   for
    several    reasons.         The   judge     noted      that    Ntamack’s         testimony
    lacked     detail        about    certain          events     and     was        inherently
    inconsistent -- he testified to imprisonment and mistreatment,
    yet   he   was    allowed    to   remain       a    member    of     the     gendarmerie.
    Indeed, he was even promoted, becoming a member of the judicial
    7
    police.     The immigration judge also found discrepancies between
    Ntamack’s story and that of Enane.
    On the merits, the immigration judge ruled that Ntamack had
    not suffered past persecution because of his political opinions.
    Rather,   his    imprisonment      and     mistreatment        were       due    to   his
    insubordination.        The immigration judge also found that Ntamack
    had failed to make a showing under CAT that it was more likely
    than not that he would be tortured if returned to Cameroon,
    observing that nothing in the record indicated the government’s
    ongoing interest in him.           The judge acknowledged that Ntamack
    might have to serve a sentence upon his return, but that such
    punishment would be a legal response to his escape.
    The immigration judge found that even if Ntamack had made
    the necessary showing for relief, the judge would deny relief
    because Ntamack was a persecutor, barring relief by statute.
    The   judge     found    that     the     gendarmerie       was       a    persecutory
    organization that had committed acts of violence against the
    students based on their political beliefs.                        While the judge
    acknowledged     that    Ntamack    had       attempted   to    withdraw         himself
    somewhat from violent actions, he nonetheless found that Ntamack
    was “part of these units where people [were] being questioned,
    harmed,   and    beaten,    and    therefore,       [was]      also       part   of   the
    persecutory arm of government.”               The immigration judge rejected
    Ntamack’s     financial     justification          for    remaining          with     the
    8
    gendarmerie and determined that Ntamack had failed to carry his
    burden of demonstrating that he was not a persecutor.
    On appeal, the BIA affirmed.                   It stated that it did not
    need   to   address     the       immigration        judge’s    adverse    credibility
    determination because Ntamack was statutorily barred from relief
    because     he    was   a   persecutor.          While       recognizing    that    mere
    membership in a persecutory organization was insufficient to bar
    relief, the BIA noted that Ntamack had furthered persecution
    through his inaction toward other members of his unit committing
    acts of persecution, his participation in the imprisonment of
    others, and his assistance in making a show of force toward the
    protesting students.          In view of this evidence of persecution,
    the BIA ruled that Ntamack had failed to meet his burden of
    showing,     by     a   preponderance           of     the     evidence,    that     the
    “persecutor bar” did not apply.
    In addition, the BIA affirmed denial of Ntamack’s request
    for deferral of removal under CAT because Ntamack had failed to
    demonstrate that it was more likely than not that he would be
    tortured upon his return to Cameroon.
    From the BIA’s decision, Ntamack filed this petition for
    review,     contending      (1)    that   the    BIA    erred    in   finding      him   a
    persecutor; (2) that the evidence showed that it was more likely
    than not that he would be tortured on his return to Cameroon;
    and (3) that the Department of Homeland Security and the State
    9
    Department,    in   their      investigation         of     his    claims    abroad,
    violated his right to confidentiality, protected by 8 C.F.R. §
    208.6.*
    II
    We review the BIA’s factual findings under the substantial
    evidence   standard,       reversing    only    if    the    evidence      compels     a
    contrary finding.      8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(4)(B).
    For his principal argument on appeal, Ntamack challenges
    the BIA’s determination that he engaged in persecutory conduct,
    thus barring him from eligibility for asylum and withholding of
    removal, under both the INA and CAT.
    The “persecutor bar” precludes the applicant from asylum
    and   withholding     of    removal    upon    a     finding      that    “the    alien
    ordered,   incited,    assisted,       or    otherwise      participated         in   the
    persecution    of   any      person    on     account       of    race,     religion,
    nationality,    membership       in    a     particular        social     group,      or
    political opinion.”         See 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(2)(A)(i) (asylum);
    see also 
    id. § 1231(b)(3)(B)(i)
    (withholding removal under the
    INA); 8 C.F.R. § 1208.16(d)(2) (withholding removal under CAT).
    *
    Ntamack also seeks to challenge the immigration judge’s
    adverse credibility finding.     But because the BIA expressly
    declined to consider the immigration judge’s credibility
    determination, the issue is not properly before us. “[O]nly the
    findings and order of the BIA, not those of the IJ,” are before
    us on appeal.   Li Fang Lin v. Mukasey, 
    517 F.3d 685
    , 687-88 &
    n.2 (4th Cir. 2008).
    10
    Physical      participation        in        the       persecution         of      others    is   not
    required for the persecutor bar to apply.                                Rather, the test is
    whether       the   applicant’s          conduct             objectively           furthered       the
    persecution of others.              See Higuit v. Gonzales, 
    433 F.3d 417
    ,
    421 (4th Cir. 2006); In the Matter of Federenko, 19 I. & N. Dec.
    57, 69 (BIA 1984) (holding that alien’s subjective intent is
    irrelevant      and   that    persecutor               bar       applies      if   the   objective
    effect of alien’s actions is to further persecution, even if in
    some    “small      measure”).               If    “evidence            indicates”       that     the
    applicant assisted or otherwise participated in persecution, the
    burden then shifts to the applicant to prove by a preponderance
    of    the   evidence     that      he    did       not          contribute      to   the    alleged
    persecutory acts.         8 C.F.R. §§ 208.16(d)(2), 1208.16(d)(2); see
    also 
    Higuit, 433 F.3d at 420-21
    .
    We     conclude    that,         in     this         case,       the     record      contains
    substantial evidence to support the BIA’s finding that Ntamack’s
    actions objectively furthered persecution.                              Ntamack testified to
    his    participation       in      quelling             a       student       uprising      at     the
    University of Yaounde by being more than a bystander.                                    He stated
    that “we” -- referring to the gendarmes, of which he was one --
    beat    the    students      and    stood          in       a    line    driving      them       back.
    Although he did state that he “held [him]self back a bit,” this
    statement is insufficient to remove him from                                    the persecutory
    conduct.       While he may have demonstrated some hesitation about
    11
    repressive      action     and   his    participation           may   have      been    less
    forceful than that of others, the fact remains that he stated
    that   he     participated       in   the   line     pushing      back     and    beating
    students.
    In addition, Ntamack furthered persecution simply by his
    participation in what appears to be a phalanx or show of force
    by the gendarmerie against the students.                        An alien’s physical
    presence      can     provide     assistance        in    persecution          when     that
    presence impedes the movement of those persecuted or otherwise
    subjects      them    to   an    increased       risk     of    harm.          See,    e.g.,
    Federenko, 19 I. & N. Dec. at 69 (unwilling Nazi prison guard
    furthered persecution); Alvarado v. Gonzales, 
    449 F.3d 915
    , 928-
    29 (9th Cir. 2006) (applicant’s presence and participation in
    persecutory      interrogation         furthered         persecution);         Negele     v.
    Ashcroft, 
    368 F.3d 981
    , 983-84 (8th Cir. 2004) (Nazi guard who
    merely      patrolled      perimeter     of      concentration          camp    furthered
    persecution).        Thus, Ntamack’s presence in the line that herded
    and attacked students could well, by itself, have supported the
    BIA’s finding of persecutory conduct.
    Ntamack argues that the BIA erroneously concentrated on the
    facts of his membership in a persecutory organization and the
    length   of    that     membership.         While    it    is    true    that     the    BIA
    recited those facts, which can indeed be relevant, see 
    Higuit, 433 F.3d at 421
    (citing Singh v. Gonzales, 
    417 F.3d 736
    , 740
    12
    (7th Cir. 2005)), the BIA did not rely solely on his membership
    to support the persecutory bar.               Rather, it relied on Ntamack’s
    actual participation in the effort to quell the uprising at the
    university.
    Ntamack   also   argues    that    even       if   his   actions    furthered
    violence   against      the   students,       the    record     reflects      that   the
    gendarmerie was acting to control a riot, rather than attack a
    legitimate    political       demonstration.          Accordingly,       he     reasons
    that the     gendarmerie      was not acting in a persecutory manner
    because it did not seek to harm the students on account of a
    ground protected by the INA.             The record, however, belies this
    contention.      Statements by Ntamack and others demonstrate that
    the students were agitating in favor of democracy and freedom
    and that the gendarmerie was sent to quell opposition to the
    ruling party.
    Finally, Ntamack contends that the BIA failed to credit his
    “redemptive acts,” such as his warning Enane of the coming raid
    on her dormitory and his urging others to negotiate or return to
    their classrooms.         But this evidence does not eliminate the
    evidence that Ntamack himself aided some persecution, and only
    some   amount    is   necessary    for    the       persecutor     bar     to    apply.
    Stated   otherwise,      while   Ntamack’s          redemptive    activities         show
    that he was less than sympathetic with the repressive goals of
    13
    his unit, they do not compel the conclusion that the persecutor
    bar should not apply.
    At     bottom,     substantial       evidence      supports        the    BIA’s
    conclusion     that    Ntamack    is   statutorily      barred    from      receiving
    asylum and withholding removal under the INA and CAT.
    III
    Ntamack    also    challenges       the   BIA’s   decision       to   deny     him
    deferral of removal under 8 C.F.R. § 1208.17(a), which provides
    that removal may be deferred when an alien demonstrates that “he
    or she is more likely than not to be tortured” if removed.
    “Torture” is defined as “an extreme form of cruel and inhuman
    treatment” that occurs by or with the consent or acquiescence of
    “a   public    official     or    other    person      acting    in    an   official
    capacity.”      
    Id. § 1208.18(a)(1)-(2).
               It does not include “pain
    or suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to
    lawful     sanctions     [such   as]   judicially       imposed       sanctions      and
    other      enforcement     actions      authorized       by     law.”          
    Id. § 1208.18(a)(3).
    The BIA found that Ntamack had failed to show that it was
    more likely than not that he would be tortured.                   While there is
    evidence in the record that Ntamack was imprisoned three times
    for insubordination and suspicion that he was supporting the
    political     opposition,        the   degree     of    mistreatment        that     he
    14
    suffered is not totally clear.                     He did testify that he was
    interrogated         under     difficult        conditions,      beaten       (once       to
    unconsciousness), and otherwise mistreated while in prison, but
    his     testimony      also       indicates       that    he    was    subjected          to
    mistreatment during the initial phase of his incarceration and
    only to incarceration thereafter.                    Moreover, he never sought
    extensive medical attention as a result of his treatment by
    authorities.         And following the first two imprisonments, he was
    released and allowed to return to work as an employee of the
    government.      The BIA concluded that Ntamack’s mistreatment did
    not rise to the extreme level of “torture” as defined under CAT.
    The     BIA   also     found      that     no    evidence      indicated      that    the
    government had any interest in him now, if he were to return,
    except perhaps to punish him for escape.                       We conclude that the
    BIA’s     determination,          while     a    close    call,       is     nonetheless
    supported by substantial evidence because it cannot be said that
    the   record    compels       a   contrary       conclusion,     as   required       by   8
    U.S.C. § 1252(b)(4)(B).             Accordingly, we also affirm the BIA’s
    decision on deferral.
    IV
    Finally,       Ntamack      claims    that    the   overseas         investigation
    into the authenticity of his prison release orders, which was
    conducted by the Department of Homeland Security and the State
    15
    Department, violated his right to confidentiality, protected by
    8 C.F.R. § 208.6(a).          He argues that we should remand this case
    to the BIA so that he can pursue this claim further.
    Ntamack did not, however, raise this argument before the
    immigration    judge    or    the    BIA,    and   therefore       we   do   not    have
    jurisdiction to consider the issue.                “A court may review a final
    order   or    removal        only    if     the    alien     has    exhausted        all
    administrative     remedies          available          to   the    alien      as     of
    right . . . .”          8    U.S.C.       § 1252(d)(1);      see    also     Asika    v.
    Ashcroft, 
    362 F.3d 264
    , 267 n.3 (4th Cir. 2004) (failure to
    raise   an   argument       before   the    BIA    is    failure   to   exhaust      all
    remedies under the statute).
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the decision of the
    BIA and deny Ntamack’s petition for review.
    PETITION FOR REVIEW DENIED
    16