Alexander Campo-Benites v. William Barr, U. S. Att ( 2020 )


Menu:
  • Case: 19-60826     Document: 00515573201         Page: 1     Date Filed: 09/21/2020
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Fifth Circuit                               United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    September 21, 2020
    No. 19-60826
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    Alexander Erasmo Campo-Benites,
    Petitioner,
    versus
    William P. Barr, U.S. Attorney General,
    Respondent.
    Petition for Review of an Order
    of the Board of Immigration Appeals
    BIA No. A200-005-955
    Before Jones, Davis, and Willett, Circuit Judges.
    Per Curiam:*
    Alexander Campo-Benites is a native and citizen of El Salvador who
    entered the United States illegally in 2005. Campo-Benites did not appear at
    his removal proceeding, so the immigration judge ordered him removed in
    absentia. Campo-Benites now seeks to reopen removal proceedings under 8
    U.S.C. § 1229a(c)(7)(C)(ii), which authorizes an alien to file a motion to
    *
    Pursuant to 5th Circuit Rule 47.5, the court has determined that this
    opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under the limited
    circumstances set forth in 5th Circuit Rule 47.5.4.
    Case: 19-60826      Document: 00515573201         Page: 2   Date Filed: 09/21/2020
    No. 19-60826
    reopen at any time based on “changed country conditions.” Campo-Benites
    argues that changes only affecting a “particular social group” or PSG—here,
    a small nuclear family—can constitute changed country conditions. But
    because Campo-Benites only alleges changes in personal circumstances, we
    deny his petition for review.
    I
    Alexander Erasmo Campo-Benites, a native and citizen of El Salvador,
    entered the United States without permission in July 2005. The same day he
    entered, the Department of Homeland Security gave Campo-Benites a notice
    to appear, which charged him with removability under 8 U.S.C. §
    1182(a)(6)(A)(i), as an alien present in the United States without being
    admitted or paroled. The notice to appear said that an in absentia removal
    order may be entered if he failed to give DHS his address. A border patrol
    officer gave Campo-Benites this information orally in Spanish, and he was
    released by DHS. Campo-Benites did not provide the immigration court with
    his address, so no hearing notice was sent. He did not appear at the
    September 2005 hearing, and the immigration judge entered an in absentia
    removal order.
    Thirteen years later, in January 2019, Campo-Benites tried to reopen
    his case with the immigration court on multiple grounds, most of which are
    now irrelevant. The one ground Campo-Benites continues to press on appeal
    is to seek asylum and related relief based on changed country conditions. In
    2017, according to Campo-Benites, gang members in El Salvador stole the car
    of his brother, Aldalberto. The gang members told Aldalberto not to go to the
    police, threatening that they would find him if he snitched. Aldalberto went
    to the police despite the threat. The night Aldalberto filed a report, he
    received a text message from one of the gang members that said, “You
    2
    Case: 19-60826      Document: 00515573201          Page: 3   Date Filed: 09/21/2020
    No. 19-60826
    shouldn’t have done what you did” and that Aldalberto “better be careful.”
    That was the last message Aldalberto received from the gang.
    With his motion to reopen, Campo-Benites offered an expert report,
    which stated that Campo-Benites “would be at high risk of egregious physical
    harm and possibly death if he returned to El Salvador.” According to the
    expert, should Campo-Benites return, he’d become a “lightning rod” for the
    gang’s animosity towards his brother. The expert provided several pages of
    analysis based on decades of field work and research.
    In February 2019, an immigration judge denied Campo-Benites’s
    motion to reopen. And the Board of Immigration Appeals dismissed Campo-
    Benites’s appeal of the IJ’s decision. Campo-Benites timely petitioned us for
    review.
    II
    We review the Board’s denial of a motion to reopen for abuse of
    discretion. INS v. Doherty, 
    502 U.S. 314
    , 323 (1992). We must affirm the
    Board’s decision, even if we believe the denial was in error, “so long as it is
    not capricious, racially invidious, utterly without foundation in the evidence,
    or otherwise so irrational that it is arbitrary rather than the result of any
    perceptible rational approach.” Cruz v. Barr, 
    929 F.3d 304
    , 308 (5th Cir.
    2019) (quoting Singh v. Gonzales, 
    436 F.3d 484
    , 487 (5th Cir. 2006)). We
    review the Board’s factual determinations under the substantial evidence
    standard. Zhao v. Gonzales, 
    404 F.3d 295
    , 306 (5th Cir. 2005). Those factual
    findings must stay in place unless “any reasonable adjudicator would be
    compelled to conclude to the contrary.” § 1252(b)(4)(B). Moreover,
    “motions to reopen deportation proceedings are ‘disfavored,’ and the
    moving party bears a ‘heavy burden.’” Altamirano-Lopez v. Gonzales, 
    435 F.3d 547
    , 549 (5th Cir. 2006) (quoting INS v. Abudu, 
    485 U.S. 94
    , 107–08
    (1988)).
    3
    Case: 19-60826       Document: 00515573201            Page: 4     Date Filed: 09/21/2020
    No. 19-60826
    If the Board conducts its own review of the evidence and law, our
    review is limited to the decision of the Board. Yuqing Zhu v. Gonzales, 
    493 F.3d 588
    , 593 (5th Cir. 2007). But if the Board considered the underlying
    decision of the immigration judge, we can also consider that. Sharma v.
    Holder, 
    729 F.3d 407
    , 411 (5th Cir. 2013). Here, the Board did consider the
    IJ’s decision.
    III
    A motion to reopen removal proceedings is subject to a 90-day
    limitation. § 1229a(c)(7)(C)(i). But there is no time limit on a motion to
    reopen if the applicant seeks asylum or withholding of removal based on
    “changed country conditions arising in the country of nationality or the
    country to which removal has been ordered.” § 1229a(c)(7)(C)(ii). Such
    evidence of changed country conditions must not have been available “and
    would not have been discovered or presented in the previous proceeding.”
    Id. The petitioner must
    show more than a “continuation of ongoing
    violence” to demonstrate changed country conditions. Singh v. Lynch, 
    840 F.3d 220
    , 222 (5th Cir. 2016) (per curiam). The change must be “material”
    rather than merely “incremental.” Nunez v. Sessions, 
    882 F.3d 499
    , 508–09
    (5th Cir. 2018). Likewise, “individual incidents, without evidence that they
    are part of a larger material change, do not constitute changed country
    conditions.”
    Id. at 509.
    A change in “personal circumstances” will not
    suffice.
    Id. Campo-Benites frames the
    central question on appeal as whether “a
    change in the treatment of a small group” can constitute changed country
    conditions. 1 He argues that the Board erroneously answered this question in
    1
    Central to his premise is that Campo-Benites’s family can qualify as a PSG.
    Neither the IJ, nor the Board addressed this claim. Nor will we. Because relief is not
    warranted even if his family is a PSG, we need not answer the question. But cf. Pena
    4
    Case: 19-60826         Document: 00515573201               Page: 5      Date Filed: 09/21/2020
    No. 19-60826
    the negative. And, he contends, because the Fifth Circuit has never directly
    addressed this question, the “IJ’s reliance on Fifth Circuit cases is
    misleading.” 2 We disagree. The IJ and the Board found the facts of this case
    analogous to other cases in which we have considered purely personal
    changes in circumstances—changes that do not constitute changed country
    conditions.
    Oseguera v. Barr, 
    936 F.3d 249
    , 250–51 (5th Cir. 2019) (noting the Board’s recent decision
    that a family may qualify as a PSG, but the decision must be reached on a case-by-case basis;
    “In the ordinary case, a family group will not meet that standard, because it will not have
    the kind of identifying characteristics that render the family socially distinct within the
    society in question.” (citing Matter of L-E-A-, 27 I.&N. Dec. 581, 586 (U.S. Att’y Gen.
    2019))).
    2
    Campo-Benites also argues that the Board has previously held that changes only
    affecting families can constitute changed country conditions, and this inconsistency alone
    may render the Board’s denial here an abuse of discretion. It’s true that an agency abuses
    its discretion if it departs from its own established precedent, “without announcing a
    principled reason for the departure.” Galvez-Vergara v. Gonzales, 
    484 F.3d 798
    , 802 n.5
    (5th Cir. 2007) (cleaned up) (quoting Johnson v. Ashcroft, 
    286 F.3d 696
    , 700 (3d Cir. 2002)).
    But here, Campo-Benites points only to unreported Board decisions, which have no
    precedential value. 8 C.F.R. § 1003.1(g); see also Leal-Rodriguez v. I.N.S., 
    990 F.2d 939
    , 946
    (7th Cir. 1993) (“[B]y INS’s own regulations, [unpublished] decisions carry no
    precedential weight. A survey of unpublished BIA decisions shows that they are treated as
    limited to their facts. They do not serve as authority for later proceedings involving the
    same issues, nor do they make new law.” (internal citation omitted)).
    Plus, to whatever extent the Board’s decision was incongruent with the
    unpublished decisions Campo-Benites cites, the Board did announce a principled reason
    for departure; the Board pointed to a recent opinion of the Attorney General, which
    overruled the Board’s prior precedential decision that “family” can constitute a particular
    social group. See Matter of L-E-A-, 27 I.&N. Dec. at 586. Here the Board noted that in
    Matter of L-E-A-, the AG recently found that “most families are not inherently socially
    distinct and therefore do not qualify as a particular social group.” So even assuming that
    (a) the unpublished Board decisions Campo-Benites points to were precedential, and that
    (b) the Board here departed from those decisions, the Board still did not abuse its discretion
    because it announced a principled reason for the departure—the AG overruling prior
    precedent on nuclear families as PSGs.
    5
    Case: 19-60826     Document: 00515573201           Page: 6   Date Filed: 09/21/2020
    No. 19-60826
    For example, in Ramos-Lopez v. Lynch, the petitioner claimed she was
    at risk because of her brother-in-law’s past involvement with a drug cartel.
    
    823 F.3d 1024
    , 1026 (5th Cir. 2016). We held that the cartel involvement was
    merely “a change in personal circumstances.”
    Id. Similarly, in Singh
    v.
    Lynch, the petitioner challenged a denied motion to reopen based on changed
    country conditions, alleging new threats of violence against his 
    mother. 840 F.3d at 222
    . Singh also averred that Indian police had threatened him,
    wrongly accusing him of receiving terrorist training in Pakistan.
    Id. We found that
    these events merely showed a “continuance of ongoing violence” in
    India and that Singh had shown only a “change in personal circumstances,”
    which does not constitute changed country conditions.
    Id. at 223–23.
              Campo-Benites also argues that to “interpret ‘changed country
    condition’ to exclude local, or more personal changes, would violate
    Congressional intent” because Congress did not use the term “country-
    wide.” But neither the Government, nor the IJ, nor the Board suggested the
    change must be “country-wide.” The plain text, however, suggests it must
    be a changed country condition, which is why it’s no surprise the Fifth
    Circuit has repeatedly held that changed personal circumstances don’t
    count. See, e.g., 
    Nunez, 882 F.3d at 509
    ; 
    Singh, 840 F.3d at 222
    –23.
    Campo-Benites likewise argues that the Board’s decision is
    incongruent with asylum laws generally because Congress expressly
    authorizes asylum for PSGs. And groups are not “particular” when they
    include “large swaths of society.” So, Campo-Benites contends, it would not
    make sense to limit changed country conditions “to only sweeping changes.”
    But contrary to the assertions of Campo-Benites, no one is arguing that the
    change must affect “large swaths of society” in a “sweeping” way. But the
    change must be “material”—reflecting conditions in the country itself.
    
    Nunez, 882 F.3d at 509
    . What matters is the nature of the changes.
    6
    Case: 19-60826        Document: 00515573201              Page: 7       Date Filed: 09/21/2020
    No. 19-60826
    Campo-Benites’s claim is of the same nature as Singh’s. Criminal
    violence was already widespread in El Salvador, and Campo-Benites doesn’t
    direct us to any evidence showing that the violence has gotten worse. His
    family’s story is a turn of events that increased his personal risk of suffering
    from the long-prevalent criminal violence in El Salvador. That’s a change in
    personal circumstances. 3 And because he cannot demonstrate a changed
    country condition, he is subject to the normal 90-day limitation. So his
    motion to reopen came far too late.
    IV
    For these reasons, we DENY Campo-Benites’s petition for review.
    3
    Campo-Benites contends that the Seventh Circuit agrees with his understanding
    of changed country conditions. In Joseph v. Holder, the petitioner, a single Christian
    woman, feared going back to Pakistan. 
    579 F.3d 827
    , 829 (7th Cir. 2009). Her family had
    arranged a marriage for her, which she claimed sufficed as a “changed circumstance.”
    Id. The Seventh Circuit
    agreed, explicitly rejecting the single-member Board order that read 8
    C.F.R. § 1003.2(c)(3)(ii) to cover only “a dramatic change in the political, religious or
    social situation.”
    Id. at 831.
    The Seventh Circuit also disagreed with the Board’s
    interpretation on the grounds that the Board excluded “personal circumstances.”
    Id. at 834.
                If Campo-Benites were in the Seventh Circuit, his position might—theoretically—
    hold water. But, as explained above, we have explicitly and repeatedly rejected claims based
    on changes in personal circumstances. So Campo-Benites can’t rely on Joseph because it is
    in direct conflict with our own precedent.
    7