Andrei Davidescu v. Loretta Lynch , 641 F. App'x 579 ( 2016 )


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  •                         NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION
    To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    Chicago, Illinois 60604
    Argued December 16, 2015
    Decided March 29, 2016
    Before
    DANIEL A. MANION, Circuit Judge
    MICHAEL S. KANNE, Circuit Judge
    ANN CLAIRE WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge
    No. 15-2099
    ANDREI DAVIDESCU,                              Petition for Review of an Order of the
    Petitioner,                                Board of Immigration Appeals.
    v.                                       No. A205-556-102
    LORETTA E. LYNCH,
    Attorney General of the United States,
    Respondent.
    ORDER
    Andrei Davidescu, a 27-year-old Moldovan citizen, sought asylum, withholding
    of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture, based on harm he
    suffered on account of his Roma ethnicity. In his testimony he described numerous
    attacks at the hands of classmates and neighbors while he was growing up in Moldova.
    The immigration judge, however, noted significant inconsistencies in his hearing
    testimony, found him not credible, and concluded that he had not sufficiently
    corroborated his claim. Because these conclusions are supported by substantial
    evidence, we deny the petition for review.
    No. 15-2099                                                                           Page 2
    Davidescu was admitted into the United States in June 2010 with permission to
    participate in an exchange-worker program. He was authorized to stay for a temporary
    period not to exceed September 11, 2010, but he overstayed. In September 2012 he
    applied for asylum affirmatively with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, which
    generally has initial jurisdiction over asylum applications filed by aliens who are
    physically present in the United States and not already in removal proceedings.
    See 8 C.F.R. § 208.2(a). Because more than one year had elapsed since his entry,
    however, the asylum officer determined the application to be untimely. See 8 U.S.C.
    § 1158(a)(2)(B). Davidescu received a notice to appear before an immigration judge,
    charging him as removable for having remained in the country longer than permitted.
    See 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(1)(B). In removal proceedings, Davidescu renewed his application
    for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under CAT.
    Davidescu testified that he grew up in Chioselia Rusa, a town of approximately
    2,000 people. His father is Roma, but his mother is Moldovan. Despite his mother’s
    heritage, he was considered Roma because of the color of his skin and because his father
    was known by other villagers to be Roma (and Davidescu self-identified with this
    group as well).
    In his testimony Davidescu described several instances of being bullied at school
    for being Roma. First, in 2001, when he was in seventh grade, a schoolmate pushed and
    hit him a couple times while using anti-Roma slurs. Then in 2003 schoolmates again
    pushed and hit him—causing a cut to his chest, bruises, and a broken finger. They told
    him that he was not welcome in the village or school because he was Roma. And in
    2006, after a banquet for his high school graduation, two young men beat him because
    he defied their warnings that he was not welcome at the gathering. Davidescu received
    bruises on his ribs, legs, and torso. He testified that he did not report this beating to the
    police. He also wrote in his affidavit (but omitted from his hearing testimony) that he
    was beaten generally by fellow university dorm-mates, who said they were tired of
    “misborn” Roma.
    Davidescu recounted two incidents that occurred in 2009. In April he was
    assaulted by two people on his way home from his university in Chisinau, Moldova’s
    capital. The attackers knocked him down and told him that, as a Roma, he had no right
    to be there. His injuries, which included a concussion and bruises, required him to be
    hospitalized for ten days. Then in August 2009, he again was beaten in a Chisinau park
    by a group of people who insulted him for being Roma.
    No. 15-2099                                                                         Page 3
    In June 2012, while Davidescu was still in the United States, his father in
    Moldova was kicked and knocked unconscious in an attack by a group of drunk
    neighbors. His father was taken to the hospital and diagnosed with a concussion.
    Davidescu says this attack led him to apply for asylum.
    Without addressing the timeliness of the asylum application, the IJ denied
    Davidescu’s applications for all relief from removal because she found him not credible
    and his claim insufficiently corroborated. She concluded that there were major
    inconsistencies in Davidescu’s account concerning central aspects of his claim. For
    instance, regarding the 2006 beating, Davidescu stated in his affidavit that he suffered a
    nose fracture and a torn lip and that afterwards he had called the police, but in his
    testimony he denied these details. When asked to clarify, Davidescu was unable to
    explain the different accounts, and he compounded the confusion about the police’s
    involvement, saying first that someone else had called the police and later that he
    stopped at a police station on the way home. In addition, Davidescu testified
    inconsistently about his interactions with the police after the April 2009 attack. On
    direct examination he said that he reported the incident to police and was never again
    contacted. But on cross-examination he stated that the police detained him at the scene
    of the beating, blamed him for the attack, and, after taking him to the police station,
    struck him on the head with a rubber baton. Davidescu also testified he then went to a
    hospital on his own power, but the hospital records reflect that only after being
    hospitalized did he regain consciousness. Finally, his testimony about being beaten in a
    park in August 2009 was contradicted by a police notice and a letter from his lawyer in
    Moldova stating that he merely had been insulted. The IJ concluded that Davidescu’s
    corroborating evidence was insufficient to clarify his inconsistent testimony or meet his
    burden of proof.
    Davidescu appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals, challenging the IJ’s
    adverse-credibility finding. He argued, without elaboration, that he had established a
    pattern or practice of persecution of Roma in Moldova. The Board upheld the IJ’s
    decision. It agreed that Davidescu failed to explain major inconsistencies in his account
    and he did not sufficiently corroborate events forming the basis of his claim. The Board
    also concluded that Davidescu did not substantiate his pattern-or-practice argument or
    otherwise demonstrate that he has a well-founded fear of persecution.
    Now represented by new counsel, Davidescu challenges the IJ’s finding that his
    testimony regarding past incidents of harm was not credible. He claimed that the
    inconsistencies in his testimony, written submissions, and corroborating evidence were
    No. 15-2099                                                                           Page 4
    minor and did not go to the heart of his claim. Inconsistencies need not go to the heart
    of an applicant’s claim to support an adverse-credibility finding, see 8 U.S.C.
    § 1158(b)(1)(B)(iii), but they must be more than trivial, see Hassan v. Holder, 
    571 F.3d 631
    ,
    637 (7th Cir. 2009).
    The IJ’s adverse-credibility finding was proper, however, because the
    inconsistencies she identified were not trivial and concerned an important aspect of his
    claim: the severity of the mistreatment he suffered and his interactions with the police.
    The particulars of the beatings Davidescu experienced and the injuries he sustained
    were at the heart of his contention that he suffered persecution rather than mere
    harassment or discrimination. See Stanojkova v. Holder, 
    645 F.3d 943
    , 948 (7th Cir. 2011).
    And the inconsistencies regarding his interactions with the police—notably including
    an allegation that the police hit him in the head with a baton at the police station—were
    material to assessing the government’s willingness and ability to prevent attacks by
    private actors. See Hor v. Gonzales, 
    400 F.3d 482
    , 485 (7th Cir. 2005) (“Persecution is
    something a government does, either directly or by abetting (and thus becoming
    responsible for) private discrimination.”)
    Davidescu also makes a two-pronged challenge to the Board’s determination that
    he did not adequately corroborate his claim. He first asserts that the IJ did not give him
    enough time to gather the necessary evidence to support his claim. But, as the
    government explains, Davidescu waived this argument by failing to present it first to
    the Board. See 8 U.S.C. § 1252(d)(1); Ghaffar v. Mukasey, 
    551 F.3d 651
    , 655 (7th Cir. 2008).
    Second, Davidescu disputes the IJ’s conclusion that his supporting documents
    were insufficient to corroborate his testimony or otherwise carry his burden of proof.
    Davidescu also failed to raise this argument before the Board, but waiver is not at issue
    here because the Board independently addressed the sufficiency of his corroborating
    documents. See Arobelidze v. Holder, 
    653 F.3d 513
    , 516–17 (7th Cir. 2011). As the Board
    noted, however, this case is governed by the REAL ID Act, which justified the IJ in
    requiring additional documents to clarify the inconsistencies in his testimony.
    See 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(1)(B)(ii). The Board properly noted that Davidescu’s submissions
    hardly corroborated the incidents of harm described in his testimony. The medical
    report from his April 2009 hospitalization contradicts his testimony that he never lost
    consciousness. And a letter from his lawyer and a police notice both state that he was
    pushed and insulted in the August 2009 incident, not beaten as he testified. The other
    significant inconsistencies are not addressed at all by the documents he submitted.
    No. 15-2099                                                                          Page 5
    But even if the IJ had accepted Davidescu’s testimony as credible and sufficiently
    corroborated, he has not presented evidence from which to infer the requisite
    involvement of state actors to establish past persecution. The attacks that Davidescu
    and his father suffered were at the hands of classmates and neighbors, not state actors,
    and he has not shown that the government would be unable or unwilling to protect him
    from harm if he were to return to Moldova. See Vahora v. Holder, 
    707 F.3d 904
    , 908 (7th
    Cir. 2013).
    Finally Davidescu challenges the Board’s determination that he did not establish
    a pattern or practice of persecution against Roma in Moldova, see 8 C.F.R.
    § 1208.13(b)(2)(iii)(A), or otherwise demonstrate a well-founded fear of future
    persecution. He did not present any evidence that he would be singled out for
    persecution, but he argues that Roma face a pattern or practice of persecution in
    Moldova, as evidenced by the denial of education, adequate medical care, employment
    opportunities, and other public services. A pattern or practice of persecution, however,
    requires “a systematic, pervasive, or organized effort to kill, imprison, or severely injure
    members of the protected group, and this effort must be perpetrated or tolerated by
    state actors,” Ahmed v. Gonzales, 
    467 F.3d 669
    , 675 (7th Cir. 2006) (internal quotation
    marks omitted), and the Board properly concluded that Davidescu’s evidence did not
    show this. The Roma are victims of deprivations, discrimination, and social
    marginalization, but these conditions—while deplorable—are not “extreme” enough to
    qualify as a pattern or practice of persecution sanctioned by the Moldovan government.
    See Georgieva v. Holder, 
    751 F.3d 514
    , 523 (7th Cir. 2014). And Davidescu’s own
    experience successfully completing secondary school and some college undermines his
    assertion that upon return he would be subjected to deprivation extreme enough to rise
    to the level of persecution.
    Because the IJ’s findings of adverse credibility and insufficient corroboration
    were not clearly erroneous and the Board properly concluded that Davidescu did not
    establish the existence of a pattern or practice of persecution of Roma in Moldova, we
    deny the petition for review.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 15-2099

Citation Numbers: 641 F. App'x 579

Judges: Manion, Kanne, Williams

Filed Date: 3/29/2016

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024