Carlos Bringas-Rodriguez v. Loretta E. Lynch , 805 F.3d 1171 ( 2015 )


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  •                       FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    CARLOS ALBERTO BRINGAS-                             No. 13-72682
    RODRIGUEZ, AKA Patricio Iron-
    Rodriguez,                                          Agency No.
    Petitioner,                 A200-821-303
    v.
    OPINION
    LORETTA E. LYNCH, Attorney
    General,
    Respondent.
    On Petition for Review of an Order of the
    Board of Immigration Appeals
    Argued and Submitted
    November 18, 2014—Pasadena, California
    Filed November 19, 2015
    Before: William A. Fletcher and Jay S. Bybee, Circuit
    Judges and Benjamin H. Settle,* District Judge.
    Opinion by Judge Bybee;
    Dissent by Judge W. Fletcher
    *
    The Honorable Benjamin H. Settle, District Judge for the U.S. District
    Court for the Western District of Washington, sitting by designation.
    2                BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    SUMMARY**
    Immigration
    The panel denied a petition for review of the Board of
    Immigration Appeals’ denial of asylum, withholding of
    removal, and protection under the Convention Against
    Torture to a citizen of Mexico who sought relief based on his
    sexual orientation and HIV-positive status.
    Relying on Castro-Martinez v. Holder, 
    674 F.3d 1073
    (9th Cir. 2011), the panel held that substantial evidence
    supported the Board’s determination that Bringas-Rodriguez
    failed to establish that the Mexican government was
    unwilling or unable to protect him, where he did not report
    the abuse he suffered to authorities, and his evidence,
    including hearsay testimony and country reports, was
    insufficient to establish that doing so would have been futile.
    The panel held that Bringas-Rodriguez failed to establish
    a pattern or practice of persecution of gay men in Mexico.
    The panel also held that Bringas-Rodriguez’s CAT claim
    failed because he did not show that he would more likely than
    not be tortured by or with the acquiescence of the Mexican
    government if he is removed to Mexico.
    The panel held that the Board did not abuse its discretion
    in denying Bringas-Rodriguez’s motion to remand based on
    his recent HIV diagnosis.
    **
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                     3
    Dissenting, Judge W. Fletcher wrote that he has growing
    doubts about this court’s decision in Castro-Martinez, but
    even applying Castro-Martinez to the facts of this case,
    Bringas-Rodriguez submitted evidence sufficient to show that
    the Mexican government was unwilling or unable to protect
    him from abuse.
    COUNSEL
    Andrea Ringer (argued) and Marco Pulido Marques (argued),
    Certified Law Students, University of California, Irvine
    School of Law, Appellate Litigation Clinic, Irvine, California;
    Mary-Christine Sungaila, Pro Bono Attorney, Snell &
    Wilmer LLP, Costa Mesa, California, for Petitioner.
    Stuart F. Delery, Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division,
    Kohsei Ugumori and John W. Blakeley (argued), Senior
    Litigation Counsel, United States Department of Justice,
    Office of Immigration Litigation, Washington, D.C., for
    Respondent.
    Peter E. Perkowski, Winston & Strawn LLP, Los Angeles,
    California, for Amici Curiae The Public Law Center, Lambda
    Legal Defense and Education Fund, the National Immigrant
    Justice Center, the Center for HIV Law and Policy; HIV Law
    Project; Immigration Equality; Disability Rights Legal
    Center; and the Asian & Pacific Islander Wellness Center.
    4             BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    OPINION
    BYBEE, Circuit Judge:
    Petitioner Carlos Bringas-Rodriguez is a citizen of
    Mexico and a gay man who was sexually abused by family
    members and a neighbor in Mexico. He challenges the BIA’s
    decision denying his applications for asylum, withholding of
    removal, and Convention Against Torture (CAT) protection,
    and denying his motion to remand to the IJ in light of his
    recent HIV diagnosis. Relying on our decision in Castro-
    Martinez v. Holder, 
    674 F.3d 1073
    (9th Cir. 2011), the BIA
    found that Bringas failed to show that the Mexican
    government was unwilling or unable to control those who
    perpetrated such acts. We have jurisdiction under 8 U.S.C.
    § 1252(a), and we deny the petition.
    I
    Petitioner, Bringas-Rodriguez (Bringas), was born and
    raised in Tres Valles, Veracruz, Mexico. He began to realize
    that he was attracted to men at age six, and by age ten he
    considered himself gay. He is now openly gay and is HIV-
    positive. As a child, he suffered physical abuse at the hands
    of his father, who would tell him to “Act like a boy, you’re
    not a woman!” and to “Do things a man does.” His father
    also abused Bringas’s mother and siblings, but he says he was
    abused “most of all . . . because [he] was different.”
    Bringas was later sexually abused by his uncle, cousins,
    and a neighbor. His uncle began the abuse when Bringas was
    four and continued the abuse every two or three months until
    he turned twelve. When Bringas turned seven, his cousins
    began to abuse him on a monthly basis as well. Bringas
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                       5
    testified that when he turned eight, his uncle admitted to him
    that he was sexually abusing him because Bringas was gay.
    He further recalled that his abusers “never called [him] by
    [his] name but called [him] fag, f_____g faggot, queer and
    laughed about it.”
    Bringas first came to the United States with his mother
    and stepfather in 2002 when he was twelve, and he lived with
    them in Kansas for five months. Bringas was undocumented.
    He then moved back to Mexico because he was “troubled”
    over hiding his sexuality and history of abuse, and he wanted
    to live with his grandmother. Once back in Mexico, however,
    the abuse continued. His uncle, cousins, and a neighbor
    raped him in his early teens. He never reported the abuse to
    the police, believing such a complaint would be frivolous,
    and he did not tell his family until years later, fearing that his
    abusers would harm his mother or grandmother.
    In 2004, at age fourteen, Bringas returned to the United
    States to live with his mother and stepfather in Kansas and
    “to escape [his] abusers.” In August 2010, Bringas was
    convicted of “Contributing to the Delinquency of a Minor” in
    Colorado; essentially, he was drinking at his house and a
    friend brought over a minor. Bringas spent ninety days in
    jail, where he attempted suicide. DHS filed a Notice to
    Appear in September 2010.
    In February 2012, Bringas filed an application for asylum,
    withholding of removal, and relief under the CAT, alleging
    that he was raped by his uncle, cousins, and neighbor while
    living in Mexico. He explained that he feared returning to
    Mexico because he would be persecuted for being gay and the
    police would ignore his complaints. The IJ denied all
    applications for relief. He denied Bringas’s asylum claim
    6                BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    because it was untimely.1 With respect to withholding, the IJ
    found that Bringas had suffered sexual abuse at the hands of
    his uncle, cousins, and neighbor, but concluded that the
    abuse, while “horrendous,” did not constitute past persecution
    “on account of” a protected status. The IJ found that
    “perverse sexual urges” motivated the abusers, and not
    Bringas’s sexual orientation. The IJ also observed that
    Bringas never reported his abuse to an adult or to the
    Mexican police and that there was no evidence that Mexican
    authorities were unwilling to offer protection.
    Turning to the risk of future persecution, the IJ looked at
    Country Reports for Mexico for 2009 and 2010 and found
    that, despite a few specific accounts of persecution of
    homosexuals in Mexico, the country as a whole—and
    especially in Mexico City—has made significant advances
    with respect to gay people. Accordingly, Bringas could
    relocate to a place like Mexico City without risking possible
    future abuse. So, the IJ found, Bringas did not show a “more
    likely than not possibility of persecution on account . . . of his
    membership in a particular social group of male
    homosexuals.”
    1
    Bringas entered the United States in November 2004 but did not file an
    asylum application until April 2011, well beyond the one-year deadline.
    The IJ acknowledged that being an unaccompanied minor entering the
    country may qualify as an “exceptional circumstance” that excuses late
    filing, but even assuming that Bringas was an unaccompanied minor upon
    entering the United States, his application was still untimely because he
    waited years after turning eighteen to file it. Bringas had argued,
    however, that in this case the age of adulthood was twenty-one, not
    eighteen, which would make his asylum application timely because it was
    filed before his twenty-first birthday. But the IJ rejected this reasoning,
    finding no evidence to suggest that asylum officers use twenty-one and not
    eighteen to determine the legal disability excuse.
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                     7
    The IJ also denied relief under the CAT on the grounds
    that Bringas offered insufficient evidence that the government
    routinely turns a blind eye to allegations of sexual abuse of
    children. As a result, Bringas could not prove that “torture in
    the future by the government, or with the acquiescence of the
    government” was likely.
    The BIA affirmed. It denied Bringas’s asylum claim on
    the merits, assuming the application was timely filed. The
    BIA concluded that Bringas failed to establish past
    persecution because (1) he could not show that he was abused
    on account of a protected ground, and (2) he had not
    demonstrated that the government was unwilling or unable to
    control his abusers. Bringas was thus not entitled to a
    presumption of future persecution. The BIA also found that
    Bringas did not have a well-founded fear of future
    persecution because he failed to show a “pattern or practice”
    of persecution against gays in Mexico. Citing our opinion in
    Castro-Martinez v. Holder, 
    674 F.3d 1073
    , 1082 (9th Cir.
    2011), the BIA explained that no “widespread brutality
    against homosexuals or . . . criminalization of homosexual
    conduct [exists] in Mexico.” Additionally, the BIA discussed
    Mexico’s improved treatment of homosexuals over the years:
    “Mexico has taken numerous positive steps to address the
    rights of homosexuals, including legalizing gay marriage in
    Mexico City and prosecuting human rights violations against
    homosexuals.”
    The BIA also rejected Bringas’s withholding of removal
    and CAT claims. With respect to withholding, it noted that
    because Bringas “failed to satisfy the lower burden of proof
    required for asylum, it follows that he has also failed to
    satisfy the higher standard of eligibility required for
    withholding of removal.” With respect to CAT, the BIA
    8               BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    found no clear error in the IJ’s determination that Bringas
    failed to show that he will more likely than not be tortured in
    Mexico “by or with the acquiescence” of the Mexican
    government.
    Finally, the BIA rejected Bringas’s argument that his case
    be remanded to the IJ in light of Bringas’s recent HIV
    diagnosis. Bringas’s brief to the BIA explained that, since his
    hearing before the IJ, he had been diagnosed with HIV. He
    argued that “this fact is significant because it now places
    [him] in a more vulnerable position should he be returned to
    Mexico.” The BIA declined to remand Bringas’s case to the
    IJ for further consideration because Bringas had “not
    provided any additional country conditions evidence or
    specific arguments regarding how his status as an HIV
    positive homosexual changes the outcome of his case.” He
    filed a timely Petition for Review of the BIA’s dismissal and
    sought a stay pending review. We granted the stay and now
    deny the petition for review.2
    II
    Bringas argues that the BIA erred in denying his asylum
    and withholding of removal claims. “To be eligible for
    asylum, an alien must demonstrate that he is unable or
    unwilling to return to his home country because of [past]
    persecution or a well-founded fear of [future] persecution on
    account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a
    2
    “We review questions of law in immigration proceedings de novo.”
    Romero-Mendoza v. Holder, 
    665 F.3d 1105
    , 1107 (9th Cir. 2011). We
    review the denials of asylum, withholding of removal, and CAT relief for
    substantial evidence. Garcia-Milian v. Holder, 
    755 F.3d 1026
    , 1031 (9th
    Cir. 2014).
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                            9
    particular social group, or a political opinion.”
    Castro-Martinez v. Holder, 
    674 F.3d 1073
    , 1080 (9th Cir.
    2011) (citing 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42)(A)). The requirements
    for a withholding claim are similar, except that the alien must
    prove a “clear probability” of persecution on account of a
    protected characteristic. 8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3)(A). If a
    petitioner cannot establish his eligibility for asylum, his
    withholding claim necessarily also fails. Zehatye v.
    Gonzales, 
    453 F.3d 1182
    , 1190 (9th Cir. 2006).
    Substantial evidence supports the BIA’s determinations
    that Bringas failed to establish past persecution or a well-
    founded fear of future persecution, and he is thus ineligible
    for asylum. See 
    Castro-Martinez, 674 F.3d at 1080
    (9th Cir.
    2011); I.N.S. v. Elias-Zacarias, 
    502 U.S. 478
    , 481 (1992)
    (quoting 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a)(4)) (noting that we must uphold
    the BIA’s factual findings if “supported by reasonable,
    substantial, and probative evidence on the record considered
    as a whole”).3 Because Bringas failed to meet his burden to
    establish eligibility for asylum, he also fails the higher burden
    required to obtain withholding of removal. 
    Castro-Martinez, 674 F.3d at 1082
    (citing Gomes v. Gonzales, 
    429 F.3d 1264
    ,
    1266 (9th Cir. 2005)).
    3
    We cannot resolve Bringas’s asylum claim on untimeliness grounds
    because the BIA ignored this procedural defect when it “assume[d]
    arguendo that the respondent filed a timely asylum application.” See
    Abebe v. Gonzales, 
    432 F.3d 1037
    , 1041 (9th Cir. 2005) (en banc) (“When
    the BIA has ignored a procedural defect and elected to consider an issue
    on its substantive merits, we cannot then decline to consider the issue
    based upon this procedural defect.”).
    10            BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    A. Past Persecution
    Asylum petitioners may produce evidence of their past
    persecution, which “creates a presumption of a fear of future
    persecution.” Hanna v. Keisler, 
    506 F.3d 933
    , 937 (9th Cir.
    2007); see 8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(b)(1). To establish past
    persecution, Bringas must show (1) that he has suffered harm
    “on the basis of [a] protected ground[]” and (2) that the harm
    was “inflicted either by the government or by individuals or
    groups the government is unable or unwilling to control.”
    
    Castro-Martinez, 674 F.3d at 1080
    . The BIA concluded that
    Bringas failed to satisfy both prongs. We will only address
    the second of these prongs. Even if we thought that the
    record compelled the conclusion that Bringas was abused on
    account of his sexual orientation, Bringas provided
    insufficient evidence that the government was unwilling or
    unable to prevent that abuse.
    Because the sexual abuse Bringas suffered was not
    inflicted by government actors, he must “show that the
    government was unable or unwilling to control his attackers.”
    
    Id. at 1078.
    “In determining whether the government was
    unable or unwilling to control violence committed by private
    parties, the BIA may consider whether the victim reported the
    attacks to the police.” 
    Id. at 1080
    (citing Baballah v.
    Ashcroft, 
    367 F.3d 1067
    , 1078 (9th Cir. 2004)); see 
    id. (“[W]here the
    persecutor is not a state actor, we consider
    whether an applicant reported the incident to police, because
    in such cases a report of this nature may show governmental
    inability to control the actors.”) (quoting Rahimzadeh v.
    Holder, 
    613 F.3d 916
    , 921 (9th Cir. 2010) (internal quotation
    marks omitted)). Nevertheless, petitioners are not required to
    report persecution to the police in order to show that the
    government is unable or unwilling to control their abusers.
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                     11
    
    Id. at 1080
    –81 (“We have never held that any victim, let
    alone a child, is obligated to report a sexual assault to the
    authorities, and we do not do so now.”).
    Where a petitioner does not report the abuse to the
    authorities, however, there is a “gap in proof about how the
    government would have responded,” and the petitioner bears
    the burden to “fill in the gaps” by showing how the
    government would have responded had he reported the abuse.
    
    Id. at 1081
    (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted).
    It is insufficient for a petitioner to state his belief that the
    government would do nothing about a report of abuse.
    Rather, a petitioner may show, “[a]mong other avenues,” that
    “private persecution of a particular sort is widespread and
    well-known but not controlled by the government or . . . that
    others have made reports of similar incidents to no avail.” 
    Id. (quoting Rahimzadeh,
    613 F.3d at 922) (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    We agree with the BIA that Bringas has not met his
    burden to prove the government’s unwillingness to respond.
    The BIA relied on our decision in Castro-Martinez v. Holder,
    
    674 F.3d 1073
    , 1080–81 (9th Cir. 2011), in determining that
    Bringas had not met his burden here. The facts in Bringas’s
    case are very similar to those in Castro-Martinez. In Castro-
    Martinez, Castro, a gay, HIV-positive Mexican man, sought
    asylum on account of a credible history of sexual abuse
    suffered because of his sexual orientation. 
    Id. at 1078–79.
    Castro also had failed to report the abuse to Mexican
    officials, and the BIA ultimately concluded that he had failed
    to demonstrate that “Mexican authorities would have ignored
    the rape of a young child or that authorities were unable to
    provide a child protection against rape.” 
    Id. at 1081
    ; see also
    
    id. at 1079.
    We denied Castro’s petition for review.
    12              BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    Bringas attempts to distinguish Castro-Martinez. He
    argues that while Castro offered nothing more than a
    conclusory statement “that he believed the police would not
    have helped him,” 
    id. at 1081,
    Bringas “provided such gap-
    filling evidence” by giving a reason why he never reported
    his abuse to the Mexican police: He testified that “a couple”
    of his gay friends told him “that they got raped, they got beat
    up, like abuse, and they went to the police [in Veracruz,
    Mexico] and they didn’t do anything” except “laugh [in]
    their faces.”4
    We agree with the dissent that Castro-Martinez left open
    the possibility that Bringas could meet his burden of proving
    that the government was unable or unwilling to control their
    abusers by “showing that others have made reports of similar
    incidents to no avail.” 
    Id. (citation and
    internal quotation
    marks omitted). But we part ways with the dissent’s assertion
    that Castro-Martinez “qualifies” a “gay petitioner . . . for
    asylum” as a matter of course, provided that he submits
    “country reports documenting official persecution on account
    of sexual orientation” and “evidence”—unsubstantiated
    hearsay or otherwise—that “others have made reports of
    similar incidents to no avail.” Dissenting Op. at 38 (quoting
    
    Castro-Martinez, 674 F.3d at 1081
    ). Castro-Martinez sets
    forth no such mechanical formula for obtaining asylum, nor
    4
    Bringas did not provide a clear picture of when he spoke with these
    friends. We know it was at some point “when [he] was living in Kansas,”
    but he lived in Kansas twice. His uncle and cousins abused him from age
    four to twelve. Then, he moved to Kansas with his mother and stepfather
    at age twelve, but five months later, he moved back to Mexico, where the
    abuse continued. At age fourteen, Bringas moved back to Kansas again.
    Thus, Bringas would have heard his friends’ accounts of their abuse in
    Veracruz after at least some (if not all) of Bringas’s own abuse had
    already occurred.
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                     13
    does our holding there support the proposition that any
    evidence of other reports of similar incidents, no matter how
    unreliable, is sufficient to satisfy this “other avenue” of
    establishing that a government is unable or unwilling to
    prevent persecution. Implicit in Castro-Martinez’s holding
    is that, in order for this method of proof to be successful, the
    evidence must be sufficient.
    Here, we agree with the IJ and the BIA that Bringas’s
    evidence was not sufficient. Looking first to the country
    reports Bringas submitted, neither the 2009 nor the 2010
    report mentions any instances of discrimination or
    persecution in his home state of Veracruz, Mexico. Indeed,
    the two reports, produced by the U.S. State Department to
    survey the state of sexual orientation discrimination across a
    country of 122 million people, note only one specific example
    of government persecution on the basis of sexual orientation
    in Mexico. The dissent highlights this incident in detail, but
    does not explain why the IJ reviewing this documentation
    should have concluded that a single example “establish[es]
    that government discrimination . . . persist[s].” Dissenting
    Op. at 34. Nor does the dissent seek to draw any connections
    from this incident, which occurred in 2008, to circumstances
    in Tres Valles, a town nearly 300 miles away.
    Rather, the country reports Bringas provided to the IJ
    highlighted “gay pride marches in cities across the country,”
    the largest drawing 400,000 participants. Additionally, the
    report described the expansion of marriage equality in
    Mexico City, and detailed a ruling from the Mexican
    Supreme Court requiring Mexico’s states to recognize legally
    performed marriages performed elsewhere, a ruling, we note,
    that was made five years before the United States Supreme
    Court reached a similar conclusion. In sum, the country
    14               BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    reports submitted to the IJ simply do not make a persuasive
    case that the Mexican government was unwilling or unable to
    protect Bringas.5
    5
    Seemingly aware that Bringas’s evidence demonstrating government
    discrimination or persecution on the basis of sexual orientation was
    somewhat thin, the dissent instead highlights the ongoing “societal
    discrimination” referenced in the country reports. Dissenting Op. at 33
    (quoting the 2010 country report). While certainly troubling, negative
    social attitudes in one’s home country cannot form the basis for an asylum
    claim. See Ghaly v. I.N.S., 
    58 F.3d 1425
    , 1431 (9th Cir. 1995)
    (“Discrimination . . . as morally reprehensible as it may be, does not
    ordinarily amount to ‘persecution.’”). If that was the case, LGBT
    Americans in many parts of this country, unfortunately, would have a
    valid claim to seek asylum in other parts of the world, including Mexico.
    Indeed, the United Nations recognizes Mexico’s “history of protecting
    asylum-seekers” and notes that it has “long been a signatory of the 1951
    Refugee Convention and its 1967 Protocol.” UNHCR Hails Mexico as
    New Refugee Law Comes Into Force, U.N. HIGH COMM’N FOR REFUGEES
    (Jan. 28, 2011), http://www.unhcr.org/4d42e6ad6.html. In 2011, President
    Felipe Calderón signed new legislation to ensure that Mexico’s asylum
    system conformed to international standards. 
    Id. Three years
    later,
    Mexico adopted the “Brazil Declaration and Plan of Action,” an
    international agreement committed to “the protection of refugees,”
    including “particularly vulnerable groups” like “lesbian, gay, bisexual,
    transgender, and intersex people.” See Brazil Declaration and Plan of
    Action, Dec. 3, 2014, at 8, http://www.acnur.org/t3/fileadmin/scripts/
    doc.php?file=t3/fileadmin/Documentos/BDL/2014/9865. And this year,
    a United Nations report noted that Mexico had established a “specialized
    hate crime prosecution unit[],” developed a “new judicial protocol to
    guide adjudication of cases involving human rights violations on grounds
    of sexual orientation,” implemented specialized training for police
    officers, and officially designated May 17 as “National Day Against
    Homophobia.” See U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights,
    Discrimination & Violence Against Individuals Based on Their Sexual
    Orientation & Gender Identity, ¶¶ 40, 74, U.N. Doc. A/HRC/29/23 (May
    4, 2015), http://www.un.org/en/ga/search/view_doc.asp?symbol=A/
    HRC/29/23&referer=/english/&?Lang=E.
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                           15
    Turning next to Bringas’s testimony, Bringas provided
    very few details about his friends’ negative experiences with
    police in Veracruz. He offered no details about his friends’
    accounts—no names, ages, indication of the nature of their
    relationship to Bringas, information on how or to whom they
    reported their abuse, or any evidence showing that these
    nameless friends actually reported any abuse to the Mexican
    authorities. Even if we could fully credit Bringas’s friends’
    statements, there is no evidence connecting general police
    practices in the state or city of Veracruz with the specific
    police practices in Bringas’s town of Tres Valles.6 Without
    something to suggest that the police in Tres Valles would
    respond in the same way as the police described in Bringas’s
    friends’ reports, we decline his invitation to compel the BIA
    to paint all the police in Veracruz with the same broad brush.
    The dissent resists this conclusion by stating that because
    Bringas’s friends reported discrimination by police in
    Veracruz and “Tres Valles is in the state of Veracruz,” any
    “geographic objection[s]” to Bringas’s evidence must fail.
    Dissenting Op. at 37–38. To draw a parallel, the dissent’s
    argument is that if someone reports discrimination at the
    hands of police in “California,” it would be fair to assume
    that police in San Diego, Eureka, or Santa Barbara would act
    in accordance with that report. We refuse to make this
    6
    We note that the Mexican state of Veracruz supports a population of
    nearly eight million residents divided into more than two hundred distinct
    municipalities. See Perspectiva Estadística Veracruz de Ignacio de la
    Llave, INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE ESTADÍSTICA Y GEOGRAFÍA, Dec. 2011,
    at 9–10, 14, http://www.inegi.org.mx/est/contenidos/espanol/sistemas/
    perspectivas/perspectiva-ver.pdf. The city of Veracruz is roughly eighty
    miles away from Bringas’s town of Tres Valles. See MAPQUEST,
    http://www.mapquest.com/maps?1c=Veracruz&1y=MX&2c=Tres%20
    Valles&2y=MX (last visited Nov. 3, 2015).
    16               BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    unfounded logical leap. The dissent is correct that in light of
    the difficulty of gathering evidence of persecution, we
    “adjust[] the evidentiary requirements” for asylum seekers,
    
    id. at 14
    (quotation marks omitted); we do not, however,
    forego them completely, and reference to vague reports from
    anonymous friends cannot overcome the lack of any
    corroborating evidence.7
    By highlighting the factual gaps in Bringas’s description
    of his friends’ reports, the dissent suggests that we
    inappropriately discount his testimony despite the fact that
    the IJ found his testimony “credible.” See Dissenting Op. at
    36. Not so. We agree that as “a general rule, because the
    Immigration Judge did not render an adverse credibility
    finding, we must accept [Bringas’s] factual testimony as true”
    and that Bringas’s “testimony includes hearsay evidence from
    . . . anonymous friend[s]” that “may not be rejected out-of-
    hand.” Gu v. Gonzales, 
    454 F.3d 1014
    , 1021 (9th Cir. 2006).
    Similarly, we do not challenge the “well established”
    principle, Dissenting Op. at 36, that “hearsay [evidence] is
    admissible in immigration proceedings,” Rojas-Garcia v.
    Ashcroft, 
    339 F.3d 814
    , 823 (9th Cir. 2003).
    7
    The dissent’s citation to Yan Rong Zhao v. Holder, 
    728 F.3d 1144
    (9th
    Cir. 2013), to support its position is inapposite. There, we observed that
    “evidence from the local province, municipality, or other locally defined
    area may be sufficient to show a well-founded fear of persecution;
    respondents are not required to present evidence from their town or city.”
    
    Id. at 1147–48
    (emphasis in original). But at issue in Zhao were family
    planning policies memorialized in a written notice from the “Family
    Planning Office.” 
    Id. at 1146.
    Had Bringas produced roughly comparable
    evidence of Mexico’s, Veracruz’s, or Tres Valles’s policy or practice, we
    would not be having this exchange.
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                     17
    However, these two propositions do not compel the result
    pressed for by the dissent. As we have repeatedly held “the
    absence of an adverse credibility finding does not prevent us
    from considering the relative probative value of hearsay.”
    
    Gu, 454 F.3d at 1021
    ; see also Singh v. Holder, 
    753 F.3d 826
    ,
    835 (9th Cir. 2014); Sharma v. Holder, 
    633 F.3d 865
    , 870–71
    (9th Cir. 2011). Indeed, in Gu, we explained that “statements
    by the out-of-court declarant may be accorded less weight by
    the trier of fact when weighed against non-hearsay 
    evidence.” 454 F.3d at 1021
    . Here, without many details to flesh out the
    context of Bringas’s friends’ hearsay statements, their relative
    probative value is rather low.
    To be clear, we are not, as the dissent charges,
    “discount[ing]” Bringas’s hearsay testimony. Dissenting Op.
    at 36. Nor are we requiring a certain level of “specificity” in
    Bringas’s description of his friends’ out-of-court reports. 
    Id. at 11.
    Instead, we are making what, we think, are common-
    sense observations: A more detailed description should be
    afforded greater weight than a less detailed description, and
    hearsay statements with details that can be corroborated are
    more probative than hearsay statements that do not include
    any verifiable details.
    The dissent’s response to these conclusions brings the
    very problem this hearsay evidence poses into sharp relief.
    In light of Bringas’s hearsay testimony and submitted country
    reports, the dissent chastises the IJ’s statement that “‘we
    certainly do not have any evidence whatsoever’ that Mexican
    authorities were unwilling to protect” Bringas as plainly
    “wrong.” Dissenting Op. at 35. The dissent only quoted the
    IJ in part. Here is the full statement:
    18               BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    [W]e certainly do not have any evidence
    whatsoever that the police in Mexico or the
    authorities do not take any action whatsoever
    to offer some type of protection against the
    abuse of children, sexually, whether the
    sexually abused child is a male or female, or
    whether the abuser is a male or a female.
    (emphasis added).
    The IJ’s finding is quite correct. There is no doubt that
    Bringas did not offer any evidence suggesting that Mexican
    police refused to protect abused children. The submitted
    country reports make no reference to it, and because
    Bringas’s hearsay statement was so lacking in detail, we have
    no idea how old his “friends” were who reported abuse to the
    police in Veracruz. Because Bringas’s testimony was so
    vague, even the dissent’s attempts to bolster its veracity get
    tangled up in its factual shortcomings. Rather, the full
    statement of the IJ only demonstrates how firmly in line the
    IJ and BIA were with this court’s precedent. See Castro-
    
    Martinez, 674 F.3d at 1081
    (affirming the BIA’s reliance on
    the lack of “evidence in the record that Mexican authorities
    would have ignored the rape of a young child or that
    authorities were unable to provide a child protection against
    rape”).8
    8
    The dissent also argues that “[n]either the BIA nor the IJ mentioned
    Bringas-Rodriguez’s testimony about what his friends had told him.”
    Dissenting Op. at 35. True enough. But that does not mean the IJ and the
    BIA did not consider or weigh that evidence. This court has repeatedly
    found that an IJ’s decision is not required “to discuss every piece of
    evidence” presented by a petitioner. Almaghzar v. Gonzales, 
    457 F.3d 915
    , 922 (9th Cir. 2006); see also Cole v. Holder, 
    659 F.3d 762
    , 771 (9th
    Cir. 2011) (“That is not to say that the BIA must discuss each piece of
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                        19
    As the IJ recognized, Bringas’s allegations are not just
    about discrimination against gay and lesbian Mexicans—they
    are about child molestation. Bringas has put forward no
    evidence that Mexico tolerates the sexual abuse of children,
    or that Mexican officials would refuse to protect an abused
    child based on the gender of his or her abusers. Instead,
    substantial evidence supports the BIA’s finding that Bringas
    failed to prove that the government would be unwilling or
    unable to control his abusers, and Bringas’s bare hearsay
    assertions from friends of unknown ages are insufficient to
    overturn the BIA’s contrary conclusion, which was based on
    other evidence in the record. Accordingly, we hold that
    Bringas failed to establish his past persecution and is
    therefore not entitled to a presumption of a well-founded fear
    of future persecution. See 8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(b)(1).
    B. Well-Founded Fear of Future Persecution
    Alternatively, in the absence of evidence of past
    persecution, a petitioner may simply provide evidence of a
    well-founded fear of future persecution. “To establish a
    well-founded fear,” Bringas must show “that his fear of
    persecution is subjectively genuine and objectively
    reasonable.” 
    Castro-Martinez, 674 F.3d at 1082
    (citing
    Ahmed v. Keisler, 
    504 F.3d 1183
    , 1191 (9th Cir. 2007)). “As
    there was no adverse credibility determination, we accept that
    [Bringas’s] fear of future persecution was genuine.” 
    Id. (citing Li
    v. Holder, 
    559 F.3d 1096
    , 1107 (9th Cir. 2009)). In
    order to show that his fear of future persecution was
    “objectively reasonable,” Bringas has two avenues. He may
    demonstrate: (1) “that he was a member of a disfavored
    evidence submitted.”). Here, Bringas’s evidence is not sufficient to
    compel a contrary result.
    20             BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    group against which there was a systematic pattern or practice
    of persecution,” or (2) that he belongs to a “disfavored group”
    and has an individualized risk of being “singled out for
    persecution.” Id.; Sael v. Ashcroft, 
    386 F.3d 922
    , 925 (9th
    Cir. 2004); see 8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(b)(2)(iii).
    Bringas’s “pattern or practice of persecution” argument
    lacks merit, and he forfeited his argument that he will be
    “singled out” as a member of a “disfavored group” when he
    failed to raise it before the BIA.
    1. Pattern or Practice of Persecution
    Bringas argues that there is a pattern or practice of
    persecution of gay men in Mexico. Despite some evidence of
    violence against gays in Mexico, Castro-Martinez forecloses
    this argument. In Castro-Martinez, we rejected the claim that
    “the Mexican government systematically harmed gay men
    and failed to protect them from 
    violence.” 674 F.3d at 1082
    .
    Although we acknowledged evidence of discrimination and
    attacks, we explained that country conditions reports showed
    that “the Mexican government’s efforts to prevent violence
    and discrimination against homosexuals. . . . ha[d] increased
    in recent years,” and, we noted, “Mexican law prohibits
    several types of discrimination, including bias based on
    sexuality, and it requires federal agencies to promote
    tolerance.” 
    Id. (recognizing the
    Mexican government’s 2005
    “radio campaign to fight homophobia” and noting the various
    country reports’ reflections of the “ongoing improvement of
    police treatment of gay men and efforts to prosecute
    homophobic crimes”).
    Here, the BIA made findings similar to those in Castro-
    Martinez and found that the situation for gay men in Mexico
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                          21
    is improving. It first cited Bromfield v. Mukasey, 
    543 F.3d 1071
    , 1078 (9th Cir. 2008), a case where we held that there
    was a pattern or practice of persecution against gay men in
    Jamaica—a country which criminalized homosexual conduct
    and prosecuted individuals under the law; the evidence there
    also showed numerous cases of violence and widespread
    brutality against persons based on sexual orientation. Then
    the BIA turned to Bringas’s case and stated that unlike
    Bromfield:
    [T]he record here does not demonstrate
    widespread brutality against homosexuals or
    that there is any criminalization of
    homosexual conduct in Mexico. . . . To the
    contrary, the record shows that Mexico has
    taken numerous positive steps to address the
    rights of homosexuals, including legalizing
    gay marriage in Mexico City and prosecuting
    human rights violations against homosexuals.
    Bringas offers no evidence showing that there has been a
    change in conditions in Mexico since we decided Castro-
    Martinez. Accordingly, we are bound by our holding in
    Castro-Martinez, and the BIA’s determination that no pattern
    or practice of persecution exists is supported by substantial
    evidence.9
    9
    Bringas argues that the BIA applied the wrong standard to his pattern-
    or-practice claim because it cited to withholding cases in discussing the
    asylum claim. But, as the government noted and as Bringas acknowledges
    in his reply, the withholding and asylum standards do not differ in any
    relevant respect as to his pattern-or-practice claim.
    22               BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    2. Singled Out for Persecution as a Member of a
    Disfavored Group
    Even without evidence of a pattern or practice of
    persecution, Bringas could still establish a well-founded fear
    if he could demonstrate a particularized risk that he will be
    singled out for persecution if returned to Mexico. Bringas
    argues that he has been singled out in the past for
    mistreatment for his membership in the disfavored group of
    homosexual men, so he “has a ‘strong’ individualized risk of
    future harm.” The government argues that Bringas forfeited
    this claim when he failed to raise it before the BIA. We agree
    that Bringas failed to exhaust this argument before the BIA.
    Bringas failed to argue that he would be singled out for
    persecution as a member of a disfavored group in his brief to
    the BIA.10 He consequently has forfeited this claim. See
    Abebe v. Mukasey, 
    554 F.3d 1203
    , 1208 (9th Cir. 2009) (en
    banc) (per curiam) (holding that an alien is “deemed to have
    exhausted only those issues he raised and argued in his brief
    before the BIA”); see also Alvarado v. Holder, 
    759 F.3d 1121
    , 1126 n.4, 1128 (9th Cir. 2014) (“Although [a]
    petitioner need not . . . raise [his] precise argument in
    10
    In his brief to the BIA, Bringas argued that the IJ erred in failing to
    find that Bringas had a well-founded fear of persecution, stating that a
    well-founded fear can be shown by a pattern or practice of persecution.
    The sections of our cases that he cited concerned only pattern-or-practice
    evidence. One of the cases he cited, Wakkary v. Holder, 
    558 F.3d 1049
    ,
    1061 (9th Cir. 2009), discussed the singled out/disfavored group analysis
    at length, but not on the page that Bringas cited. He never argued that he
    would be singled out in the future as a member of a disfavored group. The
    BIA expressly recognized that Bringas failed to make this argument,
    observing in a footnote that Bringas “does not argue that his claim falls
    within the ‘disfavored group’ analysis espoused by the Ninth Circuit.”
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                       23
    administrative proceedings, . . . [he] must specify which
    issues form the basis of the appeal.”) (alterations and
    emphasis in original) (citations and internal quotation marks
    omitted). He argues that by raising his similar claim of a
    pattern or practice of anti-gay persecution, he necessarily
    exhausted his argument before the BIA. Not so. The pattern
    or practice argument is separate and distinct from the singled
    out/disfavored group argument, and we analyze them
    separately. E.g., Wakkary v. Holder, 
    558 F.3d 1049
    , 1061–62
    (9th Cir. 2009). Unlike the pattern or practice analysis, the
    singled out/disfavored group analysis requires proof of an
    individualized risk of harm.                See 8 C.F.R.
    § 1208.13(b)(2)(iii); see also 
    Castro-Martinez, 674 F.3d at 1082
    ; 
    Wakkary, 558 F.3d at 1060
    –62; 
    Sael, 386 F.3d at 925
    .
    Our holding in Castro-Martinez forecloses Bringas’s
    “pattern or practice of persecution” argument, and he failed
    to exhaust his argument that he will be “singled out” as a
    member of a “disfavored group.”           Bringas has not
    demonstrated a well-founded fear of future persecution, and,
    accordingly, we deny the petition with respect to asylum and
    withholding of removal.
    III
    Bringas’s claim under the CAT fails because he did not
    show that he would more likely than not be tortured by or
    with the acquiescence of the Mexican government if he is
    removed to Mexico. See Garcia-Milian v. Holder, 
    755 F.3d 1026
    , 1031 (9th Cir. 2014). “To qualify for CAT relief, an
    alien must establish that ‘it is more likely than not that he . . .
    would be tortured if removed to the proposed country of
    removal.’” 
    Id. at 1033
    (quoting 8 C.F.R. § 208.16(c)(2)).
    The BIA found “no clear error in the [IJ’s] determination that
    24            BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    [Bringas] did not demonstrate that he will more likely than
    not be tortured in Mexico by or with the acquiescence . . . of
    an official of the Mexican government.”
    Even if Bringas’s past experiences constituted torture, the
    BIA is not required “to presume that [he] would be tortured
    again because of his own credible testimony that he had been
    subjected to torture as a . . . child.” Konou v. Holder,
    
    750 F.3d 1120
    , 1125 (9th Cir. 2014). This is especially true
    where “the factors that precipitated [Bringas’s] mistreatment
    as a child would be less relevant to a ‘selfsufficient
    homosexual adult.’” 
    Id. at 1126.
    Here, the IJ determined that
    Bringas could likely relocate to a different part of Mexico,
    such as Mexico City, where the population appears more
    accepting of gays, and the IJ noted the complete lack of
    evidence indicating that the Mexican government was aware
    of any torture taking place. The IJ concluded that Bringas’s
    reports showing “instances of mistreatment of homosexuals
    in Mexico” were not “sufficient to establish the burden of
    proof requirement of a more likely than not possibility of
    torture.” The same evidence that supported the BIA’s
    dismissal of the pattern-or-practice claim also supports the
    IJ’s and BIA’s conclusions that Bringas failed to establish a
    likelihood of torture: Conditions in Mexico are insufficiently
    dangerous for gay people to constitute a likelihood of
    government-initiated or -sanctioned torture. See Castro-
    
    Martinez, 674 F.3d at 1082
    . And because substantial
    evidence supported the BIA’s denial of CAT relief, we deny
    Bringas’s petition with respect to his claim under the CAT.
    IV
    Finally, the BIA did not abuse its discretion in finding
    that Bringas’s HIV diagnosis, standing alone, does not require
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                     25
    a remand to the IJ. In Bringas’s brief to the BIA, he moved
    to remand the case because, not long after the IJ’s decision
    issued, he discovered that he is HIV positive. The BIA
    denied his motion to remand.
    Denials of motions to remand are reviewed for abuse of
    discretion. Malhi v. I.N.S., 
    336 F.3d 989
    , 993 (9th Cir. 2003).
    “The BIA abuses its discretion if its decision is ‘arbitrary,
    irrational, or contrary to law.’” Romero-Ruiz v. Mukasey,
    
    538 F.3d 1057
    , 1062 (9th Cir. 2008) (quoting Lopez–Galarza
    v. I.N.S., 
    99 F.3d 954
    , 960 (9th Cir. 1996)); Konstantinova v.
    I.N.S., 
    195 F.3d 528
    , 529 (9th Cir. 1999) (“The BIA abuses
    its discretion when it fails to offer a reasoned explanation for
    its decision, distorts or disregards important aspects of the
    alien’s claim.”).
    The BIA gave a rational explanation for its denial of
    Bringas’s motion to remand based on his HIV diagnosis. In
    requesting a remand, Bringas merely noted in one short
    paragraph at the end of his brief to the BIA that his diagnosis
    is a “significant [fact] because it now places [him] in a more
    vulnerable position should he be returned to Mexico.” The
    BIA rejected this argument because Bringas did not provide
    “any additional country conditions evidence or specific
    arguments regarding how his status as an HIV positive
    homosexual changes the outcome of his case.” The BIA also
    noted that the lack of access to HIV drugs is a problem
    suffered not only by homosexuals but by the Mexican
    population as a whole. See 
    Castro-Martinez, 674 F.3d at 1082
    . Because the BIA offered a reasoned explanation and
    its decision was neither arbitrary nor irrational, we hold that
    the BIA did not abuse its discretion in denying Bringas’s
    motion to remand.
    26            BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    V
    In sum, we hold that substantial evidence supported the
    BIA’s denial of Bringas’s claims for asylum, withholding of
    removal, and relief under the CAT. We also conclude that
    the BIA did not abuse its discretion in denying Bringas’s
    motion to remand.
    Concurrently, we grant the motion of the Public Law
    Center, Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund, the
    National Immigrant Justice Center, the Center for HIV Law
    and Policy, HIV Law Project, Immigration Equality,
    Disability Rights Legal Center, and the Asian & Pacific
    Islander Wellness Center to file a brief as Amici Curiae in
    support of Bringas. We deny Bringas’s motion to take
    judicial notice of facts beyond the administrative record. See
    8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(4)(A); Singh v. Ashcroft, 
    393 F.3d 903
    ,
    905–06 (9th Cir. 2004).
    PETITION DENIED.
    W. FLETCHER, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    Carlos Bringas-Rodriguez, a Mexican national, testified
    credibly that throughout his childhood in the town of Tres
    Valles in the state of Veracruz he was sexually abused by his
    uncle, his cousins, and a neighbor. His abusers told him they
    were abusing him because he was gay, and they referred to
    him using homophobic slurs. His abusers also punched him
    and beat him, and they threatened to hurt him and his
    grandmother if he told anyone about the abuse.
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                    27
    Bringas-Rodriguez left Mexico twice. The first time, he
    came to the United States at age twelve and lived briefly with
    his mother and step-father in Kansas. While he was in
    Kansas, some of his gay Mexican friends told him that they
    had reported similar abuse to Mexican police officers but that
    the officers had laughed at them, refused to provide help, and
    told them they deserved the abuse they received. The second
    time, he came to the United States at age fourteen. He has
    not returned to Mexico.
    Bringas-Rodriguez never reported to Mexican police the
    abuse he suffered. He testified credibly before the
    Immigration Judge (“IJ”) that he did not do so because he
    believed a report would be pointless.
    The panel majority denies Bringas-Rodriguez’s asylum
    claim. The majority relies primarily on Castro-Martinez v.
    Holder, 
    674 F.3d 1073
    (9th Cir. 2011), a decision in which
    we denied a similar asylum claim. But Castro-Martinez was
    a carefully circumscribed decision. In Castro-Martinez we
    stated that, even if a petitioner himself had not reported
    abuse, asylum could be warranted if the petitioner showed
    that Mexican officials were unwilling to help other gay
    victims of abuse.
    I have growing doubts about the correctness of
    Castro-Martinez, an opinion with which I agreed when it was
    issued. However, even to the extent Castro-Martinez should
    remain the law of this circuit, I respectfully dissent from the
    panel’s conclusion that it forecloses relief in this case.
    28           BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    I. Past Persecution in Mexico
    Carlos Bringas-Rodriguez began to realize his same-sex
    attractions when he was six. As early as ten years old, he
    considered himself gay. As a child, Bringas-Rodriguez was
    physically abused by his father, who told him, “Act like a
    boy, you’re not a woman.” His father abused Bringas-
    Rodriguez’s mother and siblings as well, but he abused
    Bringas-Rodriguez the most because he was “different.”
    Bringas-Rodriguez was also abused and raped by an
    uncle, his cousins, and a neighbor. Bringas-Rodriguez’s
    uncle began to sexually abuse him when he was just four
    years old, and his uncle abused him every two or three
    months thereafter. After Bringas-Rodriguez turned seven, his
    cousins sexually abused him on a monthly basis. Bringas-
    Rodriguez’s uncle, cousins, and a neighbor raped him at
    home when his mother was not there, and sometimes dragged
    him into nearby bushes in the neighborhood. Bringas-
    Rodriguez’s abusers told him that they would hurt him and
    his grandmother if he told anyone, and, on a few occasions,
    they punched him. On one occasion, when Bringas-
    Rodriguez resisted one cousin’s attempt to rape him, the
    cousin beat him severely.
    When Bringas-Rodriguez was eight, his uncle told him
    that the reason for the ongoing abuse was Bringas-
    Rodriguez’s sexuality. His uncle was not alone in his anti-
    gay views. Bringas-Rodriguez testified, “[my abusers] never
    called me by my name but called me fag, fucking faggot,
    queer and laughed about it.”
    Bringas-Rodriguez first came to the United States in
    2002, when he was twelve. He lived in Kansas with his
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                   29
    mother and step-father for five months, and continued to hide
    his sexuality and history of sexual abuse. When Bringas-
    Rodriguez returned to Mexico to live with his grandmother
    after his stay in Kansas, the abuse resumed unabated.
    Bringas-Rodriguez’s uncle sexually abused him again.
    Bringas-Rodriguez’s cousins referred to him as their “sex
    toy” and resumed their abuse. A neighbor raped him. The
    neighbor’s assault left Bringas-Rodriguez with bruises all
    over his body. Because of the continuing abuse and rape,
    Bringas-Rodriguez fled Mexico, returning to the United
    States in 2004 at age fourteen.
    Bringas-Rodriguez never told the Mexican police about
    the abuse he had suffered. Even though he wanted protection
    from his abusers, Bringas-Rodriguez believed any complaints
    to the police would have been futile. He testified before the
    IJ that, while he was living in Kansas, two Mexican gay
    friends “told me that they got raped, they got beat up, like
    abuse, and they went to the police and they didn’t do
    anything. They even laugh [in] their faces.” In a declaration
    submitted to the Immigration Court, Bringas-Rodriguez wrote
    that he feared that the Mexican police “would laugh at me
    and tell me I deserved what I got because I was gay. This
    happened to friends of mine in Veracruz.”
    II. Persecution the Government is Unable or Unwilling to
    Control
    To establish his eligibility for asylum, Bringas-Rodriguez
    “must demonstrate that he is unable or unwilling to return to
    his home country because of persecution or a well-founded
    fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality,
    membership in a particular social group, or a political
    opinion.” 
    Castro-Martinez, 674 F.3d at 1080
    (citing 8 U.S.C.
    30            BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    § 1101(a)(42)(A)). Bringas-Rodriguez must also show the
    harm was “inflicted either by the government or by
    individuals or groups the government is unable or unwilling
    to control.” 
    Id. A. Persecution
    on the Basis of a Protected Ground
    We have held that gay men in Mexico “can constitute a
    social group for the purpose of an asylum claim.” Id.; see
    also Boer-Sedano v. Gonzales, 
    418 F.3d 1082
    , 1087–89 (9th
    Cir. 2005). Undisputed evidence in the record shows that
    Bringas-Rodriguez was abused, over a sustained period, for
    being gay. Bringas-Rodriguez testified that his uncle told
    him he was being abused because he was gay. Bringas-
    Rodriguez also testified that his uncle, cousins, and neighbor
    “never called me by my name but called me fag, fucking
    faggot, queer and laughed about it.” Every person who
    abused Bringas-Rodriguez throughout his childhood either
    told him that he was being abused for being gay or referred to
    him using homophobic slurs.
    B. Government Unable or Unwilling to Control the Harm
    The question at the heart of this case is thus not whether
    Bringas-Rodriguez was abused because he was gay. Rather,
    it is whether Bringas-Rodriguez can show that the Mexican
    government was unable or unwilling to control his abusers.
    I agree with the panel majority that this question is currently
    controlled by Castro-Martinez, an opinion I joined four years
    ago. But I part ways with the majority as to the meaning and
    application of Castro-Martinez.
    In Castro-Martinez, we discussed different methods by
    which an asylum seeker could demonstrate a government’s
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                    31
    inability or unwillingness to control harm inflicted by private
    parties. For example, we stated that “the BIA may consider
    whether the victim reported the attacks to the police.”
    
    Castro-Martinez, 674 F.3d at 1080
    . While such a report can
    suffice to demonstrate a government’s unwillingness to
    control the persecution, a report is not necessary. “We have
    never held that any victim, let alone a child, is obligated to
    report a sexual assault to the authorities, and we do not do so
    now.” 
    Id. at 1081
    . But if the victim does not report to the
    police, there is a “gap in proof about how the government
    would have responded.” 
    Id. (alterations omitted)
    (quoting
    Rahimzadeh v. Holder, 
    613 F.3d 916
    , 922 (9th Cir. 2010)).
    In such cases, the petitioner bears the burden of filling that
    gap. 
    Id. We were
    careful in Castro-Martinez to list “other
    avenues” through which a petitioner could carry this burden.
    
    Id. Specifically, we
    identified four additional ways in which
    an asylum seeker like Bringas-Rodriguez could show that his
    government was unwilling or unable to prevent persecution
    by non-governmental parties. He could:
    1. “establish[] that private persecution of a
    particular sort is widespread and well-
    known but not controlled by the
    government”;
    2. “show[] that others have made reports of
    similar incidents to no avail”;
    3. “demonstrat[e] that a country’s laws or
    customs effectively deprive the petitioner
    of any meaningful recourse to
    governmental protection”; or
    32            BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    4. “convincingly establish that going to the
    authorities would have been futile or
    would have subjected the individual to
    further abuse.”
    
    Id. at 1081
    (alterations omitted) (quoting 
    Rahimzadeh, 613 F.3d at 921
    –22). After reviewing the facts in Castro-
    Martinez, we concluded that the petitioner did not present
    sufficient evidence to show that Mexican officials would have
    been unable or unwilling to prevent his abuse. 
    Id. The panel
    majority here concludes that Castro-Martinez
    compels denial of Bringas-Rodriguez’s petition because
    “[t]he facts in Bringas’s case are very similar to those in
    Castro-Martinez.” Op. at 11. The facts are similar in one
    respect. In both cases, petitioners introduced United States
    State Department country reports describing police violence
    against homosexuals. In Castro-Martinez, the petitioner
    “submitted country reports documenting societal
    discrimination against homosexuals in Mexico and attacks on
    gay men committed by private 
    parties.” 674 F.3d at 1079
    .
    “He also presented evidence of widespread police corruption
    in Mexico and incidents of police violence against
    homosexuals.” 
    Id. We concluded
    that these reports, without
    more, did not “compel the conclusion that the police would
    have disregarded or harmed a male child who reported being
    the victim of homosexual rape by another male.” 
    Id. at 1081
    .
    In the case now before us, Bringas-Rodriguez submitted
    similar country reports. Because Bringas-Rodriguez left
    Mexico in 2004 and has not returned since, the relevant
    period for purposes of our analysis is the years before 2004.
    Bringas-Rodriguez submitted country reports from 2009 and
    2010. Although the 2009 and 2010 reports post-date the
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                  33
    period at issue in this case, they provide probative
    information. Both country reports state that in Mexico
    discrimination and persecution based on sexual orientation —
    including discrimination and persecution by governmental
    officials — had lessened over time. But they also state that
    discrimination and persecution remained serious problems,
    five and six years after Bringas-Rodriguez left the country.
    The 2009 country report states, “While homosexual
    conduct experienced growing social acceptance, the National
    Center to Prevent and Control HIV/AIDS stated that
    discrimination persisted.” The 2010 country report similarly
    notes that, according to a governmental agency and a
    nonprofit organization, “societal discrimination based on
    sexual orientation” remained “common.” The 2009 report
    continues:
    One of the most prominent cases of
    discrimination and violence against gay men
    was that of Agustin Humberto Estrada
    Negrete, a teacher and gay activist from
    Ecatepec, Mexico State.         In 2007 he
    participated in a gay rights march wearing a
    dress and high heels. According to the NGO
    Asilegal, soon after the march, Estrada began
    receiving threatening telephone calls and
    verbal and physical attacks. In 2008 he was
    fired from the school for children with
    disabilities where he worked. After his
    dismissal, he and a group of supporters began
    lobbying the government to reinstate him;
    when they went to the governor’s palace to
    attend a meeting with state officials in May,
    police beat him and his supporters. The next
    34            BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    day he was taken to prison, threatened, and
    raped. Although he was released, Estrada
    continued to face harassment by state
    authorities.
    (Emphasis added.) Through these reports, Bringas-Rodriguez
    established that government discrimination on the basis of
    sexuality in Mexico persisted, even years after he fled the
    country.
    While Castro-Martinez and Bringas-Rodriguez both
    produced relevant country reports detailing the Mexican
    government’s continued discrimination against homosexuals,
    the facts of their cases are dissimilar in a critical respect.
    Unlike Castro-Martinez, Bringas-Rodriguez provided
    evidence that “others have made reports of similar incidents
    to no avail.”       
    Castro-Martinez, 674 F.3d at 1081
    .
    Specifically, Bringas-Rodriguez presented evidence that
    while living in Kansas, gay Mexican friends told him they
    had reported similar sexual abuse and that the Mexican police
    in Veracruz had refused to take action. Bringas-Rodriguez’s
    oral testimony was brief, but quite clear:
    Q: You can go tell police if you return to
    Mexico and suffer abuse, you could tell the
    police. . . . Couldn’t you do that?
    A: They will do nothing.
    Q: How do you know that?
    A: I know that because when I was living in
    Kansas, couple of my friends told me that
    they got raped, they got beat up, like abuse,
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                   35
    and they went to the police and they didn’t do
    anything. They even laugh [in] their faces.
    Bringas-Rodriguez provided similar testimony in his written
    declaration, explaining that, if he reported his abuse, the
    police “would laugh at me and tell me I deserved what I got
    because I was gay. This happened to friends of mine in
    Veracruz.”
    Neither the BIA nor the IJ mentioned Bringas-
    Rodriguez’s testimony about what his friends had told him.
    In fact, the IJ, whose decision the BIA affirmed, stated in
    denying asylum that “we certainly do not have any evidence
    whatsoever” that Mexican authorities were unwilling to
    protect a child like Bringas-Rodriguez. The IJ’s statement is
    wrong. It is undisputed that Bringas-Rodriguez submitted
    probative country reports, and that he provided both oral and
    written testimony that his friends had reported similar sexual
    abuse to police in Veracruz, and the police refused to take
    action.
    Despite this evidence, the panel majority rejects Bringas-
    Rodriguez’s asylum claim. To rebut Bringas-Rodriguez’s
    country reports, the majority asserts that governmental
    discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation in Mexico
    has lessened in recent years. Op. at 13. Although the
    relevant time period for purposes of Bringas-Rodriguez’s
    claim is before 2004, the majority cites evidence from the
    past few years, even citing a report published only this year.
    Op. at 14 n.5. This evidence has limited utility. We
    recognized in a recently published opinion that while Mexico
    has made some advances in its treatment of homosexuals,
    there has actually been “an increase in violence against gay,
    lesbian, and transgender individuals during the years in which
    36             BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    greater legal protections have been extended to these
    communities” and that “there is a continued failure to
    prosecute the perpetrators of homophobic hate crimes
    throughout Mexico.” Avendano-Hernandez v. Lynch,
    
    800 F.3d 1072
    , 1081–82 (9th Cir. 2015) (emphasis in
    original).
    The panel majority then concludes that Bringas-
    Rodriguez’s additional evidence — the statements of his
    friends — is also not sufficient. The majority’s primary
    complaint is that the evidence lacks specificity. Op. at 15.
    To support this conclusion, the majority lists a number of
    details that, in its view, are crucially absent from Bringas-
    Rodriguez’s testimony. These details include the names of
    his two friends, their ages, “the nature of their relationship to
    Bringas,” “how or to whom they reported their abuse,” or
    “any evidence showing that these nameless friends actually
    reported any abuse to the Mexican authorities.” Op. at 15.
    But Bringas-Rodriguez did provide a number of these details.
    Bringas-Rodriguez explained the nature of the relationship:
    they were his Mexican friends who had recounted to him in
    Kansas their experience in Veracruz. While he did not state
    their exact ages, a reasonable inference, given that they were
    his friends, is that they were his age contemporaries. He also
    testified as to whom the friends had reported their abuse:
    Mexican police in Veracruz. Finally, he provided evidence
    that the friends had made the reports: his credible testimony
    about what they had told him.
    The panel majority also partially discounts the statements
    of Bringas-Rodriguez’s friends because they are hearsay. Op.
    at 12, 16–17. However, it is well established in our case law
    that hearsay — even hearsay upon hearsay — is proper
    evidence in asylum proceedings. Ramirez-Alejandre v.
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                    37
    Ashcroft, 
    319 F.3d 365
    , 370 (9th Cir. 2003) (en banc).
    Hearsay is sometimes (though only sometimes) less probative
    and reliable than direct evidence. But because of the
    particular difficulties asylum seekers have in obtaining direct
    evidence, we are more willing to credit hearsay in asylum
    cases than in conventional litigation. See, e.g., Cordon-
    Garcia v. I.N.S., 
    204 F.3d 985
    , 992–93 (9th Cir. 2000)
    (holding “Petitioner’s testimonial evidence,” which consisted
    of “hearsay, and, at times, hearsay upon hearsay,” sufficient
    to support the presumption that petitioner had a well-founded
    fear of future persecution).
    The majority also suggests that Bringas-Rodriguez’s
    testimony is suspect because much, perhaps all, of the abuse
    Bringas-Rodriguez suffered had already taken place by the
    time he talked to his friends in Kansas. See Op. at 12 n.4.
    But this is irrelevant. The question at issue is not what
    Bringas-Rodriguez knew about the police when he was a
    child. Rather, the question is whether the Mexican police
    would have helped Bringas-Rodriguez if he had reported his
    abuse to them. An asylum seeker can present probative
    evidence that he or she obtained only after escaping from
    persecution. See, e.g., 
    Cordon-Garcia, 204 F.3d at 992
    –93
    (relying upon petitioner’s evidence, obtained only after the
    petitioner departed her home country, to find that petitioner
    established a well-founded fear of future persecution);
    Gjerazi v. Gonzales, 
    435 F.3d 800
    , 809 (7th Cir. 2006)
    (holding the IJ erred in excluding documentary evidence of
    persecution solely because the evidence was only acquired
    after the petitioner arrived in the United States).
    Finally, the majority makes geographic objections to
    Bringas-Rodriguez’s evidence. For example, it discounts
    Bringas-Rodriguez’s country reports because neither report
    38            BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    “mentions any instances of discrimination or persecution in
    his home state of Veracruz.” Op. at 13. This objection
    ignores the fact that Bringas-Rodriguez’s additional evidence
    — the statements of his friends about their experiences in
    Veracruz — corroborates the country reports and
    demonstrates that discrimination against homosexuals
    extends to Bringas-Rodriguez’s home state. Similarly, the
    majority objects that Bringas-Rodriguez’s evidence does not
    discuss “the specific police practices in Bringas’s town of
    Tres Valles.” Op. at 15. But Tres Valles is in the state of
    Veracruz.     Our Court has “adjusted the evidentiary
    requirements” for asylum seekers in light of “the serious
    difficulty with which asylum applicants are faced in their
    attempts to prove persecution.” Malty v. Ashcroft, 
    381 F.3d 942
    , 947 (9th Cir. 2004) (quoting 
    Cordon-Garcia, 204 F.3d at 993
    ). Accordingly, we do not require a petitioner to
    provide evidence of the specific practices of his hometown
    when he presents evidence of statewide or even countrywide
    persecution. See, e.g., Yan Rong Zhao v. Holder, 
    728 F.3d 1144
    , 1147–48 (9th Cir. 2013) (finding the BIA erred in
    requiring a Chinese petitioner to provide evidence of the
    government policy in her town and noting that “[n]either the
    BIA nor this court has previously required municipal-level
    proof when the petitioner presents province-level proof”).
    In sum, we wrote in Castro-Martinez that a gay petitioner
    qualifies for asylum when he provides country reports
    documenting official persecution on account of sexual
    orientation, supplemented by evidence that “others have made
    reports of similar incidents to no 
    avail.” 674 F.3d at 1081
    .
    We denied relief in Castro-Martinez because the petitioner
    had not, in the view of the panel, provided such supplemental
    evidence. In this case, Bringas-Rodriguez has provided the
    additional evidence that was lacking in Castro-Martinez. He
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                     39
    testified that his Mexican friends (“others”) had told police in
    his home state of Veracruz that they were abused because of
    their sexuality (“had made reports of similar incidents”) and
    that the police did nothing (“to no avail”).
    III. Revisiting Castro-Martinez
    As noted above, I have growing doubts about our decision
    in Castro-Martinez. As the panel majority writes, the facts of
    Castro-Martinez resemble this case. In both cases, a gay,
    HIV-positive man sought asylum based on a long history of
    childhood abuse suffered in Mexico because of his sexuality.
    
    Id. at 1078–79.
    Both victims failed to report their abuse to
    Mexican officials. 
    Id. at 1080
    . And both victims provided
    country reports describing anti-gay sentiments and
    persecution by Mexican authorities. The BIA denied asylum
    in both cases, on the ground that the victims failed to show
    that the Mexican government was unable or unwilling to
    control the abusers. 
    Id. at 1081
    .
    We denied Castro-Martinez’s petition for review. We
    concluded that there was “no evidence in the record that
    Mexican authorities would have ignored the rape of a young
    child or that authorities were unable to provide a child
    protection against rape.” 
    Id. We wrote
    that Castro-Martinez
    offered nothing more than his belief that “the police would
    not have helped him.” 
    Id. “[S]uch a
    statement, without
    more, is not sufficient to fill the gaps in the record regarding
    how the Mexican government would have responded had
    Castro reported his attacks.” 
    Id. If the
    only evidence Castro-Martinez offered had been his
    unsupported belief, I would continue to think our decision in
    that case was correct. Asylum seekers must show that “the
    40            BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    government concerned was either unwilling or unable to
    control the persecuting individual or group.” Matter of
    Pierre, 15 I. & N. Dec. 461, 462 (BIA 1975).
    Unsubstantiated assertions that the government is unwilling
    or unable to control a persecutor do not suffice to carry that
    burden.
    Castro-Martinez, however, did offer evidence to show
    Mexican officials would not have helped him. As we wrote
    in our opinion, “Castro also stated that he was afraid of
    contacting the police because they would likely abuse him on
    account of his homosexuality. Castro presented country
    reports documenting police corruption and participation in
    torture, abuse, and trafficking, as well as incidents of police
    harassment of gay men.” 
    Castro-Martinez, 674 F.3d at 1081
    .
    Despite this, we held that Castro-Martinez still had not
    carried his burden because “none of these reports compel the
    conclusion that the police would have disregarded or harmed
    a male child who reported being the victim of homosexual
    rape by another male.” 
    Id. I have
    come to believe that Castro-Martinez demands an
    unwarranted level of specificity from country reports. In
    rejecting Castro-Martinez’s claim, we held that statements in
    country reports that Mexican police harassed homosexuals
    and ignored their claims of abuse was not enough. We
    required, instead, a statement in the report focusing
    specifically on gay children — a statement that Mexican
    police ignored reports by gay male children who were abused
    by other males. The panel majority here does the same. It
    discounts Bringas-Rodriguez’s evidence of governmental
    discrimination against homosexuals generally, and instead
    affirms the IJ’s conclusion that Bringas-Rodriguez failed to
    provide evidence showing that the Mexican government
    BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH                     41
    would not have responded to “the abuse of children.” Op. at
    13–14, 18 (emphasis in original).
    Given the nature of crimes of sexual violence against
    children and the difficulty children face in reporting them,
    Castro-Martinez and the panel majority require evidence that
    few victims can supply. Many children will not report these
    crimes for some of the same reasons Bringas-Rodriguez did
    not. Abusers often threaten their victims with harm if they
    tell anyone, and they sometimes make good on those threats.
    Children also have difficulty getting information to the
    police, especially if family members or neighbors — the
    people who might report the abuse — are the abusers. By
    discounting country reports that describe discrimination
    against homosexuals generally and instead requiring reports
    specifically addressing gay children, Castro-Martinez
    effectively requires abused children to report to the police,
    either to provide relevant evidence for the country reports or
    to establish the requisites for asylum in their own cases.
    Conclusion
    We have repeatedly held that victims, especially child
    victims, of private persecution need not report their abuse to
    obtain asylum. 
    Castro-Martinez, 674 F.3d at 1081
    (“We have
    never held that any victim, let alone a child, is obligated to
    report a sexual assault to the authorities, and we do not do so
    now.”); 
    Rahimzadeh, 613 F.3d at 921
    (“The reporting of
    private persecution to the authorities is not . . . an essential
    requirement for establishing government unwillingness or
    inability to control attackers.”); Ornelas-Chavez v. Gonzales,
    
    458 F.3d 1052
    , 1057 (9th Cir. 2006). Yet, Castro-Martinez
    and today’s decision effectively require just that. In Castro-
    Martinez, by demanding unrealistic specificity from country
    42              BRINGAS-RODRIGUEZ V. LYNCH
    reports, we effectively eliminated those reports as a method
    of showing a foreign government’s inability or unwillingness
    to prevent sexual abuse of gay children. In today’s opinion,
    we effectively eliminate another avenue for obtaining relief.
    In Castro-Martinez, we wrote that evidence that “others have
    made reports of similar incidents to no avail” could be used
    to show a government’s inability or unwillingness to prevent
    private harm. Bringas-Rodriguez presented precisely such
    evidence, and he presented it in the only form — hearsay —
    likely to be available to someone in his position.
    Bringas-Rodriguez, like most abused children, did not
    report to the police the sexual abuse he suffered. Thus, when
    seeking aslyum, Bringas-Rodriguez had to rely on other
    evidence of the Mexican government’s inability or
    unwillingness to protect him. He provided 2009 and 2010
    country reports describing police indifference to, and
    participation in, discrimination and violence against
    homosexuals. He also testified that his gay friends told him
    that when they reported to the Mexican police in his home
    state of Veracruz similar abuse they had suffered, the police
    laughed in their faces and told them that they deserved the
    abuse they were receiving. That should be enough.
    I respectfully dissent.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 13-72682

Citation Numbers: 805 F.3d 1171, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 20051

Judges: Fletcher, Bybee, Settle

Filed Date: 11/19/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024

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Cole v. Holder , 659 F.3d 762 ( 2011 )

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