Ixcuna-Garcia v. Garland ( 2022 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 17-1867
    MIRIAM IXCUNA-GARCIA,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    MERRICK B. GARLAND,* Attorney General,
    Respondent.
    PETITION FOR REVIEW OF AN ORDER OF THE
    BOARD OF IMMIGRATION APPEALS
    Before
    Thompson and Kayatta, Circuit Judges,
    and Katzmann,** Judge.
    Nancy J. Kelly, with whom John Willshire Carrera, Harvey
    Kaplan, and Harvard Immigration & Refugee Clinic were on brief,
    for petitioner.
    M. Jocelyn Lopez Wright, Senior Litigation Counsel, Office of
    Immigration Litigation, Civil Division, with whom Chad A. Readler,
    Acting Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division, and Melissa
    Neiman-Kelting,   Assistant   Director,  Office   of   Immigration
    Litigation, were on brief, for respondent.
    Mark C. Fleming, Arjun K. Jaikumar, Cristina Salcedo, and
    Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP on brief for Harvard
    *  Pursuant to Fed. R. App. P. 43(c)(2), Attorney General
    Merrick B. Garland has been substituted for former Attorney General
    Jefferson B. Sessions, III.
    ** Of the United States Court of International Trade, sitting
    by designation.
    Program in Refugee Trauma and Dr. F. Barton Evans III, amici
    curiae.
    February 8, 2022
    KAYATTA,    Circuit      Judge.     Miriam    Ixcuna-Garcia         is   a
    Guatemala-born indigenous K'iche' woman who came to the United
    States when she was sixteen.          After being detained in a workplace
    raid in 2007, Ixcuna-Garcia applied for relief that included asylum
    and withholding of removal.          Her case wound its way back and forth
    between an immigration judge (IJ) and the Board of Immigration
    Appeals    (BIA)    before    arriving   at     this    court   on     the   present
    petition.    As relevant here, the IJ and the BIA found that Ixcuna-
    Garcia was ineligible for asylum because she exceeded the one-year
    deadline    for    applying    for   such     relief,    and    they   denied    her
    application for withholding of removal.                  They also questioned
    Ixcuna-Garcia's credibility, in part due to her failure to provide
    evidence from her mother corroborating her claim that she had been
    sexually assaulted as a child.
    Before this court, the government concedes that Ixcuna-
    Garcia's application for withholding of removal should be remanded
    due to the failure of the IJ and the BIA to consider pertinent
    aspects of Ixcuna-Garcia's claims of past persecution.                       And we
    agree with Ixcuna-Garcia that the IJ and the BIA also erred in
    failing to provide her with, at the very least, an opportunity to
    explain why she could not provide certain corroborating evidence
    in connection with her request for withholding.                  Accordingly, we
    vacate the denial of Ixcuna-Garcia's application for withholding
    from removal.       As to her request for asylum, however, we agree
    - 3 -
    with the government that we lack jurisdiction to review the denial
    of that application.      Our reasoning follows.
    I.
    We   begin   with   the   circumstances   that   prompted    this
    petition.    Ixcuna-Garcia was born in Guatemala to an indigenous
    K'iche' Mayan family.       She came to the United States in 2002 at
    the age of sixteen and settled into a K'iche' community in New
    Bedford, Massachusetts.         Ixcuna-Garcia did not apply for asylum
    when she first arrived in the United States.
    On March 6, 2007, Ixcuna-Garcia was detained during a
    raid on the Michael Bianco factory in New Bedford and placed into
    removal proceedings under 
    8 U.S.C. § 1182
    (a)(6)(A)(i).                  After
    conceding removability, Ixcuna-Garcia applied for both asylum and
    withholding of removal.1        In her initial hearings, Ixcuna-Garcia
    testified that she had been mistreated in Guatemala due to her
    indigenous Mayan identity and that she and her family had been
    threatened with sexual assault by Ladino men.2         She also submitted
    1  Ixcuna-Garcia also applied for relief under the Convention
    Against Torture and for voluntary departure. The IJ granted her
    application for voluntary departure but only until January 3,
    2012. Ixcuna-Garcia did not press these separate claims before
    the BIA in her most recent proceedings and those issues are not
    before this court on the present petition.
    2  Ladino refers to an ethnic group within Guatemala comprised
    of non-Indigenous persons.
    - 4 -
    written and oral testimony regarding the impact of Guatemala's
    long and violent civil war on her family.
    Thus began a years-long administrative process through
    which Ixcuna-Garcia's removal proceedings twice went before an IJ
    and the BIA before arriving at this court.         First, in 2011, an IJ
    rendered an oral decision denying Ixcuna-Garcia's applications for
    asylum and withholding of removal.            The IJ found that Ixcuna-
    Garcia's asylum claim was time-barred because she failed to file
    her application within one year of entering the country as required
    by statute.     The IJ also explained that Ixcuna-Garcia had not
    demonstrated either past persecution or a likelihood of future
    persecution, noting that there was "no evidence that [Ixcuna-
    Garcia] would be subjected to torture or persecution if she were
    to   be   returned   to   Guatemala   based   on   her   purported   fear."
    Accordingly, the IJ found no basis for granting Ixcuna-Garcia's
    application for withholding of removal.             Ixcuna-Garcia timely
    appealed the IJ's decision to the BIA.
    In 2013, the BIA issued a decision dismissing in part
    and sustaining in part Ixcuna-Garcia's appeal.            With respect to
    asylum, the BIA upheld the IJ's decision, agreeing that Ixcuna-
    Garcia's application was time-barred.          Although the BIA observed
    that Ixcuna-Garcia's age when she entered the country (sixteen)
    might have provided       extraordinary circumstances warranting an
    exception to the one-year filing deadline, the BIA noted that
    - 5 -
    Ixcuna-Garcia turned eighteen in September 2004 but did not apply
    for asylum until October 2007.          The BIA therefore found that
    Ixcuna-Garcia had not filed her asylum application "within a
    reasonable time after she reached the age of 18 years old."               The
    BIA likewise rejected Ixcuna-Garcia's other explanations for the
    delay in filing, explaining that they did not suffice to establish
    changed circumstances that excused the delay.
    As to withholding of removal, the BIA remanded Ixcuna-
    Garcia's claim back to the IJ for further consideration of whether
    Ixcuna-Garcia was more likely than not to face future persecution
    upon return to Guatemala.      The BIA rejected the IJ's conclusion
    that there was "no evidence" that Ixcuna-Garcia would be subjected
    to future persecution, observing that the record "contain[ed] an
    abundance of documentary evidence" on that point and that the IJ
    had failed to provide a "detailed analysis of the specific facts
    of [Ixcuna-Garcia's] case in relation to the controlling law."
    Accordingly, the BIA ordered the IJ to conduct further proceedings
    and issue a "new decision."         The BIA further ordered that the
    parties should be provided with an opportunity to update the record
    and present additional arguments.
    In the remanded proceedings before the IJ, Ixcuna-Garcia
    submitted new evidence in support of her applications, including
    her   own   supplemental   affidavit,   affidavits   from       two   cousins,
    updated     country   conditions   documentation,    and    a    psychiatric
    - 6 -
    evaluation    prepared   by    Marguerita   Reczycki,   a   clinical   nurse
    specialist    who   examined    Ixcuna-Garcia.     In   her   supplemental
    affidavit in support of her request for relief, Ixcuna-Garcia
    stated for the first time that she had been raped as a child by a
    Ladino man and that Ladino men had attacked her and her cousin.
    She also explained in her supplemental affidavit her difficulties
    in applying for asylum when she first arrived in the United States.
    Reczycki, in turn, opined in a written report that Ixcuna-Garcia
    met the criteria for chronic and severe major depression and
    chronic post-traumatic stress disorder based on the traumatic
    experiences she had endured in Guatemala.               Reczycki's report
    indicated that, in her professional opinion, past trauma prevented
    Ixcuna-Garcia from speaking about her history of persecution in
    Guatemala, particularly her rape, and from seeking assistance in
    applying for asylum within the first year of her entering the
    United States.
    Based on this new         evidence, Ixcuna-Garcia requested
    reconsideration of both her eligibility for a waiver of the one-
    year asylum application deadline and eligibility for withholding
    of removal.    The IJ conducted further hearings on four separate
    days spread out over almost two years, ending on April 14, 2016.
    Finally, on June 23, 2016, the IJ issued a written
    decision again denying Ixcuna-Garcia's applications for asylum and
    withholding of removal.        As a threshold matter, the IJ addressed
    - 7 -
    Ixcuna-Garcia's credibility, declining to fully credit her written
    and oral testimony regarding her rape by a Ladino man from when
    she was a child.    The IJ noted that Ixcuna-Garcia had not revealed
    the rape either in her initial application or during her first
    hearings and that there were inconsistencies between her prior
    testimony and the testimony she offered in support of her claim
    that she had been raped.       The IJ also declined to give much weight
    to Reczycki's psychiatric evaluation, observing that Reczycki was
    a nurse rather than a psychologist or psychiatrist and that
    Reczycki   spent    "only   three     hours"   evaluating    Ixcuna-Garcia.
    Additionally, the IJ noted that Ixcuna-Garcia failed to provide an
    affidavit from her mother corroborating the described rape.
    The IJ next found that Ixcuna-Garcia's eligibility for
    asylum was not properly before the IJ on remand because the BIA
    had upheld the IJ's earlier determination that Ixcuna-Garcia was
    not eligible for a waiver of the one-year timing requirement.                The
    IJ then concluded that, even if he could consider the claim, the
    new evidence submitted on remand, including the evidence Ixcuna-
    Garcia   provided   regarding    her    psychological      trauma,   did     not
    reflect changed conditions directly related to Ixcuna-Garcia's
    delay in filing.
    As to withholding of removal, the IJ found that he lacked
    jurisdiction   to   consider    any    new   claims   on   remand    based    on
    mistreatment Ixcuna-Garcia had failed to allege in her initial
    - 8 -
    filings or testimony, including Ixcuna-Garcia's described rape.
    The IJ went on to conclude that, even if he could consider the new
    evidence    and    arguments,     Ixcuna-Garcia             still    would     fail    to
    establish   past    persecution        or   a   clear       likelihood       of   future
    persecution   in    Guatemala     on    account        of    a     protected      ground.
    Ixcuna-Garcia again filed a timely appeal to the BIA.
    This time, the BIA upheld all aspects of the IJ's
    decision.     First,      the   BIA    agreed     with       the     IJ's    denial    of
    reconsideration as to Ixcuna-Garcia's asylum application.                         The BIA
    explained that the new evidence Ixcuna-Garcia submitted on remand
    regarding    her   psychological        trauma        was    not    "dispositive       to
    establish the veracity of all aspects of [her] claims" relating to
    her failure to apply for asylum in the required timeframe.                            The
    BIA similarly found that Ixcuna-Garcia's other new evidence of
    changed    conditions     in    Guatemala       did    not       "materially       affect
    [Ixcuna-Garcia's] eligibility for asylum."
    The BIA also upheld the IJ's credibility finding.                         The
    BIA   explained    that   although      it      gave    "less       weight    than    the
    Immigration Judge to the inconsistencies concerning why [Ixcuna-
    Garcia] did not mention her rape, it [wa]s relevant that she did
    modify her explanation to some extent."                     The BIA further noted
    that "the lack of an affidavit from [Ixcuna-Garcia's] mother
    concerning the rape is indicative of a lack of credibility."
    - 9 -
    The BIA likewise affirmed the IJ's rejection of Ixcuna-
    Garcia's application for withholding of removal.                     The BIA found
    that Ixcuna-Garcia had failed to establish that her indigenous
    identity was a central reason for the rape and other mistreatment
    she testified to on remand.             Thus, she could not establish past
    persecution.          As to future persecution, the BIA reasoned that
    Ixcuna-Garcia's proffered evidence on remand failed to show a
    pattern    and    practice      of   mistreatment   of   indigenous         women   in
    Guatemala.       Notably, both the IJ and the BIA only addressed the
    persecution claims that were introduced on remand and did not
    attend    to    the    claims   Ixcuna-Garcia   had      made   in    her    initial
    proceedings and renewed on remand.           After the BIA issued its latest
    decision, Ixcuna-Garcia filed this timely petition for review.
    Before this court, Ixcuna-Garcia raises three principal
    contentions.       First, she argues that the IJ and the BIA erred in
    finding her ineligible for an exemption to the statutory timeline
    for seeking asylum.         Second, she asserts that the IJ and the BIA
    erred in their credibility determinations, including by failing to
    give her notice of a need to obtain (or explain the absence of)
    corroborating evidence and by rejecting the testimony of an expert
    concerning her failure to report previously a claim of rape.
    Finally, she contends that the IJ and the BIA erred in finding
    that she had failed to meet her burden of proof for withholding of
    removal.
    - 10 -
    II.
    We begin with the government's contention that we lack
    jurisdiction    to    review       the   denial     of   Ixcuna-Garcia's     asylum
    application as untimely.             To qualify for asylum, a noncitizen
    generally must file her application within one year of arriving in
    the United States.        See 
    8 U.S.C. § 1158
    (a)(2)(B).               An applicant
    may be excused from this statutory deadline by establishing "either
    the existence of changed circumstances which materially affect the
    applicant's eligibility for asylum or extraordinary circumstances
    relating to the delay in filing an application within the period
    specified."     
    Id.
     § 1158(a)(2)(D).               Ixcuna-Garcia concedes that
    she failed to file her asylum application within the one-year
    statutory deadline but insists that she qualifies for an exemption
    due to extraordinary circumstances, which include her age upon
    entry, her inability to speak English or fluent Spanish, her
    isolation in an insular Mayan community in New Bedford, and the
    psychological    trauma      she    suffered       due   to   her   experiences    in
    Guatemala.     She urges this court to review the IJ and the BIA's
    determination that her asylum claim is nonetheless barred.
    Congress     has    "carefully         circumscribed      the   scope   of
    judicial   review     with    respect      to     timeliness   determinations      in
    asylum cases."       Pan v. Gonzales, 
    489 F.3d 80
    , 84 (1st Cir. 2007).
    The relevant statutory provision provides that "[n]o court shall
    have jurisdiction to review any determination of the Attorney
    - 11 -
    General"    concerning,     among   other    things,       whether   an   asylum
    applicant    has   complied     with   the    one-year      filing    deadline.
    
    8 U.S.C. § 1158
    (a)(3).        This jurisdictional limitation, however,
    does not apply to "review of constitutional claims or questions of
    law raised upon a petition for review."             
    Id.
     § 1252(a)(2)(D).
    Accordingly, we have held that we lack "jurisdiction to
    review the agency's determination regarding the timeliness of [an]
    asylum   application   or     its   application      of    the   'extraordinary
    circumstances' exception, unless the petitioner identifies a legal
    or constitutional defect in the decision."             El-Labaki v. Mukasey,
    
    544 F.3d 1
    , 5 (1st Cir. 2008) (citing 
    8 U.S.C. §§ 1158
    (a)(3),
    1252(a)(2)(D)); accord Pan, 
    489 F.3d at 84
    .               The key that unlocks
    federal court review in such cases is a "colorable" constitutional
    or legal question that is not simply a "thinly-veiled challenge to
    the IJ's factfinding."        Pan, 
    489 F.3d at 84
    ; see also Lutaaya v.
    Mukasey, 
    535 F.3d 63
    , 69–70 (1st Cir. 2008).
    Ixcuna-Garcia      contends      that    her     petition     raises
    precisely the kind of issue that is exempted from the jurisdiction-
    stripping provision: a constitutional challenge alleging a due
    process violation.     By Ixcuna-Garcia's telling, the IJ and the
    BIA's refusal to consider her proffered psychiatric evaluation as
    evidence of extraordinary conditions justifying a waiver of the
    filing deadline impinged upon her right to due process and resulted
    in proceedings that were fundamentally unfair.
    - 12 -
    But Ixcuna-Garcia's claim cannot be read so broadly as
    to constitute the kind of colorable constitutional challenge that
    section 1252(a)(2)(D) places within our jurisdiction.              As we have
    consistently explained, a challenge that merely "takes issue with
    the evidentiary basis for the BIA's finding that 'circumstances'
    did not excuse [a petitioner's] untimely application for asylum"
    is not a colorable constitutional or legal claim that falls within
    our jurisdiction.     Rodriguez-Palacios v. Barr, 
    927 F.3d 13
    , 17
    (1st Cir. 2019); see also Ramirez-Matias v. Holder, 
    778 F.3d 322
    ,
    326 (1st Cir. 2015) ("[A] challenge to the way in which the agency
    weighed the evidence and balanced negative and positive factors is
    not a claim that raises a legal question."); Lutaaya, 
    535 F.3d at
    69–70 (concluding that assertions about improperly overlooking or
    weighing evidence are not colorable due process claims).
    Although    clothed   in   the   language     of   a   due   process
    challenge, Ixcuna-Garcia's claim is more appropriately read as a
    challenge to the manner in which the IJ and the BIA weighed the
    evidence she submitted in support of her asylum application.
    Ixcuna-Garcia does not meaningfully contend that the IJ and the
    BIA declined to consider her evidence of psychiatric trauma at
    all; rather, she asserts that the IJ and the BIA failed to accord
    her proffered evidence the weight she thought it should be due.
    This is precisely the kind of "thinly-veiled challenge to the IJ's
    factfinding"   that   our   precedent      recognizes    as      outside   the
    - 13 -
    exception        to   section 1158(a)(3)'s       jurisdiction-stripping        rule.
    Pan, 
    489 F.3d at 84
    .            We, therefore, lack jurisdiction to review
    Ixcuna-Garcia's challenge to the denial of her asylum application
    on timeliness grounds.3
    III.
    We   next   consider    Ixcuna-Garcia's      challenge   to    the
    credibility determinations in connection with the denial of her
    request for withholding of removal.              Where, as here, the BIA adopts
    and adds its own gloss to an IJ's conclusions, we examine the
    relevant portions of both decisions.                   Molina-Diaz v. Wilkinson,
    
    989 F.3d 60
    , 63 (1st Cir. 2021).                We review legal conclusions de
    novo       and   factual     findings   under    the   deferential   "substantial
    evidence" standard.           Soeung v. Holder, 
    677 F.3d 484
    , 487 (1st Cir.
    2012).
    Ixcuna-Garcia's arguments train on three aspects of the
    IJ's and the BIA's credibility determinations.                   First, Ixcuna-
    Garcia asserts that the IJ and the BIA erred in basing their
    credibility findings on the lack of an affidavit from her mother
    corroborating her rape without giving Ixcuna-Garcia either notice
    that such an affidavit would be required or an opportunity to
    3Given that the IJ did in the alternative consider and
    reject Ixcuna-Garcia's renewed challenge to the timeliness ruling
    on the merits, we need not determine whether the IJ was required
    to consider that challenge in the remanded proceedings.
    - 14 -
    explain her inability to produce the required evidence.4               Second,
    Ixcuna-Garcia contends that the IJ's and the BIA's credibility
    determinations were flawed because they failed to give due weight
    to the report submitted by Reczycki establishing Ixcuna-Garcia's
    psychological trauma.        Third, she contends that even without
    Reczycki's report, the record compelled a finding that Ixcuna-
    Garcia was credible.      We consider each argument in turn.
    A.
    Ixcuna-Garcia    first   contends     that   the    BIA   erred   in
    upholding the IJ's decision to require Ixcuna-Garcia to produce an
    affidavit from her mother corroborating Ixcuna-Garcia's rape by a
    Ladino    man   without   either   notice    of   the    need   for   specific
    corroborating evidence or an opportunity to explain her inability
    to produce the required evidence.           Ixcuna-Garcia's argument keys
    on the final sentence of 
    8 U.S.C. § 1158
    (b)(1)(B)(ii), 5 which
    states:
    Where the trier of fact determines that the
    applicant   should provide   evidence  that
    corroborates otherwise credible testimony,
    such evidence must be provided unless the
    4  Ixcuna-Garcia does not present this argument as raising a
    constitutional or legal error applicable to her asylum claim.
    5   Because   Ixcuna-Garcia's   application   post-dates   the
    enactment of the REAL ID Act of 2005, Pub. L. No. 109-13, 
    119 Stat. 302
     (2005), its provisions apply to the credibility determinations
    at issue here. See 
    8 U.S.C. § 1231
    (b)(3)(C) (applying 
    8 U.S.C. § 1158
    (b)(1)(B)(ii), (iii) to credibility determinations regarding
    withholding of removal).
    - 15 -
    applicant does not have the evidence     and
    cannot reasonably obtain the evidence.
    Ixcuna-Garcia asserts that this statutory language requires an IJ
    to provide advance notice to the applicant of the need for specific
    corroborating evidence, or, at the very least, an opportunity for
    the applicant to explain why such evidence cannot reasonably be
    provided.   After all, absent notice or an opportunity to explain,
    an applicant could not comply with the statute's command that "such
    evidence must be provided unless the applicant does not have the
    evidence and cannot reasonably obtain the evidence."   
    Id.
    Several of our sister circuits have weighed in with
    divergent views on whether section 1158(b)(1)(B)(ii) imposes an
    advance notice requirement.   Compare Ren v. Holder, 
    648 F.3d 1079
    ,
    1091–92 (9th Cir. 2011) (requiring advance notice), and Saravia v.
    Att'y Gen., 
    905 F.3d 729
    , 737–38 (3rd Cir. 2018) (same), with Liu
    v. Holder, 
    575 F.3d 193
    , 198 (2d Cir. 2009) (declining to require
    advance notice), Gaye v. Lynch, 
    788 F.3d 519
    , 528–30 (6th Cir.
    2015) (same), and Rapheal v. Mukasey, 
    533 F.3d 521
    , 530 (7th Cir.
    2008) (same).   To resolve the present appeal, however, we need not
    pick a side.      Here, the IJ and the BIA committed the more
    fundamental error of failing to provide Ixcuna-Garcia with even an
    opportunity to explain why she could not reasonably obtain the
    required evidence, a procedure that is mandated by both the BIA's
    and this court's precedent.
    - 16 -
    The BIA's decision in Matter of L-A-C- explains that if
    an IJ "determines that specific corroborating evidence should have
    been submitted, the applicant should be given an opportunity to
    explain why he could not reasonably obtain such evidence."          
    26 I. & N. Dec. 516
    , 521 (BIA 2015); see also 
    id.
     at 521 n.4 ("Permitting
    the applicant to state the reasons why the corroborating evidence
    could not be obtained is consistent with both the language of the
    REAL ID Act and the [BIA]'s longstanding practice.").          Indeed,
    Matter of L-A-C- requires an IJ to "ensure that the applicant's
    explanation is included in the record" and to "clearly state for
    the record whether the explanation is sufficient."         
    Id.
     at 521–
    22.
    Matter of L-A-C-'s requirement is also "consistent with
    our own precedent."    Molina-Diaz, 989 F.3d at 66 (citing Soeung,
    
    677 F.3d at 488
    ).    In Soeung, we held that "before the failure to
    produce corroborating evidence can be held against an applicant,"
    the IJ must make "explicit findings that . . . the applicant's
    failure to [produce that evidence] was not adequately explained."
    
    677 F.3d at 488
    .    Of course, an IJ cannot make this finding if the
    IJ does not first provide the applicant with an opportunity to
    explain the inability to produce the corroborating evidence.          We
    reaffirmed   this   requirement    in   Molina-Diaz,   explaining   that
    Soeung's holding regarding corroboration remains good law even
    - 17 -
    though it predated the passage of the REAL ID Act.               Molina-Diaz,
    989 F.3d at 66 n.2.
    This rule fits logically within the statutory scheme
    governing corroborating evidence.              Under the relevant provision,
    when       an   IJ    "determines   that   the    applicant   should   provide
    [corroborating evidence], such evidence must be provided unless
    the applicant does not have the evidence and cannot reasonably
    obtain the evidence."          
    8 U.S.C. § 1158
    (b)(1)(B)(ii).      An IJ could
    not follow the dictates of the statute and find that an applicant
    "cannot reasonably obtain [corroborating] evidence" without first
    providing her some chance to explain why such evidence cannot be
    provided.6
    Turning to the facts in this case, the IJ plainly failed
    to provide Ixcuna-Garcia with such an opportunity to set the record
    straight.            The BIA seemingly excused the IJ's error because
    Ixcuna-Garcia had "yet to supply either an explanation or an
    affidavit."          But it would be odd to expect Ixcuna-Garcia to produce
    the required evidence or explanation for the first time on appeal
    6Contrary to the government's belief, this rule does not
    necessarily require the "unusual" procedure of allowing additional
    hearings or continuances. The IJ could simply ask in the initial
    hearing why the applicant does not have the required corroborating
    evidence.   Section 1158(b)(1)(B)(ii) and Matter of L-A-C- then
    requires that the IJ evaluate the applicant's explanation and state
    on the record whether that explanation suffices. See 26 I. & N.
    Dec. at 521–22. The IJ need not always hold a second hearing or
    grant a continuance to allow the applicant to obtain that evidence.
    - 18 -
    to the BIA without any prompting.               After all, the BIA reviews
    findings of fact determined by the IJ, including credibility
    determinations, under a "clearly erroneous" standard and not de
    novo.     
    8 C.F.R. § 1003.1
    (d)(3)(i).        Moreover,     as    explained
    earlier, Matter of L-A-C- requires an IJ to "ensure that the
    applicant's     explanation       is   included   in    the    record   and . . .
    clearly    state    for     the    record   whether      the    explanation   is
    sufficient."      26 I. & N. Dec. at 521–22.           It is the IJ -- not the
    BIA -- that must enter this explanation into the record.
    The government's response relies on the mistaken belief
    that an IJ need never provide an applicant with an opportunity to
    explain a failure to produce specific corroborating evidence when
    the IJ finds the applicant's testimony not credible.                      As the
    government would have it, so long as the IJ makes an express
    adverse credibility finding, the IJ can escape the mandates of
    Matter of L-A-C- and this court's precedent.
    We need take no position on whether the government's
    argument would have force if the IJ's adverse credibility finding
    did not rest at all on any unexplained absence of corroboration.
    Here, the IJ and the BIA did not treat Ixcuna-Garcia's lack of
    corroboration as an independent or alternative basis for the
    credibility finding; rather, it was one of the factors -- along
    with the noted inconsistencies -- on which the IJ and the BIA
    relied    to    reach   the   challenged        conclusions.       Indeed,    the
    - 19 -
    government concedes this very point in its brief, stating that
    "[u]nder   the    totality   of   the   circumstances   analysis,   the
    immigration judge and the Board appropriately relied on [the lack
    of   corroboration]     to    support      the   adverse   credibility
    determination."
    The government contends that our decision in Zeru v.
    Gonzales nevertheless blesses its proposed framework.         See 
    503 F.3d 59
     (1st Cir. 2007).     Specifically, the government points to
    language in Zeru explaining that a noncitizen is not owed a
    presumption of credibility and that it is always the noncitizen's
    burden to "put forth sufficiently credible testimony or other
    evidence to establish her eligibility for [relief]."        
    Id. at 73
    .
    But it takes quite a leap in logic to bound from that general
    statement on credibility to the rule the government proposes,
    especially as the IJ in Zeru appears to have provided the applicant
    with precisely the opportunity to explain the lack of corroboration
    that is missing here.     See, e.g., 
    id. at 65
     (explaining that the
    IJ had directed Zeru at a prior hearing "to obtain news reports or
    other information to substantiate" the testimony but that Zeru
    "neither produced the documents nor had an explanation for her
    failure to do so"); 
    id. at 70
     (noting that Zeru was "advised by an
    IJ to obtain [specific corroborating] documents" yet "was able
    neither to produce the [relevant] records nor to explain why she
    did not produce them").
    - 20 -
    To be sure, section 1158(b)(1)(B)(ii) specifies that the
    applicant's testimony must be "otherwise credible."                    However, as
    explained previously, there is nothing in the IJ's or the BIA's
    decisions    to    indicate      that   Ixcuna-Garcia's      testimony    was   not
    "otherwise credible" absent the lack of corroboration.                    Where it
    is unclear whether the IJ and BIA would have found the applicant
    not      "otherwise       credible"        notwithstanding       the      required
    corroboration, we have held that the IJ must give the applicant
    "the necessary opportunity to explain why she did not provide
    corroborating evidence."           Molina-Diaz, 989 F.3d at 66.           So, too,
    in this case.          Absent some statement by the IJ or the BIA
    indicating that Ixcuna-Garcia would not be credible even if she
    had proffered the necessary corroborating evidence, we can have no
    confidence that the IJ or the BIA would have come to the same
    credibility       determination     had    Ixcuna-Garcia     been   provided    an
    opportunity       to   either    produce    the   required    corroboration     or
    explain why she reasonably could not.
    Accordingly, we hold that the IJ erred in failing to
    provide Ixcuna-Garcia with such an opportunity, as required by
    Matter of L-A-C- and Molina-Diaz, and the BIA erred in failing to
    correct this mistake.           In the remanded proceedings, Ixcuna-Garcia
    should be given an opportunity to explain (should she still not
    produce the required corroboration) why she has not been able to
    do so.
    - 21 -
    B.
    Ixcuna-Garcia's second argument is less availing.               She
    contends that the IJ and the BIA failed to meaningfully consider
    the psychiatric evaluation prepared by Reczycki, which Ixcuna-
    Garcia cited to clarify the perceived inconsistencies in her
    testimony and explain why she had not disclosed her sexual assault
    in the prior proceedings.      Ixcuna-Garcia asserts that the decision
    to not credit Reczycki's report was arbitrary and capricious
    because it was based solely on the IJ's personal perceptions about
    Reczycki's credentials (noting that she was a nurse rather than a
    doctor) and the time necessary to complete a reliable diagnosis of
    psychological trauma (noting that she spent "only three hours"
    with Ixcuna-Garcia).      As support, Ixcuna-Garcia and the amici tout
    Reczycki's     qualifications     and      the   merits     of    Reczycki's
    methodology.    In essence, Ixcuna-Garcia suggests that no rational
    decisionmaker would have rejected her explanation of the apparent
    inconsistencies in her testimony given Reczycki's report.
    Our    review   of   such   factual    findings    is   under   the
    "deferential substantial evidence standard," not de novo.            Soeung,
    
    677 F.3d at 487
    .    As such, "we will reverse only if the record is
    such as to compel a reasonable factfinder to reach a contrary
    determination."    Chen v. Holder, 
    703 F.3d 17
    , 21 (1st Cir. 2012).
    That Reczycki's psychiatric evaluation "supports a conclusion"
    which differs from that reached by the IJ and the BIA "is not
    - 22 -
    enough to warrant upsetting [their] view of the matter."                  Lopez
    de Hincapie v. Gonzales, 
    494 F.3d 213
    , 218 (1st Cir. 2007).                And
    while   we   might    well   regard    Reczycki's     evaluation   with   less
    skepticism than that expressed by the IJ, Ixcuna-Garcia points us
    to nothing in the record before the agency compelling the IJ or
    the BIA to adopt that evaluation as fact.
    Moreover, as we explained above, this is not a case where
    the IJ or the BIA failed to consider or declined to admit relevant
    evidence entirely.      Rather, the IJ noted that it did not give the
    report much weight due both to Reczycki's professional background
    and the length of time Reczycki took to conduct the evaluation.
    The BIA then accepted the IJ's conclusion that "the real reason
    [Ixcuna-Garcia] did not include certain incidents [in her prior
    statements] was because they did not happen rather than that they
    were omitted for the reasons she gave."
    Of course, on remand, the overall mix of the evidence
    may be different, depending on what Ixcuna-Garcia does to address
    the   matter   of    corroboration     by    her   mother.   How   Reczycki's
    testimony might be assessed and weighed in those circumstances
    remains to be seen.
    C.
    We need not tarry long with Ixcuna-Garcia's contention
    that the record compelled a finding that she was credible, even
    without considering the expert's evaluation.            The fact is that she
    - 23 -
    told different stories on different occasions.           And while she
    marshals   cogent   explanations   for   the    inconsistencies     in    her
    testimony, nothing compels an IJ or the BIA to agree.
    IV.
    As to her last argument, which concerns only the denial
    of   her   application   for   withholding,     Ixcuna-Garcia     and     the
    government largely agree that remand is necessary.       The government
    concedes that the IJ and the BIA failed to assess Ixcuna-Garcia's
    claims of past persecution based on her mistreatment at the hands
    of her classmates and the effect of the civil war on her family,
    which Ixcuna-Garcia had raised in her initial hearing.          While the
    IJ ruled on those aspects of the withholding of removal claim in
    his 2011 decision, the government acknowledges that that decision
    did not survive Ixcuna-Garcia's first BIA appeal.        In the remanded
    proceedings, neither the IJ nor the BIA addressed these aspects of
    Ixcuna-Garcia's     claim.     Because    the    IJ's   and   the       BIA's
    consideration of Ixcuna-Garcia's claim of past persecution may
    also impact the assessment of future persecution, the government
    admits that remand is required so that these components of Ixcuna-
    Garcia's claim may be included in the agency's overall assessment
    of her application for withholding.      We agree.
    - 24 -
    V.
    For the foregoing reasons, we grant in part and deny in
    part Ixcuna-Garcia's petition for review, and remand for further
    proceedings in accord with this decision.
    - 25 -