Reyes Pujols v. Garland ( 2022 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    Nos. 21-1128
    21-1590
    ZEIKE ALEXANDER REYES PUJOLS, a.k.a. Jose Gonsalez-Rodriguez,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    MERRICK B. GARLAND, United States Attorney General,
    Respondent.
    PETITIONS FOR REVIEW OF AN ORDER OF
    THE BOARD OF IMMIGRATION APPEALS
    Before
    Barron, Chief Judge,
    Lipez and Gelpí, Circuit Judges.
    Ethan R. Horowitz, with whom Northeast Justice Center was on
    brief, for petitioner.
    Spencer Shucard, Trial Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice,
    Civil Division, Office of Immigration Litigation, with whom Brian
    Boynton, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division, and
    Jessica E. Burns, Senior Litigation Counsel, Office of Immigration
    Litigation, were on brief, for respondent.
    June 14, 2022
    BARRON, Chief Judge.     Zeike Alexander Reyes Pujols, a
    citizen of the Dominican Republic who entered the United States
    without admission or parole, petitions for review of a ruling by
    the Board of Immigration Appeals ("BIA") that affirms the final
    order of removal that was entered against him pursuant to 
    8 U.S.C. §§ 1229
    –1229a.    He also seeks, in the alternative, review of the
    BIA's denial of his motion to reconsider its affirmance.   We grant
    the petition for review of the BIA's ruling affirming the final
    order of removal and dismiss as moot the petition for review of
    the BIA's denial of Reyes's motion for reconsideration.
    I.
    Reyes entered the United States in April of 2017.     The
    next month, he was served with a Notice to Appear for removal
    proceedings.     Reyes conceded removability but sought relief from
    removal based on asylum and withholding of removal, as well as
    Article 3 of the Convention Against Torture ("CAT").     The Boston
    Immigration Court held a merits hearing on October 21, 2019, on
    Reyes's defenses to removal.
    Reyes testified at the hearing that he worked as a
    chauffeur for a wealthy man in the Dominican Republic named Joel
    de la Cruz and endured severe abuse in consequence.    With respect
    to that abuse, Reyes testified as follows:
    De la Cruz told Reyes in 2016 to deliver 600,000 pesos
    to a man named Raul.    Reyes delivered the money to Raul, and Raul
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    then presented Reyes with a sealed box, which he instructed Reyes
    to bring to de la Cruz.          Raul would not tell Reyes, however, what
    the box contained.        Believing the box might contain contraband,
    Reyes refused to bring the box to de la Cruz.
    When Reyes returned to de la Cruz's house, de la Cruz
    and two uniformed police officers accosted Reyes.                 They accused
    him of stealing the money that he had been instructed to deliver
    to Raul.
    De la Cruz drove Reyes and the two officers to a police
    station.   De la Cruz remained outside in his vehicle, and the two
    uniformed police officers brought Reyes inside.                   The officers
    threatened Reyes, told him that he needed to repay the 600,000
    pesos,   and    stabbed    him    in   the     leg   multiple    times   with   a
    screwdriver.
    The same two officers later came to Reyes's neighborhood
    and shot him multiple times, which required his hospitalization.
    Then, when Reyes was going to be discharged from the hospital, the
    same two officers took Reyes from the hospital and brought him
    back to the police station, where they again threatened him and
    drove a screwdriver into his leg.
    In   addition    to     this   testimony,     Reyes    presented     in
    support of his request for asylum, withholding of removal, and
    protection under the CAT, medical evidence documenting injuries
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    that he had received.       The injuries were consistent with the
    shootings and stabbings that his testimony described.
    The Immigration    Judge ("IJ") concluded that Reyes's
    testimony was not "reliable" and denied Reyes's applications for
    asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the CAT.
    Reyes appealed to the BIA only the IJ's decision regarding his CAT
    claim. The BIA affirmed the IJ's ruling denying Reyes's CAT claim,
    after ruling that "there is no clear error in the" IJ's "adverse
    credibility    finding"   regarding   Reyes's     testimony.     The   BIA
    concluded   that,   "[s]ince   [Reyes]   lacked    credibility   and   the
    objective evidence in the record does not independently establish
    his claim, he did not satisfy his burden to provide eligibility
    for protection under the" CAT.
    Reyes moved for reconsideration on March 21, 2021, but
    the BIA denied the motion on July 15, 2021.            Reyes then filed
    timely petitions for review of both the BIA's affirmance of the
    IJ's ruling and its denial of Reyes's motion to reconsider.             We
    have jurisdiction to entertain these petitions pursuant to 
    8 U.S.C. § 1252
    .
    II.
    To succeed on a CAT claim, a noncitizen must "prove that
    it is more likely than not that he will be tortured if returned to
    his home country."     Mazariegos v. Lynch, 
    790 F.3d 280
    , 287 (1st
    Cir. 2015).     Reyes appears to concede that he cannot make the
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    requisite   showing   if   substantial   evidence    supports   the   IJ's
    adverse credibility finding against him.            See Cuesta-Rojas v.
    Garland, 
    991 F.3d 266
    , 270 (1st Cir. 2021). Reyes argues, however,
    that given the other evidence in the record, his testimony (if
    credible) does suffice to support (even though it does not compel)
    the conclusion that he has met his burden to prove what he must on
    his CAT claim.    And, Reyes contends, the BIA erred in affirming
    the IJ's adverse credibility finding.       We thus now turn to that
    latter contention, on which his petition for review of the BIA's
    affirmance of the IJ's final order of removal depends.
    A.
    Reyes first asks us to direct our attention to the
    portion of the IJ's adverse credibility finding that concerns
    Reyes's demeanor during his testimony.          Specifically, the IJ
    observed that Reyes at times "testified in almost a robotic manner"
    and that while Reyes did "become very emotional when discussing
    his first encounter with the police where he was stabbed in [his]
    leg with a screwdriver, he did not have the same emotion when
    discussing being shot and hospitalized . . ., and again, many of
    his responses candidly came out as rehearsed."        The IJ also stated
    that in finding that Reyes's testimony "was not fully reliable,"
    she had "considered the totality of the circumstances, including
    [Reyes's] demeanor while testifying."
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    Reyes asserts that the IJ's adverse credibility finding
    cannot be sustained insofar as it is based on the assessment of
    Reyes's   demeanor   because   that     assessment     was   premised    on   an
    "unconscious bias against trauma survivors."             In support of this
    contention, Reyes points to the features of his testimony that the
    IJ zeroed in on -- such as his flat affect -- and contends that
    they are features consistent with a person who suffers from Post-
    Traumatic Stress Disorder ("PTSD").           He then further argues that
    the IJ failed to consider the evidence in the record that Reyes
    suffered from PTSD in assessing his demeanor.
    The   government   does     not    dispute    that     the   record
    supportably shows that Reyes suffers from PTSD.                  Nor does the
    government appear to take issue with Reyes's contention that some
    of the aspects of his demeanor that the IJ identified as supporting
    a finding that his testimony was not credible -- such as a
    "robotic"   affect   at   times   and   a     highly   emotional    affect    at
    others -- are recognized symptoms of PTSD.             The government points
    out, however, that the BIA "explicitly declined to affirm" the
    IJ's assessment of Reyes's demeanor as evidencing a lack of
    credibility "because doing so was unnecessary in affirming the
    overall decision." The government thus contends that Reyes's PTSD-
    based challenge to the IJ's adverse credibility finding provides
    no basis for overturning the BIA's affirmance of it.
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    In response, Reyes argues that what he asserts was the
    IJ's "unconscious bias against trauma survivors" "infected" the
    entirety of the IJ's adverse credibility determination.         He thus
    contends that even the portions of that determination that concern
    what the IJ described as "critical inconsistencies" are tainted
    and so cannot supply a predicate for the BIA's affirmance of the
    IJ's adverse credibility finding on non-demeanor-based grounds.
    To support this line of argument, Reyes points in part
    to three cases in which we have vacated the BIA's affirmance of
    adverse credibility determinations by the IJ that derived at least
    in part from erroneous predicate factual findings.          See Cuesta-
    Rojas, 
    991 F.3d 266
    ; Mboowa v. Lynch, 
    795 F.3d 222
     (1st Cir. 2015);
    Jabri v. Holder, 
    675 F.3d 20
     (1st Cir. 2012).          In all three, we
    vacated the BIA's affirmance of an immigration judge's adverse
    credibility finding that we determined was predicated on a finding
    of "discrepancies" that the record did not support.       Cuesta-Rojas,
    991 F.3d at 272–73; Mboowa, 795 F.3d at 227–28; Jabri, 
    675 F.3d at 23, 26
    .
    But, the BIA in this case expressly stated that it "d[id]
    not rely on" the assessment of Reyes's demeanor by the IJ that
    Reyes contends tainted the IJ's overall credibility finding.        The
    BIA then purported to rely solely on what it contended were
    distinct,    non-demeanor-based     predicates   for     that   adverse
    credibility finding that the IJ had made.        That makes this case
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    different from the three on which Reyes relies, as in none of them
    did the BIA expressly disclaim reliance on the problematic portion
    of the IJ's adverse credibility finding in affirming it.
    Moreover, we cannot say on this record that the BIA, in
    affirming the IJ's adverse credibility finding while disclaiming
    any reliance on the IJ's assessment of Reyes's demeanor, affirmed
    an adverse credibility finding that the IJ did not actually make.
    And that is because we cannot say that the IJ's adverse credibility
    finding    was   itself    dependent   upon    the   assessment   of   Reyes's
    demeanor    that   Reyes    contends   was    problematic   because    of   its
    disregard of his PTSD diagnosis.
    Indeed, in arguing to the BIA, Reyes did not himself
    contend that the IJ's assessment of Reyes's demeanor infected even
    those distinct predicates for her adverse credibility finding that
    she identified that were not demeanor-based -- namely, what the IJ
    termed "critical inconsistencies" in his account -- and on which
    the BIA then relied.       To the contrary, Reyes separately challenged
    the record support for those distinct grounds for finding his
    testimony not to be credible without contending that those grounds
    could not otherwise -- independently -- provide a basis on which
    the BIA could affirm the IJ's adverse credibility finding.
    Nor did the IJ herself, in her opinion, appear to make
    her adverse credibility finding dependent on the assessment of
    Reyes's demeanor.     To be sure, the IJ did state that
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    [h]aving reviewed the record in its entirety,
    the Court finds that [Reyes]'s testimony was
    not   fully   reliable.     In   making   that
    determination, the Court has considered the
    totality of the circumstances, including
    [Reyes]'s demeanor while testifying, his
    responsiveness to questions that were asked,
    the inherent plausibility of his claim and the
    consistency of his statements in comparison to
    the documentary evidence.
    But, the IJ then went on to explain, after having made the
    assessment of his demeanor, that she "also recognized several
    critical     inconsistencies      between      either   what   was   alleged   by
    [Reyes] and the exhibits, or basic common sense that called into
    question     the   plausibility    of    his     claims."      And   then,   after
    detailing these inconsistencies and implausible aspects of Reyes's
    account, the IJ explained that "[w]hile this is not an exhaustive
    list of the inconsistencies, . . . the Court finds that these
    examples, taken in the aggregate, demonstrated a lack of complete
    candor and cast a shadow of unreliability."
    We recognize that Reyes also asserts in his petition for
    review that the IJ's assessment of Reyes's demeanor reveals the IJ
    to have had an "unconscious bias against trauma survivors" based
    on Reyes's status as an individual with PTSD and that this bias
    infected the entirety of the IJ's adverse credibility finding and
    not just the IJ's assessment of Reyes's demeanor as evidence of a
    lack of credibility.      Thus, we recognize that Reyes contends to us
    that   for   this    bias-related       reason    the   IJ's   overall   adverse
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    credibility finding cannot stand, such that the BIA's affirmance
    of it cannot either, and that this is the case notwithstanding the
    BIA's attempt to cordon off the demeanor-based portion of the IJ's
    adverse credibility finding.
    In taking up this contention, we note at the outset that
    it is not at all clear that Reyes presented this contention in his
    appeal to the BIA.     But, even assuming that he did, such that we
    have jurisdiction to consider it, see Mazariegos-Paiz v. Holder,
    
    734 F.3d 57
    , 62 (1st Cir. 2013) ("Ordinarily . . . an alien who
    neglects to present an issue to the BIA fails to exhaust his
    administrative remedies with respect to that issue and, thus,
    places it beyond our jurisdictional reach."), the contention is
    without merit.
    As we have explained, there is nothing on the face of
    the BIA's opinion that would suggest that the BIA did rely on the
    IJ's assessment of Reyes's demeanor in affirming the IJ's adverse
    credibility finding.    Nor, as we have explained, does the face of
    the IJ's opinion demonstrate that the IJ's credibility finding
    depended on that assessment, such that, but for that assessment,
    the IJ might have deemed Reyes's testimony to have been credible.
    Reyes nonetheless contends that precedent -- albeit
    from other circuits -- requires that we conclude that the IJ's
    "unconscious bias against trauma survivors" that Reyes contends is
    manifest in the IJ's negative assessment of Reyes's demeanor
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    tainted even the IJ's finding that Reyes was not credible due to
    the "inconsistencies" in his account.            Here, Reyes relies on Huang
    v. Gonzales, 
    453 F.3d 142
     (2d Cir. 2006), Elias v. Gonzales, 
    490 F.3d 444
     (6th Cir. 2007), and Shahinaj v. Gonzales, 
    481 F.3d 1027
    (8th Cir. 2007).       But, we do not agree with Reyes on this point.
    In Huang, the Second Circuit found that the IJ had
    "berated" the petitioner and "launched into a diatribe against
    Chinese immigrants lying on the witness stand,"            
    453 F.3d at
    149–
    50, while in Elias the Sixth Circuit found that "the IJ repeatedly
    addressed petitioner in an argumentative, sarcastic, and sometimes
    arguably insulting manner that went beyond fact-finding."                 
    490 F.3d at 451
    .        Thus, neither of those out-of-Circuit precedents
    provides     support   for    Reyes's   contention,    given   their   starkly
    differing facts.       In neither case was the reviewing court asked to
    discern evidence of bias on the part of the adjudicator merely
    from   the   fact   that     the   adjudicator    identified   aspects   of   a
    witness's demeanor that, though concerning in isolation, might be
    explicable because of past trauma.            Nor is Shahinaj any help to
    Reyes, as it vacated the BIA's affirmance of an adverse credibility
    determination because there -- unlike here -- the BIA failed to
    "explain" how the IJ's decision could stand after the BIA excised
    the IJ's improper inferences.           See 
    481 F.3d at 1029
    .
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    B.
    Reyes does separately contend that, even if we set aside
    his assertion of bias and accept the government's contention that
    the BIA's affirmance of the IJ's adverse credibility finding was
    not predicated on the IJ's negative assessment of Reyes's demeanor,
    we still must vacate the BIA's ruling.   That is so, Reyes contends,
    because substantial evidence does not support the IJ's findings of
    the "inconsistencies" and implausible aspects of Reyes's account
    of how he had been abused that the BIA determined that the IJ had
    independently relied on (as a collective) in finding Reyes's
    testimony not to be credible.     Our review of whether substantial
    evidence does support that non-demeanor-based adverse credibility
    determination "is of the record 'as a whole,'" Cuesta-Rojas, 991
    F.3d at 271 (quoting Al-Amiri v. Rosen, 
    985 F.3d 1
    , 4 (1st Cir.
    2021)), and we must defer to the adverse credibility finding by
    the IJ that the BIA affirmed so long as "no reasonable adjudicator
    would be compelled to conclude to the contrary," Diaz-Garcia v.
    Holder, 
    609 F.3d 21
    , 26–27 (1st Cir. 2010) (quoting Anacassus v.
    Holder, 
    602 F.3d 14
    , 18 (1st Cir. 2010)).
    To make the case that there is no substantial evidence
    to support the finding in question, Reyes homes in on one of the
    "inconsistencies" that the IJ identified and that the BIA then
    relied on in affirming the IJ's adverse credibility finding.
    Specifically, Reyes argues that "both the [IJ] and the [BIA] erred
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    in finding that" Reyes received a loan for an amount of money that
    "would have been enough to satisfy Reyes's 600,000-peso/$10,000
    USD debt and prevent further violence."
    The IJ observed in that regard that Reyes secured a loan
    to flee the country "that with interest accrued to date, closely
    approximated the sum at issue with Raul and Joel, which belies the
    assertion that he was unable to come up with that amount of money."
    The BIA noted approvingly that "the [IJ] . . . question[ed] the
    plausibility of [Reyes]'s claim because the loan amount was very
    close to the debt owed."
    The problem with finding an inconsistency in Reyes's
    account based on this portion of the record is that nothing in it
    shows that, even with the loan that Reyes did secure, he was able
    to "come up with" the money sought from him by those who he
    contended were his attackers.   Thus, nothing in this portion of
    the record supports the conclusion that there is any inconsistency
    in his testimony in the relevant respect.
    To be sure, the record shows that, by Reyes's account,
    those men sought 600,000 pesos from Reyes, which he does not
    dispute equates -- as the BIA found -- to approximately $10,000.
    It further shows that he secured a loan during the period in which
    the men in question were seeking to recoup the $10,000 that they
    contended that Reyes owed them.        But, nothing in the record
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    indicates that, via the loan, Reyes was, contrary to his testimony,
    able to "come up with" that amount of money.
    The relevant testimony at the removal proceedings is as
    follows:
    Q. Okay, and so, in total, how much do you
    think [the friend who assisted Reyes in
    obtaining a loan secured by Reyes's home]
    wound up having to get out of the house to pay
    for your travels to the United States?
    A. He told me around $7,500 to the border.
    Q. Okay, and ultimately with interest, how
    much do you think [the loan] wound up being?
    A. The truth is I don't, I don't know.
    Q. Could it have been as much as 10,000?
    A. More or less.
    Q. Okay, so could it have been even more than
    10,000?
    A. I think until that point, less than 10,000.
    (emphasis added).
    We suppose this exchange could be read to support a
    finding that the total balance due on the loan that Reyes obtained
    would ultimately amount to $10,000.       But, even granting the
    reasonableness of that reading, we do not see how the record
    undermines Reyes's testimony that he did not pay off the attackers
    because he "didn't have a way" to do so.     Even on that reading,
    the record would show at most that, down the line, Reyes would
    have assumed a debt that, with interest, equaled $10,000. It would
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    not thereby show that -- contrary to his account -- he had secured
    $10,000, let alone that he had done so in a reasonably timely
    fashion from the perspective of the collectors of his purported
    debt.1   The amount that one owes as a debt obviously is not an
    amount that one therefore has, even if it is reasonable to conclude
    that it is inconsistent to assert that one is "unable to come up
    with" money to pay off seemingly impatient potential attackers
    whenever there is evidence to support the conclusion that one would
    eventually secure funds equal to the amount such attackers are
    demanding.
    1  The BIA arguably recast the IJ's findings and thereby
    treated them as not resting on there being an inconsistency between
    Reyes's claim that he was unable to pay off his alleged attackers
    and the evidence regarding the loan that he had secured. In that
    regard, the BIA stated that, because Reyes "did not use [the loan]
    to repay his former employer but to flee the country," the IJ
    "question[ed] the plausibility of [Reyes]'s claim because the loan
    amount was very close to the debt owed."        The IJ emphasized,
    however, that the amount of loan money Reyes received "belie[d]
    the assertion that he was unable to come up with" the amount he
    owed his alleged persecutors without suggesting that it would have
    been implausible for Reyes to have used money that he obtained
    from the loan to flee rather than to pay off the men who attacked
    him.   Moreover, even if the IJ's rationale for finding Reyes's
    story implausible were the one that the BIA ascribed to the IJ, a
    reasonable adjudicator would be compelled to reject it. It is not
    in any way implausible that someone who reports having been shot,
    stabbed, and threatened with death over an unpaid debt would use
    what money he had to flee those attackers rather than to repay
    them, especially when, as we have explained is the case here, the
    record does not provide support for finding that the debtor at any
    point had in hand the amount that he was claimed to have owed and
    shows instead at most only that he had secured a loan that would
    (accounting for interest) require him to pay back such an amount.
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    Of   course,   if    the     IJ's    non-demeanor-based      adverse
    credibility finding -- and thus the BIA's affirmance of it --
    rested on a subset of the "inconsistencies" that did not include
    the one regarding the loan that we have just reviewed, that finding
    could still stand.     But, there is no basis for so concluding, given
    that   the   IJ   expressly      stated    that    she    was   relying   on   the
    "inconsistencies"      that      she    identified       when   "taken    in   the
    aggregate."
    Thus,    the     BIA       upheld     an    adverse     credibility
    determination that the IJ reached in part based on an inconsistency
    in Reyes's story that simply was not an inconsistency.                 Nor can we
    say that absent the adverse credibility finding, Reyes's CAT claim
    would necessarily fail.       We therefore must vacate the BIA's ruling
    affirming the IJ's denial of that claim.                 See Cuesta-Rojas, 991
    F.3d at 272–73, 278–79; Mboowa, 795 F.3d at 228–29; Jabri, 
    675 F.3d at 26
    ; see also Mukamusoni v. Ashcroft, 
    390 F.3d 110
    , 122
    (1st Cir. 2004) (explaining that it is error to treat an asylum
    applicant's testimony as if it were "weaker than it actually was"
    and to then "demand[] a higher level of corroboration" on that
    mistaken basis than otherwise would be required).
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, Reyes's petition for review
    is granted, the ruling of the BIA is vacated, and we remand for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion.                  Accordingly,
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    Reyes's petition for review of the BIA's denial of his motion
    for reconsideration is dismissed as moot.
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