Chavez v. Garland ( 2022 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 21-1267
    ROMMEL ALEXANDER CHAVEZ,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    MERRICK B. GARLAND,
    UNITED STATES ATTORNEY GENERAL,
    Respondent.
    PETITION FOR REVIEW OF AN ORDER OF
    THE BOARD OF IMMIGRATION APPEALS
    Before
    Gelpí, Lipez, and Howard,
    Circuit Judges.
    SangYeob Kim, with whom Gilles Bissonnette, Caroline Meade,
    American Civil Liberties Union of New Hampshire, and New Hampshire
    Immigrants' Rights Project were on brief, for petitioner.
    Susan Bennett Green, Senior Litigation Counsel, Office of
    Immigration Litigation, U.S. Department of Justice, with whom
    Brian M. Boynton, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Civil
    Division, and Linda S. Wernery, Assistant Director, were on brief,
    for respondent.
    Anna R. Welch, Clinical Professor, Camrin M. Rivera, Student
    Attorney, Emily L. Gorrivan, Student Attorney, and Cumberland
    Legal Aid Clinic, University of Maine School of Law on brief for
    amicus curiae Immigration Law Professors.
    October 21, 2022
    HOWARD,   Circuit   Judge.     Rommel   Alexander   Chavez,   a
    citizen of El Salvador, petitions for review of an order of the
    Board of Immigration Appeals ("BIA") affirming the denial of his
    application for withholding of removal under the Immigration and
    Nationality Act ("INA") and for protection under the Convention
    Against    Torture ("CAT").     For the following reasons, we grant the
    petition in part, vacate the decision of the BIA in part, and
    remand to the BIA for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    I.
    A.
    Rommel Alexander Chavez is a        45-year-old     Salvadoran
    citizen who has lived in the United States since 1997, with the
    exception of a two-month period in 2012.              The IJ found him
    credible, and the BIA did not disturb that finding.        Cf. Kalubi v.
    Ashcroft, 
    364 F.3d 1134
    , 1141-42 (9th Cir. 2004) ("[A]bsent an
    adverse credibility determination, testimony must be accepted as
    true . . . ."). Accordingly, "we accept as true [] [his] testimony
    about the historical facts."        See Palma-Mazariegos v. Gonzales,
    
    428 F.3d 30
    , 33 (1st Cir. 2005).
    While Chavez was growing up in El Salvador, he and his
    family had several violent encounters with the police.          In 1978 or
    1979, when Chavez was two or three years old, his eldest brother,
    Oscar, broke a curfew to go see his girlfriend.          In the process,
    - 3 -
    he ran into the police and was shot and killed by them.      Chavez
    also had a violent encounter with the police in 1991 or 1992, when
    he was 15 or 16 years old.   A group of police officers stopped him
    on the street and started searching him in an aggressive manner,
    hitting him at one point with a weapon.    He had a bike with him,
    and they asked him where the papers for it were.1      He told them
    that they were at his house, but they nevertheless started trying
    to take the bike away from him.     He tried to grab it from their
    hands, but they wouldn't stop, and eventually, he began to run
    away toward his house.   Just before he reached his house an officer
    shot him in his buttocks.    When his brother Omar came out of the
    house to see what was going on, an officer shot Omar, too.     Omar
    still requires the use of a colostomy bag because of that injury.
    As a result of that encounter, Chavez was sent to jail
    for about seven months for "resisting arrest."    After his release,
    he continued to be stopped and beaten up by the police.     When he
    was 12 or 13, he had gotten a tattoo that later came to be
    associated with a rival gang of MS-13, Mara 18.   He testified that
    although the police "never said anything [to him] about [his]
    tattoo," because of it, they "simply believed that [he and his
    friends] were gang members."2
    1 Chavez explained that at that time, bicycles in El Salvador
    had "titles like [] car[s]."
    2   Chavez testified that he has never been a member of any
    - 4 -
    At some point during his teenage years, members of MS-
    13 began to "insinuat[e]" to Chavez that he should go to their
    meetings, but he never did.     As he explains it, he was always
    "against" them, and used to erase their graffiti. On one occasion,
    he drew a Mara 18 symbol over MS-13's symbols.   The next day, they
    found out that he was the one who drew it, showed up to his house,
    and beat him up, fracturing one of his ribs.
    Chavez was also threatened by MS-13 on another occasion.
    He had told the victim of a robbery that El Churro, a member of
    MS-13, was the perpetrator, and the victim had proceeded to press
    charges.   At some point, Chavez also told the police that El Churro
    was the perpetrator.    El Churro learned that Chavez had told the
    victim it was he who did it, and, through another member of MS-
    13, sent a message to Chavez that, as paraphrased by Chavez,
    "[Chavez] had [better] take care of [himself] because [El Churro]
    was going to do something [otherwise]."    Chavez took that to mean
    that El Churro was probably going to "kill [Chavez] or something
    else, something bad."   It appears that Chavez left for the United
    States shortly thereafter.   As he explains it, "[he] was not about
    to stick around, waiting for" El Churro to act on his threat.
    From 1997 until 2012, Chavez lived in the United States.
    During that period, members of MS-13 killed Mauricio, one of his
    gang, and that he got the tattoo out of youthful rebellion.
    - 5 -
    friends who lived in El Salvador, because Mauricio had refused to
    pay them rent.      And in 2009, members of MS-13 killed Chavez's
    nephew    "supposedly   [because]     he   had   some    tattoos"   and   MS-13
    therefore "pinn[ed] him as belonging to [a different] gang."
    In 2011, Chavez was placed in removal proceedings.               He
    applied for asylum, but his application was denied, and he was
    removed to El Salvador in May 2012.
    On the day he returned to El Salvador, someone came to
    his house and fired a weapon into the air, which he took to be a
    "message" to make him "afraid."            In addition, after his return,
    MS-13 murdered his neighbor, Javier, and Javier's dad, Jesus,
    because    they   had   intervened    while      MS-13   was   stealing   some
    livestock. Chavez testified that he believes that MS-13 associates
    him with the victims of those murders, as well as with his murdered
    nephew and friend Mauricio.
    On another occasion during his time in El Salvador, he
    had a conversation with a member of MS-13 who had been beaten up
    by other members quite badly.        Chavez told him that he "shouldn't
    get involved with them" and that "he could get himself killed."
    At some point during that conversation, an "entire group" of
    members of MS-13 showed up, and their "boss" warned Chavez "not
    [to] mess with them."      Chavez speculated that the boss might have
    said that because "they thought [that Chavez] was advising that
    guy from the gang -- giving him advice to get out of it."                   The
    - 6 -
    next day, the MS-13 member who had been beaten up came to Chavez's
    house with a weapon and "star[ed] at [his] house [] as if he was
    going to shoot."       Chavez speculated that he may have done that
    because of "the scolding [Chavez] gave him in front of his boss"
    and that it was "possible" that his boss sent him to Chavez's house
    for that reason.
    Sometime after that incident, MS-13 told Chavez that
    they wanted to "investigate" him and "check out [his] tattoos."
    At   that   point,    Chavez   decided    to   leave   his   town   to   go   to
    Miraflores, another town in El Salvador where his mother and
    brother lived.       Two weeks later -- about two months after he had
    arrived in El Salvador -- thinking that MS-13 was going to "kill[]"
    him, he returned to the United States.
    B.
    In March 2020, Chavez was placed in withholding-only
    proceedings. On July 7, 2020, he applied for statutory withholding
    of removal under the INA and protection under the CAT.
    As relevant here, Chavez sought withholding of removal
    on account of his imputed membership in Mara 18, and his imputed
    or actual anti-MS-13 political opinion.          He alleged that he feared
    persecution from the police and from MS-13 as to the first ground,
    and persecution from MS-13 as to the second ground.           He also sought
    protection under the CAT.
    The IJ held hearings in the matter at which Chavez and
    - 7 -
    Dr. Lawrence Ladutke, an expert witness on El Salvador, testified.
    The IJ denied Chavez's application, and ordered him removed.
    Chavez appealed that decision, and the BIA dismissed his appeal in
    a written decision of its own.     This petition for review followed.
    II.
    The BIA issued its own decision on Chavez's claims, thus
    we review that final agency decision.       See Reynoso v. Holder, 
    711 F.3d 199
    , 205 (1st Cir. 2013).      Nevertheless, to the extent that
    the BIA deferred to or adopted the IJ's reasoning, we review those
    portions of the IJ's decision.      Bonilla v. Mukasey, 
    539 F.3d 72
    ,
    76 (1st Cir. 2008).
    We   review   the   agency's   findings   of   fact   under   the
    "substantial evidence" standard.     
    Id.
     (quotations omitted).      Under
    that standard, the agency's determination "must be upheld if
    'supported by reasonable, substantial, and probative evidence on
    the record considered as a whole.'"        See INS v. Elias-Zacarias,
    
    502 U.S. 478
    , 481 (1992) (quoting 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a)(4)).              "To
    reverse . . . we must find that the evidence not only supports [a
    contrary] conclusion, but compels it . . . ."        Id. at 481 n.1.
    III.
    Chavez first contends that the BIA's finding that he has
    not established eligibility for withholding of removal is not
    supported by substantial evidence.        "Withholding of removal is
    available if '[an] alien's life or freedom would be threatened in
    - 8 -
    the destination country because of the alien's race, religion,
    nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political
    opinion.'"   Heng v. Gonzales, 
    493 F.3d 46
    , 47-48 (1st Cir. 2007)
    (quoting Da Silva v. Ashcroft, 
    394 F.3d 1
    , 4 (1st Cir. 2005)); see
    also 
    8 U.S.C. § 1231
    (b)(3)(A).
    "The 'threat to life or freedom' under withholding of
    removal is 'identical' to 'persecution' under asylum, [but] the
    burden placed on the petitioner is higher."      Wiratama v. Mukasey,
    
    538 F.3d 1
    , 3 (1st Cir. 2008).        To qualify for withholding, a
    petitioner "must demonstrate either that [he] has suffered past
    persecution on account of a protected ground (thus creating a
    rebuttable presumption that [he] may suffer future persecution) or
    that it is more likely than not that [he] will be persecuted on
    account of a protected ground if sent to the destination country.”
    
    Id. at 4
     (quoting Heng, 
    493 F.3d at 48
    ) (alterations in original).
    A.
    Chavez   first   challenges   the   agency's   determination
    concerning his actual or imputed anti-MS-13 political opinion.3
    To qualify as a political opinion, an opinion "must involve some
    support for or disagreement with the belief system, policies, or
    3 In the proceedings below, Chavez also sought withholding of
    removal on the basis of his actual or imputed anti-government
    political opinion. However, in his petition, he does not challenge
    the denial of withholding of removal based on that political
    opinion. Accordingly, we do not address it.
    - 9 -
    practices of a government and its instrumentalities, an entity
    that seeks to directly influence laws, regulations, or policy, an
    organization that aims to overthrow the government, or a group
    that plays some other similar role in society.”                 Zelaya-Moreno v.
    Wilkinson,    
    989 F.3d 190
    ,     199-200    (2d   Cir.     2021)    (citations
    omitted).        An   opinion   for    this     purpose   can    be     "actual"   or
    "imputed."       To prevail on an actual political opinion claim, a
    petitioner must (1) show that he holds a political belief, (2)
    prove that the persecutors perceived that political belief, and
    (3) prove that the persecution was because of that political
    belief.     See Mendez-Barrera v. Holder, 
    602 F.3d 21
    , 27 (1st Cir.
    2010); Zhakira v. Barr, 
    977 F.3d 60
    , 67 (1st Cir. 2020).                           To
    prevail on an imputed political opinion claim, a petitioner must
    show that (1) the persecutor perceived him to hold a political
    belief, and (2) the persecution was because of that perceived
    political belief.        See Archila v. Holder, 495 F. App’x 98, 100
    (1st Cir. 2012).
    In    his   petition,      Chavez     contends      that     the   BIA's
    conclusion that MS-13 would not perceive him to hold an anti-MS-
    13 political opinion was not supported by substantial evidence.
    Because we conclude that it was, we need not examine his other
    contentions concerning his political opinion claim.4
    4   Among other things, Chavez also contends in his petition
    - 10 -
    The BIA stated that it was "affirm[ing] the [IJ's]
    determination that the applicant did not establish he was or would
    be harmed based on his actual or imputed anti-gang . . . political
    opinion"; thus, we review the IJ's decision as part of the BIA's
    decision.   The IJ stated that
    The respondent himself testified that the gangs attacked
    the respondent because they thought he was a rival.
    Furthermore,   the court will find that the respondent
    was opposed to criminal acts as a concerned citizen
    within his area, and [that] based on th[at] [he] has
    failed to . . . show . . . a nexus to the political
    opinion of anti-MS-13 gang membership.         There is
    insufficient evidence that the respondent was expressing
    an [anti] MS-13 gang political opinion; rather, he was
    a local concerned citizen opposed to criminal acts
    within his neighborhood, and he also testified that the
    gang members thought he was a threat to them. The court
    finds this is insufficient to constitute political
    opinion.
    The IJ further stated that Chavez did not have an "objective well-
    founded fear of future persecution" as to any political opinion
    that the BIA improperly required him to show that his political
    opinion was or would be a "central reason" for his persecution
    rather than "a reason" for it. That contention stems in part from
    a circuit split concerning whether an applicant for withholding of
    removal must show that a protected ground was or would be "at least
    one central reason" for his persecution, or merely that the ground
    was or would be "a reason" for it. Compare, e.g., Barajas-Romero
    v. Lynch, 
    846 F.3d 351
    , 360 (9th Cir. 2017) (a reason), and Guzman-
    Vazquez v. Barr, 
    959 F.3d 253
    , 274 (6th Cir. 2020) (same), with
    Gonzalez-Posadas v. Att'y Gen., 
    781 F.3d 677
    , 685 n.6 (3d Cir.
    2015) (one central reason), and Vazquez-Guerra v. Garland, 
    7 F.4th 265
    , 271 (5th Cir. 2021) (same). The government counters that we
    have already determined that the "one central reason" test is the
    appropriate one; Chavez contends that language to that effect in
    our caselaw is dicta. See, e.g., Marquez-Paz v. Barr, 
    983 F.3d 564
    , 565 (1st Cir. 2020). As noted, it is unnecessary to resolve
    such issues here, if in fact we have not already resolved them.
    - 11 -
    because "[i]n 2012 . . . there was a shooting outside of his house
    by unknown individuals" and there was "a threat at gunpoint" which
    was the result of a "personal dispute with a gang member; it was
    not on account of a[n] anti-MS-13 political opinion."
    The BIA in turn stated that "[t]he applicant's evidence
    that he was the victim of gang violence, resisted gang recruitment,
    reported criminal activity to the police, and painted graffiti of
    a rival gang . . . does not establish that [he] actually held or
    was perceived to hold a political opinion."              And it added that
    [T]he applicant testified that gang members attacked him
    because they presumably believed he was part of a rival
    gang and perceived him as a threat . . . . This evidence
    does not satisfy the applicant's burden to establish
    that his alleged persecutors believed or would believe
    he holds a political opinion.
    As   noted,   Chavez    must     show      that    his   persecutors
    perceived or would perceive          him to hold a political opinion
    regardless of whether he contends that he actually held that
    opinion, or only that it was imputed to him.                  Thus, we focus on
    MS-13's perception of his opinion.              Chavez contends that the IJ
    made   a   factual   finding,   which     the    BIA   accepted,     that     MS-13
    perceived him as a rival gang member, and separately, as a local
    concerned     citizen     opposed    to      criminal     acts       within     his
    neighborhood.     He rightly appears to concede that an anti-MS-13
    opinion based upon membership in a rival gang is not a political
    opinion.     See Marín-Portillo v. Lynch, 
    834 F.3d 99
    , 101 (1st Cir.
    2016) (noting that "disputes motivated by revenge," or otherwise
    - 12 -
    of a personal nature, are not "motivated by an enumerated statutory
    ground" for asylum and therefore do not support relief).          But he
    contends that being a concerned citizen opposed to criminal acts
    within his neighborhood is holding a political opinion (and, thus,
    that MS-13 perceives him to hold a political opinion).
    We need not decide whether       he is correct that       his
    opposition amounted to a political opinion because neither the BIA
    nor   the   IJ   found   that    MS-13    perceived   such    opposition
    (notwithstanding Chavez's contentions to the contrary).            It is
    true that the IJ found that Chavez was opposed to criminal acts
    within his neighborhood.        But the IJ did not find that MS-13
    perceived his actions as motivated by such opposition -- rather,
    the IJ found that, regardless of Chavez's actually held opposition
    to crime, MS-13 perceived his actions as motivated by membership
    in a rival gang.   The IJ stated that "[Chavez] himself testified
    that the gangs attacked the respondent because they thought he was
    a rival"; the BIA likewise stated that "[Chavez] testified that
    gang members attacked him because they presumably believed he was
    part of a rival gang and perceived him as a threat."         Accordingly,
    although the IJ and the BIA appeared to credit that Chavez was in
    fact motivated by his opposition to criminal acts, they did not
    find that MS-13 perceived or would perceive that opposition;
    rather, they concluded that MS-13 had perceived and would continue
    to perceive him as a rival gang member.
    - 13 -
    Moreover, that conclusion was supported by substantial
    evidence.    Here, MS-13 knew that Chavez had painted over its
    graffiti with the symbol of a rival gang (and attacked him for
    it), and in 2012, when he returned to El Salvador, an MS-13 member
    told him that they wanted to "investigate" him and "check out [his]
    tattoos" (which was the point at which Chavez decided to leave El
    Salvador, because he does in fact have a tattoo associated with
    that rival gang).    It is true that Chavez also took a number of
    other actions against MS-13 that, in isolation, could have been
    viewed by MS-13 as based upon general opposition to crime:      he
    advised an MS-13 member to quit; told the police that one of their
    members had committed a robbery; and was "always say[ing] [to MS-
    13]" that he "didn't like their painting on the walls," and
    "scolding them because they were always breaking glass bottles,"
    which "bother[ed]" him because kids in that area were frequently
    barefoot.    But, because MS-13 knew that Chavez had painted the
    symbol of a rival gang over its graffiti, it was not unreasonable
    for the BIA and the IJ to conclude that MS-13 would have viewed
    his subsequent conduct as motivated by his supposed membership in
    that rival gang, rather than by general opposition to crime as a
    citizen.
    For those reasons, the BIA's conclusion that Chavez
    would not be perceived to hold an anti-MS-13 political opinion,
    and that his claim based on that political opinion therefore
    - 14 -
    failed, was supported by substantial evidence.
    B.
    Chavez also alleged that his life or freedom would be
    threatened in El Salvador by both MS-13 and the police because
    they   would     incorrectly   perceive    him     as   a   member   of   a   gang.
    Specifically, he claimed that he will be incorrectly perceived as
    a member of Mara 18 due to his tattoo and will suffer harm as a
    result. For a proposed social group to be cognizable, an applicant
    must show that the group is "(1) composed of members who share a
    common immutable characteristic, (2) defined with particularity,
    and (3) socially distinct within the society in question."                    Paiz-
    Morales v. Lynch, 
    795 F.3d 238
    , 244 (1st Cir. 2015) (quotations
    omitted).
    In    his   petition,   Chavez       contends     that   Salvadorans
    incorrectly perceived to be gang members can be a "particular
    social group" within the meaning of the INA, notwithstanding the
    BIA's statement that they cannot, and that the BIA thus erred in
    relying on that rationale to reject his social group claim.                      He
    further contends that the BIA did not provide any alternative
    rationale for rejecting that claim, and therefore, remand is
    required.        In response, the government argues that the BIA's
    rationale      was   correct   --   that     is,    Salvadorans      incorrectly
    perceived to be gang members cannot, as a categorical matter, be
    a "particular social group" under the INA -- but appears to agree
    - 15 -
    that, in the event that we disagree, remand is required at least
    as to persecution by MS-13 based upon that group.
    The government contends, however, that the BIA adopted
    one of the alternative rationales that the IJ gave for rejecting
    Chavez's social group claim as to persecution by the police and
    thus, remand is not required as to that part of his social group
    claim   even   if   we    reject   the   BIA's   categorical   rationale.
    Specifically, it points to the BIA's statement that "the [IJ]
    properly found that the police never mentioned that they stopped
    him because of his tattoos."       Chavez explains, however, that he is
    not asserting past persecution based on the incorrect perception
    that he is a gang member, but rather, that he will be persecuted
    in the future on that account because the police will discover his
    tattoo when they detain him pursuant to COVID-19 precautions.
    Although the IJ determined that Chavez had not shown that it was
    more likely than not that he would be harmed in the future by the
    police on account of the police incorrectly perceiving him to be
    a gang member, it is not clear from the BIA's opinion whether it
    adopted that ground provided by the IJ.          "When the BIA does not
    consider an IJ's alternative ground for denying relief, that ground
    is not before us."       Bonilla, 
    539 F.3d at 81-82
    .    We thus focus on
    the validity of the BIA's conclusion that, as a categorical matter,
    Salvadorans incorrectly perceived to be members of a gang cannot
    be a valid particular social group under the INA.
    - 16 -
    In concluding that that group is not a valid particular
    social group, the BIA relied on Cantarero v. Holder, 
    734 F.3d 82
    ,
    86 (1st Cir. 2013) and Matter of E-A-G-, 
    24 I. & N. Dec. 591
     (BIA
    2008).   In Matter of E-A-G-, the BIA held that although being a
    member of a gang, and therefore, being incorrectly perceived as a
    member of a gang, entails some social visibility, such groups were
    nevertheless not cognizable under the INA.          E-A-G-, 24 I. & N.
    Dec. at 595-96.   It reasoned that Congress did not intend to grant
    protection to actual gang members, and thus, "[because] membership
    in a criminal gang cannot constitute a particular social group,
    [a] respondent [also] cannot establish particular social group
    status based on the incorrect perception by others that he is such
    a gang member."   Id. at 596.
    In Cantarero, we upheld as reasonable a determination by
    the BIA that former gang members do not constitute a cognizable
    social group under the INA.     Cantarero, 734 F.3d at 87.      We noted
    that the BIA had "cited extensively to its decision in Matter of
    E-A-G-" and had reasoned that "recognizing former members of
    violent criminal gangs as a particular social group would undermine
    the legislative purpose of the INA."      Cantarero, 734 F.3d at 85.
    However, Cantarero did not determine whether the holding
    of Matter of E-A-G- that is relevant here -- that people who are
    incorrectly   perceived   to   be   members   of   gangs   cannot,   as   a
    categorical matter, constitute a particular social group under the
    - 17 -
    INA -- is reasonable.            "Where, as here, the BIA rejects an
    applicant's proffered social group on legal grounds, its decision
    is subject to de novo review."           Cantarero, 734 F.3d at 84.         And
    "[b]ecause we are confronted with a question implicating 'an
    agency's construction of the statute which it administers,' we
    follow Chevron principles in our review."           Id. at 84-85 (quoting
    Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 
    467 U.S. 837
    , 842 (1984)). Here, because the term "particular social group"
    is ambiguous, we must uphold the BIA's interpretation if it is
    based on a "permissible construction of the statute."               Cantarero,
    734 F.3d at 85 (quoting Chevron, 
    467 U.S. at 843
    ).
    Generally speaking, "[s]ocial group determinations are
    made on a case-by-case basis."            Paiz-Morales, 795 F.3d at 245
    (quotations omitted).      None of the reasons that Matter of E-A-G-
    provided     for   determining    that   actual   gang   membership    cannot
    constitute a "particular social group" apply to those who are
    incorrectly perceived to be gang members, who do not necessarily
    have a criminal past. The other reasons that the government offers
    are   likewise     deficient.     Specifically,    it    contends    that   the
    difference between imputed and actual gang membership can be a
    hard line to draw, and that imputed membership in a particular
    group cannot be cognizable if the actual group is not.5               But the
    5   The government contends that it is a hard line to draw in
    - 18 -
    first issue can be resolved on a case-by-case basis, and the second
    does not appear to have previously been a bar to recognition.      Cf.
    Pirir-Boc v. Holder, 
    750 F.3d 1077
    , 1084 (9th Cir. 2014) (noting
    that the BIA "may not reject a group solely because it had
    previously found a similar group in a different society to lack
    social distinction or particularity").       Therefore, even under our
    deferential review, we are compelled to reject as impermissible
    Matter of E-A-G-'s holding that a group made up of those who are
    incorrectly perceived to be members of a gang is categorically
    barred from recognition as a particular social group under the
    INA.       In doing so, we join the Ninth Circuit, which rejected that
    holding based on its conclusion that the reasons for finding that
    actual members of a gang are barred from recognition simply "do
    not apply" to those incorrectly perceived to be gang members.
    Vasquez-Rodriguez v. Garland, 
    7 F.4th 888
    , 898-98 (9th Cir. 2021).6
    this case but does not in fact contend that Chavez is or was a
    gang member. Moreover, the IJ found Chavez's testimony credible,
    and thus accepted his testimony that he has never been a gang
    member. And the BIA did not disturb that finding.
    6The Tenth Circuit in an unpublished, non-precedential
    opinion also rejected that same holding based on its conclusion
    that applying those reasons to those who are incorrectly perceived
    to be gang members is an "irrational leap." Escamilla v. Holder,
    
    459 F. App'x 776
    , 786 (10th Cir. 2012). The court nevertheless
    rejected the petitioner's proposed social group because it found
    that the proposed group -- "Salvadoran men believed to be gang
    members of a rival gang" -- differed "significantly" from the
    proposed group in Matter of E-A-G-. Escamilla, 459 F. App'x at
    787. It reasoned that being a member of a "rival gang" was defined
    "not by society's perception of the group, but by the perceptions
    - 19 -
    We thus remand for the BIA to consider in the first
    instance whether Chavez's proposed social group satisfies the
    requirements for constituting a particular social group under the
    INA to which he belongs.     We express no opinion as to the merits
    of that issue other than to emphasize that the BIA cannot reject
    such a group based solely on its determination that current or
    former gang members cannot form a particular social group.                 In
    addition, on remand, the BIA may consider the alternative grounds
    the IJ gave for rejecting his claim based on his proposed social
    group -- that is, that he did not show a clear probability of
    future persecution, and that the government is able and willing to
    protect   him.   See    Bonilla,    
    539 F.3d at 82
       (finding   remand
    "appropriate" where the BIA had "not yet considered" the IJ's
    alternative ground).7
    of the . . . 'rival gangs'" and therefore "fail[ed] the first
    prong of the social visibility test." 
    Id.
     (emphasis added). Here,
    Chavez does not use such terminology; he defines his group as
    persons "incorrectly perceived" or "imputed" to be gang members.
    7 On remand, certain parts of the BIA's opinion discussing
    Chavez's CAT claim may also be relevant to Chavez's social group
    claim.   For example, the BIA endorsed the IJ's discussion of
    "government action" to combat gangs in its discussion of Chavez's
    CAT claim, which is relevant to claims for withholding of removal
    as well. See Mendez-Barrera, 
    602 F.3d at 27
    . It also noted, in
    discussing petitioner's eligibility for protection under the CAT,
    that "generalized evidence of official corruption in the
    Salvadoran law enforcement community [does not] suffice to prove
    that a Salvadoran public official would more likely than not
    torture him, or consent to or acquiesce in his future torture by
    gang members." Nevertheless, with the sole exception noted above,
    which we have determined is insufficient, the government takes the
    - 20 -
    IV.
    Chavez also contends that the BIA's determination that
    he has not demonstrated eligibility for protection under the CAT
    is not supported by substantial evidence, and that the BIA made an
    error of law in its assessment of willful blindness.          To qualify
    for that protection, Chavez must show that "it is more likely than
    not that he . . . would be tortured if removed to [El Salvador]."
    
    8 C.F.R. § 1208.16
    (c)(2).     Unlike eligibility for withholding of
    removal, relief under the CAT is available even if the risk of
    torture is not on account of any protected ground.             Rashad v.
    Mukasey, 
    554 F.3d 1
    , 6 (1st Cir. 2009).         Torture is defined as
    "any act by which severe pain or suffering . . . is intentionally
    inflicted   on   a   person . . . when   such   pain   or   suffering   is
    inflicted by, or at the instigation of, or with the consent or
    acquiescence of, a public official . . . or other person acting in
    an official capacity."     
    8 C.F.R. § 1208.18
    (a)(1).
    In considering Chavez's eligibility under the CAT, the
    IJ first found that Chavez had not been tortured in the past.           The
    IJ reasoned that the incident when he was shot as a teenager "[was]
    not torture because it was not an act that was specifically
    position that remand is necessary if this court rejects the
    relevant holding of Matter of E-A-G-.   Nor did the BIA discuss
    such issues in the context of Chavez's claim for withholding of
    removal.   Thus, the court will leave such items for the BIA's
    consideration on remand.
    - 21 -
    intended to cause severe mental pain or suffering" and that,
    "[r]ather, [Chavez] had been stopped and detained by police, he
    was uncooperative with the police and unable to comply with their
    demands, and attempted to flee the scene when he was shot."
    The IJ further found that "[e]ven if [the shooting
    incident] had constituted torture" it was not more likely than not
    that he would be tortured in the future because "he has had no
    interactions with the police at least since he was 15 or 16 years
    old."8   The IJ further stated that
    Even when he was deported back to El Salvador in 2012,
    he never had any interactions with government officials.
    To the extent he would be persecuted by a private actor
    [MS-13] . . . as noted in the court's above discussion
    on government action . . . the actions of the gang
    members . . . are not done with the acquiescence or on
    behalf of the government officials; rather, government
    officials are attempting to prosecute and prevent any
    violent criminal actions by the gang members.
    In   reaching   its   conclusion     regarding   consent   or
    acquiescence, the IJ referred back to its discussion of government
    action in the withholding context, in which it held that Chavez
    had not shown that "the government [was] unwilling or unable to
    protect him."   The IJ pointed to:        (1) evidence that showed that
    El Churro had been prosecuted for rape, which the IJ found was
    8 Chavez testified that after his release from jail after the
    1991 or 1992 incident with the police, he continued to be stopped
    and beaten up by the police.      However, no additional details
    concerning such incidents are evident from the record, nor does
    Chavez contend that the IJ's finding that he did not have any
    incidents with the police after the age of 15 or 16 was erroneous.
    - 22 -
    "proof that the El Salvadoran government does generally prosecute
    gang       members";   (2)     the    testimony    of    Dr.   Ladutke,   who,   as
    paraphrased by the IJ, testified that the gangs had been classified
    by the government as terrorists; that there was insufficient
    evidence that the police would harm Chavez or detain him upon his
    deportation;9 and that anti-terrorist laws, even if ineffective,
    show a willingness on the part of the government to prosecute
    crimes by gang members; and (3) certain articles submitted by the
    government.       The IJ noted as to such articles that although many
    of them were from 2016, a more recent New York Times article
    published in August 2019 reported that homicides were declining
    across      the   country;10    the    president   was    deploying   police     and
    Chavez contends that the IJ's statement that Dr. Ladutke
    9
    "said [that] there was insufficient evidence that the police would
    harm   [Chavez]    or   detain    him   upon   his    deportation"
    "mischaracterize[s]" his testimony.    But Dr. Ladutke testified
    that he did not have any evidence that "just by [the] act of being
    deported" Chavez would be harmed by the police, and that he would
    only be harmed if there were an "encounter." Thus, the issue is
    whether it was reasonable for the IJ to conclude that the
    likelihood of such an encounter was lower than the relevant
    threshold.
    Dr. Ladutke testified that such numbers have been "monkeyed
    10
    with," and the IJ does not appear to have addressed such testimony.
    The BIA has stated that "[w]hen the [IJ] makes a factual finding
    that is not consistent with an expert's opinion, it is
    important . . . to explain the reasons behind [that] finding[]."
    Matter of M-A-M-Z-, 
    28 I. & N. Dec. 173
    , 177-78 (BIA 2020).
    However, even if the IJ should have addressed Dr. Ladutke's
    testimony to that effect, that was only one of several reasons the
    IJ gave for concluding that the government was not unwilling or
    unable to protect Chavez. See In re San Juan Dupont Plaza Hotel
    Fire Litig., 
    994 F.2d 956
    , 968–69 (1st Cir. 1993) (noting that
    - 23 -
    soldiers to shopping and commercial areas to combat extortions;
    and a week earlier, a court had sentenced 72 MS-13 members to
    prison terms of 260 years for 22 killings.   The IJ concluded that
    such evidence refuted Chavez's contention that the Salvadoran
    government would consent or acquiesce to his torture.
    The BIA agreed with the IJ as to Chavez's claim for
    protection under the CAT, noting that "generalized evidence of
    official corruption in the Salvadoran law enforcement community
    [does not] suffice."   It agreed that the incident in which Chavez
    was shot as a teenager was not torture, and that "the [IJ] properly
    found that [] government officials in El Salvador have taken
    actions to prosecute gang members and to prevent gang violence."
    It concluded that while "gang violence continues to be a problem
    in El Salvador, the government is actively attempting to combat
    gangs" and "[t]he record does not sufficiently establish that any
    Salvadoran public official would seek to torture [him] or would
    acquiesce in or exhibit willful blindness toward any torture
    inflicted on him by any gang members or anyone else."
    Chavez first contends that the BIA's decision as to his
    CAT claim should be reversed because it erroneously applied the
    concept of willful blindness to the issue of whether public
    officials would breach their legal responsibility to intervene to
    appellate court may forgo remand where remanding would be an "empty
    exercise").
    - 24 -
    prevent torture.       A public official "[a]cquiesce[s]" in activity
    constituting torture if, prior to such activity, he or she is "[1]
    aware[] of such activity and [2] thereafter breach[es] his or her
    legal responsibility to intervene to prevent such activity." 
    8 C.F.R. § 1208.18
    (a)(7).        We     have    stated     previously      that
    "[a]cquiescence includes willful blindness."                  Perez-Trujillo v.
    Garland, 
    3 F.4th 10
    , 18 (1st Cir. 2021).             Chavez contends that the
    BIA's statement that "the [IJ] properly found that [] government
    officials in El Salvador have taken actions to prosecute gang
    members and to prevent gang violence" relates to the awareness
    prong,   and    that   its   statement      that   "[t]he     record    does    not
    sufficiently         establish       that      any       Salvadoran          public
    official . . . would acquiesce         in    or exhibit       willful   blindness
    toward any torture inflicted on him" illustrates that the BIA
    mistakenly     applied   willful    blindness      to   the    breach   of   legal
    responsibility prong.           In support, he notes that the awareness
    prong is distinct from the legal responsibility prong.                    H.H. v.
    Garland, Nos. 21-1150 & 21-1230, slip op. at 22-23 (October 21,
    2022); Khouzam v. Ashcroft, 
    361 F.3d 161
    , 171 (2d Cir. 2004)
    ("[T]orture requires only that government officials know of or
    remain willfully blind to an act and thereafter breach their legal
    responsibility to prevent it.").
    But     Chavez's     contention       misconstrues     the       BIA's
    statements.        The first excerpt discusses the measures that the
    - 25 -
    government is taking to "prevent gang violence," which is central
    to the legal responsibility prong, while the latter excerpt that
    refers to willful blindness appears to address the awareness prong.
    Thus, contrary to Chavez's contentions, the BIA concluded that the
    government would not breach its legal responsibility to intervene
    without any mention of willful blindness.
    Chavez further argues more generally that the record
    compels the conclusion that he was previously tortured and that
    Salvadoran officials will more likely than not torture him or
    ignore torturous acts inflicted upon him by MS-13 in the future.
    Among other evidence, he points to Dr. Ladutke's testimony that he
    should be "very concerned" that "if he ha[s] an encounter with the
    police," "he will be mistaken for a gang member and targeted by
    the police and security forces on that basis," and to a Human
    Rights Watch report from February 2020 stating that "[o]fficials
    interviewed for this report thought tattoos were the most common
    factor among deportees who were killed," that "gangs will kill
    them, as will others," and that in March 2019 the El Salvadoran
    police had severely beaten a man whom "they suspected of gang
    membership or hiding weapons or drugs," and set fire to a field
    where he was unconscious, leaving him with "burns to his face and
    feet." He further contends that Dr. Ladutke's testimony that "[the
    police] will obsessively checkpoint that they [indiscernible] for
    a tattoo" shows that the police will use checkpoints on the road
    - 26 -
    to   look       for   Chavez's   tattoo,   and   therefore,   his   chance    of
    encountering them is almost certain.               He also notes that Dr.
    Ladutke testified that "[d]uring the pandemic, the government has
    been detaining everyone entering El Salvador and putting them into
    this general quarantine area . . . [which includes] gang members"
    who have been "threatening" people there.               He did not testify as
    to the frequency of such threats but testified that "the government
    is not taking adequate measures to protect the people in these
    quarantine centers [from the gangs]."
    Although such evidence is undoubtedly concerning, we
    cannot say that it was improper for the BIA and the IJ to credit
    certain other evidence that the government is in fact taking
    measures to protect the population against gang members.                     See
    Perez-Trujillo, 3 F.4th at 20-21 (noting that record evidence
    concerning the government's "difficulty controlling gangs" did not
    compel      a    finding    of    acquiescence    to    torture,    given    the
    countervailing evidence of government efforts to incarcerate gang
    members involved in criminal activity); Mayorga-Vidal v. Holder,
    
    675 F.3d 9
    , 20 (1st Cir. 2012) (noting that evidence that the
    government's          "efforts   at   managing   gang    activity   [are    not]
    completely effectual" did not compel a finding of acquiescence in
    light of multiple government initiatives to arrest gang members
    and hold accountable police officers who assisted gangs).
    As to the risk of torture by the police, because the BIA
    - 27 -
    stated that it "agree[d] with the [IJ] that the applicant has not
    met his burden of demonstrating eligibility for protection under
    the CAT," citing to the portion of the IJ's decision that reviewed
    his eligibility for protection under the CAT, we review both
    decisions.    The   IJ    specifically   noted   that   Chavez   "had   no
    interactions with the police" since 1991 or 1992, although he
    remained in El Salvador until 1997, and that "when he was deported
    back to El Salvador in 2012, he never had any interactions with
    any government officials."     That was a reasonable basis on which
    to discount Dr. Ladutke's testimony as to the fact that the police
    would "obsessively" use checkpoints to find his tattoo, given that
    he had the same tattoo during all of those time periods.         Cf. Seide
    v. Gonzales, 
    137 F. App'x 364
    , 369 (1st Cir. 2005) (concluding
    that petitioner had not established eligibility for protection
    under the CAT because "from January to August 2001, [he] lived
    openly in Port-au-Prince . . . [and] was not specifically targeted
    by any individuals").11
    Finally, Chavez contends that the incident in which the
    police shot him when he was a teenager constituted past torture.
    11 Chavez also states that he is concerned that "the police
    [will discover his tattoo] because he will be detained pursuant to
    COVID-19 precautions." But Dr. Ladutke does not appear to have
    viewed the mandatory quarantine as an encounter with the police;
    rather, he discussed the potential harm posed by gangs in that
    setting. And there is no evidence that the police are checking
    deportees for tattoos in the quarantine centers.
    - 28 -
    But a finding to that effect would not have changed the BIA's
    decision.    The IJ stated that "[e]ven if" the shooting incident
    "had constituted torture," its conclusion would not have changed
    in light of the fact that Chavez remained in El Salvador without
    any incident with the police from 1991 or 1992 until 1997, and did
    not have any interactions with them when he returned to El Salvador
    for two months in 2012.   Although we strongly agree with the BIA's
    characterization of the incident in question as "condemnable," we
    also agree that, in light of how many years ago it occurred and of
    Chavez's lack of encounters with the police in the years since,
    even if it was torture, it does not compel a conclusion that Chavez
    will more likely than not be tortured in the future if removed.
    V.
    For the foregoing reasons, we grant in part the petition
    for review, vacate in part the order of the BIA, and remand the
    case to the BIA for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    - 29 -