Xing Yang v. Eric Holder, Jr. , 770 F.3d 294 ( 2014 )


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  •                                 PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 13-1682
    XING YANG YANG, a/k/a Xing Yang,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    ERIC H. HOLDER, JR., Attorney General,
    Respondent.
    On Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration
    Appeals.
    Argued:   September 16, 2014                 Decided:   October 29, 2014
    Before MOTZ and KING, Circuit Judges, and DAVIS, Senior Circuit
    Judge.
    Petition for review granted; vacated and remanded by published
    opinion. Judge King wrote the opinion, in which Judge Motz and
    Senior Judge Davis joined.
    ARGUED: Joshua E. Bardavid, BARDAVID LAW, New York, New York,
    for Petitioner. Kerry Ann Monaco, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
    JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Respondent.     ON BRIEF: Eric Y.
    Zheng, New York, New York, for Petitioner.      Stuart F. Delery,
    Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division, Linda S. Wernery,
    Assistant Director, Office of Immigration Litigation, UNITED
    STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Respondent.
    KING, Circuit Judge:
    Xing Yang Yang, a native of China, petitions for review of
    the May 31, 2013 decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals
    (the “BIA”) affirming the denial of his various applications for
    relief from deportation (the “BIA Decision”). 1                   We grant Yang’s
    petition for review, vacate the BIA Decision, and remand for
    further proceedings.
    I.
    As   explained       below,   we    ultimately     conclude     that    Yang’s
    petition should be granted because of erroneous inadmissibility
    rulings, which would preclude Yang from obtaining adjustment of
    status.      The   issues     in    this       proceeding,   however,       touch    on
    multiple     facets   of    immigration         law.    We   therefore      begin    by
    reviewing relevant aspects of the legal landscape, which has
    been largely provided by the Immigration and Nationality Act
    (the “INA”) and its implementing regulations.
    An   alien   who     enters   the     United     States   without     required
    documentation, and who remains present here, is deportable.                         See
    8   U.S.C.   §§ 1182(a)(7)(i),           1227(a)(1)(A).         The   INA    and    its
    regulations offer several avenues by which such an alien may
    1
    The BIA Decision is found at J.A. 3-7. (Citations herein
    to “J.A. ___” refer to the contents of the Joint Appendix filed
    by the parties in this matter.)
    2
    seek relief from deportation and lawfully remain in the United
    States.      Those options and alternatives include awards of asylum
    and    withholding     of    removal,      protection         under       the    Convention
    Against Torture (the “CAT”), and adjustment of status.
    Asylum,     withholding       of    removal,       and    CAT      protection        are
    separate forms of relief, but each prevents an alien from being
    deported if certain conditions are met.                       For example, asylum is
    generally available to an alien who is a “refugee,” meaning that
    he is “unable or unwilling” to return to his native country
    because of “persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution on
    account      of    race,     religion,         nationality,          membership        in    a
    particular        social    group,    or     political        opinion.”          8    U.S.C.
    §§ 1158(b)(1),         1101(a)(42).               A    “withholding         of       removal”
    requires     the    alien    to   show     a     “clear    probability”           that,     if
    removed to a particular country, his life or freedom would be
    threatened due to one or more factors, such as race, religion,
    or political opinion.             Negusie v. Holder, 
    555 U.S. 511
    , 541
    (2009) (citing 8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3)(A)).                         The obligations of
    the United States pursuant to the CAT apply if the alien shows
    that   “it    is    more    likely    than       not   that     he   or    she    would     be
    tortured if removed to the proposed country of removal.”                                     8
    C.F.R. § 1208.16(c)(2).
    Adjustment of status is another distinct form of relief,
    and does not focus on the effects of removal.                               Rather, such
    3
    relief    permits    the   Attorney     General,   in   his   discretion,   to
    adjust a deportable alien’s status to that of “lawful permanent
    resident.”    8 U.S.C. § 1255. 2       Section 1255 of Title 8 identifies
    certain    grounds     for     an     adjustment   of    status,   including
    situations where an alien has a spouse or parent — i.e., a
    “qualified relative” — who is lawfully present in this country;
    in that circumstance, the qualified relative may petition for an
    immigration    visa   on     the    alien’s   behalf.    Section 1255(i)(1)
    provides that an alien who has entered the United States without
    inspection is eligible for adjustment of status if a qualifying
    relative petitioned for the alien to receive an immigration visa
    prior to April 30, 2001.            If the alien meets those requirements
    and applies for adjustment of status, the Attorney General may
    adjust the alien’s status “to that of an alien lawfully admitted
    for permanent residence” if the immigration visa is immediately
    available and if the alien is otherwise admissible to the United
    States.    
    Id. § 1255(i)(2).
    3
    2
    The functions of the Attorney General with respect to
    immigration issues are largely handled within the Executive
    Office for Immigration Review (the “EOIR”), an agency of the
    Department of Justice. See 6 U.S.C. § 521; 8 U.S.C. § 1103(g).
    The EOIR encompasses the BIA and a host of immigration judges.
    See 8 C.F.R. §§ 1003.1, 1003.9.
    3
    The INA imposes limitations on the number of immigration
    visas available each year. See 8 U.S.C. § 1151. Additionally,
    visas are allocated according to preference categories set forth
    in 8 U.S.C. § 1153. As a result, a delay occurs between a visa
    (Continued)
    4
    An   alien   may    be   deemed      “inadmissible”      —    and    therefore
    ineligible for an adjustment of status by the Attorney General —
    for a variety of reasons.           Section 1182(a) of Title 8 identifies
    ten situations where an alien may be inadmissible, relating to
    issues such as public health, criminal background, and national
    security.     Pursuant     to     § 1182(a)(4),       an    alien   who    seeks      an
    adjustment of status is inadmissible if, at the time he applies
    for the adjustment, he is likely to become a “public charge.”
    In order to show that the alien will not become a public charge,
    the qualified relative must submit an affidavit “demonstrat[ing]
    the   means   to   maintain     the   intending    immigrant        at     an    annual
    income of at least 125 percent of the Federal poverty line.”                          8
    C.F.R. § 213a.2(c)(2).
    An alien who seeks to procure an immigration benefit by
    “fraud or willfully misrepresenting a material fact” is also
    inadmissible.        8    U.S.C     § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i).             That        bar   to
    admissibility may be waived, however, in the discretion of the
    Attorney    General,     pursuant     to   § 212(i)    of    the    INA,    8    U.S.C.
    § 1182(i).     Such a “§ 212(i) waiver” requires a showing by the
    alien that his deportation would cause sufficient hardship to a
    petition being granted and that visa becoming currently
    available, as required for an adjustment of status. See 
    id. § 1255(a)(3).
    5
    qualifying relative, including a spouse or a parent.                                  A § 212(i)
    waiver is available only to those aliens who have been found
    inadmissible pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i) for seeking
    an immigration benefit by fraud or willful misrepresentation.
    With      the    foregoing      principles          in    mind,      we    turn     to   the
    background of Yang’s petition for review and our analysis of the
    issues presented therein.
    II.
    A.
    Yang      entered    the     United          States       without         inspection      on
    January 20, 1993, and he has since remained here.                                   Yang resides
    in Maryland, where he has worked at a Chinese restaurant.                                        He
    has two children who are American citizens, born in Baltimore in
    2002       and   2004.      Chao      Zheng    Yang        is     the    mother       of   Yang’s
    children, and she is not an American citizen.                                 Zheng and Yang
    have never married.
    In    March      1993,   Yang    applied       to        the   INS     for    asylum     and
    withholding        of    removal.        The       Immigration          and      Naturalization
    Service (the “INS”) initiated removal proceedings against Yang
    in   1996. 4       On    July   23,    1997,        Yang     was      ordered       deported     in
    4
    The INS was abolished in 2002, and its enforcement
    functions were transferred to the Department of Homeland
    Security.   See Homeland Security Act of 2002, Pub. L. No. 107–
    (Continued)
    6
    abstentia after failing to appear at a deportation hearing.                          On
    March    15,       2001,    Yang’s     mother,      Hui   Lin,    a   lawful   permanent
    resident in the United States and qualified relative, petitioned
    for an immigration visa on Yang’s behalf (the “visa petition”).
    On November 16, 2002, Yang filed an application to alter his
    status from “without inspection” to that of “permanent resident”
    (the “adjustment application”), relying on the visa petition his
    mother had filed in 2001.                The visa petition was approved by the
    INS two years later, on March 5, 2004.                       In the meantime, Yang
    filed    a    motion       to   reopen    his   deportation       proceedings.      Such
    relief       was     granted     and     Yang’s     deportation       proceedings   were
    reopened by the INS on September 9, 2002.
    Yang filed yet another application for relief on December
    2, 2002, which he supplemented approximately four years later,
    on   July      17,    2007      (collectively,        the   “asylum      application”).
    Therein, Yang sought three types of relief — asylum, withholding
    of removal, and protection under the CAT.                        Yang identified three
    supporting grounds for the asylum application.                        First, he relied
    on his past political activities in China, asserting that, in
    1989, “I was involved in the student[] movement and participated
    296, § 441, 116 Stat. 2135, 2192.   For simplicity, we refer
    herein to all the immigration enforcement authorities as the
    “INS.”
    7
    in the demonstration in Beijing[,] China with my classmates.”
    J.A. 1663.       If he returned to China, Yang feared harm from the
    Chinese government based on his earlier political participation.
    Second, Yang asserted that he was associated with the Falun Gong
    group,   which    had    been     persecuted      by    the   Chinese    government.
    Third,   Yang    raised    concerns       about    China’s      one-child     policy,
    given that he already had two children and might have more.
    B.
    On June 5, 2008, an immigration judge (the “IJ”) conducted
    an    evidentiary       hearing    on     Yang’s       asylum    application    (the
    “Initial IJ Hearing”).             Before evidence was received, the IJ
    instructed Yang and his counsel to review the asylum application
    for errors.      Upon review, Yang made one correction, crossing out
    a    statement    that    he    had     been   arrested       during    the   student
    movement in China.             Yang explained to the IJ that a “travel
    service” had assisted with his immigration paperwork, because he
    did not speak English.            See J.A. 1284-85.             Yang had described
    his immigration claims to the travel service, and the service
    had completed Yang’s asylum application forms.                     Yang failed to
    carefully review the paperwork before he signed it, but believed
    the asylum application forms properly reported the information
    he had provided to the travel service.
    As Yang began to testify in the Initial IJ Hearing, the IJ
    inquired about papers Yang carried to the witness stand.                         Yang
    8
    explained that the papers contained notes about his testimony,
    and the IJ instructed that he hand them to his attorney.                    Yang
    then testified as follows:             He was a college student during
    China’s student democracy movement in 1989.             Yang took part in a
    “demonstration parade” in Fuzhou, shouting slogans in support of
    the student protests then taking place in Tiananmen Square in
    Beijing.       Following those events, Chinese government officials
    came   to    Yang’s   home   on   several   occasions   to   investigate     his
    involvement with the democracy movement.
    Yang further advised the IJ that his children lived with
    him.     If deported, he would be compelled to take the children —
    both American citizens — to China because no one in the United
    States would care for them.            Lin watched Yang’s children while
    he was at work, and Zheng was “nowhere to be found.”                J.A. 1273.
    Indeed, Yang had not known her whereabouts for two years.
    Finally, Yang testified that he “had contact with” Falun
    Gong, but was not a member of that group.                  J.A. 1296.       Yang
    clarified that Falun Gong was not relied on as a basis for his
    asylum claim, and that references to the group in his asylum
    application had been mistakenly included.
    Lin    (Yang’s   mother),      who   was   sequestered     outside    the
    hearing      room   during   Yang’s   testimony,    then   took   the   witness
    stand.       Before Lin answered questions, the IJ twice instructed
    Yang not to communicate with her.             Lin then testified that she
    9
    lived with her daughter in New York.                          Immediately thereafter,
    Lin said that she lived in Maryland, but had previously lived in
    New   York.         More    specifically,         Lin    stated    that      she    lived    in
    Yang’s Maryland home with Yang, his children, and Zheng.                                    In
    addition to indicating that Zheng lived in Yang’s home, Lin said
    that Zheng and Yang worked at the same restaurant.                                 When asked
    if    she    had    any    idea    why    Yang    had    testified      that       Zheng    was
    “nowhere to be found,” Lin replied, “Right now, she is nowhere
    to be found.”            J.A. 1309.      Lin said that Zheng had left “a while
    ago,”       but    did    not   otherwise        seek    to   explain        the    conflicts
    regarding Zheng’s whereabouts.                
    Id. A Mandarin
    interpreter provided English translations during
    Yang’s      and    Lin’s     testimony.          While    Lin     was   testifying,         the
    interpreter         interrupted          repeatedly      because        of    difficulties
    communicating with Lin.               See J.A. 1305, 1307, 1312-14, 1316-21.
    The interpreter explained to the IJ that he was having trouble
    with Lin’s testimony because “[Lin] does not speak Mandarin.”
    
    Id. at 1316.
            The interpreter also suggested that Lin required a
    Fuzhou      —     rather    than    the    Mandarin       —     interpreter. 5         Yang’s
    5
    Fuzhou and Mandarin are separate languages used in China.
    Fuzhou is widely used in part of the Fujian province, the area
    surrounding Fuzhou, the provincial capital.    See James Blatt,
    Recent Trends in the Smuggling of Chinese into the United
    States, 15 Williamette J. Int’l L. & Disp. Resol. 227, 235-36
    (2007).    Fujian is located in southeast China, across from
    (Continued)
    10
    lawyer,    however,    maintained      that    a   Mandarin   interpreter    was
    appropriate.    In light of that conflict, the IJ questioned the
    interpreter    about     the   accuracy       of   his    translations.      The
    interpreter    advised    that    he    had    accurately     translated   Lin’s
    testimony,     except     where        he     indicated     that   it      needed
    clarification. 6
    C.
    On September 4, 2008, the IJ disposed of the adjustment
    application and the asylum application by oral decision (the
    “Initial IJ Decision”). 7        The IJ first decided that Yang was not
    eligible for an adjustment of status because his visa petition
    was not currently available.            The IJ then rendered an adverse
    credibility determination (the “credibility ruling”), explaining
    that “this is a case in which [Yang] cannot rely on testimony
    Taiwan. 
    Id. at 235.
    Mandarin, the official language of China,
    is used in most of northern China. 
    Id. at 236
    n.37.
    6
    Yang was represented by the same lawyer during all
    proceedings before the IJ.    The record readily reveals issues
    concerning whether the lawyer provided effective assistance to
    Yang, including the lawyer’s apparent failure to insist on an
    appropriate   interpreter.     The   BIA  has  recognized   that
    “[i]neffective assistance of counsel in a deportation proceeding
    is a denial of due process.” Matter of Lozada, 19 I. & N. Dec.
    637, 638 (B.I.A. 1988).       Because Yang did not pursue an
    effective assistance claim to the BIA, however, we lack
    jurisdiction to consider any such issues.         See 8 U.S.C.
    § 1252(d)(1); Kporlor v. Holder, 
    597 F.3d 222
    , 226 (4th Cir.
    2010).
    7
    The Initial IJ Decision is found at J.A. 1102-23.
    11
    alone” to establish his eligibility for asylum, and that “[h]e
    needs corroborative information to support his claim.”                    Initial
    IJ Decision 17.           In support of the credibility ruling, the IJ
    found that Yang’s demeanor undermined his credibility, observing
    that       Yang   “took   notes   with   him   to    the   witness     stand,    and
    appeared to be referring to those notes during the course of his
    testimony.”        
    Id. at 15.
        The IJ further noted that Yang “twice
    signaled his witness, once before she took the witness stand,
    and once while she was testifying.”                 
    Id. According to
    the IJ,
    after Lin testified that Zheng was living in Yang’s home, Yang
    had signaled to Lin.          Lin then claimed that Zheng was “nowhere
    to be found.” 8       The IJ identified other inconsistencies between
    the    asylum     application     and    the   evidence     at   the   Initial    IJ
    Hearing, related to whether Yang went to Beijing to participate
    in the Tiananmen Square protests; whether he actively practiced
    Falun Gong; the whereabouts of Zheng, and, consequently, whether
    8
    Although the Initial IJ Decision noted that Yang twice
    signaled to Lin during the Initial IJ Hearing — including once
    while she was testifying about Zheng’s whereabouts — there is
    nothing in the hearing transcript that reflects any such
    signaling. Moreover, with respect to the IJ’s observation that
    Yang appeared to refer to notes “during the course of his
    testimony,” see Initial IJ Decision 15, the transcript shows
    that Yang gave the papers to his lawyer very early in his
    testimony, after he answered four questions about his address,
    when he left China, when he arrived in the United States, and
    his reason for leaving China, see J.A. 1266.
    12
    Yang’s children would return to China with him; and where Lin
    currently lived.
    After announcing the credibility ruling, the IJ determined
    that Yang had failed to submit sufficient corroborating evidence
    to establish his asylum claim.                      The IJ similarly denied Yang’s
    request    —     which      carried       a    higher       burden    of    proof    —     for
    withholding of deportation.                    Addressing the CAT claim, the IJ
    concluded      that        Yang     had       not    presented       credible       evidence
    regarding his past political activities or the likelihood that
    he would face torture in China.
    Yang promptly appealed the Initial IJ Decision to the BIA,
    contending that the IJ erred in denying his asylum application.
    While that appeal was pending, the visa petition filed on Yang’s
    behalf    by   Lin,        as   his   qualifying          relative,    became       current,
    rendering Yang eligible for an adjustment of status as of July
    2009.     Consequently, on February 1, 2010, the BIA remanded the
    proceeding to the IJ with instructions that Yang be afforded the
    opportunity      to    seek       adjustment        of    status.     The   BIA     deferred
    consideration         of    Yang’s     appeal        of    the    Initial    IJ     Decision
    insofar as it related to the denial of his asylum application.
    D.
    Following the BIA’s remand, a master calendar hearing was
    convened by the IJ on April 19, 2010.                            Noting the credibility
    ruling    that    had       thwarted      Yang’s         asylum   application,       the   IJ
    13
    “strongly    encourage[d]”     Yang   to      pursue    a   § 212(i)       waiver    in
    connection with his adjustment application.                  See J.A. 530; see
    also   8   U.S.C.    § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i)         (rendering       inadmissible       an
    alien who seeks to procure an immigration benefit by “fraud or
    willfully     misrepresenting    a      material       fact”);    
    id. § 1182(i)
    (authorizing Attorney General to grant § 212(i) waiver to alien
    deemed inadmissible under § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i)).                    Thereafter, on
    July 14, 2010, Yang filed his application for a § 212(i) waiver
    with the Attorney General (the “waiver application”).
    On March 17, 2011, the IJ conducted a merits hearing on
    Yang’s     adjustment    and   waiver        applications     (the      “Second      IJ
    Hearing”).     Yang, the sole witness, testified as follows:                        His
    mother, Lin, was then sixty-six years old and unable to hold a
    steady job.     Yang’s children and Lin depended entirely on Yang
    financially.         Zheng     was    “gone,”          although      she     visited
    occasionally.       See J.A. 557.        Zheng had visited Yang and the
    children in February 2011 during the Chinese New Year.                      Yang had
    spoken with Zheng only once — by phone — since that visit,
    concerning the children’s health and education.                      They had not
    discussed what would happen to their children if Yang had to
    return to China.        Yang confirmed that he and Lin cared for the
    children, and asserted that, if Yang were deported, Lin would be
    forced to obtain government assistance.                The children would then
    14
    struggle to survive because no one would be available to care
    for them.
    After    hearing      Yang’s        evidence,     the    IJ    recessed      to
    deliberate before rendering her oral ruling.                  When the Second IJ
    Hearing reconvened on March 17, 2011, Yang and his counsel were
    not present.      Nevertheless, the IJ proceeded to issue her oral
    decision, denying Yang’s adjustment and waiver applications (the
    “Second IJ Decision”). 9
    The Second IJ Decision denied Yang’s adjustment application
    on three bases.       First, the IJ ruled that Yang had abandoned the
    application     because     he    failed    to    maintain    current      biometric
    data, including fingerprinting, and, alternatively, because Yang
    was   not   present   for      the   IJ’s   oral    decision.       See    8   C.F.R.
    § 1003.47.     Second, the IJ ruled that Yang was inadmissible as a
    public charge because his income fell below the poverty line.
    See 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(4).            Third, the IJ determined that Yang
    was inadmissible on a separate and distinct ground; that is, he
    had engaged in fraud and willful misrepresentation to procure an
    immigration benefit, and was thus ineligible for adjustment of
    status     pursuant   to   8     U.S.C.    § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i)       (the    “willful
    misrepresentation      ruling”).            The    IJ   justified    the       willful
    misrepresentation ruling by invoking the Initial IJ Decision’s
    9
    The Second IJ Decision is found at J.A. 412-29.
    15
    credibility ruling.           The IJ also noted that, following the BIA’s
    remand order of February 2010, Yang could have explained the
    inconsistencies        that    led    to   the   credibility    ruling,   but   had
    declined that opportunity.
    Having       found      Yang        inadmissible     under     8    U.S.C.
    § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i), the IJ proceeded to determine that Yang did
    not warrant a § 212(i) waiver of that inadmissibility ruling.
    First, the IJ exercised discretion to deny the § 212(i) waiver
    based    on   the   willful     misrepresentation      ruling.      The   IJ    then
    alternatively concluded that Yang failed to satisfy the legal
    requirements for a § 212(i) waiver, in that he had not shown
    that Lin would suffer an extreme hardship.                     As a result, the
    Second IJ Decision ordered Yang removed to China.
    E.
    On April 6, 2011, Yang appealed the Second IJ Decision to
    the BIA, where his appeal from the Initial IJ Decision remained
    pending.      Yang also moved the BIA to remand for a new IJ hearing
    on his adjustment and waiver applications.                     In support of the
    remand request, Yang submitted Lin’s medical records, asserting
    that    her   health    problems,      as    demonstrated   by    those   records,
    created a sufficient hardship to Lin to satisfy the requirements
    for a § 212(i) waiver.               Alternatively, Yang contended that he
    did not need any such waiver because he had not engaged in fraud
    or willful misrepresentation in seeking an immigration benefit.
    16
    Further, Yang submitted his 2011 tax returns as new evidence
    that showed increased income and thus that he was no longer
    inadmissible as a public charge.                      Finally, Yang maintained that
    he had not abandoned his adjustment application.
    The BIA Decision rejected Yang’s appeals of the Initial IJ
    Decision and the Second IJ Decision, and also denied his motion
    to remand.      First, the BIA affirmed the Initial IJ Decision with
    respect to Yang’s asylum application.                          The BIA explained that
    the   credibility       ruling       was    not       clearly    erroneous    because    of
    Yang’s demeanor during the Initial IJ Hearing, as well as “major
    inconsistencies” in his asylum application and testimony.                               BIA
    Decision 2.        Agreeing that Yang “failed to meet the burden of
    proof for asylum,” the BIA ruled that Yang could not “satisfy
    the   more   stringent         clear       probability          standard    required    for
    withholding of removal.”               
    Id. at 5.
               Further, the BIA affirmed
    the Initial IJ’s Decision that Yang had failed to show that he
    would more likely than not be subject to torture if returned to
    China.
    Turning      to    the    Second       IJ       Decision,      the    BIA    Decision
    affirmed     the    IJ’s       denial      of        Yang’s    adjustment    and    waiver
    applications.           The    BIA    agreed         that     Yang   had   abandoned    the
    adjustment application by failing to maintain current biometric
    17
    data. 10     With   respect      to     the      merits        of    the    IJ’s       willful
    misrepresentation     ruling     that       made    Yang       inadmissible            under    8
    U.S.C. § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i), the BIA emphasized that the IJ had
    previously    “rendered    a   detailed          adverse       credibility         finding,”
    which the BIA did not deem clearly erroneous.                             BIA Decision 2.
    Although the IJ premised the willful misrepresentation ruling on
    her   determination    that      Yang    had       engaged          in    both    fraud       and
    willful    misrepresentation,         the     BIA    focused             only    on    willful
    misrepresentation     in   affirming          the    IJ. 11          Finally,          the    BIA
    affirmed the Second IJ Decision’s conclusion that Yang did not
    qualify for a § 212(i) waiver of inadmissibility because he had
    not shown “that his removal would result in extreme hardship to
    his lawful permanent resident mother.”                   
    Id. at 3.
    The BIA Decision also denied Yang’s motion to remand to
    consider     additional    evidence         on     his     adjustment            and    waiver
    applications.       The    BIA    considered             the    evidence         that        Yang
    submitted as new and previously unavailable, including his 2011
    10
    The Second IJ Decision concluded that Yang abandoned his
    adjustment application on two separate grounds:       failing to
    maintain current biometric data and failing to appear for the
    continuation of the Second IJ Hearing. The BIA Decision did not
    address the IJ’s second basis for the abandonment ruling.
    11
    As we explain in greater detail infra, under 8 U.S.C.
    § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i), fraud requires that an alien intended to
    deceive, while willful misrepresentation requires only that the
    alien deliberately and voluntarily misrepresented a material
    fact.
    18
    tax returns and the medical records of Lin.                           The BIA deemed the
    tax returns — but not Lin’s medical records — to be new and
    previously      unavailable,            and    thus        proper     for    consideration.
    Nevertheless,         the        BIA     concluded         that,      because         Yang     was
    inadmissible     due        to    the    willful       misrepresentation              ruling    in
    addition to insufficient income, the 2011 tax returns did not
    warrant    a   remand.           Therefore,          the   BIA     denied    Yang’s      remand
    motion.
    Yang has petitioned for our review of the BIA Decision, and
    we possess jurisdiction pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1252.
    III.
    Where, as here, the BIA has adopted an IJ decision and
    issued its own decision, we review both rulings.                              See Jian Tao
    Lin v. Holder, 
    611 F.3d 228
    , 235 (4th Cir. 2010).                                     The BIA’s
    determination that “an alien is not eligible for admission to
    the United States is conclusive unless manifestly contrary to
    law.”      8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(4)(C).                       We review legal issues de
    novo.     See Djadjou v. Holder, 
    662 F.3d 265
    , 273 (4th Cir. 2011).
    We review an IJ’s findings of fact for substantial evidence,
    accepting      such    findings          as     conclusive          unless    a       reasonable
    adjudicator     would        have       been   compelled         to   reach       a   different
    conclusion.     See 
    id. 19 IV.
    In challenging the BIA Decision by his petition for review,
    Yang     focuses    on     the      Second     IJ    Decision’s        denial      of    his
    adjustment      and      waiver       applications.              Specifically,          Yang
    maintains that he should not have been found inadmissible under
    8      U.S.C.   § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i),                because       the      IJ’s     willful
    misrepresentation          ruling     was    legally       and   factually       improper.
    Yang alternatively contends that Lin’s medical records are new
    evidence    that    should       be   considered      in    support     of   his    waiver
    application.       Finally, Yang argues that, because the INS failed
    to provide notice of its requirement for updated biometric data,
    he did not abandon his adjustment application by flouting that
    requirement.       For those reasons, Yang urges that this matter be
    remanded.
    A.
    We begin with Yang’s contention that the BIA Decision erred
    in affirming the Second IJ Decision’s determination that he is
    inadmissible       under    § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i)          for      having    made    willful
    misrepresentations          to   procure      an    immigration        benefit.         That
    willful misrepresentation ruling was predicated on the Initial
    IJ Decision’s credibility ruling.                    As explained below, the IJ
    thereby utilized an erroneous legal standard in rendering the
    willful    misrepresentation           ruling.        Furthermore,         applying      the
    proper legal principles, the willful misrepresentation ruling is
    20
    not supported by substantial evidence.                          We now turn to those
    points in further detail.
    1.
    An adverse credibility ruling impacts the evidence an alien
    must produce in order to meet his burden in proving eligibility
    for asylum.         See Djadjou v. Holder, 
    662 F.3d 265
    , 273 (4th Cir.
    2011).       The INA provides that an alien may establish an asylum
    claim through testimony alone — without corroborating evidence
    —     if    the    trier    of     fact    finds       the   alien’s   testimony     to   be
    credible and persuasive.                  See 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(1)(B)(ii).               The
    trier       of    fact   may     predicate        a    credibility     determination       on
    factors such as “the demeanor, candor, or responsiveness” of the
    alien and his witnesses, the consistency between oral testimony
    and    written      statements,          and     the   internal   consistency      of     the
    evidence.          
    Id. § 1158(b)(1)(B)(iii).
                  Under    applicable      law,
    “[m]inor omissions, inconsistencies, and contradictions that do
    not    go    to    the     heart    of     the    applicant’s     claims . . . do         not
    necessarily         support        an     adverse       credibility     determination.”
    
    Djadjou, 662 F.3d at 274
    .                  As a result, “if discrepancies cannot
    be viewed as attempts by the applicant to enhance his claims of
    persecution, they have no bearing on credibility.”                             Ceraj v.
    21
    Mukasey, 
    511 F.3d 583
    , 591 (6th Cir. 2007) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). 12
    Meanwhile,       a   willful     misrepresentation             ruling       impacts
    whether an alien is admissible to the United States.                             The INA
    provides that an alien is inadmissible — and thus ineligible for
    adjustment     of     status    —     if     he    “by    fraud      or      willfully
    misrepresenting       a    material        fact,    seeks      to     procure”        an
    immigration    benefit.         8     U.S.C.       § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i).               The
    government bears the burden of showing, by clear and convincing
    evidence,      that       the   alien        fraudulently           or       willfully
    misrepresented or concealed some material fact, and that such
    fraud     or   misrepresentation           was     used   to      seek       a     visa,
    documentation, or entry into this country.                See Ortiz-Bouchet v.
    U.S. Attorney General, 
    714 F.3d 1353
    , 1356 (11th Cir. 2013);
    Atunnise v. Mukasey, 
    523 F.3d 830
    , 835 (7th Cir. 2008); Monter
    v. Gonzalez, 
    430 F.3d 546
    , 553-55 (2d Cir. 2005); Mwongera v.
    INS, 
    187 F.3d 323
    , 330 (3d Cir. 1999); Forbes v. INS, 
    48 F.3d 439
    , 441-43 (9th Cir. 1995).          Courts interpret fraud and willful
    12
    The legal standard applicable in these proceedings was
    modified by the REAL ID Act of 2005, which now authorizes an IJ
    to base credibility determinations on any inconsistency “without
    regard to whether [it] goes to the heart of the applicant’s
    claim.”   8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(1)(B)(iii).    The REAL ID Act does
    not apply here, however, because Yang’s asylum application was
    filed prior to the effective date thereof.      See Marynenka v.
    Holder, 
    592 F.3d 594
    , 600 n.* (4th Cir. 2010).
    22
    misrepresentation           as       constituting          two     separate           bases     for
    inadmissibility.            Fraud         requires     that      the    alien    intended          to
    deceive,       while       willful         misrepresentation            requires          no    such
    intent.        See Parlak v. Holder, 
    578 F.3d 457
    , 463 (6th Cir.
    2009).         Rather,      a    misrepresentation            is       willful       if    it    was
    deliberate and voluntary.                  See In re D-R-, 25 I. & N. Dec. 445,
    451    n.3     (B.I.A.      2011).           Knowledge      of     the     falsity         of   the
    representation generally satisfies that standard.                               See 
    Mwongera, 187 F.3d at 330
    .
    Adverse credibility and willful misrepresentation also are
    distinct legal concepts, requiring separate analyses.                                  See Singh
    v. Gonzales, 
    413 F.3d 156
    , 161 (1st Cir. 2005) (“[A] negative
    credibility finding alone is not the equivalent of a finding of
    willful misrepresentation and the one does not necessarily lead
    to    the    other.”).          An    adverse        credibility         determination          can
    properly       be   rendered          without        any   deliberate          and        voluntary
    misrepresentation,           but      a    determination         that     an    alien       made    a
    willful misrepresentation requires that those specific elements
    be    shown.        Thus,       the       courts     of    appeals       have    consistently
    recognized that “inconsistencies between a petitioner’s asylum
    application         and     hearing         testimony,        as       well      as       internal
    inconsistencies           between     a    petitioner’s          asylum    application           and
    hearing         testimony,                may      not        equate            to         willful
    misrepresentations.”             Falaja v. Gonzales, 
    418 F.3d 889
    , 898 (8th
    23
    Cir. 2005); see also Oforji v. Ashcroft, 
    354 F.3d 609
    , 612 (7th
    Cir. 2003).
    Here, however, the Second IJ Decision based the willful
    misrepresentation            ruling     solely        on     the      credibility       ruling,
    applying        an    erroneous       legal     standard.               The    IJ   failed    to
    articulate any of the requirements that must be shown by clear
    and   convincing             evidence      in        order       to      apply      8     U.S.C.
    § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i), including the intent to deceive required for
    fraud,     or    the    deliberateness          and    voluntariness           necessary     for
    willful     misrepresentation.                  Rather,          after        recounting     the
    inconsistencies on which the credibility ruling was based, the
    IJ simply stated:
    [T]he Court perceives that these unexplained material
    inconsistencies are a reflection of [Yang’s] efforts
    at fraud, and that they are reflections of willful
    misrepresentations of fact that were offered up in an
    effort to gain the benefits of asylum and withholding.
    Second     IJ    Decision      4-5.        In    sum,      the     IJ    conflated      adverse
    credibility          with   fraud    and   willful         misrepresentation,           thereby
    committing legal error.
    The BIA Decision did acknowledge relevant law, recognizing
    — without discussing fraud — that a willful misrepresentation
    can   be    shown      “by    a     finding     that       the     misrepresentation         was
    deliberate and voluntary.”                 BIA Decision 3 (internal quotation
    marks omitted).             But while the BIA recounted the correct legal
    standard        for    willful      misrepresentation,             it    did    not     actually
    24
    apply      that       standard         in      affirming           the    IJ’s      willful
    misrepresentation            ruling.          The     BIA     reasoned     that     the    IJ
    determined that Yang’s “unexplained inconsistencies constituted
    willful misrepresentations to gain the immigration benefits of
    asylum and withholding or removal, and we discern no clear error
    in   this      finding.”          
    Id. Given that
       the    IJ’s     willful
    misrepresentation          ruling      was    rendered       by    erroneously     equating
    adverse     credibility        with     willful        misrepresentation,          the     BIA
    repeated       the   IJ’s     legal     error       in      affirming     the    Second    IJ
    Decision.
    2.
    The BIA Decision further erred in affirming the Second IJ
    Decision because, under the proper legal standard, the record
    lacks       substantial          evidence           to       support       the      willful
    misrepresentation ruling.               In making that ruling, the IJ simply
    relied on her earlier credibility ruling, pronouncing that the
    inconsistencies         in     Yang’s        asylum      application      and     evidence,
    coupled     with     his   demeanor,         were   “a      reflection    of     efforts   at
    fraud    and    . . .      reflections        of    willful       misrepresentations        of
    fact.”      Second IJ Decision 4-5.                 The IJ failed to specify what
    evidence established           the     “fraudulent”          or    “willful”     nature     of
    Yang’s inconsistencies.
    To be sure, a comparison of Yang’s asylum application and
    his Initial IJ Hearing testimony shows contradictory statements
    25
    about whether Yang actually went to Tiananmen Square and whether
    he was relying on Falun Gong in seeking relief from removal.
    The record does not reveal evidence, however, that Yang made
    knowing and deliberate misrepresentations to gain an immigration
    benefit.     Yang’s testimony was not only internally consistent,
    but to the extent it contradicted his asylum application, the
    testimony weakened his position.                That is, Yang testified that
    he did not travel to Tiananmen Square and that he was not basing
    his     application     on    Falun        Gong.        While     that     testimony
    contradicted      statements       made    in   the    asylum    application,      the
    testimony would seem to completely undermine the notion that
    Yang     attempted     to    use      misrepresentations          to     procure   an
    immigration       benefit.      Moreover,       Yang    explained      that   he   had
    difficulty     completing       and       reviewing     the     application     forms
    because of the language barrier.                Accordingly, the record does
    not contain clear and convincing evidence that Yang attempted to
    procure an immigration benefit by deliberately and voluntarily
    making    false    statements      regarding       Tiananmen    Square    and   Falun
    Gong.
    As for the two other inconsistencies upon which the willful
    misrepresentation ruling relied — the current residence of Lin
    and the whereabouts of Zheng               — those also fail to support the
    ruling.      Even assuming that Yang deliberately and voluntarily
    made misrepresentations about those points, it is not clear that
    26
    either misrepresentation was material to the claims raised in
    the asylum application.               The IJ made the conclusory remark that
    those inconsistencies were “material” and “were offered up in an
    effort to gain the benefit of asylum and withholding.”                            Second
    IJ Decision 4-5.              To be material, however, a misrepresentation
    must be of the sort that would affect the ultimate immigration
    decision.       See Bazzi v. Holder, 
    746 F.3d 640
    , 645-46 (6th Cir.
    2013).     Although the residence of Lin and whereabouts of Zheng
    may    have    been     relevant        to   the     question   of     whether    Yang’s
    children would accompany him to China, that was not a question
    on    which    Yang’s        asylum    and   withholding      claims     pivoted.       To
    prevail on those claims, Yang needed to show that the children’s
    presence in China would subject him to enforcement of the one-
    child policy.           Indeed, the Initial IJ Decision recognized as
    much, denying          the    asylum    claim      because    “the   evidence     in   the
    record does not demonstrate that the Chinese government would
    require       forced     sterilization          of   [Yang]     as   a    penalty      for
    returning with two children born in the United States.”                          Initial
    IJ Decision 19 (relying on BIA’s precedent of In re J-W-S-, 24
    I. & N. Dec. 185 (B.I.A. 2007), as being “on all four squares”).
    Accordingly, there is not clear and convincing evidence that the
    inconsistencies         about     Lin’s      residence   and    Zheng’s       whereabouts
    were     material       to     Yang’s     asylum      application,       as    would    be
    necessary to justify the willful misrepresentation ruling.
    27
    The   lack     of    substantial     evidence       supporting       the    willful
    misrepresentation           ruling     in   this       matter    is    highlighted        by
    reference to other proceedings where substantial evidence was
    present that the petitioners deliberately and voluntarily made
    false representations material to their claims.                             For example,
    the    Sixth     Circuit        affirmed         a     determination        of     willful
    misrepresentation where the alien:                     failed to disclose a prior
    arrest and conviction in Turkey; provided a falsely translated
    newspaper article that omitted information that the alien had
    been tried for killing two soldiers; and reported that he had
    been   sentenced       to     death,    while        failing    to    reveal      that   the
    sentence had been reduced and his conviction was being appealed.
    See 
    Parlak, 578 F.3d at 465
    .                The Second Circuit concluded that
    an alien who used a false surname and offered false information
    so as to misrepresent her eligibility for a non-immigrant visa
    had made willful misrepresentations.                    See Emokah v. Mukasey, 
    523 F.3d 110
    , 117-18 (2d Cir. 2008).                      And the First Circuit ruled
    that    an     alien        made     willful         misrepresentations           when    he
    represented that he had never been married and had no children,
    both   of    which    were    patently      false      statements.          See   Toribio-
    Chavez v. Holder, 
    611 F.3d 57
    , 63 (1st Cir. 2010).                          The evidence
    in our record offers considerably less support that Yang made
    deliberate      and        voluntary    misrepresentations             to    procure     an
    immigration benefit.
    28
    We emphasize that a willful misrepresentation must be shown
    by clear and convincing evidence in order to render an alien
    inadmissible under 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i).                        The record here
    lacks    substantial       evidence           that      would       support        such     a
    determination.      Accordingly, the Second IJ Decision erred in
    determining that Yang is inadmissible under § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i),
    and the BIA erred in affirming in that respect.
    3.
    Given   that      Yang      is    not       inadmissible        under     8     U.S.C.
    § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i),        he    has     no      need   for     a   § 212(i)        waiver.
    Yang’s   contention       that     the      BIA      should     have      remanded        for
    consideration     of      new    evidence         in    support      of      his    waiver
    application is therefore moot.
    B.
    Finally, we cannot agree with the IJ’s conclusion, which
    the BIA affirmed, that Yang abandoned his adjustment application
    by failing to submit updated biometric data, as required by 8
    C.F.R. § 1003.47.      Indeed, the Attorney General conceded at oral
    argument in this appeal that the record contained no evidence
    that the INS complied with its legal obligation to “notify the
    respondent   of     the     need       to     provide     biometrics          and    other
    biographical information and [to] provide a biometrics notice
    and instructions to the respondent for such procedures.”                             See 8
    29
    C.F.R. § 1003.47(d).   We readily accept the Attorney General’s
    candid concession in that respect.
    V.
    Pursuant to the foregoing, we grant Yang’s petition for
    review and vacate the BIA Decision.     We remand to the BIA for
    such further proceedings as may be appropriate.
    PETITION FOR REVIEW GRANTED;
    VACATED AND REMANDED
    30