Marta Alvarado Alvarado v. William Barr ( 2020 )


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  •                                   UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 18-1761
    MARTA LILIAN ALVARADO ALVARADO; A.P.R.A.,
    Petitioners,
    v.
    WILLIAM P. BARR, Attorney General,
    Respondent.
    No. 19-2258
    MARTA LILIAN ALVARADO ALVARADO; A.P.R.A.,
    Petitioners,
    v.
    WILLIAM P. BARR, Attorney General,
    Respondent.
    On Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals.
    Argued: September 9, 2020                                 Decided: November 1, 2020
    Before MOTZ, AGEE, and KEENAN, Circuit Judges.
    Petition for review granted and remanded for further proceedings by unpublished per
    curiam opinion. Judge Agee wrote an opinion concurring in the judgment.
    ARGUED: Briana Dale Carlson, Benjamin J. Osorio, MURRAY OSORIO PLLC,
    Fairfax, Virginia, for Petitioners. Deitz Lefort, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
    JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Respondent. ON BRIEF: Joseph H. Hunt, Assistant
    Attorney General, John S. Hogan, Assistant Director, Office of Immigration Litigation,
    UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Respondent.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    2
    PER CURIAM:
    Marta Lilian Alvarado Alvarado, a citizen of El Salvador, and her minor child,
    A.P.R.A., appeal the decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) denying their
    application for asylum. Alvarado testified that she feared persecution upon return to El
    Salvador because a gang had threatened her and her family with death on several occasions.
    The Immigration Judge (“IJ”) found Alvarado credible and concluded that she had suffered
    past persecution.   This finding entitled Alvarado to a presumption that she had a
    well-founded fear of future persecution, a basis for asylum. But because Alvarado testified
    that she had no knowledge of additional threats to her family, the IJ denied asylum, finding
    that her circumstances had changed because the gang now posed no threat and the
    presumption had been rebutted. The BIA affirmed. Alvarado now petitions for review.
    For the reasons that follow, we grant the petition, vacate the BIA’s denial of asylum and
    remand for further proceedings.
    I.
    On July 7, 2015, Alvarado and her daughter entered the United States without valid
    entry documents. The next day, the Department of Homeland Security served them with a
    Notice to Appear. The Department charged them as removable under the Immigration and
    Nationality Act (“INA”) because they did not possess a “valid unexpired immigrant visa,
    reentry permit, border crossing identification card, or other valid entry document.”
    8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(7)(A)(i)(I).
    3
    On April 6, 2016, the IJ held a preliminary hearing. At the hearing, Alvarado
    conceded removability and submitted a Form I-589, in which she applied for asylum,
    withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture. 1 On June
    21, 2017, the IJ held a hearing on Alvarado’s application. At the hearing, Alvarado testified
    that her mother received three extortion letters from the 18th Street Gang between January
    2015 and March 2015 while Alvarado lived with her in El Salvador. Each letter demanded
    that her mother pay the gang several hundred dollars or it would harm Alvarado and her
    siblings. Alvarado’s sister, her partner, and her father — all of whom reside in the United
    States — helped her mother pay the extortion money.
    Alvarado testified that the gang targeted her mother because the gang knew her
    family in the United States could pay the extortion demands. She acknowledged several
    times that although she spoke with her mother every day or every other day, she did not
    know if threats to her family continued after she fled to the United States. When questioned
    as to why that was, Alvarado explained that she thought her family might not tell her of
    new threats because they did not want to worry her.
    Roberto Lovato, knowledgeable on country conditions in El Salvador and South
    American gangs, also testified as an expert for Alvarado at the hearing. He explained that
    El Salvador suffered from a nationwide gang problem. When individuals do not comply
    with extortion threats, they are tortured or killed. According to Lovato, due to frequent
    cooperation between police and gangs, law enforcement in El Salvador likely would not
    1
    On appeal, Alvarado challenges only the BIA’s denial of her application for
    asylum, so we do not address her withholding of removal or CAT claims.
    4
    provide Alvarado with protection if she returned. Lovato explained that Alvarado’s family
    members who remained in the country were likely to continue to be targeted by gangs. He
    further testified that even if gangs had not actively threatened Alvarado’s family for two
    years, Alvarado remained at risk upon her return to El Salvador.
    The IJ found Alvarado’s testimony “direct, straight forward,” “detailed,” and
    “consistent with the information submitted in support of the applications for relief and the
    supporting materials.” A.R. 94. He found both Alvarado and her expert credible. The IJ
    found that the extortion letters Alvarado’s mother received from the 18th Street Gang in
    2015 constituted past persecution. He also found that Alvarado established membership in
    a particular social group — the nuclear family of her mother — and that the persecution
    resulted from her membership in that group. But the IJ denied Alvarado’s application for
    relief on the ground that the evidence did not establish that Alvarado would continue to
    face persecution upon return to El Salvador. The IJ reasoned that, although Alvarado spoke
    with her mother almost every day, she “testified that she was unaware of any threats having
    been made to any family member since she left” El Salvador or of any extortion payments
    made by her family after her departure. A.R. 95. For this reason, the IJ concluded that the
    presumption that she would suffer future persecution “has been rebutted.”
    Alvarado appealed to the BIA, which affirmed the IJ. It also based its decision on
    Alvarado’s testimony that she talked with her mother nearly every day, but had “not heard
    of the family being subjected to any further threats.” Alvarado then filed a petition for
    review in this court. When, as here, the BIA affirms the IJ with an opinion of its own, we
    review both decisions. See Salgado-Sosa v. Sessions, 
    882 F.3d 451
    , 456 (4th Cir. 2018).
    5
    We give BIA decisions regarding an order of removal “substantial” deference, Essohou v.
    Gonzales, 
    471 F.3d 518
    , 520 (4th Cir. 2006), and uphold the BIA decision unless it is
    “manifestly contrary to law,” 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(4)(C).
    II.
    The Immigration and Nationality Act permits the Attorney General to confer asylum
    on any refugee. 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b). As relevant here, the statute defines a refugee as a
    noncitizen who is unable to return to her home country “because of persecution or a
    well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a
    particular social group.”
    Id. § 1101(a)(42)(A). The
    applicant seeking refugee status bears
    the burden of showing a well-founded fear of persecution. See 
    Essohou, 471 F.3d at 520
    .
    An applicant who demonstrates past persecution on the basis of a protected ground, such
    as membership in a protected social group, is presumed to have a well-founded fear of
    future persecution. 8 C.F.R. § 1208.13(b)(1). The Government can rebut this presumption
    only by proving, by a preponderance of evidence, either (1) a “fundamental change in
    circumstances such that the applicant no longer has a well-founded fear of persecution” or
    (2) that the applicant “could avoid future persecution by relocating to another part” of the
    country.
    Id. §§ 208.13(b)(1)(i)(A), (b)(1)(i)(B),
    (b)(1)(ii). The Government relied on the
    first ground here.
    Alvarado initially argues that the IJ improperly shifted the burden to her to
    demonstrate she had not experienced a “change in circumstances” leaving her without a
    well-founded fear of persecution. See
    id. §§ 1208.13(b)(1)(i)(A), (ii).
    She points to the
    6
    IJ’s statement in its ruling that “it appears to the Court that while the respondent did suffer
    past persecution in the form of death threats made against her, the respondent has failed to
    carry her burden in establishing that she will continue to face persecution if she returns to
    El Salvador.” At two other points, however, the IJ recited the correct standard: that
    because Alvarado had established past persecution, the burden rested on the Government
    to overcome the presumption that Alvarado would continue to suffer persecution if she
    returned to El Salvador.
    We need not resolve the question of whether the IJ applied the correct burden of
    proof, because even if the IJ did so, the Government has fallen short of meeting that burden.
    We review the BIA’s factual finding that circumstances had changed such that Alvarado
    no longer feared persecution under the substantial evidence standard. See, e.g., Ortez-Cruz
    v. Barr, 
    951 F.3d 190
    , 198 (4th Cir. 2020). Under the substantial evidence standard, a court
    affirms the factfinders’ conclusions unless “any reasonable adjudicator would be
    compelled to conclude to the contrary.” 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(4)(B). While our review is
    deferential, we must still “ensure that unrebutted, legally significant evidence is not
    arbitrarily ignored by the factfinder.” Tassi v. Holder, 
    660 F.3d 710
    , 719 (4th Cir. 2011)
    (internal quotation marks omitted). The agency may not “base a decision on only isolated
    snippets of the record while disregarding the rest.”
    Id. (alterations adopted). In
    meeting its burden, the Government declined to introduce any evidence, and
    instead relied solely on the testimony of Alvarado and her expert. We recently faced a
    similar situation in Ortez-Cruz. There, the IJ held that the Government overcame the
    presumption of future harm to the applicant — a victim of domestic violence — by relying
    7
    only on the applicant’s testimony that the abuser had not contacted her in 16 years.
    
    Ortez-Cruz, 951 F.3d at 196
    . The IJ found that the applicant’s evidence was “ambiguous”
    and “inconclusive” about whether the abuser still intended to harm the applicant.
    Id. We reversed, holding
    that the Government did not rebut the presumption of future harm given
    the “ambiguous” evidence.
    Id. at 198.
    We explained that although the Government may
    rely solely on an applicant’s evidence when the record “would point unambiguously” to
    changed circumstances, if an applicant presents evidence rendering that conclusion
    “ambiguous” or “inconclusive,” the Government “must prove that its view of the evidence
    . . . is the most convincing one.”
    Id. This case, too,
    presents an ambiguous record. Alvarado testified that she did not
    know of ongoing threats to her family in El Salvador, but nearly every time she did so, she
    qualified her statements by indicating that she was not aware of continued threats. See,
    e.g., A.R. 151 (indicating she was not “aware of any threats that have been made to [her]
    family” since she arrived in the United States); A.R. 191 (when asked whether anyone in
    her family has received any additional threats since she arrived in the United States, she
    replied, “[n]ot that I know of”); A.R. 190 (confirming that “to the best of [her] knowledge,”
    no further threats had been made on her family).
    Moreover, Alvarado offered a plausible explanation for her lack of knowledge —
    that her mother may not have apprised her of ongoing threats so that she would not worry.
    Alvarado initially and repeatedly so testified. She testified that her mother did not mention
    any new threats since she left El Salvador so she “won’t be worried.” A.R. 151. When
    asked whether she was “positive” that her mother had not received any new threat letters,
    8
    Alvarado again acknowledged that her mother had not told her anything about new threats,
    but added, “maybe not to worry me.” A.R. 192. The Government presented no evidence
    challenging this account and the IJ failed to acknowledge it. In an “ordinary case” in which
    the applicant holds the burden of proof, “we could not reverse the agency’s determination
    unless the record compel[led] selection” of Alvarado’s explanation for why her family may
    have continued to receive threats, despite her lack of knowledge. See Sheng Da Dong v.
    Sessions, 743 F. App’x 513, 521 (4th Cir. 2018). But here, “it is up to the Government to
    prove that its inference is the more likely one,”
    id., and it has
    not done so.
    At oral argument, the Government insisted that Alvarado gave “unambiguous”
    testimony that the threats had stopped. It relied primarily on Alvarado’s acknowledgement,
    near the end of her testimony in response to questioning by the IJ, that her mother “hasn’t
    received any more letters asking her for money.” A.R. 191. But the Government ignores
    Alvarado’s repeated initial and subsequent explanation that her family may not have told
    her about new threats so as “not to worry” her. A.R. 192. The agency cannot “disregard[]
    important aspects of” the record. See Jian Tao Lin v. Holder, 
    611 F.3d 228
    , 235 (4th Cir.
    2010). And while the Government may face difficulty in proving that individuals “in
    another country no longer” pose a threat, “that is consistent with the presumption.” Ortez-
    
    Cruz, 951 F.3d at 200
    .
    And, as in Ortez-Cruz, the IJ also ignored relevant parts of the expert’s testimony
    that undermined the Government’s theory. Lovato testified that gangs would likely
    continue to target and potentially harm Alvarado’s family members who remained in El
    Salvador. The IJ failed to acknowledge this part of Lovato’s testimony. Lovato also
    9
    testified that, even if the threats stopped while Alvarado remained in the United States, he
    believed the threats would resume if she returned. The Government neglected to address
    this testimony at all, and the IJ did not consider it in his decision. As in Ortez-Cruz, the IJ
    “should have given it weight in assessing whether” Alvarado would face a threat upon her
    return. See
    id. at 199.
    The Government may of course rely solely on an applicant’s testimony when that
    testimony unambiguously indicates changed circumstances have occurred. We explained
    in Ortez-Cruz that if an applicant testifies that her abuser had died, a “change of
    circumstances” finding “obviously would be proper — even without evidence or argument
    from the Government — because the record would point unambiguously in that direction.”
    Id. at 198.
    But here, Alvarado’s testimony, like that of the applicant in Ortez-Cruz, did not
    conclusively establish a change in circumstances. Accordingly, the Government bore the
    burden to demonstrate that that it was more probable that Alvarado’s lack of knowledge of
    continued threats against her family resulted from an actual end to the threats than from
    her family’s desire to prevent her from worrying. The Government, however, presented
    no evidence addressing this ambiguity. And Ortez-Cruz instructs that the Government
    cannot overcome the presumption of future persecution by relying solely on ambiguous
    evidence introduced by the applicant.
    Id. at 198.
    For these reasons, we can only conclude
    that no reasonable adjudicator could find that the Government proved a change in
    10
    circumstances such that Alvarado no longer had a well-founded fear of future persecution.
    We thus vacate the BIA’s decision affirming the denial of Alvarado’s asylum application. 2
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, we grant the petition for review and remand for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    PETITION FOR REVIEW GRANTED AND
    REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS
    2
    Alvarado also filed a motion to reopen with the BIA on September 4, 2018. The
    BIA denied this motion on October 28, 2019. She filed a second petition for review
    appealing that BIA order, and her petitions for review were combined on November 8,
    2019. Because we vacate the BIA’s decision denying Alvarado’s application for relief, her
    petition for review on the order denying the motion to reopen — as well as her other claims
    — are moot.
    11
    AGEE, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment:
    In light of our recent holding in Ortez-Cruz v. Barr, 
    951 F.3d 190
    (4th Cir. 2020), I
    agree that we are required to remand this case for further proceedings. Were it not for that
    decision, I would deny the petition for review. See United States v. Cobb, 
    970 F.3d 319
    ,
    332 (4th Cir. 2020) (explaining the basic principle that one panel is “powerless to overrule
    the decision of a prior panel of this court”).
    I.
    The Per Curiam Opinion sets out much of the pertinent background, which I won’t
    repeat or expand upon except to note the following. Because the Immigration Judge (“IJ”)
    denied Alvarado’s asylum application based solely on her testimony, we must consider the
    actual substance of what she said and the context in which she said it. Only then will we
    be able to determine whether her testimony fails to “unambiguously indicate[] changed
    circumstances have occurred.” Per Curiam Op. 10. As discussed further below, apart from
    Alvarado’s unfounded suppositions, I believe that testimony does show changed
    circumstances.
    Alvarado testified on direct examination:
    Q:     Since you arrived in the United States are you aware of any threats
    that have been made to your family?
    A:     No
    Q:     Have you had any communication with your family?
    A:     Yes
    Q:     And have they said anything to you about any threats towards your
    family since you left?
    A:     No
    12
    Q:     Why do you think that is?
    A:     I’m not [sic], so that we won’t be worried.
    A.R. 151 (emphases added).
    On cross-examination, Alvarado testified that she spoke to her mother “[e]very day
    or every other day,” A.R. 180, before answering the following questions:
    Q:     Has anyone in your family received any more threats, any additional
    threats than what you’ve told us about already today?
    A:     My siblings, or brothers and sisters?
    Q:     Yes, has anyone received threats since, since you’ve come to the
    United States?
    A:     Not that I know of.
    Q:     Do you ask?
    A:     I ask my mother but she says no.
    A.R. 180–81 (emphases added).
    In response, the IJ observed that
    [i]t would be important to the respondent’s case, I think, to be able to say,
    definitively, whether or not there is still continued payment of the threats or
    in the absence of paying any threats, whether the family has been harmed,
    because if the family continues to live in that environment and they have not
    been harmed, even though they had not paid any threats, then it would appear
    to undermine the respondent’s claim that she too would be harmed if she
    were back in El Salvador.
    A.R. 189. The IJ then engaged in the following back-and-forth with Alvarado:
    Q:     Ms. Alvarado, you testified earlier today that to the best of your
    knowledge, after you left El Salvador and came to the United States,
    no further threats had been made against your family. Is that your
    testimony?
    A:     Yes.
    Q:     Now, if you know, since you left El Salvador, has your mother or other
    family [member] paid any extortion demands made by gangs?
    A:     Not that I know of.
    ....
    Q:     Does your mother continue to pay extortion demands?
    13
    A:     No, it was only those times that we got those letters, that I know of,
    they haven’t received any more letters.
    Q:     So, is it correct to say that to the best of your knowledge, your mother
    has not received any extortion demands since sometime in July 2015,
    when you came to the United States?
    A:     Not any more [sic].
    Q:     When you say not anymore, you mean that she does not pay any
    extortion money now, not anymore? Is that what you mean?
    A:     Yes, she hasn’t received any more letters asking her for money.
    A.R. 190–91 (emphases added).
    Alvarado’s attorney then asked her the following question on re-direct:
    Q:   Are you 100 percent positive that she’s not received any letters, or are
    you just testifying to your knowledge?
    A:    She hasn’t told me anything, maybe not to worry me, but she hasn’t
    told me.
    A.R. 192 (emphasis added). After a brief recess, Alvarado’s attorney recalled her to the
    stand to question her again on the issue:
    Q:   Why do you think [you would be extorted when you went back to El
    Salvador] when nobody in your family has been threatened for the
    last, that you know of, has been threatened for the last two years?
    A:    We paid the money that they asked for.
    Q:    What do you mean by that?
    A:    When they asked us for the money, we paid it, that’s why they didn’t
    harm anybody in the family.
    Q:    But, to the best of your knowledge, that all happened two years ago,
    why would it start back up if you went back?
    A:    I don’t know.
    A.R. 195–96 (emphasis added).
    The IJ later determined that the extortion letters and death threats “indicate[d] that
    [Alvarado] suffered past persecution, she and the family members, on a number of
    occasions.” A.R. 94. Recognizing that this finding meant that Alvarado “benefit[ed] from
    a presumption that she will continue to suffer persecution should she be returned to El
    Salvador,” the IJ observed that the “presumption [could] be rebutted by the Government
    14
    by a showing of either (1) changed country conditions such that the respondent need no
    longer fear prosecution, or (2) there is an internal relocation alternative available to the
    respondent which is viable.” A.R. 96. After determining the second option was unavailable,
    the IJ concluded:
    Based upon the evidence of record, it appears . . . that while [Alvarado] did
    suffer past persecution in the form of death threats made against her, the
    respondent has failed to carry her burden in establishing that she will
    continue to face persecution if she returns to El Salvador. She has failed to
    carry that burden principally because the group to which she belongs, the
    particular social group, family members of [her mother], have continued to
    live in El Salvador for the past two years, have not been threatened, have not
    paid extortion, at least so far as the evidence of this case has indicated.
    Therefore, . . . the presumption that [Alvarado] would continue to suffer
    persecution has been rebutted by the respondent’s own testimony and
    corroborated to some degree by the testimony of the respondent’s expert,
    Roberto [Lovato].
    A.R. 99.
    II.
    If Alvarado’s petition were before us on a clean slate as a matter of first impression,
    I would have little trouble denying it. Her testimony makes clear that not only was she “not
    aware of continued threats,” Per Curiam Op. 8, she was affirmatively told there were none.
    Alvarado specifically asked her mother—with whom she spoke “[e]very day or every other
    day,” A.R. 180—whether the threats were ongoing after she left for the United States. And
    Alvarado testified that her mother unequivocally said they were not. See A.R. 181.
    Considering the record as a whole, this acknowledgement—in conjunction with the IJ’s
    finding that Alvarado’s expert witness “could not, as far as I can determine, account for
    why there would be a hiatus, why there would be a stop in the persecution or extortion by
    15
    the gangs,” A.R. 230—should be enough to prevent “any reasonable adjudicator” from
    being “compelled to conclude to the contrary.” 8 U.S.C.§ 1252(b)(4)(B) (emphasis added);
    see also Tassi v. Holder, 
    660 F.3d 710
    , 719 (4th Cir. 2011) (stating that “we must treat [the
    agency’s] findings of fact as conclusive unless the evidence was such that any reasonable
    adjudicator would have been compelled to a contrary view”).
    As recognized in the Per Curiam Opinion, however, our recent decision in Ortez-
    Cruz requires us to hold otherwise. There, the IJ found the Government had carried its
    burden in rebutting the presumption of future harm because the applicant—who had
    suffered years of horrific violence at the hands of her former partner—had not been
    contacted or harmed by her abuser in 16 
    years. 951 F.3d at 195
    –96. The IJ determined this
    substantial lapse in time, along with “[its] view [that] much of [the applicant’s] testimony
    regarding her fear of future persecution was too speculative to be given much weight,” was
    sufficient to show that “circumstances had fundamentally changed since” the applicant was
    last harmed.
    Id. at 196.
    The Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) affirmed.
    Id. at 197.
    The Court granted the applicant’s petition for review, concluding that even though
    “[t]here may be cases where the [BIA] can rely solely on the applicant’s own evidence (or
    her testimony on cross-examination) in finding one of the two conditions that rebut the
    presumption,” the bar to do so is exceedingly high.
    Id. at 198.
    For example, the Court
    hypothesized that if the applicant “had testified that [her abuser] was dead, a ‘fundamental
    change of circumstances’ finding obviously would be proper—even without evidence or
    argument from the government—because the record would point unambiguously in that
    direction.”
    Id. Absent such irrefutable
    testimony, however, the Court held that the
    16
    Government is required to adduce its own evidence to prove the negative—i.e., the
    applicant’s speculation that her abuser still posed an active threat was not viable.
    Id. That said, the
    Court recognized that “[i]t will sometimes be difficult for the
    government to prove that an individual in another country no longer poses a threat.”
    Id. at 200.
    “But that [burden] is consistent with the presumption. It puts a thumb on the scale for
    applicants who show past harm. A lack of proof as to whether [the abuser] retains interest
    in [the applicant] can’t be held against her.”
    Id. In my view,
    the Court’s standard outlined
    in Ortez-Cruz has transformed that “thumb on the scale,”
    id., into a Sisyphean
    boulder the
    Government will rarely, if ever, be able to dislodge. In effect, Ortez-Cruz converts the
    regulation’s rebuttable presumption into a de facto irrebuttable presumption. In my view,
    that dramatic expansion is error. ∗
    And its impact can be clearly felt here. Alvarado’s own testimony should be enough
    for the Government to prove a change in circumstances had occurred—she knew of past
    ∗
    That the presumption at issue was not intended to be conclusive—i.e.,
    irrebuttable—is further indicated by the language the Department of Justice has used in
    other regulations. See, e.g., 28 C.F.R. § 74.4(b) (creating “irrebuttable presumptions”
    regarding eligibility under Civil Liberties Act). Other Government Agencies have also
    proved capable of making a presumption irrebuttable if they so desire. See, e.g., 20 C.F.R.
    § 718.304 (Department of Labor creating various “irrebuttable presumptions” for miners
    diagnosed with pneumoconiosis); 26 C.F.R. § 1.166-2(d)(3)(ii) (Department of the
    Treasury authorizing use of a method of accounting that establishes a “conclusive
    presumption” of worthlessness for debts). As has Congress. See, e.g., 30 U.S.C. § 921(c)(3)
    (creating various “irrebuttable presumptions” related to miners). That said, conclusive
    presumptions are exceedingly rare. Therefore, given the fact that Agencies and Congress
    alike know how to make presumptions irrebuttable, their choice to do the opposite here
    should be controlling. See Discover Bank v. Vaden, 
    396 F.3d 366
    , 370 (4th Cir. 2005)
    (“[W]here Congress knows how to say something but chooses not to, its silence is
    controlling.”). And it is not the Judiciary’s place to override that decision.
    17
    threats, but had been expressly told there were no current ones. But because, after counsel’s
    prodding, she injected ambiguity into her testimony—specifically, that she could not be
    100% sure the threats had actually stopped because of the speculative possibility that her
    mother might not be truthfully responding to her questions in an effort not to worry her—
    Ortez-Cruz requires the Government to put on its own evidence to rebut the presumption.
    This appears to diverge from the practice of at least some of our sister Courts of Appeals.
    See, e.g., Ming Li Hui v. Holder, 
    769 F.3d 984
    , 986–87 (8th Cir. 2014) (holding that the
    applicant had established past persecution when her mother abused her as a child and that
    the Government rebutted the presumption in part because a significant amount of time had
    passed and the applicant was now an adult); Yong An Zheng v. Holder, 493 F. App’x 202,
    203–04 (2d Cir. 2012) (summary order) (relying on the applicant’s own testimony about
    his subjective fear of returning to China in finding that the Government had rebutted his
    presumption of a well-founded fear of future persecution). Nonetheless, the Ortez-Cruz
    requirement remains binding in this Court until altered by the Court sitting en banc or by
    the Supreme Court. See 
    Cobb, 970 F.3d at 332
    .
    III.
    The IJ should be able to rely on an applicant’s own testimony demonstrating a
    fundamental change in circumstances as sufficient to carry the Government’s burden to
    rebut the presumption of future persecution. And an applicant’s unfounded and
    unsupported conjecture should not compel the IJ to act otherwise. At a minimum, we
    should reconsider the broad implications of our decision in Ortez-Cruz as soon as an
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    appropriate case comes before us. Until then, however, I am compelled by stare decisis to
    concur in the Per Curiam Opinion.
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