Yiang, Hung Chang v. Gonzales, Alberto R. , 198 F. App'x 548 ( 2006 )


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  •                             UNPUBLISHED ORDER
    Not to be cited per Circuit Rule 53
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    Chicago, Illinois 60604
    Argued June 14, 2006
    Decided October 2, 2006
    Before
    Hon. WILLIAM J. BAUER, Circuit Judge
    Hon. DANIEL A. MANION, Circuit Judge
    Hon. DIANE S. SYKES, Circuit Judge
    No. 05-3680
    HUNG CHANG YIANG,                              Petition for Review of an Order of the
    Petitioner,                                Board of Immigration Appeals
    v.                                       No. A78 845 619
    ALBERTO R. GONZALES,
    Respondent.
    ORDER
    Hung Chang Yiang claims that he will be persecuted if forced to return to his
    native China because he is a practitioner of Falun Gong. Yiang petitioned for
    asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against
    Torture (“CAT”). The Immigration Judge found him ineligible for asylum because
    he filed his application more than a year after entering the United States, see 
    8 U.S.C. § 1158
    (a)(2)(B), and denied him withholding of removal and relief under the
    CAT largely because she did not believe that he had practiced Falun Gong. The
    Board of Immigration Appeals adopted and affirmed the IJ’s decision. Yiang now
    petitions for review of the denial of withholding. Because the IJ’s decision is
    supported by substantial evidence, we deny the petition.
    No. 05-3680                                                                     Page 2
    I.
    Yiang entered the United States with a fraudulent passport at O’Hare
    International Airport in June 2001. At his airport interview, he told immigration
    officers that he left his home in Fujian province because he was practicing Falun
    Gong and was afraid he might be arrested. However, when asked if the Chinese
    police knew he had “joined” the Falun Gong movement, he said they did not. He
    also said that he had been practicing Falun Gong for only half a year.
    Yiang remained in the custody of the INS (now the United States Citizenship
    and Immigration Services (USCIS), a bureau of the Department of Homeland
    Security) for about seventeen days. At the end of this period, he was given a
    credible-fear interview. His statements during the credible-fear interview were
    basically consistent with his testimony at the airport interview, but he added claims
    that his “coworkers were arrested in April 2000,” and that he himself experienced
    difficulty finding employment because of his association with Falun Gong. The
    interviewer noted at the end of the interview form that “Applicant did not know 5
    basic exercises,” and that he had explained that “because he was only a member for
    one year he had not learned a lot.”
    In October 2002, Yiang filed an application for asylum. In it he claimed that
    he began to practice Falun Gong in May 1999 after an acute attack of a “stomach
    problem” that had plagued him since childhood. The pain of that attack was so bad
    that he fainted and had to be hospitalized. While he was in the hospital, he was
    visited by several coworkers, one of whom claimed to have alleviated similar
    stomach problems through practice of Falun Gong. This coworker, Xiaofeng Li,
    invited Yiang to try the exercises for himself. From then on, said Yiang, he
    practiced Falun Gong daily with Li at a local senior center, and his stomach
    problems ceased to bother him.
    At first he was able to practice freely, but in July 1999, according to Yiang,
    the Chinese government banned Falun Gong. Even so, for a time, Yiang and the
    others in his group continued to practice openly. Two months later Yiang and Li
    were ordered by their employer to stop practicing. They were warned in November
    1999 that they would lose their jobs if they did not stop, but they refused and were
    fired that December. At the same time, according to Yiang, the government began
    “repress[ing]” Falun Gong “viciously.” Yiang’s parents and sister would no longer
    allow him to go to the practice site because they were afraid for him, and so he had
    to practice at home. Yiang’s friend Li, however, continued to practice at a “secret
    site” in a park. Sometimes he also went to Yiang’s home to practice with him.
    In April 2000, Li and several of his fellow Falun Gong practitioners were
    detained by the police. One of Yiang’s cousins who worked at a police station called
    No. 05-3680                                                                   Page 3
    to tell him that his friends had been interrogated and beaten. Yiang’s cousin was
    worried that they might report that Yiang was practicing at home and encouraged
    him to “get away.”
    Yiang decided to do so. He hid at “a relative’s house” while his parents made
    plans to send him “abroad.” With the help of his cousin, he obtained a passport and
    left China in April 2001. He arrived in Chicago in June 2001, with a false
    Taiwanese passport, which he claimed he was forced to purchase because he had
    lost his original passport while traveling through Yugoslavia and Spain en route to
    the United States.
    At his hearing before the IJ, Yiang repeated essentially the same story, but
    there were a few significant discrepancies. First, he told the IJ that he began to
    practice Falun Gong in June 1998 rather than in May 1999 (and also, oddly enough,
    that he was hospitalized for the acute attack of stomach pain in September 1998,
    three months after he allegedly began to practice). Second, Yiang testified that
    when he was practicing openly, he accompanied Li to practice at a local park; he
    made no mention of the senior center that figured so prominently in his asylum
    application. Third, Yiang claimed that Li was arrested in 2001 rather than 2000 as
    he had claimed in both his credible-fear interview and his asylum application.
    Finally, Yiang raised a new claim that police had come looking for him at his
    parents’ home three weeks after Li’s arrest. (According to Yiang, the police did not
    find him because he had already gone to hide at his grandmother’s house.)
    The only evidence Yiang offered to corroborate any of this testimony was a
    letter from his parents that recited his principal allegations. The letter also
    asserted that Li remained in custody, and that the police “issued a wanted circular
    for [Yiang] and actually came to our house several times to look for him.” Yiang’s
    parents claimed that they had previously attempted to write letters for him to
    verify his story but that their letters were “confiscated by the Chinese customs
    office” because they exposed the “negative side” of the country.
    The IJ rejected Yiang’s claim that his delay in filing his asylum application
    for more than a year was excused by “extraordinary circumstances,”see 
    8 U.S.C. § 1158
    (a)(2)(D), and concluded that he was not eligible for asylum. The IJ also
    denied him withholding of removal and protection under the CAT because she did
    not believe that he was a practitioner of Falun Gong. She found his testimony
    incredible because he had testified inconsistently about the date he began to
    practice, and because he had been unable to describe the five basic movements of
    Falun Gong at his credible-fear interview. In addition, she thought his claim
    undermined by his failure to obtain any affidavit or witness testimony from any of
    the persons with whom he allegedly practiced Falun Gong in Chicago. Finally, she
    concluded that even if Yiang were credible, he could not have sustained his burden
    No. 05-3680                                                                      Page 4
    of proving a clear probability of persecution or torture because he failed to show
    that his circumstances sufficiently resembled Li’s to justify an inference that he
    would be targeted for similar treatment, and because he failed to point to anything
    suggesting that the Chinese police sought him at his parents’ house in order to
    punish him for practicing Falun Gong.
    The BIA adopted and affirmed the IJ’s opinion, making it the final agency
    determination for purposes of our review. Giday v. Gonzales, 
    434 F.3d 543
    , 547 (7th
    Cir. 2006); Feto v. Gonzales, 
    433 F.3d 907
    , 911 (7th Cir. 2006).
    II.
    Persecution of practitioners of Falun Gong has been variously deemed
    persecution on account of religion, imputed political opinion, and membership in a
    particular social group, see Zhou v. Gonzales, 
    437 F.3d 860
    , 863 (9th Cir. 2006)
    (imputed political opinion); Chen v. United States Dept. Of Justice, 
    426 F.3d 104
    , 114
    (2d Cir. 2005) (religion and social group); Iao v. Gonzales, 
    400 F.3d 530
    , 534 (7th Cir.
    2005) (religion); Zhang v. Ashcroft, 
    388 F.3d 713
    , 719-20 (9th Cir. 2004) (per curiam)
    (imputed political opinion and religion), but there is no question that practicing Falun
    Gong is in one way or another protected. A petitioner for asylum, however, must have
    a credible claim that he is a practitioner, and the IJ found that Yiang was not
    sufficiently credible.
    We review an adverse credibility finding for substantial evidence. Kllokoqi v.
    Gonzales, 
    439 F.3d 336
    , 341 (7th Cir. 2005). The IJ’s finding is entitled to particular
    deference, as long as it is supported by “specific, cogent reasons” with a “legitimate
    nexus to the finding.” 
    Id.
     (internal citation and quotation omitted); see Shtaro v.
    Gonzales, 
    435 F.3d 711
    , 715 (7th Cir. 2006). To overturn a denial of asylum for lack
    of credibility requires “extraordinary circumstances.”1 Huang v. Gonzales, 
    453 F.3d 942
    , 945 (7th Cir. 2006) (internal citation and quotation omitted).
    There are no extraordinary circumstances here. Yiang first argues that the IJ’s
    decision is unreasoned, for the reasons we set forth in Iao, 
    400 F.3d at 532-33
    .
    Specifically, Yiang contends that the IJ (1) did not make a “clean” credibility
    determination, (2) erred in discrediting him based on the discrepancies in the dates he
    gave for beginning his practice, and (3) unreasonably assumed that he could obtain
    corroborating evidence from his fellow Falun Gong practitioners in Chicago.
    1
    Our credibility analysis is unaffected by the passage of the REAL ID Act of
    2005, see Pub. L. No. 109-13, 
    119 Stat. 231
    , which governs only cases in which the
    petition for asylum was filed on or before May 11, 2005. Kwok v. Gonzales, 
    455 F.3d 766
    , 769 (7th Cir. 2006).
    No. 05-3680                                                                          Page 5
    But Iao is not an appropriate parallel. In that case we rejected all of the IJ’s five
    reasons for denying the petitioner asylum. Moreover, the IJ’s opinion left us “in the
    dark” as to why, in her view, the petitioner failed to carry her burden of proof. See Iao,
    
    400 F.3d at 532-34
    . In this case it is clear that the IJ did not find Yiang credible
    because she stated that he failed to convince her “of the bona fides of his membership
    in this particular social group [Falun Gong practitioners].” In addition, we do not
    agree with Yiang’s claim that the discrepancies in the dates he gave for beginning his
    practice are too insignificant to support the adverse credibility finding. See 
    id. at 532
    (criticizing IJ for relying on “trivial” inconsistencies). Discrepancies in date may be
    trivial, see, e.g., Kwok, 
    455 F.3d at 769-70
    ; Singh v. Gonzales, 
    439 F.3d 1100
    , 1108-09
    (9th Cir. 2006); Daneshvar v. Ashcroft, 
    355 F.3d 615
    , 623 (6th Cir. 2004), but here the
    IJ justified giving them weight by noting that, according to Yiang, the date he began
    to practice Falun Gong marked a turning point in his life. At that time the stomach
    problems that had plagued him since his childhood ended. And Yiang offered no
    explanation for giving the differing dates. Further, while the IJ may have been
    unreasonable in expecting Yiang to produce affidavits or other testimony from his
    fellow Falun Gong practitioners in Chicago, see Iao, 
    400 F.3d at 534
    , we do not think
    such an error would warrant reversal because of the strength of the other grounds for
    the IJ’s determination.
    Yiang next argues that the IJ erred in discrediting him because of his inability
    to explain the five basic exercises of Falun Gong at his airport interview. These
    exercises are critical because, as we noted in Iao, they are “the primary manifestation
    of adherence to Falun Gong,” and “the heart” of its observance. See Iao, 
    400 F.3d at 531-32
    . Yiang does not dispute this, but he contends that under our opinion in
    Balogun v. Ashcroft, 
    374 F.3d 492
    , 505 (7th Cir. 2004), the record of the interview is
    unreliable because it “merely summarize[d] or paraphrase[d]” what transpired and did
    not contain the exact words of the question he was asked about the five exercises. We
    disagree. Balogun did not establish a categorical prohibition against reliance on such
    a record; we simply cautioned that a summary record is generally “less reliable.” 
    Id.
    And in this case the record contains an approximation of the question Yiang was asked
    and the answer he gave, such that we are satisfied that the record is a meaningful
    report of the exchange. In any event, Yiang has no basis for arguing that the record
    is unreliable because he does not dispute the accuracy of its representations. See 
    id.
    We uphold the IJ’s adverse credibility determination, and the petition for review
    is DENIED.