Edmundo Solano-Abarca v. William P. Barr ( 2019 )


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  •                   NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 19a0102n.06
    Case No. 18-3474
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    FILED
    Mar 04, 2019
    EDMUNDO SOLANO-ABARCA,                               )
    DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
    )
    Petitioner,                                   )
    )       ON PETITION FOR REVIEW
    v.                                                   )       FROM THE UNITED STATES
    )       BOARD   OF  IMMIGRATION
    WILLIAM P. BARR, Attorney General,                   )       APPEALS
    )
    Respondent.                                   )
    )
    ____________________________________/
    Before: MERRITT, GIBBONS, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.
    MERRITT, Circuit Judge. This is a cancellation of removal case from the Board of
    Immigration Appeals. When an alien seeks to secure a discretionary ruling from an Immigration
    Judge cancelling removal, he or she must show: (1) continuous presence in the country for ten
    years; (2) good moral character during that period; (3) no convictions for certain enumerated
    offenses; and (4) that “removal would result in exceptional and extremely unusual hardship to the
    alien’s spouse, parent, or child, who is a citizen of the United States.” See 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(b)(1).
    The inquiry on the fourth factor focuses on the hardships to qualifying U.S. citizen relatives: the
    spotlight is on the family’s suffering rather than the alien’s. Those decisions are reviewed by the
    Board of Immigration Appeals.        After that, our review is limited to questions of law or
    constitutional claims. See 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(D).
    Case No. 18-3474, Solano-Abarca v. Barr
    The Immigration Judge below denied cancellation of removal, and the petitioner appealed
    to the Board. During the pendency of that appeal, but before the Board issued a decision, the
    petitioner filed a Motion to Reopen and Remand, claiming that a new qualifying relative’s
    deteriorating medical condition warranted reconsideration of the hardship standard. The Board
    denied this Motion and affirmed the cancellation hardship finding. The instant appeal focuses only
    on the denial of the Motion.
    The petitioner complains that the Board’s decision disregards new and important evidence
    essential to an assessment of whether exceptional and extremely unusual hardship will befall his
    qualifying U.S. citizen relatives if he is deported. At the hearing before the Immigration Judge,
    petitioner presented evidence about three qualifying U.S. citizen relatives: his U.S. citizen wife
    and two biological U.S. citizen children, a boy and a girl. But in the Motion for Remand filed with
    the Board, the petitioner disclosed that he had a second U.S. citizen daughter who, although she
    was born before the hearing, was diagnosed with a severe medical condition after the hearing. He
    seeks a remand to the Board because he believes that the Board did not properly consider this new
    evidence the first time around when it issued its decision.
    We are guided in this case by a very recent published opinion from this Court, Hernandez-
    Perez v. Whitaker, No. 18-3137, __ F.3d __, 
    2018 WL 6580478
    (6th Cir. Dec. 14, 2018).
    Hernandez-Perez concerned a similar situation where new evidence about qualifying relatives
    arose late in the game while the petitioner’s case was in the appellate pipeline before the Board.
    Balancing the issues in these cases is difficult because the burden is on the petitioner to show that
    he or she meets the standard for a discretionary cancellation of removal. But of course, no
    petitioner can testify as to what medical misfortunes will befall his family in the 36 to 48 months
    following his hearing. The case law, recognizing this reality, contemplates Motions to Remand
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    and Reopen as a safety valve to address this problem. In this case, the Board failed to meaningfully
    address this new evidence, choosing instead to berate petitioner for not naming his daughter
    sooner. But the failure to disclose is irrelevant because no matter when the child was born, her
    medical problems arose post-hearing. Because the Board abused its discretion as to this Motion,
    and guided by the principles articulated in Hernandez-Perez, we GRANT the petition and
    REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Petitioner Edmundo Solano-Abarca is a Mexican citizen who came to the United States
    without inspection in January 2001, when he was eighteen. In 2013, the government commenced
    removal proceedings against him; Solano-Abarca conceded removability but sought discretionary
    cancellation of removal under 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(b)(1). The government conceded that Solano-
    Abarca had been in the United States for ten years, had established good moral character, and had
    no disqualifying convictions; thus, the only issue was whether Petitioner could establish
    “exceptional and extremely unusual hardship” under § 1229b(b)(1)(D). The Immigration Court
    held a hearing on April 4, 2016, and heard testimony from Solano-Abarca, his U.S. citizen wife,
    and his wife’s mother, who resides with the family.
    The testimony at the hearing showed that Solano-Abarca and his wife care for three U.S.
    citizen children, one of whom is not Solano-Abarca’s biological child, but who knows Solano-
    Abarca as his father. As counsel for the government points out, the witnesses were clear in their
    answers that Solano-Abarca and his wife care for three children: two boys and a girl. The oldest
    child (not Solano-Abarca’s biological child, but his wife’s biological child) was born in 2006, the
    son was born in 2008, and the daughter was born in 2011.
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    The Immigration Judge also noted that Solano-Abarca was twice convicted for driving
    under the influence, once in 2006 and again in 2011; he attends Alcoholics Anonymous regularly.
    He is the sole source of support for his family as his wife does not work, and they would not
    accompany him if he were deported to Mexico. On cross examination, Solano-Abarca admitted
    to purchasing a green card and a social security number in the past.
    On May 24, 2017, the Immigration Judge issued a decision finding all of the witnesses
    credible. After reciting applicable law, the Judge addressed the substance of the case in less than
    a page. In the main, the Court found that the petitioner’s situation did not meet the standard of
    “exceptional and extremely unusual hardship,” but also made a discretionary finding: “Even if the
    Court were to find Respondent eligible for cancellation, it would decline to exercise its discretion
    for the following reasons: Respondent’s convictions for drunk driving; Respondent’s purchase and
    use of a false green card and social security number; and the lack of an economic stake in the
    United States.” Solano-Abarca was granted voluntary departure.
    On June 21, 2017, Solano-Abarca appealed the decision of the Immigration Judge. But on
    December 4, 2017, Solano-Abarca’s counsel filed a “Motion to Reopen and to Remand.” The
    Motion averred that Solano-Abarca had four U.S. citizen children, not three. The Motion disclosed
    the existence of a fourth child (or more accurately, a third biological child), born in 2015, but did
    not explain why that child was not discussed at the hearing, instead claiming that certain testimony
    had referenced this new fourth daughter instead of the daughter born in 2011. The Motion also
    attached an exhibit from a doctor diagnosing the fourth child born in 2015 with hypotonia and an
    abnormal brain MRI (letter dated November 10, 2017). The letter did not indicate exactly when
    the fourth child received this diagnosis, but the Motion represented that it post-dated the hearing
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    before the Immigration Judge. The child’s birth certificate listed Solano-Abarca as the father and
    his wife as the mother, but the child has a different last name than either.
    On April 23, 2018, the Board of Immigration Appeals issued an order denying the Motion
    and dismissing the appeal. The Board first considered the merits component of the hardship
    finding, and said: “We agree with the Immigration Judge’s determination that the respondent did
    not establish that his removal to Mexico would result in exceptional and extremely unusual
    hardship to his spouse or children[.]” The Board then proceeded to a discussion of the Motion,
    saying, “Turning to the respondent’s motion to remand, we do not find any evidence
    accompanying the respondent’s motion to remand which would persuade us to remand
    proceedings.” Following this inscrutably vague sentence is one paragraph simply reciting the facts
    in the Motion relating to the fourth child. In the second paragraph relating to the Motion, the
    Board couched its denial in evidentiary terms, saying:
    The respondent, who is represented by counsel, appears to have provided
    information relating to another individual in his notice to remand. The record does
    not indicate that the respondent has daughter by the name of [Child 4], born on
    August 8, 2015. The respondent listed only [Child 1], [Child 2], and [Child 3] as
    his children on his cancellation of removal application. When testifying, the
    respondent named [Child 1], [Child 2], and [Child 3] as his children (Tr. at 25-26).
    In light of the foregoing, the respondent’s motion to remand will be denied.
    So the denial of the Motion did not relate to the applicable hardship standard, but to the fact that
    the fourth child had not been presented to the Immigration Court in the first place.
    On May 21, 2018, Solano-Abarca appealed to the Sixth Circuit. He sought a stay of
    removal, but the Motions Panel (Suhrheinrich, Gilman, and Sutton, Circuit Judges) denied the stay
    in an order dated July 5, 2018. A request for reconsideration was denied on July 24, 2018.
    The posture of Solano-Abarca’s current appeal is important. In his brief, he only attacks
    the denial of his Motion for Remand rather than the substance of the hardship determination. The
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    government contends that we lack jurisdiction over discretionary determinations made by the
    Immigration Judge, that the Petitioner waived any review of the cancellation application by failing
    to mention it in his brief, and that the Board did not abuse its discretion in denying the Motion for
    Remand. The parties continue to dispute whether the existence and medical condition of the fourth
    child are relevant to this proceeding. The government notes in its brief that prior to the filing of
    the Motion, the record contained no references to the fourth child. The petitioner’s attorney says
    that the Board did not consider the effects of this new evidence on the applicability of the hardship
    standard, and points to the birth certificate as uncontroverted proof that the fourth child is the
    petitioner’s daughter. The petitioner also doubles down on the explanation of the trial testimony
    as referencing the fourth daughter rather than the third.
    II. ANALYSIS
    Jurisdiction in cancellation of removal cases usually hangs by a thread. See generally
    Ettienne v. Holder, 
    659 F.3d 513
    (6th Cir. 2011); 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(D). The posture of the
    instant matter is somewhat unusual; the petitioner is not challenging the Board’s hardship
    determination but is instead attacking the denial of his Motion for Remand. The standard of review
    for denials of such motions is abuse of discretion. See Hernandez-Perez, 
    2018 WL 6580478
    , at
    *7. Following the petitioner’s lead, we confine our review of this matter to the Motion. We note
    in passing that the Immigration Judge’s additional discretionary finding coupled with the choice
    in the petitioner’s brief not to attack the hardship-cancellation decision makes a barely reviewable
    issue even less reviewable. But the denial of the Motion is a separate issue entirely.
    First, we agree that the record as it stood before the filing of the Motion was fairly clear
    that the petitioner’s household only contained three children. Petitioner’s tax return for the 2015
    year listed only three children. Petitioner himself testified at the hearing quite clearly that he only
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    had three children. He said, in reference to the son born to his wife and another man: “I treat him
    as I treat my other two children, my own children.” In its brief on appeal, the government does
    not say that the fourth child’s birth certificate is invalid but jabs at the fact that the child’s last
    name is not the same as her father or mother. While we agree with the government on what the
    evidence showed, we do not minimize the difficulties that fact-finding in these cases poses to even
    the most experienced of attorneys. The record indicates that petitioner’s counsel was not fully up
    to speed on the condition of the children. When petitioner’s wife testified about her daughter’s
    hearing problems, counsel for the petitioner said, “Well, can you explain why we haven’t
    submitted any of those documents to the Court, because I didn’t know anything about this.”
    Counsel later said, “One thing that I forgot, and I didn’t even know, was this hearing, medical
    issue with their daughter, that just came up. And, clearly, I would have submitted documents,
    because the Board has said medical condition may not be a decisive factor, but it’s an important
    factor. And I wasn’t aware of it until this morning.” But while the record is clear that the fourth
    child’s birth preceded the hearing, it is equally clear that the medical problems post-date the
    hearing.
    Timing matters in this kind of case. We must distinguish between scenarios where a
    petitioner whose cancellation application has been denied: (1) presents the immigration authorities
    with a “new” qualifying relative; (2) presents the immigration authorities with a new medical
    problem that a previously disclosed qualifying relative is now suffering from; or (3) some kind of
    hybrid scenario, as here. The takeaway is that when a qualifying relative suffers from a newly
    arisen medical condition, the petitioner has no control; it goes without saying that taking care of a
    qualifying relative factors into a discretionary decision about the applicable hardship standard. But
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    when a petitioner simply forgets to mention a qualifying relative at all without a reasonable excuse,
    that merits somewhat less sympathy.
    An example of the first kind of case is the recent Hernandez-Perez decision, where the
    petitioner discovered a new son concealed from him during the pendency of his immigration case.
    Hernandez-Perez, 
    2018 WL 6580478
    , at *2 (discussing how the new relative was discovered and
    noting that the child may have been neglected). The second kind of case, where a new medical
    problem arises, was referenced in the abstract in a Ninth Circuit opinion. See Fernandez v.
    Gonzales, 
    439 F.3d 592
    , 601–02 (9th Cir. 2006) (“An example would be the submission of
    evidence, subsequent to a denial of cancellation of removal, concerning a newly-discovered, life-
    threatening medical condition afflicting a qualifying relative.”). An example of the third kind of
    case, where the qualifying relative’s existence and that person’s medical condition are both new
    to the immigration authorities, is another decision from our Circuit. Ortiz-Cervantes v. Holder,
    596 F. App’x 429, 431 (6th Cir. 2015) (“The BIA added that neither Ortiz nor his attorney raised
    the issue of a new qualifying relative to the IJ, even though Ortiz’s son was born on May 29, 2012,
    while his previous appeal was still pending before the BIA…Moreover, the evidence submitted
    concerning his son was not new or previously unavailable.”) (internal citation omitted).
    In this case, the fourth child was born in August of 2015. The Immigration Judge heard
    testimony in April of 2016 and rendered a decision in May of 2017. So if this were a case where
    the petitioner sought a second try before the Board simply because he failed to present evidence
    of another qualifying relative that he certainly knew of at the first hearing, that might settle this
    matter. The Board does not usually accept new evidence on appeal. Hernandez-Perez, 
    2018 WL 6580478
    , at *7. But while it is clear that the Petitioner should certainly have submitted evidence
    that his child was a qualifying relative at the hearing, the record does not reflect that the relevant
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    medical evidence was available at the time of the hearing. In fact, counsel for Solano-Abarca has
    represented that the opposite is true: “[T]he medical evidence regarding Respondent’s daughter’s
    medical condition was not available at the time of Respondent’s individual hearing on April 4,
    2016, and it could not have been discovered earlier.” The letter from the doctor is dated November
    10, 2017. That puts this matter closer to box number two than box number one. So the real
    question in this case is whether the Petitioner’s failure to notify the immigration authorities that
    his child existed at the time of the hearing vitiates his ability to present “evidence, subsequent to a
    denial of cancellation of removal, concerning a newly-discovered, life-threatening medical
    condition afflicting a qualifying relative.” 
    Fernandez, 439 F.3d at 601
    –02. More to the point, the
    question is whether the Board abused its discretion in ruling on the Motion.
    Both Ortiz-Cervantez and Hernandez-Perez are instructive. Again, timing is critical. In
    Ortiz-Cervantez, the Immigration Judge heard testimony in January 2010 and issued a decision in
    September 2011. Ortiz-Cervantes, 596 F. App’x at 430. The petitioner’s son was born in May
    2012 and hospitalized with asthmatic issues three times from October 2012 to March 2013. The
    Board remanded in May 2013 on a voluntary departure question, and a new hearing was held on
    that same issue in July 2013. The petitioner disclosed his son’s asthma only upon appealing the
    July 2013 order of the Board. So he had several chances to say something and didn’t. Thus, the
    panel in Ortiz-Cervantes was quite right to say that “the evidence submitted concerning his son
    was not new or previously unavailable.” 
    Id. at 431.
    The import of that case is that Ortiz-Cervantes
    should have told the Board earlier about his son. 
    Id. at 433
    (“The BIA did not abuse its discretion
    in this regard because it is undisputed that Ethan was born March 29, 2012, while Ortiz’s first
    appeal to the BIA was pending and thus prior to the second hearing before the IJ.”). Both the
    existence of the new qualifying relative and that relative’s medical condition went undisclosed
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    during the pendency of multiple hearings. That is not true here – the Motion for Remand was filed
    a month after the doctor wrote the letter (Letter Dated November 10, 2017, Motion dated
    December 4, 2017).
    Hernandez-Perez teaches that “[t]he issue before us then is whether the evidence about the
    hardship to [the new qualifying relative] was available or could have been discovered at the time
    of the merits hearing before the immigration judge in August 2015.” Hernandez-Perez, 
    2018 WL 6580478
    , at *7. And the answer to that question on these facts is no. And as Hernandez-Perez
    notes, the Board must accept facts in a Motion to Reopen as true unless it finds them inherently
    unbelievable. 
    Id. at 8.
    The evidence arose after the hearing and was promptly disclosed – so it
    should have been considered meaningfully.
    The Board’s exploration of the evidence presented by the Motion leaves much to be
    desired. In the main, the Board treated this as an evidentiary matter – the fact that Solano-Abarca
    failed to present this child below ended the inquiry. But the failure to present the existence of the
    child has no effect whatsoever on the timing of the medical condition affecting that child.
    Furthermore, the Board simply said that evidence of the existence of the fourth child here was not
    in the record below. It said nothing about whether that harm rose to the level of exceptional and
    extremely unusual hardship: “Turning to the respondent’s motion to remand, we do not find any
    evidence accompanying the respondent’s motion to remand which would persuade us to remand
    proceedings.” This is insufficient. “[E]ven if this were a thinly disguised attempt to relitigate the
    merits, the BIA would not be excused from explaining its reasoning.” Franco-Rosendo v.
    Gonzales, 
    454 F.3d 965
    , 968 (9th Cir. 2006) (internal citation and quotation marks omitted)
    (granting petition where medical issue arose after hearing).
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    An abuse of discretion in this context occurs when the Board makes a decision without a
    rational explanation, departs from established policies, or bases its decision on invidious
    discrimination. Trujillo Diaz v. Sessions, 
    880 F.3d 244
    , 248 (6th Cir. 2018) (quoting Allabani v.
    Gonzales, 
    402 F.3d 668
    , 675 (6th Cir. 2005)). Here, the record shows that the petitioner could not
    have presented the medical evidence in question to the Board. Reaching this conclusion does not
    mean that we excuse or countenance the failure of the petitioner to disclose this fourth child on his
    tax returns or to the Immigration Judge at the hearing. But even assuming that petitioner had
    included this fourth child in the record, the medical evidence would still have arisen after the
    hearing. Petitioner’s counsel did exactly what the petitioner in Ortiz-Cervantes did not. The
    Board’s order was not a rational explanation because it simply recited what the parties already
    knew rather than discussing the import of those facts in light of the hardship standard.
    III. CONCLUSION
    Cancellation of removal cases poses unique challenges. See generally In Re Andazola-
    Rivas, 23 I. & N. Dec. 319, 334 n.3 (BIA 2002) (Osuna, Board Member, dissenting). But the
    petitioner has chosen to frame this appeal solely from the perspective of the motion to remand
    rather than the substance of the discretionary determination. Because the Board abused its
    discretion by failing to discuss the fourth child’s new medical evidence in the context of the
    applicable hardship standard, we GRANT the petition and REMAND to the Board for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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    NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judge, dissenting. The reason the Board did not consider the
    Petitioner’s new medical evidence is simple: The Board did not believe the Petitioner’s claim that
    the evidence pertained to one of his children. Because the Board was entitled to disbelieve the
    Petitioner and did not abuse its discretion in doing so, I dissent.
    The majority frames the issue in this case as whether the Petitioner could introduce new
    medical evidence about one of his children after the immigration judge denied his application for
    cancellation of removal. So, naturally, the majority’s analysis focuses on timing. Specifically, it
    focuses on when the evidence became available, and when the Petitioner informed the Board about
    the evidence.
    But the Board’s decision did not rest on the timing of the Petitioner’s submission. Instead,
    the Board’s decision was based on its finding that the evidence did not relate to one of his children.
    More precisely, the Board did not believe that the Petitioner had a fourth child suffering from a
    new medical disorder, as he alleged in his motion to reopen. It makes sense, therefore, that the
    Board did not consider the Petitioner’s new medical evidence. It had no reason to after finding that
    the evidence did not pertain to a qualifying relative under 8 U.S.C. § 1229b.
    Consequently, the cases the majority relies on—which analyze whether the alien’s newly
    submitted evidence was timely—are beside the point. See Hernandez-Perez v. Whitaker, 
    911 F.3d 305
    , 316 (6th Cir. 2018); Ortiz-Cervantes v. Holder, 596 F. App’x 429, 431 (6th Cir. 2015);
    Fernadez v. Gonzales, 
    439 F.3d 592
    , 601–02 (9th Cir. 2006). In those cases, the authenticity of
    the evidence was never in dispute. In this case, however, it is.
    At bottom, the issue here is whether the Board could discredit the Petitioner’s factual
    allegations in his motion to reopen. Our inquiry is governed by the following rule, which we
    recently adopted from the D.C. Circuit: “[I]n adjudicating a motion to reopen, the BIA ‘must accept
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    as true reasonably specific facts proffered by an alien in support of a motion to reopen unless it
    finds those facts to be inherently unbelievable.’” Trujillo Diaz v. Sessions, 
    880 F.3d 244
    , 252 (6th
    Cir. 2018) (quoting Haftlang v. INS, 
    790 F.2d 140
    , 143 (D.C. Cir. 1986)). “The purpose of this
    rule is to ensure that the applicant has had her day in court to demonstrate the truth of the facts
    alleged.” Trujillo Diaz, 880 at F.3d at 252 (citing 
    Haftlang, 790 F.2d at 143
    ). The question is
    whether the Board determined that the Petitioner’s facts were “inherently unbelievable” by making
    specific findings. Trujillo 
    Diaz, 880 F.3d at 253
    .
    In Trujillo Diaz, we held that the Board abused its discretion in failing to credit a
    declaration that the petitioner had submitted in support of her motion to reopen. 
    Id. at 254.
    In so
    holding, we noted that the Board did not find the declaration to be inherently unbelievable. 
    Id. at 253.
    Indeed, the Board did not “make any findings that would indicate that it reached [that]
    conclusion.” 
    Id. For example,
    the Board did not find any “internal inconsistencies” in the declaration; it did
    not find that the declaration was “at odds with other materials” submitted by the Petitioner; and it
    made no determination that the affidavit was “incompatible with some other incontrovertible piece
    of evidence.” 
    Id. “Because the
    BIA made no such determination . . . it should have accepted as
    true the facts contained in the declaration." 
    Id. But here,
    the Board made several findings indicating that it concluded the Petitioner’s facts
    were inherently unbelievable. In particular, the Board concluded that there was nothing in the
    record to suggest that the Petitioner had a daughter named Nayeli Jazmin Vazquez, born on August
    8, 2015. In supporting that conclusion, the Board found that the Petitioner “listed only Jorelyse
    Aliana Solano, Alexayier Atrevian Solano, and Adrian Wetzel as his children on his cancellation
    of removal application.” [A.R. at 4–5.] It also found that, when testifying, the Petitioner did not
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    state he had a fourth child named Nayeli Jazmin Vazquez. Indeed, when the Petitioner’s lawyer
    directly asked him how many children he had, he unequivocally responded, “three,” and named
    Jorelyse, Alexayier, and Adrian as his children. [Id. at 153–54.] Finally, the Board noted that
    Nayeli’s birthdate did not correspond to any of the birthdates that the Petitioner provided of his
    children on his application or at his hearing.
    In this case, the Board did what it failed to do in Trujillo Diaz: It made exactly the type of
    findings that we said would constitute a determination that the Petitioner’s facts were inherently
    unbelievable. That is, it found the Petitioner’s claim that he had a fourth child named Nayeli to be
    “at odds with” or “incompatible with” the incontrovertible record evidence. And because the
    Board’s finding was supported by substantial evidence, it should have survived our review. See
    Dada v. Holder, 
    516 F. App'x 521
    , 523 (6th Cir. 2013) (explaining that “[w]e review the BIA’s
    . . . factual findings for substantial evidence.”)
    Accordingly, I would hold that the Board did not abuse its discretion in denying the
    Petitioner’s motion to reopen.
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