Toufighi v. Mukasey ( 2008 )


Menu:
  •                      FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    PEJMAN TOUFIGHI,                                  No. 04-74010
    Petitioner,            Agency No.
    v.                              A76-382-466
    MICHAEL B. MUKASEY,* Attorney                       ORDER
    General,                                           AMENDING
    Respondent.                   OPINION AND
    AMENDED
             OPINION
    On Petition for Review of an Order of
    the Board of Immigration Appeals
    Argued and Submitted
    August 9, 2007—Pasadena, California
    Filed December 13, 2007
    Amended August 18, 2008
    Before: Marsha S. Berzon and Sandra S. Ikuta,
    Circuit Judges, and James K. Singleton, Jr.,**
    Senior District Judge.
    Opinion by Judge Singleton;
    Dissent by Judge Berzon
    *Michael B. Mukasey is substituted for his predecessor, Alberto R.
    Gonzales, as Attorney General of the United States, pursuant to Federal
    Rule of Appellate Procedure 43(c)(2).
    **The Honorable James K. Singleton, Jr., Senior United States District
    Judge for the District of Alaska, sitting by designation.
    10879
    10882               TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY
    COUNSEL
    Theodore Whitley Chandler, Sidley Austin, San Francisco,
    California, for the petitioner.
    Adam M. Dinnell (argued) and Terri Scadron, United States
    Department of Justice, Civil Division, Washington, D.C., for
    the respondent.
    ORDER
    The opinion filed December 13, 2007, slip op. 16371, is
    amended as follows.
    1. At slip op. 16387, footnote 14, replace the sentences
    that begin  and end
    TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY                  10883
     with 104 F.3d 943
    , 949
    (7th Cir. 1997) (noting that evidence regarding the “sincerity
    of the alien’s new religious commitment” can be relevant to
    an asylum claim based on apostasy, but is not dispositive).>.
    OPINION
    SINGLETON, Senior District Judge:
    Pejman Toufighi, a native and citizen of Iran, petitions for
    review of a decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals
    (“Board”) which denied his motion to reopen his claims for
    asylum and withholding of removal. Toufighi sought to
    reopen the proceedings in reliance on his marriage to a United
    States citizen, and what he contended were changed circum-
    stances in Iran material to his claims. We have jurisdiction
    over the final order denying Toufighi’s motion to reopen pro-
    ceedings. 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(5). We deny the petition for
    review.
    BACKGROUND
    Pejman Toufighi is a native and citizen of Iran. He was
    admitted to the United States on or about March 16, 1996, as
    a non-immigrant visitor with authorization to remain for six
    months. Toufighi remained in the United States beyond his
    10884                     TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY
    six-month stay without authorization from the Immigration
    Service (“Service”). In May of 1997, the Service instituted
    removal proceedings.
    On August 8, 1997, Toufighi appeared with counsel and
    conceded that he was removable. The Immigration Judge
    (“IJ”) granted additional time to consider available forms of
    relief, and in anticipation of an asylum claim, directed parties
    to file supporting documents by the hearing date of September
    18, 1997. In September, Toufighi appeared with counsel and
    received a further continuance to allow him time to obtain
    additional documents.1 The IJ set the hearing for April 1,
    1998, and gave Toufighi until March 2, 1998, to submit addi-
    tional supporting documents.
    Toufighi appeared with counsel at the hearing on April 1,
    1998, and testified on his own behalf. Essentially, Toufighi
    claimed that he had converted from Islam to Christianity, and
    that he feared that he would be persecuted upon return to Iran
    for committing apostasy. In support of his claim, Toufighi tes-
    tified that he was introduced to Christianity while in college
    in Iran, but did not convert because he was afraid of the rami-
    fications. He alleged that after arriving in the United States to
    visit his sister he began regularly attending church and prayer
    meetings and had become a Christian.
    Toufighi also submitted in support of his claim several
    unauthenticated official documents translated from Farsi, and
    two letters from a Christian pastor attesting to his conversion.
    The IJ, finding that Toufighi had been given sufficient time
    to properly authenticate his documents, refused to consider
    the unauthenticated documents translated from Farsi. The let-
    ters from the pastor were admitted over the objection of the
    1
    The documents presented in September 1997 included an Amnesty
    International Report on Iran, unauthenticated translations of documents
    written in Farsi, and a letter from the pastor of a Christian church serving,
    inter alia, Persian immigrants.
    TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY                  10885
    Service, but the IJ discounted them because they were not
    from the pastor of Toufighi’s alleged home church, and nei-
    ther the pastor who wrote the letters, nor the pastor of Tou-
    fighi’s alleged home church, were present to testify to their
    knowledge of Toufighi’s religious beliefs.
    The IJ found that Toufighi’s testimony was generally credi-
    ble, but that Toufighi had not in fact converted to Christianity:
    [T]he Court would note that he has very deep con-
    cern as to the genuineness as [to] the respondent’s
    claimed conversion from Muslim to Christianity.
    The respondent testified that he attended church
    every Sunday since he came to the United States in
    1996, at least December 1996. The respondent, how-
    ever, apparently knows very little about the “Bible”
    that he studied. The respondent cannot even name
    the 12 apostles of Jesus Christ. With the Court’s
    understanding that Christianity begins with the life
    and teaching of Jesus Christ in the New Testament,
    the 12 apostles have some of the most important, if
    not the most important, writings of Christianity. The
    Court has serious doubt in the respondent’s conver-
    sion to Christianity when he cannot even give the
    names of the 12 apostles of Jesus Christ. The respon-
    dent’s knowledge about Christianity [was presented]
    to the Court in such general terms that any person of
    any religion can come up with that description of
    their religion, namely peace, tranquility, and love.
    The respondent is not able to give any specific
    knowledge that he has learned from attending Chris-
    tian church every Sunday, for four hours each day,
    for at least the last year-and-a-half, and also his
    desire to become a Christian was so big that he had
    to “escape” his home country and come to the
    United States to learn and become a Christian. The
    Court just would not believe that the respondent’s
    claimed conversion is genuine in nature. The Court
    10886                     TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY
    would find that the respondent’s alleged conversion
    from Muslim to Christianity is basically as a vehicle
    for him to apply for political asylum in the United
    States.
    The IJ further found that Toufighi had not previously prac-
    ticed Christianity in Iran, and implicitly found that he would
    not practice it there in the future because his alleged apostasy
    was simply a ruse to gain asylum. Based on these findings,
    the IJ concluded that Toufighi had not established past perse-
    cution, or a well-founded fear of persecution upon his return
    to Iran.
    The IJ therefore denied Toufighi’s claim for asylum, and
    because the standard was higher, also denied the request for
    withholding of removal.2 The IJ then granted Toufighi’s alter-
    nate request for voluntary departure, giving him until May 31,
    1998, to depart.
    Toufighi challenged the IJ’s decision, filing a timely notice
    of appeal with the Board. However, he failed to timely file a
    brief in support of his appeal, and the Board accordingly dis-
    missed it in May 2002, pursuant to 8 C.F.R.
    § 1003.1(d)(2)(i)(E) (formerly 8 C.F.R. § 3.1(d)(2)(i)(D)
    (2002)).3 The Board’s dismissal permitted Toufighi to volun-
    2
    In order to obtain withholding of deportation on the basis of future per-
    secution, an applicant must demonstrate a clear probability of persecution.
    INS v. Stevic, 
    467 U.S. 407
    , 413 (1984). In contrast, an applicant seeking
    asylum as a refugee, need only show a well-founded fear of persecution,
    a lesser standard. See INS v. Cardoza-Fonseca, 
    480 U.S. 421
    , 428 (1987).
    3
    Although the Board prefaced the dismissal with a statement that it had
    reviewed the record and was not persuaded that the IJ’s ultimate resolution
    was in error, we have held such dismissals to be procedural and not on the
    merits. See, e.g., Garcia-Cortez v. Ashcroft, 
    366 F.3d 749
    , 752 (9th Cir.
    2004). We have also held that summary dismissal for failure to timely file
    a brief is improper if the notice of appeal is sufficiently specific to focus
    the Board’s attention on the specific findings of fact and conclusions of
    law that the alien contends were erroneous. 
    Id. at 753.
    Here, Toufighi
    included an “attachment sheet” with his notice of appeal setting out his
    claims of error. However, Toufighi did not seek timely review of the dis-
    missal of his appeal, and we do not review it here.
    TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY                          10887
    tarily depart within thirty days, and warned him that if he
    failed to timely depart he would be removed, subjected to a
    fine, and made ineligible for a period of ten years for any fur-
    ther relief under certain sections of the Immigration and
    Nationality Act.4
    Toufighi did not depart as promised. On October 16, 2003,
    he filed a motion to reopen his case to adjust his status to that
    of a lawful permanent resident based upon his recent marriage
    to a United States citizen. Alternatively, he asserted that
    changed conditions in Iran warranted reopening his asylum
    claim.5
    The Board denied the motion on July 15, 2004. First, the
    Board found that as a consequence of Toufighi’s failure to
    voluntarily depart pursuant to the Board’s grant of voluntary
    departure dated May 21, 2002, Toufighi was barred from
    applying for adjustment of status for ten years in accordance
    with 8 U.S.C. § 1229c(d). Second, the Board concluded that
    the application for adjustment of status was barred as
    untimely pursuant to 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(c)(2). Third, the
    Board rejected the motion to reopen based on changed cir-
    cumstances in Iran because it was not supported by evidence
    that Toufighi would be directly affected by the alleged
    changes:
    The respondent alternatively requests reopening of
    4
    The Board’s Order, dated May 21, 2002, established a new departure
    date thirty days thereafter and restarted the ten-year period of ineligibility.
    Zazueta-Carrillo v. Ashcroft, 
    322 F.3d 1166
    , 1173-74 (9th Cir. 2003).
    5
    The changed conditions to which Toufighi referred did not address reli-
    gion in general, or Christian-Muslim relations in particular, but sought to
    show that since the latest Iraq war, Iran had been persecuting proponents
    of liberal pro-Western or pro-American ideologies. Toufighi expressed
    fear that if he and his family returned to Iran they would be perceived as
    Americans or American sympathizers and persecuted on that basis. Tou-
    fighi did not seek to challenge with new evidence the IJ’s finding that his
    conversion to Christianity was a ruse.
    10888                TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY
    his asylum and withholding of removal claims based
    upon alleged changed conditions in Iran. To support
    his motion, the respondent has submitted some gen-
    eral news articles related to recent events in that
    country. None of the submitted information, how-
    ever, contains prima facie evidence that the respon-
    dent would be directly affected by any changes noted
    therein. Moreover, the Immigration Judge previously
    rejected the respondent’s assertion that he had con-
    verted to Christianity; the respondent’s religious
    conversion was the basis of his claims. To the extent
    this information [the materials submitted by Tou-
    fighi] would relate to persecution of Christians in
    Iran, the respondent has already failed to establish
    that this would affect him. We are not in a position
    to readjudicate the merits of his original appeal at
    this point. Thus, none of the new evidence is mate-
    rial with respect to the respondent’s claims.
    In August 2004, Toufighi timely petitioned this Court for
    review of the final order of the Board dismissing his motion
    to reopen.
    STANDARDS GOVERNING REVIEW
    Denials of motions to reopen are generally reviewed for
    abuse of discretion. INS v. Doherty, 
    502 U.S. 314
    , 323-24
    (1992); INS v. Abudu, 
    485 U.S. 94
    , 104-05 (1988). This Court
    defers to the Board’s exercise of discretion unless it acted
    arbitrarily, irrationally or contrary to law. Caruncho v. INS,
    
    68 F.3d 356
    , 360 (9th Cir. 1995); Lainez-Ortiz v. INS, 
    96 F.3d 393
    , 395 (9th Cir. 1996). The Board’s determination of purely
    legal questions is reviewed de novo except to the extent that
    deference is owed to its interpretation of the governing stat-
    utes and regulations. Rodriguez-Lariz v. INS, 
    282 F.3d 1218
    ,
    1222 (9th Cir. 2002); Simeonov v. Ashcroft, 
    371 F.3d 532
    ,
    535 (9th Cir. 2004). Factual findings are reviewed for sub-
    TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY                          10889
    stantial evidence. Sharma v. INS, 
    89 F.3d 545
    , 547 (9th Cir.
    1996).
    DISCUSSION
    A. Motion to Reopen based upon Marriage and the Birth of
    Children
    In reviewing Toufighi’s claims we must bear in mind that
    motions to reopen, like motions for new trial based upon
    newly discovered evidence, are disfavored. 
    Doherty, 502 U.S. at 323
    (citing 
    Abudu, 485 U.S. at 107-08
    ). While the Board
    has broad discretion in ruling on a motion to reopen, it must
    show proper consideration of all factors, both favorable and
    unfavorable, in determining whether to grant a motion to
    reopen. Bhasin v. Gonzales, 
    423 F.3d 977
    , 983 (9th Cir.
    2005).
    In October 2003, Toufighi sought reopening to permit him
    to apply for adjustment of status on the ground that he had
    married a United States citizen and fathered children who are
    also citizens. The Board declined to hear this argument for
    two reasons. First, as a consequence of Toufighi failing to
    depart as ordered in 2002, he was statutorily ineligible to
    apply for adjustment of status for a ten-year period.6 See 8
    U.S.C. § 1229c(d)(1)(B). Second, his application, made
    6
    Toufighi concedes that he was twice ordered to depart voluntarily and
    twice warned that the civil consequences of failing to depart included a
    ten-year bar on applying for an adjustment of status. He argues that, con-
    struing the statutes and regulations in his favor, his failure to post the bond
    required as a condition of voluntary departure relieved him of the civil
    penalties for failing to depart. In Toufighi’s view, failure to post the
    required bond terminates the right to voluntary departure, leaving the alien
    under an order of removal, to which the civil penalties do not attach. An
    alien in this situation may remain in the country with impunity subject
    only to being removed if he is found. Toufighi relies upon In re Diaz-
    Ruacho, 24 I. & N. Dec. 47 (BIA 2006). Our disposition of this petition
    makes it unnecessary for us to determine whether In re Diaz-Ruacho is
    entitled to deference.
    10890                    TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY
    nearly seventeen months after the final order of removal, was
    untimely. See 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(c)(2).
    [1] Toufighi’s motion to reopen to apply for adjustment of
    status was properly denied regardless of whether the ten-year
    bar on discretionary relief for failing to voluntarily depart
    applies to him. If the ten-year bar under § 1229c(d)(1)(B)
    applies, it will not expire until 2012 and the motion here was
    not available to him. If § 1229c(d)(1)(B) does not apply, Tou-
    fighi was still bound by the usual ninety-day deadline for
    motions to reopen, which ran long before he applied for a
    change of status.7 See 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(c)(2); 8 U.S.C.
    § 1229a(c)(7)(C)(I). The Board noted both grounds in its
    opinion. We need not determine whether the former ground
    is correct, because Toufighi’s motion was rightly rejected on
    the latter ground, namely, it was barred by the usual ninety-
    day deadline.8
    B.   Motion to Reopen based on Changed Circumstances
    Alternatively, Toufighi argues that new and verified evi-
    dence of changed conditions within Iran supports his claim of
    a well-founded fear of persecution. This ground is not subject
    to the ninety-day limitation discussed above. See 8 U.S.C.
    § 1229a(c)(7)(C)(ii); 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(c)(3)(ii). Nor does the
    ten-year bar apply, because it does not bar an alien from seek-
    ing relief under 8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3) (withholding of
    removal) or 8 U.S.C. § 1158 (asylum). 8 U.S.C.
    § 1229c(d)(1)(B). The Board was therefore permitted to con-
    7
    We recognize that the ninety-day time limit is not jurisdictional and
    that in a proper case equitable tolling might apply. See Socop-Gonzalez v.
    INS, 
    272 F.3d 1176
    , 1193 (9th Cir. 2001) (en banc). Toufighi did not pre-
    sent an equitable tolling claim to the Board and points to no facts in the
    existing record that might support such a claim.
    8
    Toufighi also argues that the Board ignored his request to reopen sua
    sponte. We lack jurisdiction to review the Board’s refusal to reopen
    removal proceedings sua sponte. Ekimian v. INS, 
    303 F.3d 1153
    , 1160
    (9th Cir. 2002).
    TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY                         10891
    sider Toufighi’s changed circumstances claim filed well over
    ninety days after the original order became final.
    (1) The Board did not err as a matter of law when it
    concluded that Toufighi failed to establish that he would be
    persecuted for being a Christian.
    [2] The Board found that the newly available evidence pre-
    sented by Toufighi relating to persecution of Christians in
    Iran was irrelevant because the IJ had already determined that
    Toufighi had not converted to Christianity.9 Toufighi argues
    that the Board’s determination was in error because the IJ
    never rejected his assertion that he had converted to Christian-
    ity, and if the IJ did, the rejection was legally and factually in
    error. We find that the IJ did reject Toufighi’s assertion of
    conversion, and that we now lack jurisdiction to review the
    IJ’s original determination, because Toufighi’s opportunity to
    appeal that determination lapsed ninety days after the Board’s
    Order of May 21, 2002. The Board therefore did not err as a
    matter of law in relying on this conclusion.
    a) The IJ made an express credibility finding rejecting
    Toufighi’s assertion that he had converted to Christianity.
    Toufighi asserts that the IJ did not make an express adverse
    finding regarding his credibility, and that the Board therefore
    erred in its reliance. In Toufighi’s view, the Board misunder-
    stood the IJ’s decision. Toufighi submits that the IJ found him
    generally credible, and that the IJ’s qualifying remarks10 do
    9
    Toufighi did not present new evidence or arguments in support of his
    alleged conversion with his motion to reopen. Rather, the evidence related
    solely to the deteriorating conditions in Iran for those associated with the
    United States or pro-Western ideology. See supra note 5.
    10
    The IJ expressed “deep concern” as to genuineness of conversion; “se-
    rious doubt” as to conversion; and found the alleged conversion was
    merely “a vehicle for him to apply for political asylum in the United
    States.” The IJ further stated that “[t]he Court just would not believe that
    the respondent’s claimed conversion is genuine in nature.” See supra p.
    16376-77.
    10892                     TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY
    not add up to a clear finding that Toufighi’s claim of conver-
    sion was false. Toufighi asserts that the only fair conclusion
    to be drawn is that the IJ had doubts, but resolved them on
    balance in Toufighi’s favor, concluding that Toufighi had
    converted to Christianity but could avoid persecution by prac-
    ticing his faith in hiding in Iran.11
    [3] We disagree. Words may not be interpreted in a vac-
    uum. It is context that gives meaning to words. Given the IJ’s
    qualifying remarks, we conclude that the Board reasonably
    interpreted the IJ’s decision as an explicit or express rejection
    of Toufighi’s claim to have converted to Christianity.12 On
    this record we find that the IJ did make an express adverse
    credibility determination as to Toufighi’s claim that he con-
    verted to Christianity. See Rizal v. Gonzales, 
    442 F.3d 84
    , 89-
    90 (2d Cir. 2006) (finding an express adverse credibility
    determination on a similar record). The IJ did far more than
    imply a negative credibility finding by concluding that the
    applicant failed to satisfy the burden of proof. The IJ explic-
    itly stated, “The Court just would not believe that the respon-
    dent’s claimed conversion is genuine in nature. The Court
    11
    The law of this circuit is clear that a finding that an applicant would
    have to practice her faith in hiding would support, not defeat, her applica-
    tion for asylum. Zhang v. Ashcroft, 
    388 F.3d 713
    , 719-20 (9th Cir. 2004).
    However, taken in context, the IJ’s questions and comments along this
    vein were focused on imputed Christianity. The IJ merely intended to con-
    vey that the Iranian authorities would not impute Christianity to Toufighi
    because Toufighi had never practiced Christianity in Iran, and would cease
    the ruse of practicing it in the United States with the closing of the asylum
    proceedings. More importantly, as discussed infra, even if this had been
    the basis of the IJ’s ultimate conclusion, we lack jurisdiction to review the
    IJ’s decision.
    12
    There is no inconsistency between a finding of general credibility
    where interest and bias were not significant, and partial non-credibility
    about the central claim of conversion. It appears that Toufighi wants very
    much to stay in this country. While Toufighi could have made a number
    of claims in support of asylum, he elected to claim a religious conversion.
    Stuck with that choice, he made the best effort he could to support it. The
    IJ found his claim of conversion false.
    TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY                  10893
    would find that the respondent’s alleged conversion from
    Muslim to Christianity is basically as a vehicle for him to
    apply for political asylum in the United States.” Cf. Mansour
    v. Ashcroft, 
    390 F.3d 667
    , 671-72 (9th Cir. 2004) (holding
    that an IJ’s statements that he was “troubled by [ ] certain
    inconsistencies” and that the petitioner’s credibility was “sus-
    pect” amounted only to “an implicit adverse credibility deter-
    mination,” which the court “refused to recognize”); Kataria v.
    INS, 
    232 F.3d 1107
    , 1114 (9th Cir. 2000) (holding that the
    Board did not make an adverse credibility finding when it
    “merely noted questions about [the petitioner’s] claim and
    concluded that [the petitioner] failed to meet his burden of
    establishing asylum eligibility”).
    b) We do not have jurisdiction to review the IJ’s
    conclusions.
    Alternatively, Toufighi has argued that if the IJ did reject
    his conversion to Christianity, the IJ’s finding was also in
    error. Although we have jurisdiction to hear this petition, our
    jurisdiction is limited to review of the Board’s Order of July
    15, 2004, denying the motion to reopen. We are not permitted
    to review the Board’s Order entered May 21, 2002, dismiss-
    ing Toufighi’s appeal of the IJ’s decision, because Toufighi
    failed to seek timely review of that order.
    [4] The Supreme Court has held that a timely motion for
    reconsideration does not toll the running of the ninety-day
    period for review of final deportation orders. Stone v. INS,
    
    514 U.S. 386
    , 405-06 (1995). By reasonable extension, a
    motion to reopen would also not toll the ninety-day period.
    See, e.g., Martinez-Serrano v. INS, 
    94 F.3d 1256
    , 1257-58
    (9th Cir. 1996); Caruncho v. INS, 
    68 F.3d 356
    , 360 (9th Cir.
    1995). Toufighi’s opportunity to appeal the original denial of
    his application lapsed ninety days after the Board’s Order of
    May 21, 2002.
    10894                    TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY
    [5] Because Toufighi’s motion to reopen was not filed until
    October 16, 2003, the IJ’s factual determinations in the origi-
    nal proceeding are conclusive. We consider only whether the
    alien satisfied the procedures, and presented a prima facie
    case for asylum based on the newly available evidence in light
    of the evidence presented in the original proceedings. See
    
    Bhasin, 423 F.3d at 984
    , 986 n.3.13
    Toufighi seeks to avoid this result, asserting that the origi-
    nal decision of the IJ may be reviewed at this time because the
    Board rested its decision to dismiss his motion to reopen on
    the IJ’s conclusions of fact. Citing Ma v. Ashcroft, 
    361 F.3d 553
    (9th Cir. 2004), Toufighi argues that the Board’s reliance
    on the IJ’s original factual conclusion that Toufighi had not
    converted to Christianity necessarily opened up the earlier
    decision for review.
    [6] Toufighi’s reliance on this case is misplaced. Ma dealt
    with a motion for reconsideration of an earlier decision, not
    a motion to reopen. 
    Ma, 361 F.3d at 558
    n.7. A motion to
    reconsider necessarily reaches the prior decision because it
    must “specify[ ] the errors of fact or law in the prior Board
    decision.” See 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(b)(1). In contrast, a motion
    13
    We have held that an alien may use a motion to reopen to present
    newly available material evidence that challenges the original factual con-
    clusions drawn by the IJ. 
    Bhasin, 423 F.3d at 985-86
    . However, a court
    may not directly review the original denial of asylum on a motion to
    reopen. 
    Id. at 986
    n.3. The applicant must demonstrate that the new evi-
    dence, when considered together with the evidence presented in the origi-
    nal asylum proceeding, would establish a prima facie case for asylum. 
    Id. In Bhasin,
    the IJ based his conclusion that the applicant’s would-be perse-
    cutors were not motivated by her membership in her familial social group
    on evidence that her family members still residing in the country of origin
    had not been persecuted. 
    Id. at 985.
    In her motion to reopen, the applicant
    presented evidence that since the hearing before the IJ, three or more of
    her family members had been disappeared. 
    Id. The court
    in Bhasin did not
    directly review the fact finding in the original asylum proceeding, it
    merely found that the facts had changed since the hearing. See 
    id. at 985-
    86. Toufighi did not present new evidence of his conversion.
    TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY                  10895
    to reopen based on changed conditions is focused on “new
    facts” showing changed conditions that now establish a prima
    facie case for asylum. See 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(c)(1) and
    (c)(3)(ii); 
    Bhasin, 423 F.3d at 984
    -86. While a motion for
    reconsideration necessarily brings up the earlier order to be
    reconsidered, a motion to reopen engages the earlier order
    only to the extent the relevant available facts have since
    changed. 
    Id. c) The
    Board did not abuse its discretion.
    In order to prevail on his motion to reopen the proceedings
    on the basis of changed country conditions, Toufighi needed
    to clear four hurdles: (1) he had to produce evidence that con-
    ditions had changed in Iran; (2) the evidence had to be “mate-
    rial;” (3) the evidence must not have been available and
    would not have been discovered or presented at the previous
    proceeding; and (4) he had to “demonstrate that the new evi-
    dence, when considered together with the evidence presented
    at the original hearing, would establish prima facie eligibility
    for the relief sought.” See 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(c)(7)(C)(ii); Bha-
    
    sin, 423 F.3d at 984
    . The Board could thus deny the motion
    to reopen for failing to meet any of these burdens. See 
    Abudu, 485 U.S. at 104-05
    .
    [7] In this case, the Board concluded that the evidence pro-
    duced by Toufighi with his motion to reopen, did not “con-
    tain[ ] prima facie evidence that the respondent would be
    directly affected by any changes noted therein.” Even assum-
    ing the newly available evidence presented by Toufighi dem-
    onstrated a general increase in persecution of apostates in
    Iran, Toufighi still failed to establish a prima facie case for
    eligibility because it had already been conclusively deter-
    mined that he was not an apostate, and that Iranian officials
    would not impute this status to him because Toufighi would
    never inform them of apostasy which never took place.14 The
    14
    The dissent argues that neither the IJ nor the Board considered
    imputed group membership. Though he did not use the term “imputed,”
    10896                    TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY
    IJ’s conclusive findings on this point also make the new evi-
    dence regarding persecution of apostates immaterial.
    [8] In conclusion, because the IJ found the conversion was
    not genuine, and that apostasy would not be imputed to Tou-
    fighi, the Board did not abuse its discretion in concluding that
    his evidence of changed country conditions was not “materi-
    al” to his claim, and that he failed to establish a prima facie
    case for asylum.
    (2) The Board did not err in failing to consider other
    possible bases for reopening.
    On appeal, Toufighi argues that the Board abused its dis-
    cretion by confining his motion to reopen to issues of reli-
    gious persecution. He argues that the Board should have
    addressed a claim that Toufighi was exposed to persecution
    based upon his association with the United States, pro-
    American opinion, and his new wife and children who are
    United States citizens. In Toufighi’s view, anyone identified
    in the Iranian mind with the United States or pro-American
    ideology will be at risk because of the recent escalation of
    the IJ addressed this concern, concluding that Toufighi would not be
    viewed as a Christian in Iran. The IJ noted that Toufighi had never been
    persecuted in Iran; had never practiced Christianity in Iran; had almost no
    ties to Christians in Iran; and would not communicate his alleged conver-
    sion upon return to Iran because it was merely a ruse to gain asylum. In
    light of the IJ’s factual determinations that Toufighi was not a genuine
    convert to Christianity, was not an apostate, and would not be considered
    an apostate by the Iranian authorities, and given our lack of jurisdiction
    to review these factual determinations, we do not reach the separate ques-
    tion whether a petitioner could establish a well-founded fear of persecu-
    tion based on evidence of apostasy, or evidence that the petitioner would
    be perceived as an apostate by Iranian officials, in a case where the peti-
    tioner failed to prove that the petitioner’s conversion was genuine. Cf.
    Najafi v. INS, 
    104 F.3d 943
    , 949 (7th Cir. 1997) (noting that evidence
    regarding the “sincerity of the alien’s new religious commitment” can be
    relevant to an asylum claim based on apostasy, but is not dispositive).
    TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY                  10897
    tensions brought on by war in Iraq and the tussle over Iran’s
    plan to develop nuclear capability.
    The Board did not recognize this as a separate claim. It was
    not required to search the record to tease out claims that Tou-
    fighi had not clearly made. The claims Toufighi had previ-
    ously made were focused on his religious beliefs and how
    those beliefs would be viewed in Iran. He does not contend
    that he was active in pro-Western groups before coming to
    this country. He never claimed to be affiliated with anti-
    Iranian-government or pro-Western groups in this country.
    We have never recognized pro-Western as a social group pro-
    tected against persecution, and agree with the Seventh Circuit
    that such a proposition “is debatable at best.” Sharif v. INS,
    
    87 F.3d 932
    , 936 (7th Cir. 1996); see also Fisher v. INS, 
    79 F.3d 955
    (9th Cir. 1996) (en banc).
    [9] In sum, the Board did not act unreasonably in not sepa-
    rately addressing a claim that Toufighi had a well-founded
    fear that he would be persecuted based upon his political
    opinions or membership in a pro-Western or pro-American
    social group.
    CONCLUSION
    The Board denied Toufighi’s motion to reopen his case. It
    held that Toufighi’s motion to reopen to adjust his status
    based on marriage to a United States citizen and the birth of
    their citizen children could not be considered because the
    motion was untimely and barred by civil penalties assessed
    against Toufighi for failing to depart as ordered. As to Tou-
    fighi’s request to reopen in light of changed circumstances in
    Iran, the Board, in reliance on the IJ’s conclusion that Tou-
    fighi had not converted, and would not be identified as having
    done so, concluded that the evidence presented was not rele-
    vant, and that he failed to establish a prima facie case for asy-
    lum. These decisions of the Board did not constitute an abuse
    of discretion and were supported by substantial evidence.
    10898                     TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY
    PETITION DENIED.
    BERZON, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    I respectfully dissent. The BIA misunderstood what the IJ
    actually said about Toufighi’s conversion and, as a result,
    entirely failed to consider whether circumstances have
    changed with regard to how Iran treats apostates.1 The major-
    ity opinion perpetuates the BIA’s error.
    The BIA declined to consider Toufighi’s new evidence
    because:
    [T]he Immigration Judge [IJ] previously rejected the
    respondent’s assertion that he had converted to
    Christianity; the respondent’s religious conversion
    was the basis of his claims. To the extent that this
    information would relate to persecution of Christians
    in Iran, the respondent has already failed to establish
    that this would affect him.
    The majority upholds the BIA because it also concludes that
    the IJ found that “the conversion was not genuine, and that
    [therefore] apostasy would not be imputed to Toufighi.” Maj.
    Op. at 10896.
    But the IJ did not find that Toufighi had not converted, only
    that his conversion was not spiritually genuine.2 The IJ found
    1
    Toufighi submitted documents demonstrating that the climate of
    repression in Iran is worsening for Muslims who have renounced Islam.
    Whether or not the evidence was adequate to support reopening is prop-
    erly a question for the BIA on remand.
    2
    The majority is correct that we lack jurisdiction to review the IJ’s deci-
    sion. The IJ’s findings of fact cannot be disturbed at this point. But we do
    not, of course, lack jurisdiction to read the opinion carefully to discern
    what the IJ did and did not say.
    TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY                        10899
    “first of all, the respondent’s testimony to be generally credi-
    ble,” but went on to “note that he has very deep concern as
    to the genuineness as the [sic] respondent’s claimed conver-
    sion from Muslim [sic] to Christianity” and that he “just
    would not believe that the respondent’s claimed conversion is
    genuine in nature.” (emphases added). Instead, he found, “the
    respondent’s alleged conversion from Muslim [sic] to Chris-
    tianity is basically a vehicle for him to apply for political asy-
    lum in the United States.”
    At the same time, however, the IJ credited Toufighi’s testi-
    mony that he was a church member, “attending Christian
    church every Sunday, for four hours each day, for at least the
    last year-and-a-half” and that he attended a small prayer
    group every Tuesday. The IJ also found that Toufighi would
    continue to practice his Christian beliefs in Iran, as he cred-
    ited Toufighi’s statement that “if he were to return to Iran, he
    would only practice his religion in hiding.”3
    So the IJ’s finding was only that the conversion might not
    be “genuine” — that is, not spiritually in earnest. The BIA
    elided the distinction between this finding and a finding that
    there had been no conversion, in the sense of behavior and
    practice, when it stated that “the [IJ] previously rejected the
    respondent’s assertion that he had converted to Christianity.”
    3
    To the extent the BIA relied on this finding to determine that changed
    conditions would not affect Toufighi, its holding was, as the majority rec-
    ognizes, improper. “[T]o require [a petitioner] to practice his beliefs in
    secret is contrary to our basic principles of religious freedom and the pro-
    tection of religious refugees.” Zhang v. Ashcroft, 
    388 F.3d 713
    , 719 (9th
    Cir. 2004). On a more pragmatic level, “[a]s for the suggestion that the
    Iranian authorities may not discover [Toufighi’s] aspostasy, . . . the INS
    [and now the DHS] apparently makes no effort to conceal its deportation
    and asylum proceedings from foreign states.” Bastanipour v. I.N.S., 
    980 F.2d 1129
    , 1133 (7th Cir. 1992).
    The majority resolves this problem by arguing that the IJ really just “in-
    tended to convey that the Iranian authorities would not impute Christianity
    to Toufighi because he “would cease the ruse of practicing it in the United
    States with the closing of the asylum proceedings.” The IJ did not say that.
    10900                TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY
    The BIA’s oversight is critically important. The question
    for asylum purposes is not what Toufighi believes in his heart
    of hearts, but whether he would be perceived as having
    renounced Islam were he to return to Iran. The threat to the
    petitioner upon return would stem not from what he really
    believes, but from what his persecutors would understand him
    to believe. By missing the distinction, the BIA failed to con-
    sider whether changed circumstances bear upon this threat.
    We have recognized the distinction between actual and
    imputed belief in the political opinion context: “To establish
    a likelihood of persecution on account of an imputed political
    opinion, an applicant must show that his alleged persecutors
    have imputed or would impute a political opinion to him,
    ‘rightly or in error,’ and have persecuted or would persecute
    him for that opinion.” Al-Harbi v. I.N.S., 
    242 F.3d 882
    , 890
    (9th Cir. 2001) (quoting Sangha v. I.N.S., 
    103 F.3d 1482
    ,
    1489 (9th Cir. 1997)); see also Mejia v. Ashcroft, 
    298 F.3d 873
    , 877-78 (9th Cir. 2002) (discussing imputed political
    opinions). In Al-Harbi, for example, we upheld the BIA’s
    conclusion that the Iraqi petitioner was not an anti-Hussein
    activist, and had lied when he said he 
    was. 242 F.3d at 889
    -
    90. But given the circumstances in Iraq at the time, and his
    involvement in an American-sponsored escape from Iraq, we
    held he would be treated upon return as an American loyalist
    and opponent of Hussein, even though he was not. 
    Id. at 890-
    94.
    An imputed religious opinion is treated the same way, par-
    ticularly in theocratic Iran where religion is politics. We have
    recognized that the Iranian government may persecute people
    for their “actually-held or perceived-to-be-held political or
    religious beliefs.” Fisher v. I.N.S., 
    79 F.3d 955
    , 962 (9th Cir.
    1996) (en banc) (emphasis added); see also Abedini v. U.S.
    I.N.S., 
    971 F.2d 188
    , 192 (9th Cir. 1992) (discussing the pos-
    sibility of persecution if Iranian government would “impute a
    political or religious belief” to the petitioner) (emphasis
    added). Other circuits have also so held in the religion con-
    TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY                         10901
    text. See Rizal v. Gonzales, 
    442 F.3d 84
    , 90 n. 7 (2nd Cir.
    2006) (“Indeed, even an individual who does not subscribe to
    a certain religion, but is nonetheless being persecuted on
    account of others’ perception that he does, may well be able
    to establish a religious persecution claim under a theory of
    ‘imputed religion’ analogous to the ‘imputed political opin-
    ion’ theory . . . .”) (emphasis in original)4; Mezvrishvili v. U.S.
    Attorney General, 
    467 F.3d 1292
    , 1296 (11th Cir. 2006)
    (same); Ahmadshah v. Ashcroft, 
    396 F.3d 917
    , 920 n. 2 (8th
    Cir. 2005) (holding that, in the case of a Muslim apostate
    applying for asylum from religious persecution in Afghani-
    stan, “[e]ven if [petitioner] did not have a clear understanding
    of Christian doctrine, this is not relevant to his fear of perse-
    cution. . . . If [petitioner] had shown that Afghans would
    believe that he was an apostate, that is sufficient basis for fear
    of persecution under the law.”).
    As Ahmadshah and a line of earlier well-reasoned Seventh
    Circuit cases make clear, the BIA particularly missed the
    point in the case of a Muslim apostate who fears persecution
    under religious law. “The offense in Muslim religious law is
    apostasy — abandoning Islam for another religion,” not the
    sincerity of faith in the new religion. Bastanipour v. I.N.S.,
    
    980 F.2d 1129
    , 1132 (7th Cir. 1992); see also Najafi v. I.N.S.,
    
    104 F.3d 943
    , 948 (7th Cir. 1997) (IJ “treated the question of
    whether [petitioner] is a Christian as dispostive of his claim
    of religious persecution [but] . . . . [r]ather we must ask
    whether the alien is an apostate.”).
    In short, the question is not what Toufighi believes but
    what Iran understands him to believe — or, more accurately,
    4
    Indeed, in Rizal the IJ found that the petitioner had “failed to persuade
    the Court of the genuineness of his professed Christian 
    faith,” 442 F.3d at 88
    (emphasis added), much as in this case. While that case was resolved
    on other grounds, Rizal endorsed a distinction between “genuine” faith
    and the imputed religious opinions that may put asylum seekers at risk and
    which threaten Toufighi here. 
    Id. at 90
    n. 7.
    10902                    TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY
    not to believe. It is throughly plausible that because he attends
    Christian services and belongs to a Christian church, Toufighi
    will be taken to have renounced Islam. Neither the BIA’s nor
    the IJ’s “opinion[s] . . . consider[ed] what could count as con-
    version in the eyes of an Iranian religious judge, which is the
    only thing that would count as far as the danger to [the peti-
    tioner] is concerned.” 
    Bastanipour, 980 F.2d at 1132
    (empha-
    sis in original). Even if his conversion is not “genuine,” he
    remains at risk. “Whether [the petitioner] believes the tenets
    of Christianity in his heart of hearts or, . . . is acting oppor-
    tunistically (though at great risk to himself) in the hope of
    staving off deportation would not . . . matter to an Iranian reli-
    gious judge.” Id.; cf. 
    Al-Harbi, 242 F.3d at 890-94
    .5
    The IJ’s sincerity findings were therefore entirely unre-
    sponsive to the critical question before the BIA on Toufighi’s
    religious asylum ground. For these reasons, the BIA’s holding
    on the religious persecution/change of country circumstances
    question was unsupported. Because the majority, like the
    BIA, misreads the IJ as holding that Toufighi was not and is
    not a Christian, in any sense, it concludes that he is therefore
    “not an apostate” and so fails to recognize the BIA’s error.
    Maj. Op. at 10896.
    It is important to note, however, that, because of its misun-
    derstanding of the IJ’s opinion, the majority does not hold that
    imputed religious beliefs in general or apostasy in particular
    are improper grounds on which to base an asylum claim.
    Instead, it simply fails to grasp that the sincerity of Toufighi’s
    beliefs has no direct bearing on the question whether he will
    be persecuted based on imputed religious beliefs.
    5
    For this reason, the IJ’s belief that Toufighi’s conversion was moti-
    vated by a desire to seek asylum is largely irrelevant to the changed cir-
    cumstances inquiry. If the external incidents of conversion were
    sufficiently obvious as to suggest that he had left Islam, he could well be
    in danger in Iran, even if his initial motivations were impure.
    TOUFIGHI v. MUKASEY                 10903
    Starting from false premises, the majority reaches an unjust
    result. A remand to reconsider Toufighi’s motion to reopen
    upon proper legal standards would have been the appropriate
    course.
    I respectfully dissent.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 04-74010

Filed Date: 8/18/2008

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/3/2016

Authorities (29)

Yose Rizal v. Alberto R. Gonzales, 1 , 442 F.3d 84 ( 2006 )

Mehran Najafi v. Immigration and Naturalization Service , 104 F.3d 943 ( 1997 )

Naseem Salman Al-Harbi v. Immigration and Naturalization ... , 242 F.3d 882 ( 2001 )

Ahmad Ahmadshah v. John Ashcroft, Attorney General of the ... , 396 F.3d 917 ( 2005 )

Soroya Sharif v. Immigration and Naturalization Service , 87 F.3d 932 ( 1996 )

Mohammed A. Bastanipour v. Immigration and Naturalization ... , 980 F.2d 1129 ( 1992 )

Kui Rong Ma v. John Ashcroft, Attorney General , 361 F.3d 553 ( 2004 )

Vikesh Datt SHARMA; Vijanti Devi Sharma, Petitioners, v. ... , 89 F.3d 545 ( 1996 )

Usha Bhasin v. Alberto R. Gonzales, Attorney General , 423 F.3d 977 ( 2005 )

Pankaj Karan Singh Kataria v. Immigration and ... , 232 F.3d 1107 ( 2000 )

Nicolas Rodriguez-Lariz Maria De Jesus Guevara-Martinez v. ... , 282 F.3d 1218 ( 2002 )

Baljinder Singh SANGHA, Petitioner, v. IMMIGRATION AND ... , 103 F.3d 1482 ( 1997 )

Todor Krumov Simeonov v. John Ashcroft, Attorney General , 371 F.3d 532 ( 2004 )

Samuel Martinez-Serrano v. Immigration and Naturalization ... , 94 F.3d 1256 ( 1996 )

Emmanuel Mejia v. John Ashcroft, Attorney General , 298 F.3d 873 ( 2002 )

Oscar Socop-Gonzalez v. Immigration and Naturalization ... , 272 F.3d 1176 ( 2001 )

Hongke Zhang v. John Ashcroft, Attorney General , 388 F.3d 713 ( 2004 )

95-cal-daily-op-serv-8182-95-daily-journal-dar-14076-domingo , 68 F.3d 356 ( 1995 )

96-cal-daily-op-serv-2252-96-daily-journal-dar-3751-saideh-fisher , 79 F.3d 955 ( 1996 )

Mehdi Abedini v. U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service , 971 F.2d 188 ( 1992 )

View All Authorities »