F I L E D
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
NOV 15 2001
FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT
PATRICK FISHER
Clerk
LUIS JUAN MONTEJO,
Petitioner,
v. No. 01-9507
(BIA No. A70 095 957)
IMMIGRATION & (Petition for Review)
NATURALIZATION SERVICE,
Respondent.
ORDER AND JUDGMENT *
Before TACHA , Chief Judge, SEYMOUR , Circuit Judge, and BRORBY , Senior
Circuit Judge.
After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined
unanimously to grant the parties’ request for a decision on the briefs without oral
argument. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(f); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is therefore
ordered submitted without oral argument.
*
This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the
doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. The court
generally disfavors the citation of orders and judgments; nevertheless, an order
and judgment may be cited under the terms and conditions of 10th Cir. R. 36.3.
Petitioner Luis Juan Montejo, a citizen of Guatemala, appeals the decision
by the Board of Immigration of Appeals (Board) affirming the immigration judge
(IJ)’s denial of petitioner’s application for asylum and withholding of removal.
Because the decision is supported by substantial evidence, we affirm.
Petitioner entered the United States illegally in May 1990, seeking to avoid
recruitment by guerrilla forces in Guatemala. In June 1991, he submitted an
application for asylum. Removal proceedings were initiated against petitioner on
June 17, 1997, and on August 11, 1998, petitioner admitted that he was
removable, but reiterated his request for asylum and withholding of removal. At a
hearing held on May 20, 1999, petitioner testified that when he was approximately
eleven years old his father refused to join the guerrilla forces and was placed on a
death list; that his father went to Mexico and later to the United States, where he
was deported in 1989; that petitioner feared that he would be recruited by the
guerrillas when he turned eighteen; that he knew neighbors who had been killed
for refusing to join the guerrilla forces; and that he left Guatemala when he was
eighteen to avoid being recruited.
Petitioner also presented a psychologist’s report stating that petitioner
feared returning to Guatemala. The report contained a somewhat different factual
history, relating that petitioner left his hometown at age 12 to live in the small
town of Retableu, that he moved to Guatemala City at age 15, and that he returned
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to his hometown at age 17 to work in a bakery. The report stated that the
guerillas came to his hometown when petitioner was 15, and that his father left
the country in 1986 but returned to take care of his family in 1989. Finally, the
report indicated that petitioner feared not only guerrilla recruitment, but military
recruitment as well. The psychologist opined that petitioner was a marked man
because of his refusal to join either side, and that he might be retaliated against.
The government presented a State Department report on Guatemala
containing the following information concerning petitioner’s claim: that
Guatemala’s thirty-six-year-old civil war ended with the signing of peace accords
in December 1996; that the umbrella guerrilla organization and its component
groups disbanded in March 1997 and have formed a legitimate political party; that
the guerrillas have renounced the use of force to achieve political goals; that the
military and police have been reduced and restructured and Civilian Self-Defense
Patrols have been abolished; that these entities are being held accountable for
their conduct; that the targeting of Indian populations for military and guerrilla
recruitment has ceased; that since the signing of the peace accords the State
Department had not seen any claims of violence by Guatemalan Indians that could
be attributed to political motives; and that even during the worst times the
enforced conscription was avoidable by moving to a different part of the country.
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The IJ issued an oral ruling after the hearing, finding that petitioner had not
shown past persecution or a well-founded fear of future persecution based on his
race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social
group; that recruitment by a military or guerrilla group was not considered
persecution on one of the enumerated grounds; that the fact that petitioner had not
been recruited when he was younger, during the prime recruitment ages, indicated
that he was not subjected to persecution; that petitioner could have moved to
another part of Guatemala to avoid guerrilla recruitment; that petitioner’s fear of
future recruitment by the guerillas was not well-founded because of the peace
accord; and that petitioner’s inability to meet the burden for asylum precluded
him from meeting the higher withholding of removal standard.
Petitioner appealed to the Board, arguing that he had met the standard for
asylum and that the IJ had improperly discounted his evidence. The Board
concurred with the IJ’s decision and dismissed the appeal.
On appeal to this court, petitioner raises a host of issues that were not
raised to the Board. Because petitioner failed to exhaust his remedies with
respect to these issues, we lack jurisdiction to consider them on appeal.
Akinwunmi v. INS, 194 F.3d 1340, 1341 (10th Cir. 1999). 1 The one issue he
1
Petitioner argues that we have jurisdiction to consider his equal protection
claim even though it was not raised to the Board because the Board lacks
(continued...)
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preserved is whether the BIA erred in affirming the IJ’s decision that petitioner
failed to establish past persecution or a reasonable fear of future persecution. We
review this issue under a deferential standard, reversing only if petitioner’s
evidence “compels” a contrary conclusion. INS v. Elias-Zacarias, 502 U.S. 478,
481 n.1 (1992).
Contrary to the facts described in petitioner’s brief, the record shows that
petitioner himself was not actually threatened with death, but that his father had
been placed on a death list. In fact, it is not clear whether petitioner was actually
recruited at all. At the hearing, he testified that the guerillas stopped looking for
his family after his father left home because the children were still little, that the
guerrillas threatened to recruit him when he was older, and that he left Guatemala
because he was eighteen, which he believed was the age of recruitment, but that
no specific incident caused him to leave.
1
(...continued)
jurisdiction to review constitutional issues. It is true that there is an exception to
the general exhaustion rule for constitutional issues. Akinwunmi, 194 F.3d at
1341. Here, however, there is no actual controversy as to whether stopping the
accrual of an alien’s years of continuous presence upon service of a notice to
appear violates equal protection, because petitioner has not shown that he was
refused cancellation of removal on this basis by the IJ or the Board. Further, it is
not clear that petitioner would be foreclosed from seeking cancellation of removal
on this ground, as his notice to appear was served more than seven years after he
entered this country.
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Even assuming that petitioner refused an attempt to recruit him, there is no
evidence that petitioner was recruited or refused recruitment due to his political
opinion. In Elias-Zacarias, the Supreme Court made it clear that recruitment by
Guatemalan guerrillas, in itself, is not considered persecution based on political
opinion. Id. at 482-83 (explaining that forced recruitment is not on account of
victim’s political opinion, but that of guerrillas, and that refusal to join guerillas
can be for many reasons other than political opposition to their cause). Because
here petitioner did not present any evidence that he was recruited based on his
political opinion or that he refused to join the guerillas because he disagreed with
their political stance, the evidence does not compel the conclusion that he was
persecuted based on his political opinion.
The decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals is AFFIRMED, and the
petition for review is DISMISSED.
Entered for the Court
Deanell Reece Tacha
Chief Judge
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