File Name: 05a0118n.06
Filed: February 15, 2005
NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
No. 03-4570
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
SOKOL VUSHAJ and DRITA VUSHAJ, )
)
Petitioners-Appellees, )
) ON PETITION FOR REVIEW OF AN
v. ) ORDER OF THE BOARD OF
) IMMIGRATION APPEALS
ALBERTO GONZALES, )
)
Respondent-Appellant. )
Before: GIBBONS and SUTTON, Circuit Judges; EDGAR, District Judge.*
SUTTON, Circuit Judge. Albanian citizens Sokol Vushaj and his wife Drita Vushaj seek
review of a decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) denying their petition for asylum,
withholding of removal and protection under the Convention Against Torture. The BIA concluded
that the petitioners were not credible and that, even if their testimony were credited, they had not
demonstrated past persecution or a well-founded fear of future persecution. We agree and deny the
petition.
*
The Honorable Robert Allan Edgar, Chief United States District Court Judge for the
Eastern District of Tennessee, sitting by designation.
No. 03-4570
Vushaj v. Gonzales
On October 21, 2000, Drita Vushaj, using fraudulent documents, entered the United States
via Dulles International Airport in Virginia. Several months later, on March 17, 2001, her husband,
Sokol Vushaj, also using fraudulent documents, entered the United States via San Francisco
International Airport. Immigration authorities interviewed each spouse about the fraudulent
documents and about their reasons for attempting to flee Albania for the United States and
temporarily allowed them to enter the United States.
The couple eventually conceded removability, and Sokol filed an application on his and
Drita’s behalf for asylum, withholding of removal and protection under the Convention Against
Torture. In the application, Sokol emphasized two reasons for obtaining asylum. First, he alleged
that as Catholics, he and his family have been persecuted by Muslims. Attempting to bolster this
point, he noted that on September 3, 1999, Muslims kidnapped him and held him for ransom.
During the kidnapping, he added, he was beaten and warned never to wear a crucifix or to attend
church again, and he was released only when his father sold much of his family’s property to pay
the ransom.
Second, Sokol alleged that he and his wife fear that if she is forced to return to Albania, she
will be kidnapped and sold into prostitution in Europe. To support this claim, Sokol noted that in
October 2000, three armed men approached his wife and threatened to shoot her if she did not get
in the car with them. One of the men allegedly grabbed her arm, but she managed to break free and
run into the woods. Relying on these incidents, Sokol said that he will be killed if he returns to
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No. 03-4570
Vushaj v. Gonzales
Albania (because he is Catholic) and that he and his wife will live in constant fear that criminal
gangs will kidnap his wife and sell her into prostitution.
In an oral opinion spanning thirty-five pages of transcript, the Immigration Judge (IJ) found
that neither petitioner was credible. According to the IJ, the information that Sokol and Drita
provided at their border interviews, in the application and during the immigration hearing contained
numerous material inconsistencies. At one point in his application, Sokol stated that his kidnappers
knew he was Catholic when they picked him up because everyone in his village is Catholic. But at
another point in his application, he stated that “criminal gangs” captured him for ransom and beat
him only when they later discovered he was Catholic. In his application, he stated that his father had
to sell much of the family’s property to pay his ransom, but in his testimony he said that no one paid
any ransom. Nor did he mention his kidnapping during his interview at the border, saying instead
that Muslims were chasing him. In the interview at the border, he said that his wife had been
kidnapped three times but, in their application and in their testimony, the Vushajs said that Drita had
faced one attempted kidnapping.
Sokol also testified that he came to the United States because he received numerous threats
but he never was able to detail their source or substance, much less corroborate them. And neither
his statements at the border nor his application contain any allegations of recent threats. In another
inconsistency, Sokol at one point testified that there was no church in his village, but later said that
there was a church. He testified that it is unsafe for him to go to church in Albania, even though
other parts of the record indicate that all of the people in his village are Catholic.
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No. 03-4570
Vushaj v. Gonzales
Sokol also testified that he had not attended church in Albania since 1999, at some time
before his marriage. But Sokol was married on January 18, 1999, which would mean that he last
could have attended church for 17 days in January, and more importantly would mean that he
stopped attending church nine months before he allegedly was kidnapped and threatened by Muslims
because of his religious beliefs.
Drita’s testimony, the IJ concluded, also undermined the credibility of the application. In
her entry interview, she stated that she was not aware of any persecution that had ever happened to
any of her family members, which undercut Sokol’s claim that he was abducted and held for ransom
for three days in September of 1999, eight months after his and Drita’s January 1999 wedding. In
her entry interview, she never mentioned that anyone had ever tried to kidnap her, but only stated
that “they” kidnapped two girls from her village and forced them into prostitution and that she came
to the United States because Albania offers no security and no jobs. Even though Sokol stated in
the asylum application that men had tried to kidnap Drita and sell her into prostitution in Europe,
Drita testified at the hearing that she did not know where the men planned to take her or why they
would want to kidnap her. She later testified that she thought they would take her to Italy. When
asked why she thought that, she responded that two girls from her village were kidnapped and taken
to Italy. When asked how she knew that they were taken to Italy, she said that she heard reports on
the television but could explain no further. When questioned specifically about her religion, she
stated that she attended an Albanian Catholic Church in Detroit about two to three times a month
but could not name the church or give its location.
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No. 03-4570
Vushaj v. Gonzales
On the basis of these inconsistencies, among others, the IJ found that the applicants were not
credible. Even assuming that some version of their testimony was true, the IJ concluded that they
had not demonstrated any past persecution and did not have a well-founded fear of future
persecution.
The BIA affirmed the lack-of-credibility finding and stated that even if the applicants were
wholly credible, “we would conclude that the respondents failed to demonstrate that any problems
they experienced in Albania rose to the level of persecution.” JA 5. The BIA agreed that the record
did not support the applicants’ claim and that they had not established any well-founded fear of
future persecution if they return to Albania. This appeal followed.
The Attorney General may grant asylum if an applicant qualifies as a refugee. 8 U.S.C. §
1158(b)(1). A refugee is one who “is unable or unwilling to return to” his or her country “because
of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality,
membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.” 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42)(A). The
burden falls on the applicant to show that he or she meets this definition, Mikhailevitch v. INS, 146
F.3d 384, 389 (6th Cir. 1998), and the applicant has two options in trying to make this showing.
First, an applicant may “establish that he or she has suffered persecution,” at which point there is
a presumption of a well-founded fear of future persecution. 8 C.F.R. § 208.13(b)(1). The
government may rebut that presumption by showing that conditions in the applicant’s country have
changed so “that the applicant no longer has a well-founded fear of persecution.” 8 C.F.R. §
208.13(b)(1)(i)(A). Second, the applicant may show that he or she has a well-founded fear of future
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No. 03-4570
Vushaj v. Gonzales
persecution, 8 C.F.R. § 208.13(b)(2), which “must be both subjectively genuine and objectively
reasonable,” Mikhailevitch, 146 F.3d at 389.
Our standard of review in this area is familiar. We will affirm the BIA’s decision on these
issues if it is supported by substantial evidence, see INS v. Elias-Zacarias, 502 U.S. 478, 481 (1992),
and will reverse only where the evidence in the record “not only supports a contrary conclusion, but
indeed compels it.” Mikhailevitch, 146 F.3d at 388 (quotation marks and citation omitted).
In our view, the record amply supports the IJ’s adverse-credibility determination. As fairly
shown by the inconsistencies noted above, the petitioners have not given a consistent or credible
explanation of their reasons for leaving Albania or the events that precipitated their departure. See
Yu v. Ashcroft, 364 F.3d 700, 703–04 (6th Cir. 2004). Having failed to shoulder their burden of
demonstrating eligibility for asylum either at the administrative level or here, they cannot establish
reversible error regarding the BIA’s decision.
We also agree with the BIA that, even if some version of these events is true, it does not rise
to the level of past persecution or establish that the petitioners hold a well-founded fear of future
persecution based on their membership in a religious or social group. In claiming that Muslims will
kill him if he returns to Albania because he is Catholic, Sokol points to just one incident in which
he was kidnapped and released. But even this one incident, which occurred after Sokol lived as a
Catholic in Albania for nearly a quarter of a century, appears to have taken place not because of
Sokol’s faith but because the kidnappers wanted a ransom. And Drita’s attempted kidnapping
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No. 03-4570
Vushaj v. Gonzales
appears at most to have resulted from random crime, not a targeted effort to harm her because of her
religious beliefs.
Finally, having failed to establish grounds to support a grant of asylum, the petitioners
necessarily have failed to meet the more rigorous requirements for withholding of removal or
protection under the Convention Against Torture. See Yu, 364 F.3d at 703 n.3.
For these reasons, we deny the petition for review.
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