NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name: 18a0549n.06
No. 17-4149
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
MIREYA BRAVO ESCOBAR; BENIGNA )
ESCOBAR SANCHEZ; ALEJANDRA ) FILED
CARDENAS BRAVO; MARIA DEL ) Nov 01, 2018
CARMEN HERNANDEZ BRAVO; JOSE ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
SANTOS HERNANDEZ BRAVO; )
MARIA GUADALUPE HERNANDEZ )
BRAVO, )
Petitioners, )
)
v.
)
JEFFERSON B. SESSIONS, III, Attorney ) ON PETITION FROM A FINAL
General, ) ORDER OF THE BOARD OF
) IMMIGRATION APPEALS
Respondent. )
OPINION
BEFORE: NORRIS, DONALD, and BUSH, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM. Petitioners, Mexican citizens Mireya Bravo Escobar (“Bravo”) and her
mother, Benigna Escobar Sanchez (“Escobar”), each filed applications for asylum, withholding of
removal, and for protection under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). Their applications,
along with the derivative applications filed by Bravo on behalf of four minor children, were
consolidated below. After a hearing, an immigration judge denied relief. Petitioners elected not to
seek review of this decision with the Board of Immigration Appeals (“the Board”). Instead they
filed a motion with the immigration judge to reopen their removal proceedings based upon their
former attorneys’ ineffective assistance. The immigration judge denied the motion to reopen; that
decision was unsuccessfully appealed to the Board. Petitioners now seek review in this court.
Bravo Escobar v. Sessions
No. 17-4149
I.
Petitioners arrived in the United States on March 5, 2015, without the required
documentation. They were served with notices to appear and subsequently conceded that they were
subject to removal. They appeared for a merits hearing on September 26, 2016.
Petitioners both testified that they fled from Mexico because of their connection to former
Guerrero State police officer Fortino Bravo Teran, who is Bravo’s father and Escobar’s husband.
At the hearing, counsel for petitioners framed his clients’ claim to the immigration judge as based
upon their status as members of a “[p]olitical group imputed by their familial affiliation with anti-
cartel activities.”
Bravo testified first and explained that she came to the United States with her children to
escape from the “La Familia” cartel, which was “upset at my family” because her father was a
police officer. The cartel had kidnapped him in December 2014 and held him for a ransom of
10,000 pesos. He was released after three days when the ransom was paid. He left the police force
shortly thereafter and was hiding in Mexico at the time of Bravo’s testimony. Petitioners submitted
a letter from him as part of their application. While Fortino states in the letter that he continues to
hide for fear of being kidnapped, nowhere does he mention serving as a police officer.
When asked about the nature of the violence directed at her family, Bravo responded,
“They arrived at my house asking for me to feed 50 people. And they also asked me for money.”
She recalled that ten to fifteen armed cartel members began coming to her house at the beginning
of 2015. They threatened that they would take one of her children if she did not give them the
money they requested.
Not only did they kidnap her father, they also murdered her uncle, Moises Escobar
Sanchez, on June 10, 2015. According to Bravo, her uncle had been an unwilling member of the
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cartel who guarded kidnapping victims, including her father. Bravo believes that her uncle was
murdered because of his close relationship to her father. However, he also sought to leave the
cartel. By the time of his murder, petitioners had arrived in the United States.
Bravo told the immigration judge that the men from the cartel came to her house daily from
January to early March of 2015. She conceded that neither she nor her mother had contacted the
police because they were “accomplices” of the cartel who would be of no help. On cross-
examination, Bravo repeated that, to her knowledge, her “father was the only person in the entire
police department not involved with the cartel.”
Escobar essentially repeated Bravo’s testimony: the cartels targeted her husband because
he was a police officer; they kidnapped him and killed her brother; in contrast to his colleagues,
her husband was not corrupt. However, Escobar recalled the men coming to her house to ask for
food only twice. She also contradicted Bravo by testifying that neither she nor her daughter gave
the men food.
The Immigration Judge’s Decision
In his oral decision, the immigration judge summarized the evidence in these terms:
[T]he background documents taken as a whole do not reflect that the Government
of Mexico is unable or unwilling to control the criminal organizations in that case,
specifically, the cartels. . . .
[The letter from Bravo’s father] does not even mention the fact that he was a police
officer at any time anywhere in Mexico. The Court finds it unsettling that such an
important fact would be left out of the one letter received from the father.
[T]he uncontradicted evidence in this case, by all witnesses, indicates that none of
these events at any time were ever reported to the police in Guerrero state or
anywhere in Mexico.
The immigration judge also noted that the number of times Bravo and Escobar testified that they
were asked for food and money varied. Despite that discrepancy, the immigration judge stated that
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“the Court will find the credibility of these witnesses to be marginal. What is required in this case
is corroboration of the claim, and that has not been done in this case.”
Due to the paucity of corroborating evidence, the immigration judge rejected each of
petitioners’ three grounds for relief. With respect to asylum, he concluded that they had not
experienced harm that rose to the level of persecution on the basis of a protected ground. For
instance, even if one credited petitioners’ account of Fortino’s kidnapping, the testimony supports
a conclusion that the family was the target of economic extortion rather than persecution based
upon Fortino’s service as a policeman. The immigration judge concluded that the asylum
applications lacked merit:
[B]ased upon the evidence in this record, I do find that even if the respondent had
presented a valid particular social group and shown that the Government of Mexico
was unable or unwilling to control these private actors, the respondent has not
corroborated this claim by reasonable and available evidence.
Regarding internal relocation, I do not find the respondent has met her
burden of showing that it would [be] neither possible nor reasonable to relocate
somewhere within the country of Mexico, which is certainly a large country.
In the end, I do find this to be economic targeting of the respondents by
private actors or criminal gangs, and the Court believes the Sixth Circuit has ruled
in Sanchez-Robles that these types of articulated particular social groups are indeed
rejected.
The Immigration Judge went on to summarily deny petitioners’ requests for withholding
of removal and protection under the CAT.
Motion to Reopen
Rather than seek review of this decision by the Board, new counsel for petitioners filed a
motion to reopen the proceedings based upon ineffective assistance of prior counsel. Ironically,
current counsel, Melissa Anderson, served as prior counsel, in the initial stages of the applications
for asylum. At that time, she was a member of the Velez Immigration Firm. However, she parted
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ways with that firm while petitioners’ applications for relief were still being developed and another
attorney from the firm represented them at the hearing already discussed.
Current counsel resumed her representation after the adverse decision by the immigration
judge. The motion to reopen essentially asserts that prior counsel should have done a better job
mustering corroborative evidence and preparing his clients to testify.
The Immigration Judge’s Decision (Motion to Reopen)
After finding the motion to reopen to be timely, the immigration judge rejected it in these
terms:
Motions to reopen based upon ineffective assistance of counsel require:
(1) a supporting affidavit detailing the agreement Respondent entered into with
counsel, (2) counsel be informed of the allegations against him, (3) a complaint be
filed with the appropriate disciplinary authorities with respect to any violation of
counsel’s ethical responsibilities, and (4) counsel’s response if any. Matter of
Lozada, 19 I&N Dec. 637, 639 (BIA 1988). Furthermore, the respondent must
establish that s/he was prejudiced by the actions or inactions of counsel.
Respondents’ Motion to Reopen complies with all of the procedural
requirements for sustaining an ineffective assistance of counsel claim. . . .
Respondents, however, have failed to establish that they were prejudiced by
the actions or inactions of their former counsel. . . .
Even if Respondents had presented additional corroborating evidence at their merits
hearing relating to their husband/father/grandfather, the Court still would have
denied their asylum claim. In its oral decision, the Court finds Respondents
marginally credible, despite significant discrepancies between lead Respondent and
her mother’s testimony, but ultimately concludes that Respondents failed to
adequately corroborate their claim. However, the Court’s analysis of Respondents’
case did not stop there. The Court went on to explain that even if Respondents
provided sufficient corroboration, Respondents could not carry their burden to
establish past persecution for three reasons. First, the harm that lead Respondent
suffered, having to feed cartel members for 90 days and paying ransom for her
father in the form of 10,000 pesos, does not rise to the level of persecution
contemplated by the INA. Lead Respondent’s mother testified that the cartels
approached her on two occasions and that she never had to feed any cartel members
or pay ransom money. Again, these harms do not reach the threshold of persecution.
Second, Respondents did not demonstrate that the government of Mexico was
unable and unwilling to control the acts of the perpetrators in this case, considering
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Respondents never reported the father’s kidnapping to the police, and the country
conditions evidence makes it clear there is basically an ongoing state of war
between the gangs and the government of Mexico. Third, Respondents were unable
to meet the nexus requirement for past persecution. Respondents asserted lead
Respondent’s father was kidnapped, beaten, and released after a 10,000 pesos
ransom was paid because he was a former police officer. However, the fact that
lead Respondent’s father was released after ransom was paid on his behalf clearly
indicates that he was not targeted as a former police officer, but instead targeted for
economic extortion. See Sanchez-Robles v. Lynch, 808 F.3d 688, 692 (6th Cir.
2015) (finding criminal exploitation motivated by perceived wealth is not a
cognizable social group under the INA). Finally, the Court found that Respondents
failed to demonstrate a well-founded fear of future persecution by the government
of Mexico, or by private actors the government is unable or unwilling to control.
The Board’s Decision
The Board adopted the reasoning of the immigration judge and dismissed the appeal.
II.
The Attorney General retains broad discretion to grant or deny motions to reopen
immigration proceedings. I.N.S. v. Doherty, 502 U.S. 314, 323 (1992); Sako v. Gonzales, 434 F.3d
857, 863 (6th Cir. 2006) (applying abuse of discretion standard). Such motions are generally
disfavored. Doherty, 502 U.S. at 323. The Board may deny a motion to reopen on any of three
independent grounds, which include “failure to introduce previously unavailable, material
evidence, and a determination that even if these requirements were satisfied, the movant would
not be entitled to the discretionary grant of relief which he sought.” Id. (citing I.N.S v. Abudu,
485 U.S. 94, 104-05 (1988)).
“[W]here there is a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, we review this question of
law de novo.” Sako, 434 F.3d at 863 (quoting Allabani v. Gonzales, 402 F.3d 668, 676 (6th Cir.
2005)). A successful motion to reopen based upon ineffective assistance of counsel must meet two
requirements: first, it must satisfy the requirements set out in Matter of Lozada, supra; second,
petitioners must show that they were “prejudiced by the actions or inactions of counsel.” Id.
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(quoting In re Assad, 23 I.&N. Dec. 553, 556 (BIA 2003)). In this case, petitioners satisfied the
requirements of Lozada; only prejudice is at issue. The movant carries the burden of establishing
that ineffective assistance of counsel resulted in prejudice. Id.
According to a complaint form signed by Bravo and filed with the Tennessee Supreme
Court’s Board of Professional Responsibility, she hired Rafael Velez and his law firm in April
2015. Her case was developed by several junior members of the law firm, including her current
attorney, Ms. Anderson. After an initial interview, Bravo did not see Mr. Velez again until the
hearing held on September 26, 2016. Although he attended the hearing, Mr. Velez did not
participate. Instead a young attorney, William Tippens, handled it. According to Bravo, Mr.
Tippens acknowledged that it was his first hearing.
Current counsel left the firm in July 2016 but offered to continue to assist with the cases of
existing clients. That offer was declined and, in her view, petitioners were poorly served by the
Velez firm, which did not adequately prepare its clients for the September hearing. A sworn
statement submitted by Bravo details petitioners’ complaints: failure by her newly assigned
attorney, John Schlicher, to remain in contact; learning only two weeks before the hearing that
petitioners needed to obtain additional evidence; and, being assigned another of the firm’s
attorneys (Tippens) at the last minute. In Bravo’s opinion, “we lost, or at least had no chance of
winning due to how Mr. Velez did not oversee the attorneys and did not make sure that we were
properly prepared.” As a result, she hired Ms. Anderson “as she at least always kept us informed
about our case.”
Petitioners point to inconsistencies in their asylum applications that undermined their
claims. These appear to be clerical errors, which a competent attorney should have caught. For
instance, Bravo’s application states that armed cartel members came to her house in December
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2015; yet on the next page she states that she left Mexico on March 2, 2015. In a similar vein,
petitioners Bravo and Escobar each swore affidavits in December 2015. Bravo stated that her
Uncle Moises worked for the cartel; Escobar swore that he did not. As petitioners see it, because
the Velez Firm did not diligently review the facts and statements of the case, there was a lack of
corroboration at trial.
One thing is clear from the administrative record: petitioners did not receive stellar
representation below. However, petitioners must still show that they were prejudiced by sub-
standard representation. As the immigration judge explained, and the Board affirmed, they have
not. First, petitioners have failed to establish that they were subject to past persecution. While the
privations that they experienced, such as being forced to feed cartel members, are regrettable and
not to be condoned, they do not rise to the level of persecution contemplated by the Immigration
and Nationality Act. Board Dec. at 2 (citing Mohammed v. Keisler, 507 F.3d 369, 371-72 (6th Cir.
2007)) Second, petitioners have not shown that the government of Mexico either participated in,
or was unwilling to control past persecution. Id. at 2-3 (citing Khalili v. Holder, 557 F.3d 429, 436
(6th Cir. 2009). And, third, petitioners have not shown that they could not relocate safely within
Mexico, which undercuts their claim of prejudice. Id. at 3. For these reasons, petitioners’ claim for
relief based upon ineffective assistance of counsel fails.
III.
The petition for review is DENIED.
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