In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________________
No. 18-3297
JUANA HERNANDEZ-GARCIA, et al.,
Petitioners,
v.
WILLIAM P. BARR, Attorney General of the United States,
Respondent.
____________________
Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals.
Nos. A208-190-985, A208-190-986, A208-190-987
____________________
ARGUED MAY 15, 2019 — DECIDED JULY 22, 2019
____________________
Before WOOD, Chief Judge, and EASTERBROOK and
HAMILTON, Circuit Judges.
WOOD, Chief Judge. Juana Hernandez-Garcia is a citizen of
Guatemala. She and two of her children, Brian and Yeniser
Morales-Hernandez, entered the United States without
proper documentation on August 29, 2015. They immediately
received Notices to Appear for removal proceedings, but
those Notices did not specify a date and time for their hearing.
Later, when they nonetheless appeared before an
immigration judge, they conceded removability but filed
2 No. 18-3297
requests for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection
under the Convention against Torture. As we detail below,
first the immigration judge and then the Board of
Immigration Appeals rejected those requests and ordered
removal. Hernandez-Garcia, on behalf of both her children
and herself, has petitioned this court for review. We conclude
that the Board’s decision must be upheld, and so we deny
their petitions for review.
I
In Guatemala, Hernandez-Garcia and her two youngest
children lived in the village of Chiantla, Huehuetenango. Her
husband, Anacleto Morales-Fuentes, came to the United
States illegally in 2001. He regularly sent $200 to $300 every
two weeks to his wife; in order to obtain access to that money,
she took a bus to a nearby city and withdrew it from a bank.
As a result of the extra funds she received, her home in the
village was larger than those of her neighbors, and she had a
higher standard of living. Until 2013, her oldest son lived with
her and the two youngest children, but that year he left for the
United States and left her on her own.
It was not long before she began receiving anonymous
notes asking for money and threatening her and the children.
She told the immigration judge that she was certain the notes
were from gang members. At first she did not take them seri-
ously, but at the end of August 2015 they became more worri-
some. One even threatened death if she did not pay the send-
ers. On another occasion, someone knocked at the door and
left a note with a vague threat that something bad would hap-
pen to her. Hernandez-Garcia reported these incidents to the
police, but they ignored her. Fearful, she left Guatemala with
Brian and Yeniser on August 27, 2015. When they reached the
No. 18-3297 3
U.S. border, Hernandez-Garcia was interviewed by the Bor-
der Patrol. They were promptly served with Notices to Ap-
pear, and on November 2, 2017, an immigration judge held a
hearing on their applications for asylum, withholding of re-
moval, and protection under the United Nations Convention
Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment (CAT), Dec. 10, 1984, S. Treaty Doc.
No. 100-20, 1465 UNTS 114.
Hernandez-Garcia was designated the lead respondent at
the hearing, but all three applicants testified. Hernandez-
Garcia described the events set forth above, but, as the
immigration judge found, she also admitted that “she told the
[Border Patrol] officer that she had no fear of persecution or
torture and that she had left her country because of the
poverty.” Brian, who was 18 years old by that time, recounted
that just before the family left Guatemala he was regularly
stopped by gang members, asked to join the gang, and asked
about his father. No one ever harmed him, but he said that he
was afraid to return because “the people who left the notes”
thought that his family had money. Yeniser, age 16 at the
hearing, testified that she lived in fear in Guatemala because
there was no older man in the house. No one ever approached
her personally, but her mother told her about the threats.
The immigration judge found all three to be credible, but
she concluded that none of them had described harm that
qualifies as past persecution. The judge acknowledged that
the threats and encounters Hernandez-Garcia described were
“unsettling,” but they were nonetheless not sufficiently immi-
nent or severe to be more than harassment.
4 No. 18-3297
In the alternative, the judge concluded that even assuming
that the threats were severe enough to fall within the defini-
tion of persecution, Hernandez-Garcia’s petitions for asylum
and withholding had to be rejected for an independent rea-
son: she failed to demonstrate a sufficient nexus between the
harm she and her children experienced and a protected
ground (race, religion, nationality, membership in a particu-
lar social group, or political opinion, 8 U.S.C.
§ 1101(a)(42)(A)). In addition to her concerns about nexus, the
immigration judge was also skeptical about the two proposed
social groups Hernandez-Garcia proposed: single females
with no male head-of-household, and well-to-do persons op-
posed to gangs. Perceived or actual wealth, standing alone,
does not form the basis of a particular social group, the judge
said, and the gangs were extorting Hernandez-Garcia simply
because they thought she could pay.
The immigration judge wrapped up her opinion with sev-
eral final points. First, the judge ruled that Hernandez-Garcia
had not demonstrated a well-founded fear of future persecu-
tion, nor had she shown that she and her children would be
singled out individually for persecution in Guatemala. Fur-
thermore, she had not shown that they belonged to any group
that is subjected to a pattern or practice of persecution in Gua-
temala. Last, the judge found that nothing Hernandez-Garcia
had described amounted to torture, for purposes of the CAT,
see 8 C.F.R. § 1208.18(a), nor did she have any evidence that a
public official would perform or acquiesce in acts of torture,
or that she could not successfully relocate in the country to
avoid harm.
No. 18-3297 5
The Board of Immigration Appeals “adopt[ed] and af-
firm[ed] the decision of the Immigration Judge.” For the asy-
lum and withholding petitions, it emphasized the immigra-
tion judge’s finding of a lack of a nexus between the extortion
threats and gang harassment she had experienced and any
protected ground for relief. It also agreed with the immigra-
tion judge that Hernandez-Garcia’s showing fell short for
purposes of the CAT. Finally, the Board addressed and re-
jected Hernandez-Garcia’s argument that the proceedings
against her were jurisdictionally barred because of the ab-
sence of date-and-place information in the Notice to Appear,
citing its decision in Matter of Bermudez-Cota, 27 I&N Dec. 441
(BIA 2018). Hernandez-Garcia did receive a later notice with
that information; she appeared at several hearings; and
through counsel she admitted the factual allegations in the
Notice and conceded that the alleged grounds of removal ap-
plied to her.
II
Before this court, Hernandez-Garcia raises four points: she
argues that she presented enough evidence to demonstrate
past persecution in Guatemala; she contends that she and her
children belong to a particular social group that the immigra-
tion judge and the Board failed to consider (the group of sin-
gle females without a head of household, Petr. Brief at 33); she
argues that her showing of a well-founded fear of future per-
secution was adequate; and she urges that the immigration
court lacked jurisdiction to hear her case, in light of the Su-
preme Court’s decision in Pereira v. Sessions, 138 S. Ct. 2105
(2018).
6 No. 18-3297
A
We start with the last point, because it is one that we re-
cently resolved adversely to Hernandez-Garcia. The peti-
tioner in Ortiz-Santiago v. Barr, 924 F.3d 956 (7th Cir. 2019),
made precisely the same argument. Like Hernandez-Garcia,
petitioner Ortiz-Santiago had received a Notice to Appear
that did not include a specified time, date, and place for the
removal proceeding, but also like our petitioner, he made no
timely objection to that defect, he could show no prejudice
from it, and it was cured in a timely manner. We concluded
that the holding of Pereira only went far enough to show that
the agency erred by failing to include statutorily specified in-
formation. Pereira did not hold that this flaw was “jurisdic-
tional.” After examining the statute and regulations, we con-
cluded that the omission of time, date, and place, while a mis-
take, is subject to normal rules of waiver and harmless error.
That ruling disposes of Hernandez-Garcia’s jurisdictional ar-
gument. Not a shred of evidence in this record suggests that
she or her children were prejudiced by the omission of that
information in her own Notice to Appear. We therefore move
on to the merits of her petition.
B
We first address Hernandez-Garcia’s petitions for asylum
and withholding of removal. Like the immigration judge and
the Board, we can assume for the sake of argument that her
evidence sufficed to show past persecution and move directly
to the question whether she proved both that she belonged to
a particular social group and that the mistreatment she en-
dured was on account of her membership in that group. The
government argues that she waived this point by failing to de-
velop it in her brief. If it is correct, then we have no choice but
No. 18-3297 7
to deny the petition for review insofar as it covers asylum and
withholding of removal, because the statute permits relief on
those grounds only if such a nexus is demonstrated.
Hernandez-Garcia’s brief starts off well enough, by quot-
ing the pertinent statutory language requiring an asylum
seeker to demonstrate “persecution or a well-founded fear of
persecution on account of … membership in a particular social
group.” 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42)(A) (our emphasis). But then she
turns immediately to the task of defining her proposed social
group. She notes, for example, that this court’s definition of a
social group in Cece v. Holder, 733 F.3d 662 (7th Cir. 2013) (en
banc)—young women who lived alone—is similar to the one
she proposes. That may (or may not) be so. But the Board did
not take issue with her proposed group. What it said instead
was “the extortion threats the respondent experienced in Gua-
temala, recruitment attempts upon her minor son, and the re-
spondents’ fear of criminal gang members do not have a
nexus to any protected ground.”
It is hard, at best, to see where Hernandez-Garcia takes is-
sue with the Board’s finding about nexus. While a sympa-
thetic reading of her brief might permit a finding that she has
squeaked by the waiver hurdle, the fact is that she never
squarely confronts the question whether she has shown a link
between her alleged social group and the persecution she ex-
perienced. The best she does is to say, Petr. Br. at 34, that
“Guatemala [is] a country that is well known for its history of
violence against women who have no one to protect them,”
and that “[s]ingle mothers living alone are amongst these vul-
nerable women that are routinely subject to violence and as-
saults.” After criticizing the Board for “dismiss[ing]” these
points, the brief asserts that had the Board given these facts
8 No. 18-3297
proper weight, it “would have found a sufficient nexus be-
tween the threats and Petitioner’s membership in this pro-
tected ground.” Id.
Missing is any argument about why the Board should have
found the necessary link. Hernandez-Garcia never directly
addresses the immigration judge’s finding that there is “no
evidence that the risk faced by the respondent is distinct be-
cause of her opposition to gangs or her lack of a male head of
household.” Perhaps her discussion of the timing of the
threats, which arose after her eldest son left, was designed to
fill that evidentiary gap, but she never says this in so many
words. We do not know anything about the alleged persecu-
tors (whose identity is murky at best, unless one assumes
counterfactually that Guatemala is plagued by only one
gang). We do not know whether they are concentrated in
Huehuetanango or country-wide. And we do not know if the
gang picks on vulnerable women or if it indiscriminately tar-
gets anyone with perceived wealth. These facts and others
would be needed in order to demonstrate the link between
her status and the persecution that followed, but they are
missing here. That is enough to support a finding of waiver.
We add that even if we were to find the nexus argument
(barely) preserved, we see no reason to overturn the Board on
this point. Granted, the immigration judge’s reasoning left
something to be desired, insofar as she seemed to think that
the persecutors’ goals were dispositive on the nexus point.
That takes things too far. Gangs can raise money in all sorts of
ways, some with a nexus to a particular social group and
some without such a link, but all for the same goal. The ques-
tion is in which category does the persecution Hernandez-
Garcia experienced fall: nexus, random, or ubiquitous? The
No. 18-3297 9
immigration judge thought that Hernandez-Garcia was tar-
geted because of her perceived wealth and no other reason. In
this connection, the judge said that “there is no evidence that
the risk faced by the respondent is distinct because of her opposi-
tion to the gangs or her lack of a male head of household.”
(Emphasis added.)
That is indeed the key question, and the immigration
judge and Board resolved it adversely to Hernandez-Garcia.
She points us to no evidence that undermines this finding. In-
deed, the record offers some support for the immigration
judge’s conclusion. Hernandez-Garcia lived alone without
her husband from 2001 until she left Guatemala in 2015. Dur-
ing most of that period her sons were too young to serve as
household protectors. Despite her situation, the regular remit-
tances from her husband did not lead to threats until 2014.
This is not a record that compels a finding of nexus, and with-
out that strong showing, Hernandez-Garcia could not prevail
even if she has managed to preserve this point.
C
We conclude with a brief explanation of why
Hernandez-Garcia’s remaining arguments do not save her
petition. Because she cannot show past persecution on
account of a protected ground for purposes of asylum or
withholding of removal, she is not entitled to a presumption
that she will face future persecution upon her return to
Guatemala. In order to prevail on a stand-alone argument of
a well-founded fear of future persecution, she must show that
her fear is “subjectively genuine and objectively reasonable in
light of credible evidence.” Musollari v. Mukasey, 545 F.3d 505,
508 (7th Cir. 2008) (citation omitted). We assume that she can
meet the subjective part of this test. But in order to satisfy the
10 No. 18-3297
objective part, she must prove either that “there is a
reasonable probability that she will be singled out
individually for persecution or that there is a pattern or
practice of persecution of an identifiable group, to which [she]
belongs, such that [her] fear is reasonable.” Ayele v. Holder, 564
F.3d 862, 868 (7th Cir. 2009), as amended July 14, 2009.
The immigration judge’s finding that Hernandez-Garcia
could not meet the objective test is grounded in the record.
The judge noted that she offered no evidence that she would
be singled out for persecution; that the authors of the threat-
ening notes never sought her out; and that at most she had
shown generalized crime in the country. The judge also noted
the dearth of evidence about any distinct group-based perse-
cution. We realize that Guatemala is unfortunately beset with
violent crime, including a shocking level of violence against
women, see AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL, “Why Does Guatemala
Have One of the Highest Rates of Femicide in the World?”,
https://www.amnestyusa.org/why-does-guatemala-have-
one-of-the-highest-rates-of-femicide-in-the-world (last vis-
ited July 22, 2019), but those general conditions do not alone
suffice to satisfy Hernandez-Garcia’s burden.
Finally, we say a word about her argument under the CAT.
Even though it does not condition relief on a showing of
membership in a social group and a nexus between torture
and such membership, there are other equally demanding
criteria for that relief, and Hernandez-Garcia has not met
them. Threats of imminent death that cause “prolonged
mental harm” can constitute torture under the regulations
implementing the CAT. 8 C.F.R. § 1208.18(a)(4)(iii). The
evidence in this record, however, does not compel a finding
that Hernandez-Garcia faced a threat of “imminent death”
No. 18-3297 11
that caused “prolonged mental harm.” Moreover,
Hernandez-Garcia failed to show that “it was more likely than
not that, if removed … [she] would be tortured by or with the
acquiescence of a public official.” Ramos-Braga v. Sessions, 900
F.3d 871, 875 (7th Cir. 2018) (emphasis added). It is too big a
leap from the indifference the police demonstrated about the
threatening letters she received to a finding that public
officials would either torture her or stand by while others did.
More evidence was needed. Without it, this aspect of her
petition must also be rejected.
The petition for review filed by Juana Hernandez-Garcia
on behalf of herself and derivative petitioners Brian Morales-
Hernandez and Yeniser Morales-Hernandez is DENIED.