Legal Research AI

Pierre v. Gonzales

Court: Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
Date filed: 2007-09-11
Citations: 502 F.3d 109
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104 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
05-3260-ag
Pierre v. Gonzales

 1                           UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
 2                               FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
 3
 4                                 August Term, 2006
 5
 6
 7     (Argued: November 27, 2006             Decided: September 11, 2007)
 8
 9                               Docket No. 05-3260-ag
10
11     - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -X
12
13     FRANCK PIERRE,
14
15                       Petitioner,
16
17                   - v.-
18
19     ALBERTO R. GONZALES, Attorney General
20     of the United States; WILLIAM CLEARY,
21     Acting Field Director Deportation and
22     Removal, Buffalo District, Bureau of
23     Immigration and Customs Enforcement,
24     United States Department of Homeland
25     Security,
26
27                       Respondents.
28
29     - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -X
30

31             Before:          JACOBS, Chief Judge, WALKER, and RAGGI,
32                              Circuit Judges.
33
34             Petition for review of a final decision and order of

35     the Board of Immigration Appeals affirming an immigration

36     judge’s denial of an application for withholding of removal

37     under the Convention Against Torture.
1        Petition denied.

 2                                 MARK T. KENMORE, Buffalo, NY,
 3                                 for Petitioner.1
 4
 5                                 GAIL Y. MITCHELL, Assistant
 6                                 United States Attorney, for
 7                                 Terrance P. Flynn, United States
 8                                 Attorney for the Western
 9                                 District of New York, Buffalo,
10                                 NY, for Respondent.
11
12   DENNIS JACOBS, Chief Judge:
13
14       Petitioner Franck Pierre, a native of Haiti, appeals

15   from the June 15, 2004 final decision and order of the Board

16   of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) which affirmed the January

17   20, 2004 decision of immigration judge (“IJ”) John B. Reid

18   denying Pierre’s application for withholding of removal and

19   relief under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”).

20       Pierre asserts that he has shown a sufficient

21   likelihood that he will be tortured if he is deported to

22   Haiti, because all Haitians who are deported from the United

23   States (and other countries) for criminal conduct are

24   imprisoned indefinitely, and because prison conditions

25   prevailing in Haiti amount to torture.    He challenges the


          1
            Subsequent to oral argument, petitioner’s counsel
     withdrew; having afforded the petitioner an opportunity to
     obtain new counsel and/or file supplemental briefing, and
     having received no such briefing, we decide the case on the
     original briefs and oral argument.
                                    2
1    BIA’s decision in In re J-E-, 23 I. & N. Dec. 291 (B.I.A.

2    2002) (en banc), which held that a Haitian petitioner faced

3    with this detention is not entitled to CAT relief.   He also

4    contends that his case is distinguishable from In re J-E-

5    because his medical conditions will be inadequately treated

6    in the Haitian prisons.

7        We deny the petition, and defer to the BIA’s

8    interpretation of the definition of torture under the CAT

9    regulations.   The failure to maintain standards of diet,

10   hygiene, and living space in prison does not constitute

11   torture under the CAT unless the deficits are sufficiently

12   extreme and are inflicted by government actors (or by others

13   with government acquiescence) intentionally rather than as a

14   result of poverty, neglect, or incompetence.   We also affirm

15   the agency’s conclusion that, based on the record evidence,

16   Pierre’s diabetes does not remove his case from the ambit of

17   In re J-E-.

18

19                             BACKGROUND

20       Pierre was born in Haiti in 1962, and was admitted to

21   the United States in 1967.   In August of 1997, Pierre was

22   convicted of criminal possession of a firearm; in September


                                   3
1    1999, he was convicted of grand larceny.    For the latter

2    crime, he was sentenced to a period of 18 to 36 months’

3    incarceration.

4        In 2000, the INS charged that Pierre was subject to

5    removal under 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii) as an alien

6    convicted of an aggravated felony, see 8 U.S.C. §

7    1101(a)(43)(G) (defining aggravated felony to include “a

8    theft offense . . . for which the term of imprisonment [is]

9    at least one year”), and under 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(C) as

10   an alien convicted of a firearms offense.    Pierre conceded

11   removability, but applied for withholding of removal and CAT

12   relief.   Before the IJ, he presented documentary evidence

13   concerning the conditions in Haiti, as well as his own

14   testimony and that of his sister--a doctor--concerning

15   Pierre’s diabetes.

16       The record concerning country conditions in this case

17   is substantially similar to the record in In re J-E- (and

18   its progeny), and can be summarized as follows.

19       At one time, Haitian government policy had been to

20   briefly detain any Haitian deported for having committed

21   crimes in another country; release was ordinarily secured

22   within a week.   In re J-E-, 23 I. & N. Dec. at 300.   In


                                   4
1    2000, Haiti began to hold such deportees with no timetable

2    for their release.   According to a 2000 U.S. State

3    Department country report (written in 2001), this policy was

4    instituted to “prevent the ‘bandits’ from increasing the

5    level of insecurity and crime in the country.”     Id. (quoting

6    Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, U.S. Dep’t of

7    State, Haiti: Country Reports on Human Rights Practices--

8    2000 (Feb. 23, 2001), available at

9    http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2000/wha/795.htm (“the

10   2000 Country Report”)).

11         Conditions in Haitian prisons are awful.   “[P]rison

12   facilities are overcrowded and inadequate. . . .

13   [P]risoners are deprived of adequate food, water, medical

14   care, sanitation, and exercise.    Many prisoners are

15   malnourished.”   Id. at 293.   A lack of basic hygiene and

16   health care results in elevated morbidity and mortality.

17   Id.   According to the 2000 Country Report, food and medicine

18   are in short supply, and prisoners receive one meal a day

19   unless their diet is supplemented by nearby family.     Haitian

20   prison authorities, working with the Red Cross, have

21   attempted to improve conditions in the country’s prisons.

22   Id. at 301.


                                    5
1        The State Department reports that deliberate

2    mistreatment of those arrested or detained by police in

3    Haiti is “pervasive in all parts of the country,” commonly

4    involves “[b]eating with fists, sticks, and belts,” and

5    sometimes involves “burning with cigarettes, choking,

6    hooding, and kalot marassa (severe boxing of the ears, which

7    can result in eardrum damage).”     Id. (quoting the 2000

8    Country Report).

9        At a January 7, 2004 hearing, Pierre’s sister testified

10   that her brother suffered from type two diabetes and from

11   hypertension, though she herself (an emergency room

12   physician with a pediatric specialty) had never treated him.

13   According to her testimony, without his diabetes medications

14   and a proper diet, Pierre’s blood sugar levels would become

15   unstable and acute dehydration could induce diabetic coma--

16   or even death.     She also testified that Pierre’s

17   hypertension, if left untreated, could bring on a stroke.

18       Pierre himself testified as to the circumstances

19   surrounding his criminal convictions and his connections

20   with Haiti.   Pierre’s last visit to Haiti was in 1998, when

21   he got married; his wife lives there with her family.       As of

22   the date of the 2004 hearing, he was corresponding with her


                                     6
1    by mail.   He also testified that his aunt and uncle spend

2    part of the year in Haiti and maintain a residence there.

3        In a January 20, 2004 decision, the IJ denied Pierre

4    withholding of removal and CAT relief.   As to the CAT, (1)

5    the IJ incorporated into his findings by reference the

6    conclusion in In re J-E- that “there is no evidence that

7    Haitian authorities are detaining criminal deportees with

8    the specific intent to inflict severe physical or mental

9    pain or suffering”; and (2) the IJ found (a) that Pierre’s

10   medications would be available in Haiti, (b) that his

11   relatives in Haiti could supply him with medication, and (c)

12   that he would neither be prevented from taking the

13   medication nor be denied a fairly prompt release when his

14   family took action.

15       Pierre appealed to the BIA both the denial of

16   withholding of removal and the denial of CAT relief.     The

17   BIA denied Pierre’s appeal on June 15, 2004, declining to

18   revisit In re J-E- and holding that because Pierre had

19   failed to show that the substandard prison conditions in

20   Haiti amounted to torture, or that his family would be

21   prevented from giving him medication, he was not entitled to




                                   7
1    relief under the CAT. 2   On July 15, 2004, Pierre filed a

2    habeas petition in the Western District of New York;

3    pursuant to provisions of the REAL ID Act of 2005, Pub. L.

4    No. 109-13, 119 Stat. 231, § 106(c) (2005), the habeas

5    petition was transferred to this Court as a petition for

6    relief from a ruling of the BIA.

7

8

9

10                              DISCUSSION

11                                  I

12       At issue in this case is a CAT regulation which



          2
            The IJ evidently assumed--without analysis--that In
     re J-E- applied not only to the CAT but also to withholding
     of removal under 8 U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3); the BIA affirmed
     without an explanation of whether (or why) it adopted this
     assumption . But Pierre’s brief to this Court addresses only
     the denial of CAT relief, and therefore Pierre has abandoned
     any challenge to the denial of withholding of removal under
     § 1231(b)(3). See Fen Yong Chen v. Bureau of Citizenship &
     Immigration Servs., 470 F.3d 509, 515 n.4 (2d Cir. 2006);
     Yueqing Zhang v. Gonzales, 426 F.3d 540, 542 n.1 (2d Cir.
     2005). So we express no opinion on the matter. We also
     express no view on the IJ’s conclusion that Haitian criminal
     deportees constitute a “particular social group” under the
     INA. See Toussaint v. Att’y Gen. of the U.S., 455 F.3d 409,
     418 (3d Cir. 2006) (rejecting argument that Haitians who
     commit crimes in the United States constitute a particular
     social group); Elien v. Ashcroft, 364 F.3d 392, 397 (1st
     Cir. 2004) (same).
                                    8
1    provides that “[i]n order to constitute torture, an act must

2    be specifically intended to inflict severe physical or

3    mental pain or suffering.”   8 C.F.R. § 208.18(a)(5).        In re

4    J-E- construed the phrase “specifically intended” to require

5    a showing of specific intent.       Pierre argues that the

6    specific intent requirement of In re J-E- is an

7    impermissible reading of the CAT and of the implementing

8    regulations, and therefore is not entitled to deference.

9    The CAT (according to Pierre) requires only general intent--

10   that is, the intent to commit an act that foreseeably

11   results in severe pain or suffering.

12       Because Pierre is a criminal alien, this Court’s review

13   is limited to constitutional claims and questions of law.

14   See 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(C)-(D).       “Except in cases where

15   the IJ’s factual findings are themselves based on

16   constitutional or legal error--thus raising ‘constitutional

17   claims or questions of law’--[the Court] does not review the

18   factual findings made by the IJ.”       Xiao Ji Chen v. U.S.

19   Dep’t of Justice, 471 F.3d 315, 329 n.7 (2d Cir. 2006)

20   (citing Joaquin-Porras v. Gonzales, 435 F.3d 172, 178-80 (2d

21   Cir. 2006)).   We review de novo the BIA’s application of

22   legal principles to undisputed facts.       See Wangchuck v.


                                     9
1    Dep’t of Homeland Sec., 448 F.3d 524, 528 (2d Cir. 2006).

2    But the BIA’s interpretations of immigration regulations are

3    reviewed with “‘substantial deference.’”     Id. (quoting

4    Joaquin-Porras, 435 F.3d at 178).

5        The question as to the meaning of “torture” is

6    presented to us now in the procedural and statutory context

7    of immigration.   But we bear in mind that (as this opinion

8    demonstrates) the wording of the immigration regulations we

9    read is carefully drawn to implement the wording of the CAT

10   itself--subject to the express understandings of the Senate

11   when it ratified--and that the CAT is not solely or

12   predominantly concerned with immigration and refoulement. 3

13   The CAT binds its signatories to prevent torture within

14   their own borders.   Any definition of torture adopted by the

15   United States has potential bearing on the obligations of

16   the United States, domestically and abroad, in contexts that

17   transcend our immigration laws.     These considerations bear



          3
            “Refoulement,” as defined by the United Nations
     Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, is “the
     expulsion of persons who have the right to be recognised as
     refugees,” whether to their country of origin or to another
     country in which they could be subjected to persecution.
     See UNESCO Migration Glossary, available at
     http://portal.unesco.org/shs/en/ev.php-URL_ID=4145&URL_DO=DO
     _TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html (last visited July 25, 2007).
                                   10
1    upon our deference to the BIA’s construction of the term

2    “torture.”   Great deference is owed to the political

3    branches, which guide the nation’s efforts to achieve (and

4    define) domestic compliance and to coordinate with other

5    countries in eradicating torture worldwide.   See El Al Isr.

6    Airlines, Ltd. v. Tsui Yuan Tseng, 525 U.S. 155, 168 (1999)

7    (“Respect is ordinarily due the reasonable views of the

8    Executive Branch concerning the meaning of an international

9    treaty.”).   The deference owed to the BIA may be qualified

10   to the extent that its reading of the regulation (which

11   mirrors the wording of the CAT and the Senate’s

12   understanding of it) is a reading of terms that have

13   application outside the context of immigration.

14

15

16                                 II

17                                 A

18       The CAT, to which the United States is a signatory,

19   includes a provision that “[n]o State Party shall expel,

20   return (‘refouler’) or extradite a person to another State

21   where there are substantial grounds for believing that he

22   would be in danger of being subjected to torture.”      United


                                   11
1    Nations Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman

2    or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, opened for signature

3    Dec. 10, 1984, art. III, S. Treaty Doc. No. 100-20 (1988),

4    1465 U.N.T.S. 85, 114, available at

5    http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/h_cat39.htm.

6        Torture is defined by the CAT and the immigration

7    regulations as:

 8            any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether
 9            physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on
10            a person for such purposes as obtaining from him
11            or her or a third person information or a
12            confession, punishing him or her for an act he or
13            she or a third person has committed or is
14            suspected of having committed, or intimidating or
15            coercing him or her or a third person, or for any
16            reason based on discrimination of any kind, when
17            such pain or suffering is inflicted by or at the
18            instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence
19            of a public official or other person acting in an
20            official capacity.
21
22   8 C.F.R. § 208.18(a)(1); see also CAT art. 1.      Torture “does

23   not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in

24   or incidental to lawful sanctions.”   8 C.F.R. §

25   208.18(a)(3); CAT art. 1.

26       The CAT is not self-executing; by its own force, it

27   confers no judicially enforceable right on individuals.      See

28   Mu-Xing Wang v. Ashcroft, 320 F.3d 130, 140 (2d Cir. 2003).

29   To implement the CAT, Congress amended the immigration laws


                                  12
1    with the Foreign Affairs Reform and Restructuring Act of

2    1998 (“FARRA”), 4 which announced the policy of the United

3    States “not to expel, extradite, or otherwise effect the

4    involuntary return of any person to a country in which there

5    are substantial grounds for believing the person would be in

6    danger of being subjected to torture.”     Pub. L. No. 105-277,

7    Div. G, tit. XXII, § 2242(a), 112 Stat. 2681, 2681-822

8    (codified at 8 U.S.C. § 1231 note); see Auguste v. Ridge,

9    395 F.3d 123, 132-33 (3d Cir. 2005).     FARRA directed the

10   appropriate agency (the Department of Justice) to issue

11   implementing regulations, and specified that the regulations

12   should define torture as the term is defined in the treaty

13   “subject to any reservations, understandings, declarations,

14   and provisos contained in the United States Senate

15   resolution of ratification of the Convention.”     FARRA §

16   2242(b), (f)(2) (codified at 8 U.S.C. § 1231 note), quoted

17   in 8 C.F.R. § 208.18(a); see Auguste, 395 F.3d at 133.        The

18   definition of torture under domestic immigration law, and




          4
            The CAT took some time to be implemented. President
     Ronald Reagan signed the CAT on April 18, 1988, but the
     United States did not ratify the convention until October
     21, 1994, see Regulations Concerning the Convention Against
     Torture, 64 Fed. Reg. 8478, 8478 (Feb. 19, 1999), and FARRA
     followed in 1998.

                                  13
1    the scope of an individual’s entitlement to CAT relief, is

2    therefore governed by the text of the CAT subject to the

3    terms of the Senate ratification resolution.

4          The Senate ratification resolution included the

5    following understanding: “[T]he United States understands

6    that, in order to constitute torture, an act must be

7    specifically intended to inflict severe physical or mental

8    pain or suffering . . . .”   136 Cong. Rec. S17,486-01,

9    S17,491 (1990); see also Convention against Torture,

10   Declarations and Reservations, available at

11   http://www.ohchr.org/english/countries/ratification/9.htm

12   (last visited July 25, 2007).        The FARRA regulations use the

13   wording of this understanding:        “In order to constitute

14   torture, an act must be specifically intended to inflict

15   severe physical or mental pain or suffering.”        8 C.F.R. §

16   208.18(a)(5).   One ramification of this, as the regulations

17   explain, is that an act is not torture if it “results in

18   unanticipated or unintended severity of pain and suffering.”

19   Id.

20         The text of the CAT itself recognizes that there are

21   “other acts of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or

22   punishment which do not amount to torture.”        CAT art. 16.


                                     14
1    The regulations also draw this distinction:      “Torture is an

2    extreme form of cruel and inhuman treatment and does not

3    include lesser forms of cruel, inhuman or degrading

4    treatment or punishment that do not amount to torture.”      8

5    C.F.R. § 208.18(a)(2).

6        The acts of private individuals may constitute torture

7    under the CAT only if there is government “acquiescence.”

8    See CAT art. 1.    The Senate’s resolution indicates:

 9               [T]he United States understands that the term
10               “acquiescence” requires that the public official,
11               prior to the activity constituting torture, have
12               awareness of such activity and thereafter breach
13               his legal responsibility to intervene to prevent
14               such activity.
15
16   136 Cong. Rec. S17,486-01, S17,491-92; see Khouzam v.

17   Ashcroft, 361 F.3d 161, 170-71 (2d Cir. 2004) (discussing

18   the U.S. government’s decision to revise its original

19   understandings “to make it clear that both actual knowledge

20   and ‘willful blindness’ fall within the definition of the

21   term ‘acquiescence’” (quoting S. Exec. Rep. 101-30, at 9

22   (1990))).    The regulations incorporate the text of this

23   understanding.    See 8 C.F.R. § 208.18(a)(7).

24       The CAT forbids deportation if there are “substantial

25   grounds” to believe that the deportee will suffer torture at

26   home; the Senate Ratification Resolution links this standard

                                    15
1    to the “more likely than not” standard used by immigration

2    courts for persecution-based withholding of removal claims:

 3            [T]he United States understands the phrase, “where
 4            there are substantial grounds for believing that
 5            he would be in danger of being subjected to
 6            torture,” as used in Article 3 of the Convention,
 7            to mean “if it is more likely than not that he
 8            would be tortured.”
 9
10   136 Cong. Rec. S17,486-01, S17,492.    Accordingly, the

11   regulations place the “burden of proof . . . on the

12   applicant for withholding of removal . . . to establish that

13   it is more likely than not that he or she would be tortured

14   if removed to the proposed country of removal,” 8 C.F.R. §

15   208.16(c)(2), and mandate withholding or deferral of removal

16   where the applicant meets this burden, 8 C.F.R. §

17   208.16(c)(4); see Mu Xiang Lin v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice, 432

18   F.3d 156, 159 (2d Cir. 2005).

19

20                                   B

21       The issue in this case is whether Haiti’s indefinite

22   detention of criminal deportees amounts to torture in light

23   of the prevailing prison conditions.    The BIA answered this

24   question in the negative in In re J-E-, 23 I. & N. Dec. 291

25   (B.I.A. 2002) (en banc), and the BIA here affirmed the IJ’s

26   denial of relief because Pierre’s medical condition does not

                                     16
1    distinguish his case from In re J-E-.

2        In re J-E- held (1) that detaining criminal deportees

3    in the prison conditions prevailing in Haiti does not

4    constitute torture because the prison conditions are not

5    created or maintained with a specific intent to cause severe

6    pain and suffering, but are instead “the result of budgetary

7    and management problems as well as the country’s severe

8    economic difficulties,” id. at 301; and (2) that indefinite

9    detention does not amount to torture because it is a lawful

10   sanction, id. at 300.   The BIA conceded that there are

11   examples of “isolated acts” constituting torture in Haitian

12   prisons, but concluded that the applicant there presented

13   insufficient evidence to show it was more likely than not

14   that he would be singled out for such treatment.   Id. at

15   303-04.

16       Pierre argues that the specific intent standard of In

17   re J-E- is an impermissible narrowing of the CAT, and is

18   therefore not entitled to deference.    However, the

19   regulations at issue were drawn by the DOJ pursuant to a

20   mandate in FARRA to craft regulations that implement the

21   exact wording of the Senate’s expressed understanding of a

22   treaty.   On general principles, this circumstance bespeaks


                                   17
1    more deference, not less: deference to the Senate’s

2    ratification understanding, deference to the framing of the

3    regulations, and deference to an agency’s interpretation of

4    the regulations.   “[I]n construing treaty language,

5    ‘[r]espect is ordinarily due the reasonable views of the

6    Executive Branch.’”   Tachiona v. United States, 386 F.3d

7    205, 216 (2d Cir. 2004) (second alteration in original)

8    (quoting El Al Isr. Airlines, Ltd. v. Tsui Yuan Tseng, 525

9    U.S. 155, 168 (1999)); see also Sumitomo Shoji Am., Inc. v.

10   Avagliano, 457 U.S. 176, 184-85 (1982) (“Although not

11   conclusive, the meaning attributed to treaty provisions by

12   the Government agencies charged with their negotiation and

13   enforcement is entitled to great weight.”).   As to the CAT

14   regulations: where the BIA interprets “a regulation

15   promulgated by the Attorney General under the INA, we afford

16   ‘substantial deference’ to the BIA’s interpretation, unless

17   it is plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulation,

18   or inconsistent with the agency’s previous interpretation.”

19   Zhen Nan Lin v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice, 459 F.3d 255, 262 (2d

20   Cir. 2006) (citations omitted).

21       Deference to the BIA’s interpretation of the CAT is

22   particularly important when (as here) “claims similar to


                                   18
1    [the petitioner’s] have been advanced by many petitioners

2    before this and other courts,” and the issue “raises

3    complicated public policy and foreign policy questions.”

4    Jian Hui Shao v. BIA, 465 F.3d 497, 502 (2d Cir. 2006)

5    (citing INS v. Aguirre-Aguirre, 526 U.S. 415, 425 (1999)

6    (“[J]udicial deference to the Executive Branch is especially

7    appropriate in the immigration context where officials

8    exercise especially sensitive political functions that

9    implicate questions of foreign relations.”)).

10

11                                 C

12       The BIA’s decision in In re J-E- has commanded

13   deference from several federal courts.   See, e.g., Theagene

14   v. Gonzales, 411 F.3d 1107, 1113 (9th Cir. 2005); Auguste,

15   395 F.3d at 153; Cadet v. Bulger, 377 F.3d 1173, 1193 (11th

16   Cir. 2004); Elien v. Ashcroft, 364 F.3d 392, 399 (1st Cir.

17   2004); Thelemaque v. Ashcroft, 363 F. Supp. 2d 198, 211 (D.

18   Conn. 2005).   No federal circuit court considering the case

19   of a Haitian criminal deportee has declined to follow In re

20   J-E-, though there are wrinkles in the Third Circuit. 3


          3
            In Lavira v. Att’y Gen. of the U.S., 478 F.3d 158 (3d
     Cir. 2007), the Third Circuit remanded such a case, but not
     because it rejected the validity of In re J-E-. Rather, the
                                   19
1        In the case of a Congolese petitioner, the Third

2    Circuit distinguished In re J-E- on the basis that the

3    petitioner’s CAT claim was based on far more than evidence

4    of substandard prison conditions.       See Zubeda v. Ashcroft,

5    333 F.3d 463 (3d Cir. 2003). 4     The Zubeda panel also opined

6    that the wording of the CAT regulations stopped short of

7    requiring specific intent.       But this discussion in Zubeda

8    was discounted as dicta in a later Third Circuit case that

9    decided the very issue before this Court--and followed In re

10   J-E-.       See Auguste, 395 F.3d at 147-48.   Of course, we are

11   free nevertheless to adopt Zubeda’s analysis as persuasive,

12   but we are unpersuaded for the following reasons.

13       Zubeda concluded that (under the statute and



     Third Circuit held that the agency had failed to properly
     consider whether the petitioner’s individual circumstances
     made his case distinguishable from In re J-E-.
             4
            The Zubeda panel noted that the BIA had ignored
     record evidence,

                   [r]educing Zubeda’s claim to an attack on . . .
                   inhumane prison conditions . . . [which] totally
                   ignores the fact that this record is replete with
                   reports from government agencies and human rights
                   organizations that detail what appear to be
                   country wide, systematic incidents of gang rape,
                   mutilation, and mass murder [in the Democratic
                   Republic of the Congo].

     333 F.3d at 477.
                                       20
1    regulations) torture does not entail a specific intent to

2    inflict severe pain or suffering. 5   The panel acknowledged

3    that severe pain and suffering must be “specifically

4    intended” to constitute torture; but to justify its

5    conclusion that one can “specifically intend” without

6    specific intent, the panel focused on the regulations’

7    statement that an “‘act that results in unanticipated or

8    unintended severity of pain and suffering is not torture.’”

9    Zubeda, 333 F.3d at 473-74 (quoting 8 C.F.R. §

10   208.18(a)(5)).   As a matter of plain language, we read that

11   portion of section 208.18(a)(5) differently to draw a

12   distinction between a severity of pain or suffering that is

13   intended (torture) and a severity of pain or suffering that

14   is unintentional or unanticipated (not torture), rather than

15   a distinction between what is foreseeable and what is not.

16   The proviso in section 208.18(a)(5) that an act must be

17   “specifically intended to inflict severe physical or mental

18   pain or suffering” bespeaks specific intent, the Zubeda



          5
              This runs counter to the ordinary understanding of
     the word “torture”; but the Zubeda panel considered the
     issue in a context--rape--that presents special difficulties
     if (though only if) one thinks that the intent of a rapist
     is satisfaction that does not depend on the pain inflicted
     on the victim.

                                   21
1    dicta notwithstanding.

2        Zubeda discounted specific intent on another ground:

3    that the CAT regulations define torture to include threats

4    of physical harm that result in severe mental suffering,

5    regardless of whether the persecutor actually intends to

6    carry out the threat.    Zubeda, 333 F.3d at 474.   But this

7    proves little; when a credible threat of physical torture

8    causes extreme mental pain or suffering, the specific intent

9    requirement is altogether satisfied by the specific intent

10   to cause the mental pain or suffering; the persecutor’s

11   intent (specific or not) to follow through on the threat to

12   inflict physical torture does not matter if the making of

13   the credible threat amounts to the torture in itself.      See 8

14   C.F.R. § 208.18(a)(4) (defining types of severe mental pain

15   and suffering that can rise to the level of torture with or

16   without any physical torture).

17       It is also important that the concept of specific intent

18   not be conflated with the concept of state acquiescence.

19   Because the CAT reaches torture committed by or acquiesced in

20   by government actors, it is not always necessary that the

21   specific intent required by section 208.18(a)(5) be formed by

22   the government itself.    A private actor’s behavior can


                                    22
1    constitute torture under the CAT without a government’s

2    specific intent to inflict it if a government official is

3    aware of the persecutor’s conduct and intent and acquiesces

4    in violation of the official’s duty to intervene.   See

5    Khouzam v. Ashcroft, 361 F.3d 161, 171 (2d Cir. 2004) (“In

6    terms of state action, torture requires only that government

7    officials know of or remain willfully blind to an act and

8    thereafter breach their legal responsibility to prevent it.”

9    (emphasis added)).   But in that scenario, there is specific

10   intent--the intent of the private actor.

11       Some courts have contemplated the possibility that in

12   particular cases, a government’s “willful blindness” or

13   “deliberate indifference” to suffering might suffice to show

14   that the suffering is “specifically intended.”   See, e.g.,

15   Lavira v. Att’y Gen. of the U.S., 478 F.3d 158, 171 (3d Cir.

16   2007) (“Our criminal law jurisprudence . . . bolsters the

17   view that a finding of specific intent could be based on

18   deliberate ignorance or willful blindness.”); Thelemaque, 363

19   F. Supp. 2d at 215 (“[A] mechanical application of the

20   specific intent requirement might yield results at odds with

21   . . . CAT and . . . concepts such as deliberate indifference,

22   reckless disregard or willful blindness might well suffice in


                                   23
1    certain circumstances . . . .”).   We do not see how these

2    concepts, which may bear on knowledge to the extent they

3    establish conscious avoidance, can without more demonstrate

4    specific intent, which requires that the actor intend the

5    actual consequences of his conduct (as distinguished from the

6    act that causes these consequences). 6

7        In sum, the phrase “specifically intended” incorporates

8    a criminal specific intent standard, notwithstanding the

9    difficulties that might arise in applying that standard to

10   evidence of country conditions in order to predict the

11   likelihood of future events in individual cases.    The

12   President and Senate knew full well that they were construing

13   a treaty designed to stop criminal conduct. 7   We cannot


          6
            That said, nothing in this opinion prevents the
     agency from drawing the inference, should the agency choose
     to do so, that a particular course of action is taken with
     specific intent to inflict severe pain and suffering if it
     is found on the record evidence that the actor is aware of a
     virtual certainty that such pain and suffering will result.
          7
            The federal criminal statute--like the CAT
     regulations--requires that the infliction of severe pain and
     suffering be “specifically intended.” 18 U.S.C. § 2340(1).
     As other courts have noted, the George H.W. Bush
     administration, which proposed the understandings that the
     Senate adopted by resolution in 1990, clearly interpreted
     the understanding to require specific intent: “‘[T]he
     package now contains a revised understanding to the
     definition of torture, which . . . maintains our position
     that specific intent is required for torture.’” Thelemaque,
                                   24
1    ignore the word “specifically” in the ratification

2    understanding and the regulations, and we decline to give it

3    a counter-intuitive spin.     See Duncan v. Walker, 533 U.S.

4    167, 174 (2001) (citing principle that “‘a statute ought,

5    upon the whole, to be so construed that, if it can be

6    prevented, no clause, sentence, or word shall be superfluous,

7    void, or insignificant’” (quoting Market Co. v. Hoffman, 101

8    U.S. 112, 115 (1879))).     The deference we owe to the BIA’s

9    analysis in In re J-E- simply confirms the understanding we

10   derive from plain meaning.     The BIA’s reading of 8 C.F.R. §

11   208.18(a)(5), to which we defer, raises no insurmountable

12   obstacle to CAT relief, because there is no requirement that

13   a CAT claimant “provide direct proof of [the] persecutors’

14   motives.”   INS v. Elias-Zacarias, 502 U.S. 478, 483 (1992).

15   The CAT regulations, like the asylum regulations, “make[]

16   motive critical,” so a CAT claimant must “provide some

17   evidence” of specific intent, “direct or circumstantial.”

18   Id.   But torture as commonly understood and practiced is not

19   subtle, elusive, or easy to misconstrue, and the torturer’s




     363 F. Supp. 2d at 207 (emphasis added) (omission in
     original) (quoting S. Exec. Rep. No. 101-30, app. A at 35
     (1990)).
                                     25
1    intentions are rarely if ever obscure.8

2

3                                  D

4        Pierre appears to argue that even if the United States’s

5    ratification understanding reflects a definition of torture

6    that entails a specific intent to inflict severe pain and

7    suffering, it should yield to the broader language of the CAT

8    itself as interpreted under principles of international law.

9        Because the CAT is not a self-executing treaty, Mu-Xing

10   Wang v. Ashcroft, 320 F.3d 130, 140 (2d Cir. 2003), Pierre

11   has no judicially enforceable right directly arising from the

12   CAT as interpreted by its signatory nations: his claims arise

13   under United States law implementing the treaty.   See Flores

14   v. S. Peru Copper Corp., 414 F.3d 233, 257 n.34 (2d Cir.

15   2003) (noting that non-self-executing treaties require



          8
             An act is only torture under the CAT if it is
     motivated by some illicit purpose such as “obtaining . . .
     information or a confession, punishing . . ., or
     intimidating or coercing . . ., or for any reason based on
     discrimination of any kind . . . .” 8 C.F.R. §
     208.18(a)(1); see Auguste, 395 F.3d at 151. Evidence
     showing an illicit purpose may easily overlap with evidence
     showing a specific intent to inflict severe pain or
     suffering. The issue of specific intent is isolated in this
     case only because imprisonment is by its nature designed to
     punish, but ordinarily does not trigger severe pain or
     suffering as contemplated by the CAT.
                                   26
1    implementing action in order to be suitable for judicial

2    application, while self-executing treaties immediately create

3    judicially enforceable rights).      “United States law is not

4    subordinate to customary international law or necessarily

5    subordinate to treaty-based international law and, in fact,

6    may conflict with both.”     United States v. Yousef, 327 F.3d

7    56, 91 (2d Cir. 2003).     An act of Congress will govern in

8    domestic courts in derogation of previous treaties and

9    customary international law.     See Oliva v. U.S. Dep’t of

10   Justice, 433 F.3d 229, 236 (2d Cir. 2005) (noting that clear

11   congressional action trumps customary international law in

12   the immigration context as elswhere); Empresa Cubana Del

13   Tabaco v. Culbro Corp., 399 F.3d 462, 481 (2d Cir. 2005)

14   (“[L]egislative acts trump treaty-made international law when

15   those acts are passed subsequent to ratification of the

16   treaty and clearly contradict treaty obligations.” (internal

17   quotation marks omitted)); Mu-Xing Wang, 320 F.3d at 142

18   n.18; Guzman v. Tippy, 130 F.3d 64, 66 (2d Cir. 1997) (per

19   curiam).

20       In that light, international law does not assist the

21   analysis.   It is plain that in FARRA, Congress commanded the

22   immigration agencies to promulgate regulations that give full


                                     27
1    effect to all of the Senate’s reservations and

2    understandings, including the understanding that in order to

3    constitute torture, an act must be specifically intended to

4    inflict severe pain and suffering.     See Auguste, 395 F.3d at

5    140 (“[I]n our opinion, FARRA codified the Senate’s

6    understandings into domestic law.”).     By announcing its

7    understandings, the Senate implicitly recognized that the

8    treaty wording would benefit from clarification.     Those

9    understandings are the indispensable premise for the

10   implementation of the CAT as domestic law.     The agency is

11   bound by them, and we defer to the agency’s reasonable

12   interpretation of them:

13             [The petitioner] invites this Court to inquire into
14             the meaning of Article 1 of the [CAT], its drafting
15             history, and the interpretation of Article 1 by
16             various international tribunals. . . . We,
17             however, see no reason to be drawn into a debate
18             about the appropriate interpretation . . . , or
19             what the prevailing international understanding of
20             the intent standard required under Article 1 of the
21             [CAT] is. . . . [W]e believe that we must apply
22             the standard clearly stated in the ratification
23             record of the United States.
24
25   Id.

26         As we stated earlier, the CAT is not solely concerned

27   with immigration and refoulement; the same language that

28   governs the BIA’s review of deportation orders guides the


                                    28
1    political branches in their decisions about whether our

2    country and other signatories are in compliance with a

3    multilateral treaty.   It is unseemly for a government to

4    adopt different meanings of the same word in the same treaty;

5    and it is imprudent for a court to fix on a special or

6    unnatural meaning in litigation when the political branches

7    are evidently disposed otherwise.

8

9                                   E

10       Pierre also challenges the ruling in In re J-E- that

11   Haiti’s policy of indefinite detention is a “lawful

12   sanction.”   See 8 C.F.R. § 208.18(a)(3) (“Torture does not

13   include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in or

14   incidental to lawful sanctions.”).   Because we agree with the

15   BIA that the regulations validly promulgated pursuant to

16   FARRA clearly require a showing of specific intent to inflict

17   severe pain and suffering, we need not decide the question of

18   lawful sanction.

19       Nevertheless, a close reading of In re J-E- shows that

20   while the BIA decided that the “detention policy in itself”

21   was a “lawful sanction,” 23 I. & N. Dec. at 300, it did not




                                   29
1    decide whether conditions of confinement, lawfully imposed, 9

2    are categorically “lawful sanctions” that therefore cannot

3    amount to torture.   In holding that the Haitian prison

4    conditions did not constitute torture, the BIA relied on the

5    lack of specific intent, not on the “lawful sanctions”

6    provision.   Id. at 300-01.    In any case, this Court has

7    already narrowly construed In re J-E- on this point.      See

8    Khouzam, 361 F.3d at 169-70 (“It would totally eviscerate the

9    CAT to hold that once someone is accused of a crime it is a

10   legal impossibility for any abuse inflicted on that person to

11   constitute torture. . . .     If J-E- actually stood for this

12   proposition, we would have to disapprove of it . . . .”).

13   Moreover, one United States understanding of the CAT reflects

14   Senate concern that the “lawful sanctions” language may be

15   too expansive.   See 136 Cong. Rec. S17,486-01, S17,491

16   (“[T]he United States understands that a State Party could

17   not through its domestic sanctions defeat the object and

18   purpose of the Convention to prohibit torture.”); Kyaw Zwar

19   Tun v. INS, 445 F.3d 554, 567 (2d Cir. 2006) (“In accord with

20   the Senate’s understanding, even torture sanctioned by the



          9
            We do not address the legality of Haiti’s detention
     policy under Haitian law.
                                     30
1    alien’s country of origin for his criminal conduct will

2    sometimes establish entitlement to relief.”).

3        Prison is always an ordeal.       Barbaric prison conditions

4    might constitute torture if they cause severe pain or

5    suffering and if circumstances indicate that the intent of

6    the authorities in causing the severity of pain and suffering

7    (over and above the discomforts incident to confinement in

8    that time and place) is to illicitly discriminate, punish,

9    coerce confessions, intimidate, or the like--just as live

10   burial would be torture even if somewhere it were the lawful

11   sanction for an offense.

12       Although we do not follow In re J-E- on the issue of

13   lawful sanction, we defer to In re J-E-’s interpretation of 8

14   C.F.R. § 208.18(a)(5):     The failure to maintain standards of

15   diet, hygiene, and living space in prison does not constitute

16   torture under the CAT unless the deficits are sufficiently

17   extreme and are inflicted intentionally rather than as a

18   result of poverty, neglect, or incompetence.

19

20

21                                   III

22       The IJ and the BIA concluded that the medical evidence


                                     31
1    Pierre adduced did not command a result different from that

2    in In re J-E-.   There is no reason to disturb the agency’s

3    decision.

4        Because Pierre is a criminal alien, we have no

5    jurisdiction to review the agency’s factual findings.

6    See supra Section I.    Therefore, unless the agency’s fact-

7    finding process was premised on legal error, we cannot

8    question its findings about prevailing conditions in Haiti or

9    the likelihood that specific events will occur when Pierre is

10   returned to Haiti.     It is beyond our power to revisit the

11   conclusion in In re J-E---and the IJ’s opinion--that prison

12   conditions in Haiti chiefly result from economic conditions

13   in that country and not from the intent on the part of the

14   authorities to worsen the suffering of inmates or detainees.

15   We also cannot question the IJ’s finding that Pierre will

16   likely have access to medicine through his family and will

17   likely be released in a timely fashion.    However, we do

18   review, de novo, the agency’s application of the definition

19   of torture to its factual findings about what is likely to

20   happen.

21       As we have held:     Assuming the validity of the factual

22   findings underlying In re J-E-, that decision reaches the


                                     32
1    correct conclusion as to whether deportees’ indefinite

2    detainment constitutes torture.     Even though Haiti’s

3    government does apparently wish to intimidate criminal

4    deportees by imprisoning them in whatever prisons are

5    available, the agency found that neither the government nor

6    its agents have any specific intent to cause severe suffering

7    through harsh conditions as an additional means of

8    intimidation--the poor conditions result chiefly from the

9    economic situation in Haiti.   Therefore, imprisonment in

10   Haiti without more is not torture.

11       As to Pierre’s attempt to distinguish his case from In

12   re J-E- on the basis of his medical condition, the IJ

13   appeared to opine in passing that as to the issue of specific

14   intent, Pierre’s condition was irrelevant.    We disagree to

15   the extent this suggests that a petitioner’s individual

16   circumstances are per se irrelevant under In re J-E- and can

17   have no bearing on the likelihood that the petitioner would

18   be subjected to torture.   It is true that, given the United

19   States’s understandings of the CAT, even suffering of the

20   utmost severity cannot constitute torture unless it is

21   specifically intended, and this principle undercuts the

22   importance of evidence that a particular petitioner’s


                                    33
1   suffering in prison will be more severe or more foreseeable

2   than others’; but it does not render such evidence

3   irrelevant.   Nothing in In re J-E- or in our opinion dictates

4   that a petitioner cannot present evidence that the severe

5   suffering to which the petitioner is likely to be subjected

6   is motivated by some actor’s specific intent--that is, some

7   intent not present in In re J-E-.10   As In re J-E-

8   acknowledged, acts of abuse committed by prison guards are


         10
           In Lavira v. Attorney General of the United States,
    a panel of the Third Circuit remanded the case of an HIV-
    positive Haitian criminal alien because both the IJ and the
    BIA summarily relied on In re J-E- and failed to “focus[] on
    the specifics of [the petitioner’s] situation in denying his
    CAT claim.” 478 F.3d 158, 171 (3d Cir. 2007). The Lavira
    panel purported to further hold that Lavira had a “non-
    frivolous and legally available” argument that the extremely
    high likelihood of an HIV-positive petitioner’s death in
    Haitian prison meant that any Haitian official who detained
    such a petitioner would exhibit “willful blindness” to the
    likelihood of death; the panel reasoned that this would
    adequately show specific intent. Notwithstanding assertions
    to the contrary in Lavira, this proposition seems to us
    inconsistent with the Third Circuit’s holding in Auguste
    that “[t]he mere fact that the Haitian authorities have
    knowledge that severe pain and suffering may result by
    placing detainees in these conditions does not support a
    finding that the Haitian authorities intend to inflict
    severe pain and suffering.” 395 F.3d at 153-54. How can
    willful blindness towards a fact be legally significant if
    actual knowledge of it is not? To the extent the two cases
    are in tension, Auguste is the more persuasive precedent,
    though it is hard to contest Lavira’s chief holding: IJs
    should carefully consider evidence that individual
    petitioners put forth to distinguish their cases from In re
    J-E-. That is what the IJ did here.
                                  34
1    not infrequent in Haiti, and it might be that petitioners

2    with certain histories, characteristics, or medical

3    conditions are more likely to be targeted not only with these

4    individual acts but also with particularly harsh conditions

5    of confinement.   But Pierre adduced no evidence suggesting

6    this to be the case as to diabetics or as to him

7    individually.

8        Even though the IJ arguably overstated the impact of In

9    re J-E- on the relevance of Pierre’s medical condition, the

10   record indicates that the IJ carefully considered Pierre’s

11   evidence and entered individualized findings that adequately

12   support the conclusion that, notwithstanding Pierre’s medical

13   condition, Pierre has not adduced the evidence that he will

14   likely be subjected to torture.    The BIA affirmed on that

15   basis, and so do we.

16

17                             CONCLUSION

18       For the foregoing reasons, the petition is denied.




                                   35