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  • New limit on review of asylum cases

    New limit on review of asylum cases
    Immigration judges' decisions would be harder to overturn

    - Bob Egelko, Chronicle Staff Writer

    www.sfgate.com
    Monday, May 16, 2005

    Armen Matevosyan said he fled his native Armenia after being jailed
    and beaten for 30 days because he is a Pentecostal Christian. The
    immigration judge who heard his claim of political asylum decided
    Matevosyan was lying about his religious beliefs because he hadn't
    joined a church in Southern California and because he disagreed with
    the judge's view of the relevance of the Old Testament to his own
    faith.

    A federal appeals court in San Francisco overturned the judge's
    decision in November, saying it was based on speculation and personal
    opinion, and reinstated Matevosyan's asylum case. But the court might
    be barred from making such rulings in the future once President Bush
    signs a law narrowing federal courts' authority to second-guess
    immigration judges.

    It's no coincidence the ruling came from the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court
    of Appeals. The asylum legislation is a Republican-led attempt to
    nail two targets: perceived fraud and security risks in the asylum
    program, and the San Francisco-based court. The court is the largest
    of the federal circuits and hears far more immigration cases than any
    other.

    The changes would "return asylum law to the way it was before
    activist judges in the Ninth Circuit had their way with it," the
    measure's sponsor, House Judiciary Committee Chairman James
    Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., said in a letter to colleagues.

    The asylum rules are part of the Real ID Act, which is attached to a
    military spending bill headed to the president after overwhelming
    congressional approval.

    The asylum provisions have received much less attention than another
    section of Real ID, which would require states to demand proof of
    legal residency from driver's license applicants. But the changes
    will have a significant effect on a system that handles more than
    60,000 asylum applications each year, and grants about half, from
    foreigners claiming they would face persecution if deported to their
    homeland.

    "This legislation will ... prevent the ability of potentially
    dangerous aliens to show up under false pretenses on our shores and
    be granted safe haven, while simultaneously protecting those who are
    legitimately fleeing persecution," Sensenbrenner said on the House
    floor.

    Immigrants'-rights advocates say the measure will not help security
    but will place new obstacles in the path of those seeking shelter
    from political oppression.

    "These provisions will ... harm the victims of human rights abuses,
    torture and religious and political persecution who seek the
    protection of this society," said a statement by Human Rights First,
    formerly known as the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights.

    Each of the bill's changes would overturn Ninth Circuit rulings that
    have made it easier for asylum applicants in California and eight
    other Western states to prove their cases.

    The measure would:

    -- Allow an immigration judge to decide that an applicant's account
    is false based on any statements that the judge finds inconsistent or
    implausible, or doesn't believe because of the applicant's manner or
    body language. If the judge, a Justice Department employee who hears
    asylum claims at an early stage, decided an applicant was not
    believable, a federal court would have limited authority to overrule
    that decision.

    -- Allow the immigration judge to require an applicant to produce
    evidence documenting a claim of persecution, unless the applicant
    cannot reasonably obtain it. A ruling by the judge that such
    documentation was needed would be virtually immune from review in
    federal court.

    -- Require applicants to prove that their status -- race, religion,
    nationality, political opinion or membership in a particular social
    group -- was "at least one central reason" they were persecuted in
    the past, or were likely to be persecuted if deported.

    Each of those revisions would harden definitions in current law.

    For example, the federal courts that hear appeals of asylum cases are
    already required to defer to an immigration judge's assessment of a
    witness' truthfulness, unless there is compelling evidence the judge
    was wrong. The law would tighten that standard.

    Opponents of the change point to cases like Matevosyan's, where an
    immigration judge found an applicant to be untruthful because of the
    judge's notions about the applicant's religious practices. Critics
    also fear the consequences of limiting federal court review of
    subjective decisions by immigration judges who work for the executive
    branch.

    "A person who is very nervous, very timid, from another culture, is
    going to be perceived as not truthful," especially when trying to
    describe a traumatic event, said Karen Musalo, director of the Center
    for Gender and Refugee Studies at UC Hastings College of the Law in
    San Francisco. "Imagine a fearful person entering the United States
    who doesn't know who they're speaking to and may not have an
    interpreter. Is that statement going to be used against them?"

    But supporters of the measure say it's needed to rein in Ninth
    Circuit judges who dismiss discrepancies in an applicant's story as
    only minor inconsistencies.

    For example, Soghoman Abovian, who said he was persecuted in Armenia
    for refusing to join the secret police, testified that Armenia's
    president met with him at least 15 times to pressure him to join, but
    never mentioned any such meeting in his written application. Noemi
    Garrovillas said in his asylum application that Filipino guerrillas
    had shot at him, but denied it on the witness stand and said he
    hadn't read the application a lawyer prepared for him. The Ninth
    Circuit reinstated both men's asylum cases in rulings criticized by
    backers of Real ID.

    Probably the most hotly disputed provision requires applicants to
    prove that their status was a central reason for their persecution.
    It does not appear to differ greatly from current law -- which makes
    asylum available to those fleeing persecution on account of their
    race, religion, nationality, political opinion or social group -- but
    opponents say the subtle shift in language could have harsh results.

    In a study of the proposed law, the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society
    predicted dire consequences for victims of religious persecution, who
    would be asked to "prove with unrealistic precision what is going on
    in their persecutors' minds." Other religious groups, including some
    conservative evangelicals, also opposed the provision.

    Similarly, said Stephen Knight, a lawyer at Hastings' Center for
    Gender and Refugee Studies, immigration judges have found that a
    lesbian was given electroshock treatment in Russia to cure her, not
    to persecute her, and that African women were subjected to genital
    mutilation for cultural reasons -- rulings that would be harder to
    overturn under the new standard.

    But supporters of Real ID say the change is crucial because of a line
    of Ninth Circuit rulings, starting in 1988, that found political
    persecution in cases where a foreign government imprisoned and
    tortured someone who was falsely accused of being a militant.

    Under such rulings, said Sensenbrenner, the United States would have
    to "grant asylum to aliens whose governments believe they are
    affiliated with terrorist organizations."

    He said in a letter to colleagues that "asylum fraud is a vehicle of
    choice for terrorists," citing an asylum application that allowed a
    mastermind of the first World Trade Center bombing in 1993 to remain
    in the country.

    But Congress quickly closed that loophole in 1994, and there's no
    evidence that would-be terrorists are applying for asylum, said
    American Civil Liberties Union lawyer Timothy Edgar, an opponent of
    Sensenbrenner's bill.

    "Asylum applicants are the most closely scrutinized group of any
    immigrants," Edgar said. "That's one reason why the 9/11 hijackers
    never applied for asylum."

    E-mail Bob Egelko at [email protected].

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    URL:http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/05/16/MNG
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