Document ID: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca7-15-03357/USCOURTS-ca7-15-03357-0/pdf.json

Parties Involved:
Loretta E. Lynch
Respondent
Guihu Yang
Petitioner

Document Text:

In the 

United States Court of Appeals 

For the Seventh Circuit ____________________

No. 15‐3357

GUIHU YANG,

Petitioner,

v.

LORETTA E. LYNCH,

Attorney General of the United States,

Respondent.

____________________

Petition for Review of an Order of the  

Board of Immigration Appeals.

No. A089‐678‐703

____________________

ARGUED JUNE 8, 2016 — DECIDED AUGUST 12, 2016

____________________

Before BAUER, MANION, and KANNE, Circuit Judges.

MANION, Circuit Judge. Guihu Yang, a 52‐year‐old Chinese

citizen from Shanxi province, petitions for review of the de‐

nial of his application for asylum based on his fears of forced

sterilization under China’s one‐child policy. Because substan‐

tial evidence supports the IJ’s conclusions that Yang was not

credible and that he did not adequately corroborate his ac‐

count, we deny the petition.  

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2 No. 15‐3357

Background

Yang came to the United States in 2007 on a business‐visi‐

tor visa he obtained by misrepresenting to U.S. officials that

he hoped to attend a university conference. A few months

later, he applied for asylum with U.S. Citizenship and Immi‐

gration Services, asserting that his wife twice had been forced

to undergo abortions and that he had been fired from his job

for refusing to be sterilized. His application was denied, and

he was placed in removal proceedings for having overstayed

his visa.  

At his removal hearing, Yang renewed his application for

asylum and testified about his family’s encounters with

China’s family‐planning apparatus. Yang and his wife,

Xiping Yao, had a son born in 1990. The son apparently was

in poor health. When asked to describe his son’s condition,

Yang simply said that the boy was “very weak” and caught

colds easily but doctors’ examinations produced no exact di‐

agnosis. According to Yang, their son’s poor health was the

reason that he and his wife wanted to have a second child. In

2002 Yao became pregnant, and the couple sought permission

to have a second child from the local birth‐control committee.

Their request was denied. Family‐planning officials then be‐

gan threatening them with fines and loss of their jobs unless

Yao underwent an abortion. The couple eventually gave in,

though Yang maintains that they had no real choice. After the

abortion, officials continued to visit their home once or twice

a month to remind them that they were not free to have an‐

other child.

In late 2006, Yao became pregnant again. To avoid atten‐

tion, she moved in with Yang’s parents in a village about an

Case: 15-3357 Document: 35 Filed: 08/12/2016 Pages: 10
No. 15‐3357 3

hour’s drive away. But within a month, family‐planning offi‐

cials from her workplace discovered her whereabouts, show‐

ing up at the home one night. Yang, who was not present be‐

cause he had remained in the city to continue working, testi‐

fied that the authorities “intimidated” her over the course of

six hours and then forcibly took her to the hospital to have an

abortion.  

Yao also testified at Yang’s asylum hearing and expanded

on this episode. She said that the officials wore her down with

their threats and intimidation, until she agreed to go back to

her workplace and “resolve” the matter. On the ride back she

fell asleep and awakened to find the car parked outside of a

hospital. The officials dragged her out of the car, and at some

point during her struggle with them she fell down a flight of

stairs and was knocked unconscious. She said that the fall

fractured her left arm and caused her to bleed from her lower

body. Upon regaining consciousness, she realized that she

had had an abortion. She remained in the hospital for three

months—a stay necessitated, she said, because of her frac‐

tured arm.  

After the episode, family‐planning officials wanted Yang

to be sterilized; his wife’s health, they said, was too compro‐

mised after the abortion to undergo the procedure herself.

Yang refused, and a few months later his employer fired him

for doing so. Family‐planning officials also frequented his

home and demanded that he undergo sterilization. Fearing

these visits, Yang said that he avoided his home and stayed

with friends or relatives. On the few occasions that he did re‐

turn home and encountered officials, he rebuffed them.  

In November 2007 Yang left China, alleging that he feared

being forcibly sterilized. Since his departure, his wife and

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neighbors have told him that officials continue to look for

him. His wife joined him in the United States in October 2012

on a tourist visa that she overstayed.

Yang supplemented his application with corroborative

documents. He submitted a medical record from Yao’s hospi‐

tal stay—saying that she was hospitalized for three months

because of a bone fracture and “broken nerve” on her left arm.

He also included two letters from neighbors in China saying

that family‐planning officials had inquired about his wherea‐

bouts, as well as a letter from his workplace manager stating

that he was fired for refusing to be sterilized, as required by

the company’s family‐planning officials.  

The IJ disbelieved the testimony of Yang and his wife, and

denied his applications for asylum, withholding of removal,

and protection under the Convention Against Torture. The IJ

offered six reasons for finding Yang not credible. One reason

had to do with Yang’s testimony that he did not know in 2006

whether he could have a second child legally; the IJ found this

testimony implausible, given Yao’s abortion in 2002 and the

frequent harassment that the couple said they endured from

family‐planning officials. Among other reasons, the IJ also be‐

lieved that Yang had testified inconsistently about the details

surrounding his son’s allegedly poor health, about the visits

that family‐planning officials purportedly made to his home

after his wife’s second abortion, and about the particular cir‐

cumstances in which he was fired from his job. The IJ also

found Yao not credible, primarily because she struggled to

answer questions and had difficulty remembering the details

of the second abortion. Finally, the IJ concluded that, under

the terms of the REAL ID Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(1)(B)(ii),

Yang had not provided sufficient corroborative evidence to

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No. 15‐3357 5

carry his burden of proof because he did not provide medical

records confirming treatments or procedures received by ei‐

ther his wife or son during their hospitalizations.

The Board of Immigration Appeals upheld the IJ’s deci‐

sion, concluding that the IJ had properly supported her find‐

ings concerning credibility and corroboration. The Board

highlighted three of the IJ’s reasons for finding Yang not cred‐

ible. First, Yang’s statement that he did not know whether he

and his wife legally could have a second child in 2006 was

implausible, given the couple’s past run‐ins with family‐plan‐

ning officials and Yao’s forced abortion earlier in 2002. Sec‐

ond, in his written statement accompanying his initial asylum

application, Yang failed to mention any encounters with fam‐

ily‐planning officials after his wife’s second abortion or any

reports that these officials sought him after he left China.

Third, Yang testified inconsistently regarding the extent he

stayed away from his own home after the second abortion

and whether during this time he encountered family‐plan‐

ning officials.  

The Board also agreed with the IJ that Yao’s testimony was

“insufficiently reliable and credible” because of her “absent‐

mindedness” and difficulty recalling details. And Yang’s cor‐

roborative evidence was insufficient, the Board added, be‐

cause the hospital record he submitted did not mention the

abortion procedure and the letter from his manager did not

explain why family‐planning officials continued to pursue

him after he was fired.

   

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Analysis

On appeal, Yang challenges three of the IJ’s express rea‐

sons (endorsed by the Board) for finding him not credible. If

the IJ had credited his testimony, his fears of forced steriliza‐

tion could form the basis for a well‐founded fear of future per‐

secution. See 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(42)(B); Chen v. Holder, 604 F.3d

324, 330–31 (7th Cir. 2010). Regarding the IJ’s first reason—

inconsistencies in his statements about whether he and his

wife lawfully could have a second child—he asserts that fam‐

ily‐planning enforcement is left to local officials’ discretion,

and that he plausibly hoped that his son’s chronic health con‐

dition could justify an exemption to have a second child—as

permitted with other families whose first child had a disabil‐

ity.  

But the IJ reasonably could find this explanation uncon‐

vincing. As the Board noted, just four years earlier in 2002,

Yao was forced to have an abortion despite whatever health

problems afflicted their son, and even afterwards the couple

was—in Yang’s words—“frequently harassed” by officials

who told them that they could not have another child. More‐

over, Yang has never specified the nature of the health issues

that affected his son; indeed, the son apparently was healthy

enough to work at a fast‐food restaurant, as Yao testified.  

Regarding the second reason that the IJ (and Board) of‐

fered for discrediting him—the omission from his initial writ‐

ten statement that family‐planning officials had visited him

repeatedly in the months following his wife’s 2006 abortion

and searched for him even after he left the country—Yang

contends that any omission is insignificant. But this discrep‐

ancy (as the IJ pointed out) strikes at his central reason for

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No. 15‐3357 7

fleeing China and seeking asylum—that he was being pur‐

sued by officials seeking to forcibly sterilize him. We have up‐

held adverse credibility findings based on non‐trivial incon‐

sistencies between an asylum applicant’s testimony and ap‐

plication. See Tawuo v. Lynch, 799 F.3d 725, 727 (7th Cir. 2015);

Hassan v. Holder, 571 F.3d 631, 637 (7th Cir. 2009). The omis‐

sion from Yang’s original written statement of any mention of

frequent visits by family‐planning officials is a noteworthy in‐

consistency that the IJ was entitled to rely on.

As forthe third reason—regarding his testimony about the

degree to which he stayed away from his home to evade fam‐

ily‐planning officials (staying away entirely vs. most of the

time)—he denies that there was any inconsistency. He main‐

tains that he credibly testified about needing to stay away

from home to avoid the officials but encountering them on in‐

termittent occasions when he briefly returned home.

We agree with Yang that this reason is unpersuasive, but

on its own this flaw is insufficient to disturb agency’s the ad‐

verse credibility finding. Viewed in context, Yang’s two state‐

ments were compatible: he did not testify that he never went

home; he consistently alluded to returning for brief visits. The

IJ’s unpersuasive reason notwithstanding, the Board’s first

two reasons are sufficient to support the adverse credibility

finding. An adverse credibility finding can be supported by

any non‐trivial inconsistencies in the applicant’s story, as is

the case here. See Tawuo, 799 F.3d at 727; Hassan, 571 F.3d at

637.1

                                                 

1 Further, Yang does not articulate—and therefore has waived—any

challenge to several other reasons that the IJ gave for discrediting Yang’s

testimony: his inconsistent testimony about whether he was fired by letter

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Yang also challenges the IJ’s finding that his wife was not

credible. She had described being forced to undergo two abor‐

tions, the second of which followed a physical struggle with

family‐planning officials that resulted in her falling down a

flight of stairs and being knocked unconscious.  

The IJ’s assessment of Yao’s testimony indeed was flawed,

but we accept the Board’s determination that her testimony

could not cure the defects in Yang’s account. Her testimony

does not salvage the omissions and inconsistencies that we’ve

already addressed in Yang’s testimony and written state‐

ments. Nonetheless, two missteps in the IJ’s analysis of Yao’s

credibility need to be pointed out. In discrediting Yao, the IJ

relied on questionable assumptions about her demeanorin re‐

marking that she “became increasingly uncomfortable and

nervous, and her responsiveness diminished” and that she

“struggled to answer questions.” First, we’ve commented on

the unreliability of demeanor evidence generally, see United

States v. Pickering, 794 F.3d 802, 805 (7th Cir. 2015), and the

particular difficulty of using such evidence to evaluate the

credibility of witnesses from other cultures,see Djouma v. Gon‐

zales, 429 F.3d 685, 687 (7th Cir. 2005). And we’ve criticized an

overreliance on findings arising from minor memory lapses

when a witness testifies about events from years earlier.

See Kadia v. Gonzales, 501 F.3d 817, 822 (7th Cir. 2007). Second,

the IJ faulted her for not remembering particular circum‐

stances at the hospital that she could not reasonably have

known if she was knocked unconscious, as she testified—e.g.,

                                                 

or by phone call, whether he had any savings to draw from when he lost

his job, the precise age at which his son’s health problems became appar‐

ent, and whether the son now holds a job. See Haichun Liu v. Holder,

692 F.3d 848, 851 (7th Cir. 2012).

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No. 15‐3357 9

how many stairs she fell down, why she was bleeding from

her lower body, having no recollection of the abortion proce‐

dure.  

Yang also challenges the agency’s conclusion that he did

not sufficiently corroborate his account under the REAL ID

Act, and in particular, that he should have been able to obtain

more medical documents about his wife’s and son’s medical

circumstances. Yang asks whether other documentation rea‐

sonably would have been available. Although we agree that

the IJ and the Board inappropriately faulted Yang for not

providing evidence of any forced abortions, see San Kai Kwok

v. Gonzales, 455 F.3d 766, 771 (7th Cir. 2006); Zhang v. Gonzales,

434 F.3d 993, 999–1000 (7th Cir. 2006), the IJ was entitled to

expect corroboration of other medical treatment that his wife

and son received. When asked whether the hospital had rec‐

ords pertaining to his son, Yang replied that it did, and even

acknowledged that he would have been given them had he

asked, but he simply didn’t think to do so. Nor did Yang think

to provide any evidence about the medical condition of his

son, whose poor health was the basis for Yang’s contention

that he might have qualified for an exemption from the one‐

child policy. More puzzlingly, Yang supplied no evidence to

explain why his wife needed to remain in the hospital for as

long as three months to treat a fractured arm. Because this ev‐

idence was reasonably obtainable, the IJ was entitled to re‐

quire Yang to provide it to sustain his burden of proof.

See 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(1)(B)(ii).

Finally, Yang contends that the IJ and the Board failed to

address his eligibility for withholding of removal and protec‐

tion under CAT. But as the government correctly points out,

Yang waived these challenges because his appeal to the Board

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addressed his application for asylum only. See 8 C.F.R.

§ 1003.3(b).  

Because substantial evidence supports the IJ’s conclusion

that Yang was not credible and that he had not sufficiently

corroborated his account, we deny the petition for review.

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