{"id":886,"date":"2008-09-30T07:49:35","date_gmt":"2008-09-30T12:49:35","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/law.marquette.edu\/facultyblog\/?p=886"},"modified":"2008-09-30T21:46:05","modified_gmt":"2008-10-01T02:46:05","slug":"attorney-general-cancels-the-stay-in-matter-of-r-a-the-case-of-a-guatemalan-woman-seeking-asylum-from-severe-domestic-violence","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/law.marquette.edu\/facultyblog\/2008\/09\/attorney-general-cancels-the-stay-in-matter-of-r-a-the-case-of-a-guatemalan-woman-seeking-asylum-from-severe-domestic-violence\/","title":{"rendered":"Attorney General Cancels Stay in Matter of R-A-, the Case of a Guatemalan Woman Seeking Asylum From Severe Domestic Violence"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a href=\"http:\/\/law.marquette.edu\/facultyblog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2008\/09\/liberty.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft size-medium wp-image-892\" style=\"margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 10px;\" src=\"http:\/\/law.marquette.edu\/facultyblog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2008\/09\/liberty.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"95\" height=\"126\" \/><\/a>Some of my former students will remember the domestic-violence asylum case, <a title=\"Matter of R-A-, Interim Decision #3404\" href=\"http:\/\/www.usdoj.gov\/eoir\/vll\/intdec\/vol22\/3403.pdf\" target=\"_blank\"><em>Matter of R-A-<\/em><\/a>, which had been pending in a sort of limbo state since January 2001. \u00a0The <em>R-A-<\/em> case presents the issue of whether an immigrant may obtain asylum in the United States on the basis of her well-founded fear that she will suffer severe domestic violence if she is returned to her country, violence from which her country will not protect her. \u00a0This week, Attorney General Michael Mukasey issued <a title=\"Mukasey decision\" href=\"http:\/\/www.usdoj.gov\/eoir\/vll\/intdec\/vol24\/3624.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">a decision<\/a> directing the Board of Immigration Appeals to reconsider the case.<\/p>\n<p><!--more-->The procedural history of the case is extraordinarily convoluted, even by immigration law standards. \u00a0The petitioner, R-A-, was granted political asylum by the Immigration Court in 1996, but the (now-defunct) Immigration and Naturalization Service appealed, and the decision granting R-A- refugee status\u00a0<a title=\"Matter of R-A-, Interim Decision #3403\" href=\"http:\/\/www.usdoj.gov\/eoir\/vll\/intdec\/vol22\/3403.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">was reversed by the Board of Immigration Appeals in 1999<\/a>. Subsequently, in 2001, Attorney General Janet Reno issued an <a title=\"Reno order\" href=\"http:\/\/cgrs.uchastings.edu\/documents\/legal\/ag_ra_order.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">order vacating <\/a>the Board of Appeals&#8217; decision and directed the Board to stay reconsideration pending anticipated approval of a new rule governing such matters. \u00a0However, that proposed new rule\u00a0has never become final, not even after Attorney General John Ashcroft <a title=\"Ashcroft order\" href=\"http:\/\/cgrs.uchastings.edu\/documents\/legal\/ag_ra_order_1-05.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">ordered <\/a>the Board to &#8220;reconsider the decision in light of the final rule&#8221; in 2005.<\/p>\n<p>The underlying facts of the case are undeniably horrifying. \u00a0The nature and extent of the violence experienced by R-A- was detailed in <a title=\"Matter of R-A-, Interim Decision #3403\" href=\"http:\/\/www.usdoj.gov\/eoir\/vll\/intdec\/vol22\/3403.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">the original decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals <\/a>and summed up by the <a title=\"Center for Gender and Refugee Studies, UC-Hastings\" href=\"http:\/\/cgrs.uchastings.edu\/\" target=\"_blank\">Center for Gender and Refugee Studies<\/a> at UC-Hastings, in <a title=\"CGRS page about R-A-\" href=\"http:\/\/cgrs.uchastings.edu\/campaigns\/update.php\" target=\"_blank\">its web page about her case<\/a>:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>[The petitioner&#8217;s husband] raped and sodomized [her], broke windows and mirrors with her head, dislocated her jaw, and tried to abort her child by kicking her violently in the spine.\u00a0 Besides using his hands and his feet against her, he also resorted to weapons\u2014pistol-whipping her, and terrorizing her with his machete.<\/p>\n<p>[The petitioner&#8217;s] repeated attempts to obtain protection failed.\u00a0 The police and the courts refused to intervene because it was a &#8220;domestic&#8221; matter.\u00a0 When she ran away, [her husband] found her and beat her unconscious.\u00a0 He told her that she could never get away from him, because he would &#8220;cut off her arms and legs, and . . . leave her in a wheelchair, if she ever tried to leave him.&#8221;<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>In\u00a0<a title=\"Matter of R-A-, Interim Decision #3403\" href=\"http:\/\/www.usdoj.gov\/eoir\/vll\/intdec\/vol22\/3403.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">its 1999 decision<\/a>, the Board of Immigration Appeals explained\u00a0that Guatemala failed to protect R-A- from this violence:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The respondent\u2019s pleas to Guatemalan police did not gain her protection. \u00a0On three occasions, the police issued summons for her husband to\u00a0appear, but he ignored them, and the police did not take further action. \u00a0Twice, the respondent called the police, but they never responded. When the\u00a0respondent appeared before a judge, he told her that he would not interfere\u00a0in domestic disputes. Her husband told the respondent that, because of his\u00a0former military service, calling the police would be futile as he was familiar\u00a0with law enforcement officials. The respondent knew of no shelters or\u00a0other organizations in Guatemala that could protect her.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Nonetheless, though expressing sympathy for the petitioner&#8217;s plight, the Board concluded she did not fit the definition of a &#8220;refugee&#8221;:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>It is not possible to review this record without having great sympathy\u00a0for the respondent and extreme contempt for the actions of her husband.\u00a0The questions before us, however, are not whether some equitable or prosecutorial\u00a0authority ought to be invoked to prevent the respondent\u2019s deportation\u00a0to Guatemala. Indeed, the Service has adequate authority in the form of \u201cdeferred action\u201d to accomplish that result if it deems it appropriate.\u00a0Rather, the questions before us concern the respondent\u2019s eligibility for relief\u00a0under our refugee and asylum laws. And, as explained below, we do not\u00a0agree with the Immigration Judge that the respondent was harmed on\u00a0account of either actual or imputed political opinion or membership in a\u00a0particular social group.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Reasonable minds can differ about this question, whether victims of domestic violence should receive protection as refugees. \u00a0But most everyone agrees that immigration cases should be resolved in a more timely and orderly fashion than this one has been. \u00a0Indeed, Attorney General Mukasey refers to the need to resolve this legal limbo in his <a title=\"Mukasey decision\" href=\"http:\/\/www.usdoj.gov\/eoir\/vll\/intdec\/vol24\/3624.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">new decision<\/a>:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>I have been advised that the Board has been holding not only\u00a0the case of the particular alien who is the subject of the <em>Matter of R-A-<\/em> decision,\u00a0but also a growing number of similar cases involving aliens who\u00a0have alleged that they were victims of domestic violence in their home\u00a0countries. [footnote omitted] The stay order has prevented the Board from acting on these cases.\u00a0In light of these developments and the fact that the proposed rule cited by\u00a0Attorney General Reno never has been made final, I have decided to lift the\u00a0stay so that the Board can revisit the issues in <em>Matter of R-A-<\/em> and related cases\u00a0and issue new decisions. Accordingly, the Board should now proceed as it\u00a0sees fit with its reconsideration of <em>Matter of R-A-<\/em> and the other cases . . . .<\/p><\/blockquote>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Some of my former students will remember the domestic-violence asylum case, Matter of R-A-, which had been pending in a sort of limbo state since January 2001. \u00a0The R-A- case presents the issue of whether an immigrant may obtain asylum in the United States on the basis of her well-founded fear that she will suffer 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