Martinez-Guevara v. Garland
5th Cir.
5th Cir.
Case: 20-60624 Document: 00516223610 Page: 1 Date Filed: 03/03/2022
United States Court of Appeals
for the Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
No. 20-60624 March 3, 2022
Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
Sonia Maritzel Martinez-Guevara,
Petitioner,
versus
Merrick Garland, U.S. Attorney General,
Respondent.
Petition for Review of an Order of
the Board of Immigration Appeals
No. A 094 787 317
Before Smith, Elrod, and Oldham, Circuit Judges.
Jerry E. Smith, Circuit Judge:
Sonia Martinez-Guevara, an alien, seeks review of an order of re-
moval. She says that worsened conditions in her home country entitle her to
remain in the United States. The Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA” or
“Board”) affirmed her removal. But Martinez-Guevara insists that the Board
abused its discretion by neglecting evidence and misapplying the law. That
leaves us two questions.
First is our jurisdiction. Martinez-Guevara did not move the BIA to
reconsider its ruling. We must decide whether that deprives us of jurisdiction
Case: 20-60624 Document: 00516223610 Page: 2 Date Filed: 03/03/2022
No. 20-60624
on petition for review. It does not. Next are the merits. The Board did not
err, so we deny the petition.
I.
In 2006, Martinez-Guevara swam the Rio Grande River into the wait-
ing arms of federal border agents, who transported her to a processing center.
But that year, more than a million noncitizens illegally entered through the
southwest border—a number not surpassed until now. 1 The crush of cross-
ings overwhelmed federal authorities. Lacking space to detain Martinez-
Guevara, they released her with orders to appear before an immigration court
in Harlingen, Texas. Yet Martinez-Guevara never showed. She escaped in-
land, and the immigration court ordered her removal if she were found.
Thirteen years later, Martinez-Guevara moved to reopen her removal
proceedings, seeking asylum and related relief. An alien usually must file
such a motion within ninety days of the removal order. See 8 U.S.C. § 1229a-
(c)(7)(C)(i). But our petitioner claims an excuse: She says that conditions in
El Salvador, her home country, have materially worsened since the removal
order issued. If she can show that, the ninety-day time bar does not apply. Id.
§ 1229a(c)(7)(C)(ii).
To support her motion to reopen, Martinez-Guevara contends that
since the removal order, gangs in El Salvador have attacked the families of
police there. That “systematic” activity, she claims, caused a material
1
See U.S. Border Patrol, Southwest Border Sectors: Total En-
counters by Fiscal Year, https://www.cbp.gov/sites/default/files/assets/docu-
ments/2021-Aug/US59B8~1.PDF (last visited Dec. 2, 2021); Nick Miroff, Border Arrests
Have Soared to All-Time High, New CBP Data Shows, Wash. Post (Oct. 20, 2021),
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/border-arrests-record-levels-2021/2021/10/
19/289dce64-3115-11ec-a880-a9d8c009a0b1_story.html (reporting that the 2021 fiscal year
marked an all-time high of 1.66 million alien detentions on the southern border).
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worsening of conditions in El Salvador. And because two of her relatives are
police officers, she says she has shown that she reasonably fears future perse-
cution because of her “membership in a particular social group.” Id.
§ 1158(b)(1)(B)(i). If proved, all that could make Martinez-Guevara eligible
to remain in the United States.
With her motion, Martinez-Guevara presents personal documents, a
State Department report, and seven news articles from El Salvador. The doc-
uments show that she has police officers in her family and that their relatives
have received death threats from gangs stemming from that relationship. The
State Department report, published the year after the removal order, does not
discuss gang-related attacks on police in El Salvador, though it does recount
a mass shooting that killed or wounded a dozen officers. The news articles,
from several years later, report attacks on police officers and their families.
They also recount the belief of two Salvadoran officials that the attacks re-
flected a campaign of gang violence.
The immigration judge (“I.J.”) denied Martinez-Guevara’s motion as
untimely. The I.J. acknowledged that the petitioner had evidenced attacks on
police officers’ relatives and threats against her family. But the I.J. con-
cluded, citing Singh v. Lynch, 840 F.3d 220 (5th Cir. 2016) (per curiam), that
Martinez-Guevara did not “meet the heavy burden [she] must overcome to
show changed country conditions.”
Martinez-Guevara appealed that ruling to the BIA, stressing her evi-
dence—from the two Salvadoran officials—that gangs had coordinated the
recent attacks. That evidence, she urged, showed a “systematic strategy of
targeting” police officers’ relatives, and that this strategy had materially al-
tered conditions in El Salvador. She then distinguished her case from Singh,
where she said the petitioner and his family had endured “isolated” threats
of violence.
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The BIA affirmed. Refining the I.J.’s reasoning, the Board observed
that the petitioner had shown, at most, an “incremental increase in violence
in El Salvador since 2006.” And under Singh, the Board explained, mere
“continuance” of violence in a place, id. at 222, does not prove “a material
change” in conditions there. Likewise, though the threats against Martinez-
Guevara’s relatives altered “her personal circumstances,” they did not reflect
a dramatic nationwide shift. The BIA thus dismissed Martinez-Guevara’s
appeal.
Instead of asking the BIA to reconsider, Martinez-Guevara came to us.
She petitions for review on two grounds. First, she claims that the Board
abused its discretion by not discussing two of the news articles she offered as
evidence. Second, she contends that the Board misapplied Singh.
We do not agree. The BIA did not abuse its discretion, so we deny the
petition for review. But first, we explain why we have jurisdiction.
II.
We always may question our jurisdiction, even if neither side contests
it. Goonsuwan v. Ashcroft, 252 F.3d 383, 385(5th Cir. 2001). And we would lack jurisdiction over this appeal unless the petitioner has exhausted her rem- edies before the Board. Ibrahim v. Garland,19 F.4th 819, 825
(5th Cir. 2021);8 U.S.C. § 1252
(d)(1). Martinez-Guevara lost before the I.J., appealed, and
then lost at the Board. But she did not ask the Board to reconsider its judg-
ment; instead, she came directly to us. We must decide whether she had to
ask the Board to reconsider its ruling to exhaust her claims. We think not.
A.
Congress constricts our review of removal orders. We may review
such an order insofar as “the alien has exhausted all administrative remedies
available to [her] as of right.” 8 U.S.C. § 1252(d)(1). In other words, if a
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remedy is available, the alien must use it.
Requiring exhaustion ensures that the BIA can apply its expertise to
claims before they reach us. Dale v. Holder, 610 F.3d 294, 301(5th Cir. 2010). Exhaustion also promotes finality in immigration cases; it cuts the risk that we must prolong a proceeding by reversing to correct errors that the Board had no chance to address. See Cruz Rodriguez v. Garland,993 F.3d 340, 345
(5th Cir. 2021) (per curiam).
Martinez-Guevara has moved to reopen her removal proceedings.
Such a motion goes first to an I.J. See 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(a), (b). If the peti-
tioner loses there, she may appeal to the Board. 8 C.F.R. §§ 1003.1(b)(3),
1003.38(a). If she loses there, she may ask the Board to reconsider. 8 U.S.C.
§ 1229a(c)(6)(A).
Reading Section 1252(d), one might think we lack jurisdiction: Mar-
tinez-Guevara did not seek reconsideration from the Board; reconsideration
appears to be an “administrative remed[y],” id. § 1252(d)(1); so she did not
exhaust.
But our caselaw says otherwise. In this circuit, a petitioner exhausts a
claim by presenting it to the BIA—whether on appeal or on a motion to re-
consider. That’s why a motion to reconsider is not “generally required” to
exhaust. Omari v. Holder, 562 F.3d 314, 320(5th Cir. 2009). Such a motion is necessary, we have said, only when the Board’s decision “itself results in a new issue and the [Board] has an available and adequate means for address- ing” it.Id.
A new issue is one that “neither party could have possibly raised” before the Board’s decision.Id.
at 320–21.
Our caselaw thus creates two classes of claims: The first includes
claims raised or lost at the BIA. Those claims are exhausted, so we can hear
them even without a motion to reconsider. See Dale, 610 F.3d at 300–01. Of
course, a petitioner cannot contest the Board’s errors before it. But that does
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not mean every mistake by the Board calls for a motion to reconsider. Such a
motion is not required when the petitioner “raised, presented, or mentioned”
the direct predicate of the Board’s error to the Board. Vazquez v. Sessions, 885
F.3d 862, 868 (5th Cir. 2018) (cleaned up).
That’s why we can hear claims that the Board wrongly weighed the
evidence 2 or misapplied the law. Those claims are new in some sense. But
so long as the petitioner raised the same claims to the Board on appeal from
the I.J., the Board had a chance to address them, so they are exhausted. 3
The second class holds claims alleging some new defect that the BIA
“never had a chance to consider.” Avelar-Oliva v. Barr, 954 F.3d 757, 766(5th Cir. 2020) (quotation omitted). Such claims present a “wholly new ground for relief” that arises “only as a consequence of” the Board’s error.Id.
(empha- sis added) (cleaned up). We treat those claims as unexhausted unless the pe- titioner presents them to the Board in a motion to reconsider.Id.
Claims that
the Board “engaged in impermissible factfinding” 4 or applied the wrong stan-
dard of review 5 belong to this unreviewable class. So do claims that the
Board’s ruling on a properly presented issue breached a procedural require-
ment or the petitioner’s due-process rights. 6
2
See Tabora Gutierrez v. Garland, 12 F.4th 496, 503–06 (5th Cir. 2021) (considering
such a claim after setting aside a standard-of-review challenge for want of jurisdiction).
3
See, e.g., Dale, 610 F.3d at 300 (holding that petitioner had exhausted because he
“dispute[d] only the [Board’s] answer” to the legal question whether he was convicted of
an aggravated felony).
4
Omari, 562 F.3d at 321.
5
See, e.g., Avelar-Oliva, 954 F.3d at 766.
6
See, e.g., Judhani v. Holder, 538 F. App’x 562, 563(5th Cir. 2013) (per curiam) (“Although the petitioners allege due-process violations, they may not escape the exhaus- tion requirement by couching their claims, which could have been raised in the first instance before the [Board], in terms of due process.”); Roy v. Ashcroft,389 F.3d 132, 137
(5th
6
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In short, to classify a claim, we ask whether the Board had a chance to
consider it. The Board need not actually decide or consider the issue; what
matters is whether the petitioner presented it.
Claims that the BIA considered are exhausted. Ibrahim, 19 F.4th
at 825. “[B]rand new” arguments are not.Id. at 826
. Between those ex- tremes, we ask whether the petitioner “could reasonably tie” what she said to the Board to her claims before us.Id.
(cleaned up). If she can do that, she
exhausted.
B.
Martinez-Guevara presents two claims here. First, she says that the
BIA abused its discretion by not discussing two of the articles she offered as
evidence. Second, she avers that the Board “erred by misapplying” Singh,
which she says is not like her case. The question is whether Martinez-Gue-
vara gave the Board a chance to consider each claim, and the answer is yes.
Our petitioner has exhausted her claims, so we have jurisdiction.
Martinez-Guevara first protests that the Board did not address the two
news articles. Those articles recount two Salvadoran officials’ belief that
gangs were targeting police officers’ relatives to undermine policing in the
country. That claim would be unexhausted had she not raised it to the Board.
But she did raise it—when she asked the Board to reverse the I.J.’s ruling on
the same ground. Martinez-Guevara told the Board that the I.J. had erred
because the news articles showed “a systematic strategy” to “target[ ] the
family members of police officers.” That strategy, she claimed, changed “the
country conditions in El Salvador.” Because the Board had a chance to
Cir. 2004) (per curiam) (“Procedural error correctable by the Board . . . is properly subject
to the exhaustion requirement.” (cleaned up)).
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address that claim then, it is exhausted now.
The same is true of the second claim. In her brief before the BIA,
Martinez-Guevara urged that the I.J. had misapplied Singh. The Board ad-
dressed that claim; it cited Singh and explained why it controlled. That claim
is exhausted. 7
Petitioners often accuse the BIA of ignoring evidence. 8 Faced with
such claims, we must review our jurisdiction with care. To exhaust her rem-
edies, a petitioner who says that the Board committed a new error must bring
that claim to the Board in a motion to reconsider. 9 Mandatory exhaustion
regimes brook no exceptions. Ross v. Blake, 578 U.S. 632, 639 (2016).
But we can hear this appeal. Martinez-Guevara alleges nothing new.
She accuses the Board of repeating the legal and factual errors that she asked
it to correct when she appealed the I.J.’s adverse ruling. We see no point in
“calling the BIA to ponder once again the very issue[s] upon which it has al-
ready ruled.” Dale, 610 F.3d at 301 (cleaned up). This petitioner has ex-
hausted. 10
7
See Ibrahim, 19 F.4th at 825 (“If the BIA deems an issue sufficiently presented to
consider it on the merits, such action by the BIA exhausts the issue.” (cleaned up)).
8
See, e.g., Rodriguez-Perdomo v. Barr, 784 F. App’x 258, 261 (5th Cir. 2019) (per
curiam).
9
Thus, insofar as Martinez-Guevara contends only that the BIA erred procedurally,
her claim that the BIA ignored relevant evidence is unexhausted because she did not first
raise it in a motion for reconsideration. Cf. Omari, 562 F.3d at 321; Cabrera v. Sessions,890 F.3d 153, 162
(5th Cir. 2018).
10
See Omari, 562 F.3d at 320(“If a party disagrees with the BIA’s resolution of an issue previously raised before the BIA, there is no need to reargue this issue in a motion for reconsideration.” (cleaned up)); see also Dale,610 F.3d at 301
(“Federal jurisdiction is not
conditioned upon the petitioner affording the BIA a second bite at the apple to rid its opin-
ion of any legal error; administrative exhaustion requires only that federal courts refrain
from addressing an immigration issue until the appropriate administrative authority has had
8
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III.
Turning to the merits, we agree with the Board and deny the petition
for review.
The BIA enjoys vast discretion when it denies motions to reopen. We
must deny a petition for review unless the Board’s decision is entirely capri-
cious, irrational, or unfounded. Gomez-Palacios v. Holder, 560 F.3d 354, 358(5th Cir. 2009). The Board may not ignore critical evidence or draw absurd conclusions from it. See, e.g., Abdel-Masieh v. INS,73 F.3d 579
, 584–85 (5th
Cir. 1996). But anything short of that must stand.
The BIA is required only to “consider the issues raised and announce
its decision in terms sufficient to enable a reviewing court to perceive that it
has heard and thought and not merely reacted.” Efe v. Ashcroft, 293 F.3d 899,
908(5th Cir. 2002) (cleaned up). 11 The Board need not acknowledge every piece of evidence that a petitioner presents. Seeid.
(“The Board does not
have to write an exegesis on every contention.” (cleaned up)). It need only
show that it considered the petitioner’s claim, supported its view with some
evidence, and did not ignore facts that would render its decision entirely un-
reasonable.
The BIA easily satisfies that low bar. It acknowledged the evidence
and weighed it carefully. Though conceding that the 2006 State Department
report did not discuss gang violence against police officers’ families, the
Board observed that Martinez-Guevara had not linked the attacks described
the opportunity to apply its specialized knowledge and experience to the matter.” (cleaned
up)).
11
See also Singh, 840 F.3d at 222 (“The BIA’s ruling will stand, even if this court
concludes it is erroneous, so long as it is not capricious, racially invidious, utterly without
foundation in the evidence, or otherwise so irrational that it is arbitrary rather than the re-
sult of any perceptible rational approach.” (cleaned up)).
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in the news articles to a national trend.
To conclude that, the Board did not need specifically to refute the two
Salvadoran officials’ belief that the violence arose from a coordinated gang
campaign. Neither official explained why he believed that, and one admitted
that he needed to “find out” whether his suspicions were “true.” Given the
weakness of that evidence, it certainly was not critical. Cf. Abdel-Masieh,
73 F.3d at 584–86. The Board could and did conclude that the evidence
showed too little violence—gang-coordinated or not—to prove a material
change in country conditions.
Nor did the BIA err applying Singh. Like Martinez-Guevara, Singh
filed an untimely motion to reopen and claimed that evidence of violence in
his home country entitled him to relief. We denied review and affirmed the
Board, which declined to reopen Singh’s case because Singh had not shown
that conditions at home “ha[d] substantially deteriorated” since the removal
order. Singh, 840 F.3d at 222.
So too here. Like Singh, Martinez-Guevara presents compelling evi-
dence of a personal change in circumstances. But to obtain relief, she also
must show a dramatic nationwide change. From her scattered anecdotal evi-
dence, the Board concluded that she did not meet that heavy burden. That
conclusion was neither irrational nor unsupported. Cf. Ramos-Lopez v. Lynch,
823 F.3d 1024, 1026 (5th Cir. 2016).
The petition for review is DENIED.
10
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