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No. 10573977
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
G. C. v. Bondi
No. 10573977 · Decided May 8, 2025
No. 10573977·Ninth Circuit · 2025·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
May 8, 2025
Citation
No. 10573977
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
EDGAR G.C., No. 21-1228
Petitioner, Agency No.
A200-694-332
v.
ORDER AND
PAMELA BONDI, Attorney General, AMENDED
OPINION
Respondent.
On Petition for Review of an Order of the
Board of Immigration Appeals
Argued and Submitted April 2, 2024
Pasadena, California
Filed July 30, 3034
Amended May 8, 2025
Before: Ryan D. Nelson, Lawrence VanDyke, and Gabriel
P. Sanchez, Circuit Judges.
Order;
Opinion by Judge VanDyke;
Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge Sanchez
2 G.C. V. BONDI
SUMMARY *
Immigration
The panel filed (1) an order amending the opinion filed
on July 30, 2024, denying a petition for panel rehearing and
for rehearing en banc, and indicating that no further petitions
will be entertained; and (2) an amended opinion denying
G.C.’s petition for review of the Board of Immigration
Appeals’ decision upholding the denial of withholding of
removal and protection under the Convention Against
Torture.
G.C. sought withholding of removal and CAT protection
based on a risk of future persecution and torture by his father
and the Los Zetas cartel, of which his father is a member.
The panel held that the BIA did not abuse its discretion
in determining that G.C.’s assault conviction under
California Penal Code § 245(a)(4) constituted a particularly
serious crime, which rendered him ineligible for withholding
relief. Both the IJ and the BIA relied on appropriate
evidence in conducting their analyses, including evidence of
G.C.’s mental illnesses, and plausibly concluded that G.C.’s
mental illnesses did not render the assault a less reliable
indicator of G.C.’s dangerousness.
With respect to CAT protection, G.C. contended that the
agency erred by wrongly discounting evidence of past harm
by his father because such abuse occurred in the United
States, not Mexico. G.C. argued that “past torture” must
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
G.C. V. BONDI 3
include abuse outside the proposed country of removal
because unlike 8 C.F.R. § 1208.16(b)(1)(i), which applies to
claims for withholding relief and requires evidence of past
persecution in the proposed country of removal, the text of 8
C.F.R. § 1208.16(c)(3)(i) imposes no geographic limitation
on past torture for CAT claims. The panel agreed with the
government’s interpretation of the CAT regulations.
Despite the textual difference between the two regulations,
the regulatory definition of “torture” requires that the torture
must occur with the acquiescence of the government to be
actionable under CAT. Thus, a past injury that would
otherwise rise to the level of torture in the United States does
not fit the regulatory definition of “torture” because such
injury did not occur with the acquiescence of the Mexican
government. Practically speaking, past harm in the United
States says nothing about the likelihood that the Mexican
government will acquiesce to severe harm in
Mexico. Moreover, while G.C.’s testimony about his
father’s history of abuse might be some evidence of his
father’s intent to cause G.C. harm in the future, it says
nothing at all about the Mexican government’s willingness
to acquiesce in such torture. And as the regulatory definition
of “torture” makes clear, infliction, instigation, or
acquiescence is an element that is required for abuse or harm
to qualify as past “torture” under CAT.
The panel also held that substantial evidence supported
the agency’s findings regarding the likelihood of future
torture. Given the passage of time, past unfulfilled death
threats, and the lack of clarity regarding G.C.’s father’s
motives, the record did not compel the conclusion that
G.C.’s father would more likely than not seek to torture him
upon his return to Mexico.
4 G.C. V. BONDI
Concurring in part and dissenting in part, Judge Sanchez
agreed that the BIA did not abuse its discretion in concluding
that G.C.’s assault conviction was a particularly serious
crime. However, Judge Sanchez would find that G.C. is
entitled to CAT protection because the uncontroverted
evidence, including extensive country conditions and expert
evidence, compelled the conclusion that G.C. is likely to be
targeted and tortured by his father upon his removal to
Mexico.
COUNSEL
Estelle M. McKee (argued), Supervising Attorney; Alyssa
Kastner (argued), Certified Law Student; Cornell Law
School, Asylum and Convention Against Torture Appellate
Clinic, Ithaca, New York; Luis C. Romero and Amy
Rubenstein, Novo Legal Group PLLC, Kent, Washington;
for Petitioner.
Aric A. Anderson (argued), Trial Attorney; Kohsei Ugumori
and Elizabeth K. Fitzgerald-Sambou, Senior Litigation
Counsel; John W. Blakeley, Senior Counsel for Appellate
Litigation; Holly M. Smith, Assistant Director; Office of
Immigration Litigation; Yaakov M. Roth, Acting Assistant
Attorney General; Brian M. Boynton, Principal Deputy
Assistant Attorney General; Civil Division, United States
Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.; for Respondent.
Aadhithi Padmanabhan, University of Maryland Francis
King Carey School of Law, Federal Appellate Immigration
Clinic, Baltimore, Maryland, for Amicus Curiae The
Florence Immigrant and Refugee Rights Project.
G.C. V. BONDI 5
ORDER
The majority opinion and partial dissent filed on July 30,
2024, are hereby amended. The amended opinion and
amended partial dissent will be filed concurrently with this
order.
Judge Nelson and Judge VanDyke voted to deny the
petition for panel rehearing and rehearing en banc. Judge
Sanchez voted to grant the petition. The full court has been
advised of the petition for rehearing en banc and no judge
has requested a vote on whether to rehear the matter en banc.
Fed. R. App. P. 40. The petition for panel rehearing and
rehearing en banc (Dkt. No. 64) is thus DENIED. No further
petitions for rehearing shall be filed.
OPINION
VANDYKE, Circuit Judge:
Petitioner G.C. 1 petitions for review of a decision of the
Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) affirming the denial of
his claims for asylum, withholding of removal, and
Convention Against Torture (CAT) deferral. His petition,
which details the litany of abuses he suffered during
childhood at the hands of his now-deported father, contends
that he is entitled to withholding and CAT relief based on a
risk of future persecution and torture by his father and the
Los Zetas cartel, of which his father is a member.
1
Because the court previously granted (Dkt. No. 27) Petitioner’s motion
to use a pseudonym (Dkt. No. 26) in any written decision of the court,
this opinion refers to him simply as “G.C.”
6 G.C. V. BONDI
The record does not compel reversal of the agency’s
denial of G.C.’s claims for withholding and CAT relief.
First, the BIA did not abuse its discretion in determining that
G.C.’s assault conviction constituted a particularly serious
crime, which rendered him ineligible for withholding relief.
See Avendano-Hernandez v. Lynch, 800 F.3d 1072, 1077–78
(9th Cir. 2015). For that reason, we need not consider G.C.’s
challenges to the BIA’s alternative holding that his
withholding claim failed on the merits. And as for his CAT
claim, substantial evidence supports the BIA’s conclusion
that G.C. has failed to show his father would “more likely
than not” torture or kill him upon his return to Mexico. See
Rodriguez-Zuniga v. Garland, 69 F.4th 1012, 1023–24 (9th
Cir. 2023). We thus deny G.C.’s petition for review.
I. Background
A. Events Leading Up to G.C.’s Removal Proceedings
G.C. is a native and citizen of Mexico. He was born in
1995 and entered the United States without valid entry
documents shortly thereafter, sometime in 1996. He has
resided in the United States ever since. For much of his
childhood G.C. had no lawful status in the United States, but
in 2012 he obtained lawful permanent residency after filing
a Special Immigrant Juvenile petition.
In February 2018, G.C. was convicted of petty theft
under California Penal Code §§ 484(a)–488 and sentenced
to 10 days’ imprisonment. Later that year, he was charged
with felony assault with force likely to produce great bodily
injury under California Penal Code § 245(a)(4). He pled
guilty and was sentenced to 270 days in county jail and 3
years of probation. In December 2018, the Department of
Homeland Security served him with a notice to appear
charging him with removability under 8 U.S.C.
G.C. V. BONDI 7
§ 1227(a)(2)(A)(ii) as an alien “convicted of two or more
crimes involving moral turpitude, not arising out of a single
scheme of criminal misconduct.”
G.C. initially appeared before an Immigration Judge
(“IJ”) pro se. But after an inquiry into his competency
pursuant to Franco-Gonzalez v. Holder, No. CV-10-02211,
2014 WL 5475097 (C.D. Cal. Oct. 29, 2014), the IJ
appointed a qualified representative to represent him during
the remainder of the removal proceedings. Through his
qualified representative, G.C. contested removability. After
a contested removal hearing, the IJ sustained the charge
based on his underlying theft and assault convictions.
G.C. then applied for asylum, withholding of removal,
and CAT relief, arguing that he has a well-founded fear of
future persecution and torture upon his return to Mexico
arising from several sources, including (1) the police, (2) his
now-deported father and the Los Zetas cartel, (3) other
cartels, and (4) Mexico’s inadequate psychiatric facilities.
He also claimed membership in three different proposed
classes of particular social groups (“PSGs”): (1) “Sons of
[G.C.’s Father],” (2) “Mexican Criminal Deportees with
Visible Markers of Gang Membership,” and (3) Mexicans
with Perceptible Mental Illness.”
In support of his application, G.C. offered (1) his own
testimony, (2) the testimony of his mother, (3) the testimony
of an expert witness, Dr. Robert Kirkland, (4) a
psychological evaluation produced by a licensed clinical
social worker, Deana Gullo, and (5) various declarations
from friends and family members. The IJ found that G.C.,
his mother, and Dr. Kirkland all testified credibly, and the
BIA did not disturb those credibility determinations.
8 G.C. V. BONDI
After arriving in the United States, G.C. lived with his
mother and sporadically with his father, who was in and out
of prison during his childhood. His father physically,
emotionally, and sexually abused G.C. and his siblings. He
was particularly abusive toward G.C. He made fun of G.C.’s
learning and speech disabilities, forced him to use drugs and
to steal, molested him, and regularly called him vulgar
names—notably for present purposes including the word
“bitch.”
Though G.C.’s family left Mexico to escape the threat of
violence caused by his father’s involvement with Los Zetas,
his father remained involved with gangs and selling drugs in
the United States. When G.C. was 14, his father was
deported for drug offenses to Mexico, where he remains a
member of the Los Zetas cartel. G.C. has not seen his father
since his father’s arrest and deportation.
Though his father has not abused him since he was
deported, G.C.’s mental health has suffered because of the
abuse he suffered in childhood. He has regularly used drugs
and has attempted suicide several times. At one point he
belonged to a gang. Gullo, the licensed clinical social
worker who examined G.C., diagnosed him with
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), Major Depressive
Disorder, Unspecified Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other
Psychotic Disorder, Specific Learning Disorder, and Opioid
Use Disorder. The record elsewhere indicates a prior
diagnosis for Bipolar Disorder. He suffers from panic
attacks, sees shadows, and experiences auditory
hallucinations of his father repeating insults from his
childhood. These symptoms persist regardless of whether
G.C. takes his prescribed medication. G.C.’s childhood
history of abuse has led to anger-management issues, and he
G.C. V. BONDI 9
responds poorly to being called names his father once called
him, including the “b-word.”
The parties dispute the extent to which this evidence of
G.C.’s mental health and anger-management issues is
relevant to analyzing whether his 2018 assault conviction
constitutes a particularly serious crime. G.C., who was
homeless at the time of the assault, was drinking and doing
drugs with two other men on the roof of a parking garage. 2
One of the men called him a “bitch,” and in response, G.C.
“snapped,” “blacked out,” and “started just beating him up.”
G.C. testified that he punched the man, knocking him over,
and continued to kick him after he had fallen to the ground.
A police report of the incident corroborates this testimony,
noting that G.C. continued to kick or knee the victim in the
head from behind after he had fallen over. G.C. was under
the influence of drugs at the time of the assault.
B. G.C.’s Fear of Harm Upon Returning to Mexico
The evidence regarding G.C.’s father’s intentions toward
him is mixed. G.C. and his family believe that his father
resides in the Tijuana area and remains an active member of
the Los Zetas cartel. In his declaration, G.C. stated that
during his childhood his father repeatedly threatened to kill
him, but he has obviously never followed through on such
threats. G.C.’s mother and brother testified that his father
has made more recent death threats toward G.C. since his
deportation. On the other hand, G.C.’s mother testified that
on at least one occasion, G.C.’s father expressed a desire to
help him, but his mother explained she did not believe his
father’s offer to help given his continued involvement with
the cartel and the prior death threats.
2
His mother had kicked him out of her home due to his drug use.
10 G.C. V. BONDI
As further evidence of his father’s hostility, G.C. noted
that his father recently orchestrated an assault on G.C.’s
maternal grandmother, who lives in Mexico. G.C.’s mother,
however, attributed the assault to his father’s motivation to
force her to reunite with him, not to any hostility toward G.C.
Overall, the record is not entirely clear regarding who in
G.C.’s family his father seeks to harm and what his motives
are for doing so.
Should he be deported, G.C. and Dr. Kirkland anticipate
that his father will easily be able to determine G.C.’s
whereabouts because the United States shares information
about criminal deportees with the Mexican government, and
Los Zetas is readily able to obtain such information through
its government contacts. Cartels like Los Zetas are
particularly active around Tijuana and other ports of entry,
and Los Zetas has “a strong presence in about 17 Mexican
states—or half the country.” Moreover, G.C. has visible,
gang-related tattoos, and he testified that other cartels will
associate him with his father and the Zetas because (1) his
last name is uncommon and therefore recognizable and
(2) his father is well known.
The evidence regarding resources available to G.C. to
mitigate these risks is also mixed. On one hand, Kirkland
testified that G.C. may have a difficult time obtaining police
protection because of his criminal record and because he will
not have lived in Mexico for a long time after his
deportation. But on the other hand, Kirkland testified that
the Mexican National Guard and federal police have made
“significant … improvement” in combatting cartel violence,
and that the government is not “inept” in dealing with the
problems posed by cartels.
G.C. V. BONDI 11
Additionally, there are nonprofit organizations operating
on the border that offer recent deportees temporary shelter
and protection from the cartels, and the Mexican government
has both a national healthcare system and programs in place
providing financial assistance and identification documents
to help repatriate deportees into Mexican society. Finally,
though most of G.C.’s immediate family lives in the United
States, he does have “some extended family” in Mexico.
C. The IJ’s Decision
The IJ denied G.C.’s application. First, the IJ concluded
that G.C. was ineligible for asylum and withholding because
his conviction for assault with force likely to produce great
bodily injury qualifies as a particularly serious crime. See 8
U.S.C. § 1158(b)(2)(A)(ii); id. § 1231(b)(3)(B)(ii). To
support that conclusion, the IJ considered the elements of the
offense, the length of the sentence and the maximum
sentence that could have been imposed, and the facts and
circumstances underlying the conviction, including evidence
that G.C. was under the influence at the time of the offense
and continued to assault the victim after he had fallen to the
ground. The IJ also considered and rejected the possibility
that certain mental conditions brought on by his history of
abuse mitigated his responsibility for the assault.
The IJ alternatively concluded that G.C. was ineligible
for asylum because he had not established past persecution
or a well-founded fear of future persecution. The IJ first
concluded that G.C. had not alleged any past persecution in
Mexico and thus was not entitled to the presumption of
future persecution. The IJ then concluded G.C.’s proposed
PSGs were not cognizable because they lacked either social
distinction, particularity, immutability, or some combination
12 G.C. V. BONDI
of the three. 3 The IJ also rejected G.C.’s claims of a well-
founded fear of future persecution because he failed to
demonstrate that the Mexican government would be
unwilling or unable to protect him or that internal relocation
within Mexico was unreasonable. And because G.C. was
unable to meet the “lesser” “well-founded fear standard for
asylum,” the IJ concluded that G.C. had not met the “more
stringent” “clear probability standard required for
withholding of removal.”
Finally, G.C. put forth two “chains of possible events”
underlying his fear of future torture in Mexico, and the IJ
rejected both. First, the IJ rejected G.C.’s argument that it
was more likely than not his father would torture him
because it concluded that his father’s motives were unclear
and that even if his father intended to harm him, there was
insufficient evidence that the Mexican government would be
unwilling or unable to control his father. Then, it rejected
G.C.’s argument that he would be tortured in a Mexican jail
or mental institution, and G.C. did not press this theory
before the BIA. 4
D. The BIA’s Decision
G.C. appealed the IJ’s decision, and the BIA dismissed
his appeal. It concluded that the IJ’s particularly serious
3
Because the BIA did not consider the IJ’s analysis of G.C.’s proposed
PSGs to affirm the denial of relief, we also do not assess the proposed
PSGs. See Garcia v. Wilkinson, 988 F.3d 1136, 1142 (9th Cir. 2021)
(“In reviewing the BIA’s decisions, we consider only the grounds relied
upon by that agency.”).
4
The BIA thus considered this “second possible chain of events” waived,
and because that theory was not exhausted before the agency, G.C.’s
CAT claim before this court is limited to the risk of future torture by his
father. See Wilkinson, 988 F.3d at 1142.
G.C. V. BONDI 13
crime determination was not clearly erroneous for two
reasons. First, the IJ properly weighed the factors set out in
Matter of Frentescu, 18 I. & N. Dec. 244 (BIA 1982), and
second, the IJ’s view of the facts underlying the offense—
including its conclusion that G.C.’s mental health did not
mitigate his responsibility for the assault—was “based on a
plausible and reasonable view of the evidence.” The BIA
also agreed with the IJ’s alternative denial of asylum and
withholding, affirming the IJ’s conclusions that (1) “the
government of Mexico would not be unwilling or unable to
protect [G.C.] from his father or the cartel members,” and
(2) “[G.C.] did not meet his burden of showing that
relocation to another part of the country was not reasonable.”
Finally, the BIA affirmed the denial of CAT relief, finding
no clear error in the IJ’s factfinding as to G.C.’s father’s
intent to torture G.C. in the future or the Mexican
government’s ability and willingness to control him.
G.C. petitioned this court for review.
II. Jurisdiction and Standards of Review
At the outset, while the parties agree this court has
jurisdiction to review G.C.’s petition, they disagree as to the
proper basis for that jurisdiction. Their disagreement hinges
on the legal basis for G.C.’s removability. G.C. asserts that
he was charged with removability as an aggravated felon
under 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii), meaning this court lacks
jurisdiction to consider his petition under 8 U.S.C.
§ 1252(a)(2)(C). G.C. thus resorts to the saving clause in
8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(D) to preserve jurisdiction over the
issues raised in his petition.
For its part, the government contends that G.C. was
removable under 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(ii). This court
lacks jurisdiction to review petitions brought by aliens
14 G.C. V. BONDI
removable under § 1227(a)(2)(A)(ii) only when both crimes
are punishable by a sentence of one year or longer. 8 U.S.C.
§ 1252(a)(2)(C); id. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(i)(II). Because G.C.’s
petty theft conviction was punishable by a maximum of six
months imprisonment, see Cal. Penal Code § 490, the
government argues that review is not precluded by
§ 1252(a)(2)(C).
The government is correct. Contrary to G.C.’s argument
that he was deemed removable because of an aggravated
felony, the record indicates that he was both charged with
removability and found removable for two crimes involving
moral turpitude under 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(ii). Thus, 8
U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(C) does not pose a barrier to reviewing
G.C.’s petition, the court has jurisdiction under § 1252(a)(1),
and there is no need to resort to the saving clause in
§ 1252(a)(2)(D) as G.C. suggests.
Our jurisdiction established, G.C. next argues that the
BIA erred in denying his application for three reasons. First,
he argues the agency erred in conducting its particularly
serious crime analysis by failing to consider all the evidence
of G.C.’s mental health and by applying an overly restrictive
legal standard to that portion of the mental health evidence it
did consider. Second, he contends the BIA wrongly rejected
his withholding claim on an alternative basis because it failed
to consider whether the government of Mexico can control
G.C.’s father and Los Zetas, ignored evidence that it is
unwilling to do so, and failed to apply the mandatory
regulatory factors in 8 C.F.R. § 1208.16(b)(3) when
determining whether relocation was reasonable. Finally, he
argues the agency wrongly denied CAT relief because it
ignored evidence demonstrating it is more likely than not that
G.C. V. BONDI 15
he will be tortured with the acquiescence of the Mexican
government. 5
While a claim that the BIA applied the wrong legal
standard in determining whether a conviction constitutes a
particularly serious crime raises a question of law, see
Gomez-Sanchez v. Sessions, 892 F.3d 985, 990 (9th Cir.
2018), this court reviews the BIA’s determination that a
crime is particularly serious for abuse of discretion. Arbid v.
Holder, 700 F.3d 379, 383 (9th Cir. 2012). The court
reviews the agency’s fact-finding “under the highly
deferential substantial evidence standard,” which treats an
agency’s findings of fact as conclusive unless “any
reasonable adjudicator would be compelled to conclude to
the contrary.” Rodriguez-Zuniga, 69 F.4th at 1016 (citation
omitted). Applying these standards, we conclude that none
of G.C.’s arguments merit granting his petition.
III. The Agency’s Particularly Serious Crime
Determination
We first conclude that the BIA neither applied the wrong
legal standard nor abused its discretion in concluding that
G.C.’s assault conviction was a particularly serious crime.
Aliens “convicted of particularly serious crimes … are
barred from obtaining withholding of removal.” Gomez-
Sanchez, 892 F.3d at 990; see also 8 U.S.C.
§ 1231(b)(3)(B)(ii). While an aggravated felony punishable
by five or more years imprisonment is categorically a
particularly serious crime, the BIA may also conclude on a
case-by-case basis that a crime punishable by less than five
5
Because G.C. has not challenged the BIA’s decision to uphold the IJ’s
denial of asylum relief before this court, that claim is waived. See
Antonio v. Garland, 58 F.4th 1067, 1072 n.7 (9th Cir. 2023).
16 G.C. V. BONDI
years imprisonment is particularly serious. Id.
§ 1231(b)(3)(B); see also Blandino-Medina v. Holder, 712
F.3d 1338, 1344 (9th Cir. 2013) (“[T]he record in most
proceedings will have to be analyzed on a case-by-case
basis.” (quoting Matter of Frentescu, 18 I. & N. Dec. at
247)).
“The applicable legal standard to determine if a crime is
particularly serious, described in the BIA’s decision in
Matter of Frentescu, … requires the agency to ask whether
‘the nature of the conviction, the underlying facts and
circumstances[,] and the sentence imposed justify the
presumption that the convicted immigrant is a danger to the
community.’” Avendano-Hernandez, 800 F.3d at 1077
(quoting Delgado v. Holder, 648 F.3d 1095, 1107 (9th Cir.
2011) (en banc)). When reviewing for abuse of discretion,
the court “is limited to ensuring that the agency relied on the
appropriate factors and proper evidence to reach [its]
conclusion.” Id. (cleaned up). Among the underlying facts
and circumstances relevant to the conviction is “the
defendant’s mental condition at the time of the crime.”
Gomez-Sanchez, 892 F.3d at 996.
Here, both the IJ and the BIA explicitly considered the
factors laid out in Frentescu. 6 The IJ considered the nature
of the conviction by examining the elements of the crime,
noting that it required both the willful use of force against
another and a degree of force likely to cause great bodily
6
“Where, as here, the BIA agrees with the IJ’s reasoning, we review both
decisions.” Garcia-Martinez v. Sessions, 886 F.3d 1291, 1293 (9th Cir.
2018).
G.C. V. BONDI 17
injury. 7 Regarding G.C.’s sentence, the IJ concluded that
“270 days in county jail and three years of probation is [] a
weighty sentence” and noted that the statute authorized even
harsher penalties of several years’ imprisonment. Finally,
the IJ considered the underlying facts and circumstances,
noting that G.C. continued to attack the victim even after he
had fallen to the ground and was under the influence of drugs
and alcohol at the time of the offense. The BIA found no
clear error in the IJ’s factfinding as to any of the Frentescu
factors and incorporated the IJ’s particularly serious crime
analysis into its decision.
Additionally, both the IJ and the BIA relied on
appropriate evidence in conducting their analyses, including
evidence of G.C.’s mental illnesses. The record reflects that
the IJ and the BIA considered evidence that G.C. was
suffering from PTSD at the time of the assault and the
absence of any evidence that G.C. was experiencing
hallucinations that might have motivated his actions. G.C.
now objects to the fact that the agency did not consider such
evidence sufficient to mitigate the violent nature of the
underlying offense, but this court “may not reweigh the
evidence and reach [its] own determination about the crime’s
seriousness.” Avendano-Hernandez, 800 F.3d at 1077.
G.C. faults the IJ and the BIA for considering only his
PTSD diagnosis and not his accompanying diagnoses for
Major Depressive Disorder, Unspecified Schizophrenia
Spectrum and Other Psychotic Disorder, and Bipolar
7
Although the IJ incorrectly asserted that the elements of the crime alone
were sufficient to establish that G.C.’s offense was particularly serious,
contra Blandino-Medina, 712 F.3d at 1348, the BIA did not make the
same mistake, and the IJ nevertheless proceeded to analyze the other
Frentescu factors.
18 G.C. V. BONDI
Disorder. But that argument is unconvincing because it fails
to accurately characterize the agency’s reasoning and would
require us to impose a non-existent legal requirement that the
agency must expressly consider every diagnosed mental
disorder no matter whether the applicant attributes his
offense to the diagnosis.
Even though the agency’s decisions expressly name only
G.C.’s PTSD diagnosis, the record does not support the
conclusion that the agency considered only that condition.
As G.C. himself acknowledges, both the IJ and the BIA
considered the absence of any hallucinations as a relevant
factor. Gullo’s report attributes G.C.’s hallucinations not to
his PTSD, but to his Unspecific Schizophrenia Spectrum and
Other Psychotic Disorder, and nowhere in her three-page
description of G.C.’s PTSD diagnosis did Gullo reference
G.C.’s hallucinations. Nor is there any indication, as G.C.
suggests, that the IJ and the BIA wrongly attributed the
hallucinations to the PTSD diagnosis. In short, there is no
reason to assume the agency arbitrarily limited its analysis
of G.C.’s mental health problems to PTSD.
Moreover, evidence of mental illness is only relevant to
the Frentescu analysis insofar as an applicant attributes the
offense to the illness. As this court has recently explained,
“Gomez-Sanchez did not impose a new standard that the IJ
must always reference a petitioner’s mental health in a
‘particularly serious crime’ determination. Rather, … the
consideration of mental illness anticipated by Gomez-
Sanchez is required only where the petitioner … presents …
evidence directly attributing the crime to his mental illness.”
Benedicto v. Garland, 12 F.4th 1049, 1062 (9th Cir. 2021)
(cleaned up).
G.C. V. BONDI 19
Here, G.C. attributed the attack directly to the victim
calling him a “bitch,” which has “special significance” to
him because “[t]hat’s the wor[d] that [his] dad used to use a
lot towards [him]” and which he testified caused him to
“snap,[]” “black[] out,” and attack the victim. The IJ’s
decision demonstrates that it clearly understood the
relevance of the victim’s verbal provocation given G.C.’s
history of abuse, as it explicitly made the connection
between the use of the word “bitch” and the “abuse [G.C.]
suffered as a child.” The agency then reasonably concluded
that while G.C. “snapped” and “blacked out,” there was no
evidence that reaction was caused by the auditory
hallucinations he sometimes suffered because of his past
abuse.
The agency thus considered G.C.’s mental illness
diagnoses insofar as G.C. suggested that such illnesses
motivated the assault, as Benedicto requires. It
acknowledged the potential that the illnesses might have
contributed to G.C.’s behavior, but stopped short of
concluding he was hallucinating, a factor which might have
mitigated the inference of dangerousness that could be
drawn from G.C.’s behavior. To the extent G.C. separately
relies on Gullo’s report, which lists his many diagnoses, to
argue that the agency must specifically mention each of his
diagnoses by name and then conduct a diagnosis-by-
diagnosis analysis of each one, we rejected such a proposal
in Benedicto, and we again refuse to impose any such
requirement on the agency here. See Benedicto, 12 F.4th at
1062.
Finally, notwithstanding G.C.’s assertions to the
contrary, neither the IJ nor the BIA invented “a non-existent
legal requirement that the [alien] experience hallucinations
during the crime” for his mental health conditions to
20 G.C. V. BONDI
sufficiently mitigate the seriousness of a criminal
conviction. As this court noted in Gomez-Sanchez, the
“essential key” to the particularly serious crime inquiry is
dangerousness. 892 F.3d at 991 (citation omitted). As such,
the IJ as factfinder should “examine what he or she deems
reliable evidence of mental health and decide whether such
evidence bears on the dangerousness determination.” Id. at
994.
Against this legal backdrop, it is clear enough that the IJ
mentioned the absence of “any visual or auditory
hallucinations at the time of [the] offense” not for the
purpose of suggesting that such hallucinations are
categorically required for a mentally ill applicant to rebut a
particularly serious crime determination. Instead, the IJ
examined the “reliable evidence of mental health” available
in the record, id., and presumably concluded that, had there
been evidence G.C. was suffering from hallucinations, such
evidence might have been one reason to mitigate the
otherwise-violent nature of the offense. Mentioning the
absence of such evidence, then, does not imply that it is
always required—it merely acknowledges that no such
mitigating factor existed on this record.
Indeed, G.C.’s hair-trigger reaction to being called a
“bitch” only magnifies the danger he poses, given that he is
willing to commit assault likely to produce great bodily
injury over a relatively minor provocation. While the litany
of evidence detailing G.C.’s history of mistreatment and his
various diagnoses might make his behavior more
understandable in some sense or perhaps even less culpable
in a criminal case, “[t]he IJ is not retrying the question of
guilt.” Id. Instead, the IJ is concerned with determining how
the crime informs the issue of the applicant’s dangerousness.
Here the agency plausibly concluded that G.C.’s mental
G.C. V. BONDI 21
illnesses do not render the assault a less reliable indicator of
G.C.’s dangerousness.
For these reasons, the BIA did not abuse its discretion in
concluding that G.C.’s assault conviction was a particularly
serious crime, and it did not commit legal error by expressly
mentioning only the most salient aspects of G.C.’s various
diagnoses of mental illness and concluding those facts did
not mitigate the underlying dangerousness of the offense he
committed. Because the agency’s particularly serious crime
determination means G.C. is “barred from obtaining
withholding of removal,” id. at 990, we proceed no further
in considering G.C.’s challenges to the agency’s rejection of
his withholding claim.
IV. The Agency’s Denial of CAT Relief
That leaves the BIA’s decision affirming the denial of
G.C.’s claim for CAT deferral. As an applicant for CAT
relief, G.C. “must prove [1] that it is more likely than not
that he … would be tortured if removed to the proposed
country” and “[2] that torture must be inflicted by or at the
instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public
official or other person acting in an official capacity.”
Rodriguez-Zuniga, 69 F.4th at 1023 (cleaned up). G.C. must
meet his burden at both the likelihood-of-future-torture
prong and the acquiescence prong to demonstrate his
entitlement to relief. Failure at either step is fatal to his CAT
claim.
G.C. assigns two errors to the agency’s CAT analysis,
first criticizing its decision to ignore G.C.’s childhood
history of abuse because it occurred in the United States, not
Mexico, and then arguing the agency’s factfinding regarding
the likelihood of future torture and acquiescence of the
22 G.C. V. BONDI
Mexican government were unsupported by substantial
evidence. Neither of these arguments is convincing.
A. The BIA did not err by discounting evidence of G.C.’s
history of abuse at the hands of his father during his
childhood in the United States.
G.C. first contends the agency erred by wrongly
discounting evidence of alleged “past torture” at the hands
of his father because such abuse occurred in the United
States, not Mexico. In G.C.’s view, “past torture” must
include abuse outside the proposed country of removal
because unlike 8 C.F.R. § 1208.16(b)(1)(i), which applies to
claims for withholding relief and requires evidence of “past
persecution in the proposed country of removal” (emphasis
added), the text of 8 C.F.R. § 1208.16(c)(3)(i) imposes “no
geographic limitation on past torture” for CAT claims.
In response, the government acknowledges the textual
difference between the two regulations but emphasizes that
the regulatory definition of “torture” requires that the torture
must occur with the acquiescence of the government to be
actionable under CAT. Because that is so, the government
argues, past injury that would otherwise rise to the level of
torture in the United States does not fit the regulatory
definition of “torture” because such injury did not occur with
the acquiescence of the Mexican government. Consistent
with this view of the relevant regulatory definitions, the
government contends that, practically speaking, “past harm
in the United States says nothing about the likelihood that
the Mexican government will acquiesce to severe harm in
Mexico.”
We agree with the government’s interpretation of the
CAT regulations. Under 8 C.F.R. § 1208.18(a)(1),
“[t]orture is defined as any act by which severe pain or
G.C. V. BONDI 23
suffering … is intentionally inflicted on a person … when
such pain or suffering is inflicted by, or at the instigation of,
or with the consent or acquiescence of, a public official
acting in an official capacity or other person acting in an
official capacity.” Because the regulatory definition of
“torture” itself explains that abuse must be sanctioned or
acquiesced to by an official of the country of removal to be
actionable under CAT, the textual distinction suggested by
G.C. between the withholding and CAT regulations is
ultimately a distinction without a meaningful difference in
this case. Nothing in the record suggests that the abuse by
G.C.’s father was inflicted by, instigated by, or occurred
with the acquiescence of a Mexican public official, so the
past mistreatment does not constitute “past torture.”
Moreover, the government’s observation about the
relationship between the torture and the location in which the
torture occurs is also intuitively sensible and accords with
this court’s announced purposes for considering evidence of
past torture. See Nuru v. Gonzales, 404 F.3d 1207, 1217 (9th
Cir. 2005) (“Past torture is the first factor we consider in
evaluating the likelihood of future torture because past
conduct frequently tells us much about how an individual or
a government will behave in the future.”). While G.C.’s
testimony about his father’s history of abuse might be some
evidence of his father’s intent to cause G.C. harm in the
future, it says nothing at all about the Mexican government’s
willingness to acquiesce in such torture. And as the
regulatory definition of “torture” makes clear, infliction,
24 G.C. V. BONDI
instigation, or acquiescence is an element that is required for
abuse or harm to qualify as past “torture” under CAT. 8
G.C. contends that this court has already conclusively
resolved this question in his favor in Xochihua-Jaimes v.
Barr, 962 F.3d 1175 (9th Cir. 2020). But we are
unconvinced. Unlike G.C., who was abused entirely in the
United States, the past torture underlying the petitioner’s
CAT claim in Xochihua-Jaimes occurred in both Mexico and
8
Importantly, we do not understand our dissenting colleague to disagree
with this understanding of what 8 C.F.R. § 1208.18(a)(1) requires for
harm to rise to the level of “torture” for purposes of determining CAT
eligibility. The dissent does, however, argue that “significant past harm
is relevant to the likelihood of future torture when the perpetrator of that
harm is in the country of removal,” and thus the evidence of past harm
is “highly probative” and “cannot be so easily dismissed.”
It’s worth making two points about such reasoning. First, even if it is
true that the evidence of past harm is relevant—an issue which, as
explained below, we need not resolve here—it does not prove the agency
erred in concluding as a legal matter that G.C.’s father’s pattern of
harming him did not qualify as “past torture” and thus did not qualify for
the kind of privileged consideration it so often receives under this court’s
CAT precedents. See Nuru, 404 F.3d at 1218 (“[P]ast torture is
ordinarily the principal factor on which we rely when an applicant who
has previously been tortured seeks relief under [CAT].”).
And second, to the extent the dissent means to suggest that in this case
the agency altogether ignored the evidence of past harm—setting aside
whether such harm qualifies as “torture”—such a suggestion misreads
the IJ’s and the BIA’s decisions. The IJ recounted G.C.’s father’s sordid
history of abuse in detail, and later specifically noted the father’s past
death threats—many of which occurred during and formed a part of the
childhood history of abuse—as part of its fear-of-future-torture analysis.
Thus, just as the dissent correctly concludes “it is clear that the BIA was
aware of and considered evidence that G.C. suffered from several mental
health conditions,” there is likewise no reason to believe the agency
altogether failed to consider G.C.’s father’s past harmful behavior
toward him.
G.C. V. BONDI 25
the United States. Id. at 1178–79. Thus, when we held “it
[wa]s likely she [would] be tortured again if returned to the
site of her prior suffering,” we obviously meant Mexico,
where some of the torture had already occurred. Id. at 1188
(emphasis added) (cleaned up). Because Xochihua-Jaimes
did not involve a petitioner whose abuse had occurred
exclusively outside of the country of removal, it does not
resolve the issue in G.C.’s favor. 9
B. Substantial evidence supports the agency’s fact-
finding regarding the likelihood of future torture.
Finally, G.C. argues that the agency erred by discounting
evidence demonstrating that (1) G.C.’s father had a
continuing interest in him and (2) public officials in Mexico
will acquiesce in his torture. 10 Ultimately, these arguments
fail because substantial evidence supports the IJ’s
conclusion that there is not a greater than fifty percent
9
The dissent notes that the Xochihua-Jaimes court considered evidence
of past harm in Arizona and North Carolina as part of its fear-of-future-
harm analysis. That is true, but again, Xochihua-Jaimes was different
because there, the abuse that occurred in the United States was part of a
cross-border course of abuse that occurred in both Mexico and the United
States. And as already explained, there is no reason to believe here that
the BIA altogether disregarded G.C.’s father’s harmful behavior in the
United States. Instead, it simply (and correctly) concluded that such
behavior did not rise to the regulatory definition of past torture.
10
G.C. also challenges the BIA’s failure to consider the evidence G.C.
presented suggesting that he would be targeted by Mexican law
enforcement on account of his tattoos and history of gang membership.
But as noted above, G.C. waived that by failing to argue it before the
BIA. Therefore, we consider only the exhausted aspect of G.C.’s CAT
claim, which is premised on the possibility of future torture perpetrated
by his father, not by government actors.
26 G.C. V. BONDI
likelihood that G.C.’s father would kill or otherwise torture
him if he were removed to Mexico.
The IJ and the BIA relied on three facts in the record,
namely (1) the passage of time, (2) past unfulfilled death
threats, and (3) the lack of clarity regarding G.C.’s father’s
motives, concluding those facts “cast doubt upon the
likelihood that he would actually follow through with killing
or torturing [G.C.] now.” The BIA affirmed this finding, and
in our view, “[t]he record compels no different conclusion.”
Rodriguez-Zuniga, 69 F.4th at 1022.
In his opening brief, G.C. criticizes the IJ’s reliance on
the fact that past death threats went unfulfilled, arguing that
G.C.’s father “was physically incapable of acting on his
threats” “for the past fifteen years” because “he was either
in prison or deported to Mexico” during that time. G.C.
provides no evidence for the argument that his father was
never capable of following through on his death threats at
any time after making them, and given that G.C.’s father
threatened to kill him early in his childhood, it seems highly
improbable that his father had absolutely no opportunity to
act upon his threats—especially given the litany of other
abuses that G.C. testified his father was able to perpetrate.
Next, G.C. argues that the IJ’s reliance on his father’s
statement that he “wanted to help” him was misplaced
because his mother expressed that she did not believe G.C.’s
father’s offer of assistance was genuine. But even though
the agency deemed his mother’s testimony credible, her
speculation as to his father’s motives is exactly that—
speculation—and while that speculation might reduce the
probative value of G.C.’s father’s statement, it does not
entirely negate the extent to which his father’s seeming
change in posture might inform his present motives. Put
G.C. V. BONDI 27
another way, a reasonable adjudicator could continue to put
some evidentiary weight on G.C.’s father’s offer of
assistance notwithstanding his mother’s speculation as to its
authenticity and the other evidence in the record that weighs
against crediting the father’s statement. 11
Taken together, these facts cast sufficient doubt on
G.C.’s father’s present motives toward G.C. for us to
conclude that the record does not compel a conclusion
contrary to the BIA’s that it is not more likely than not that
G.C.’s father will seek to torture him upon his return to
Mexico.
In resisting that conclusion, the dissent relies at length on
other facts in the record, including (1) G.C.’s childhood
history of abuse, (2) his father’s continued involvement with
gangs, and (3) most importantly, a litany of dire predictions
from G.C.’s mother, brother, and former girlfriend about the
potential violence G.C. may face at his father’s hand. But
while such evidence could support the conclusion that it is
more likely than not that G.C.’s father would torture him
upon his return to Mexico, that is not the conclusion the BIA
reached, and the dissent’s privileging of such evidence
reveals the extent to which it misunderstands our task when
reviewing the agency’s decision for substantial evidence.
Our job “[u]nder that extremely deferential standard of
review” is not to “independently weigh the evidence and
reverse the agency” whenever we feel a different result is
more in line with the greater weight of the evidence. Kalulu
v. Garland, 94 F.4th 1095, 1099 (9th Cir. 2024); see also
11
The dissent is thus clearly incorrect in insisting that “there is no
reliable evidence in the record contradicting the testimony that G.C.’s
father wants to kill G.C. and has recently threatened and targeted his
family.”
28 G.C. V. BONDI
Don v. Gonzales, 476 F.3d 738, 743 (9th Cir. 2007) (“The
approach taken in the dissenting opinion amounts to an
impermissible re-weighing of the evidence.”).
Our approach in Kalulu is instructive. There, the agency
“based its adverse credibility determination on … twelve
inconsistency and implausibility findings and
… [petitioner’s] demeanor during her hearing.” Id. at
1110. 12 Notwithstanding the fact that there was some
indication that at least some of the twelve inconsistency
findings were not reliable, our court rejected the petitioner’s
and a dissenter’s suggestions that “those inconsistencies and
her demeanor” should be “counterbalanced by other
consistencies in her testimony.” Id. at 1104. Instead, we
concluded that “at least four independent and supported
factual findings … together constitute[d] more than
substantial evidence supporting the agency’s credibility
determination,” notwithstanding other, credible testimony
that might have supported the agency reaching some other
conclusion. Id. at 1109. Like in Kalulu, where the mere
presence of some credible testimony did not undermine the
substantial evidence supporting an adverse credibility
finding, here the presence of some evidence suggesting that
G.C.’s father may intend to torture him upon his return to
Mexico does not undermine the substantial evidence
supporting the agency’s contrary conclusion.
12
While this case does not involve an adverse credibility determination,
it does involve other disputed factfinding, and this court reviews adverse
credibility determinations like any other factual finding. Chebchoub v.
INS, 257 F.3d 1038, 1042 (9th Cir. 2001) (“[W]e review the [BIA]’s
factual determinations—including its credibility findings … for
substantial evidence.), superseded on other grounds by statute as stated
in Shrestha v. Holder, 590 F.3d 1034, 1046 (9th Cir. 2010).
G.C. V. BONDI 29
The dissent magnifies its misapplication of substantial
evidence review by engaging in the kind of reasoning that
once motivated this court to craft another of its misbegotten
and now-thoroughly rejected immigration rules: the
“deemed-true-or-credible rule.” Garland v. Ming Dai, 593
U.S. 357, 365 (2021). Under that rule, this court concluded
it “must assume that the alien’s factual contentions are true”
“in the absence of an explicit adverse credibility finding by
the agency.” Id. at 364 (alterations omitted) (quoting
Kataria v. INS, 232 F.3d 1107, 1114 (2000)). The dissent’s
reasoning here, which (1) repeatedly relies on the agency’s
conclusion that G.C.’s mother, brother, and expert witness
testified credibly and (2) wholly credits even the most
speculative aspects of their testimony, bears the indelible
mark of the now-defunct “deemed-true-or-credible rule.”
Essentially, the dissent reasons that because (1) the
witnesses testified credibly and (2) some aspects of their
testimony, if credited, would support G.C.’s claim for CAT
relief, the agency erred by failing to reach a conclusion
consistent with the testimony of such witnesses.
Take, for example, the dissent’s treatment of G.C.’s
brother’s testimony that he “wouldn’t last a week” in Mexico
or his mother’s testimony that she “d[id]n’t believe [his
father]” when “he said he wanted to help [G.C.]” “because
he told [her] on several occasions[] that he was going to kill
[G.C. and his siblings].” Regarding each of these
statements, the dissent’s approach would essentially force
the BIA to deem true the matter asserted—the speculation as
to how long G.C. would last after returning to Mexico or as
to his father’s motives—from the simple fact that the IJ
considered their testimony credible. But as the Supreme
Court explained in Ming Dai, that logical leap is
unwarranted. “It’s not always the case that credibility equals
30 G.C. V. BONDI
factual accuracy, nor does it guarantee a legal victory.”
Ming Dai, 593 U.S. at 372.
The dissent attempts to distinguish its suggested
approach from the deemed-true-or-credible rule by noting
that here, the IJ expressly found that G.C. and his supporting
witnesses had testified credibility. But the dissent’s
approach is nonetheless premised on the same wrong logic
that animated our former rule. Like the deemed-true-or-
credible rule, the dissent wrongly conflates the testimony’s
credibility with its persuasiveness and advocates for a
standard more akin to the one we employ when reviewing
the allegations in a complaint on appeal that was dismissed
at the motion to dismiss stage. Such a standard “has no
proper place” here, where our review is supposed to be
exceedingly deferential towards the agency, not the
petitioner and his witnesses. Ming Dai, 593 U.S. at 365.
Nor do other, related provisions of the INA offer any
support for the dissent’s approach. As the statute elsewhere
describes an asylum petitioner’s evidentiary burden, “[t]he
testimony of the applicant may be sufficient to sustain the
applicant’s burden without corroboration, but only if the
applicant satisfies the trier of fact that the applicant’s
testimony is credible, is persuasive, and refers to facts
sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a refugee.” 8
U.S.C. § 1158(b)(1)(B)(ii) (emphases added). This
provision distinguishes between credibility and
persuasiveness and sends a clear message that credible
testimony may, but oftentimes may not, satisfy a petitioner’s
burden of proof. To put it another way, under the INA,
credible testimony does not suffice unless the IJ also finds
the testimony persuasive. See id.
G.C. V. BONDI 31
It should thus come as no surprise that the Supreme
Court considered and rejected the exact kind of reasoning the
dissent now engages in by unanimously rejecting our
erroneous “deemed-true-or-credible” rule in Ming Dai.
Such a rule dramatically narrows the agency’s supposedly
wide factfinding discretion and presents it with a sort of
Hobson’s choice: either find the petitioner explicitly
noncredible and reject 100% of his testimony, or our court
would assume the agency accepted 100% of the petitioner’s
testimony as 100% true and persuasive. But Ming Dai
rejected this false dichotomy and made clear when “[f]aced
with conflicting evidence, it seems likely that a reasonable
adjudicator could find the unfavorable account more
persuasive than the favorable version,” and as here, rule
against the petitioner accordingly. Id.
Try as it might to avoid the comparison, the dissent’s
approach to the evidence in this record (both speculative and
otherwise) is ultimately objectionable for the same reason
that our old “deemed-true-or-credible rule” was: “Rather
than ask whether the agency’s finding qualifies as one of
potentially many reasonable possibilities, it gives conclusive
weight to any piece of testimony that cuts against the
agency’s finding.” Id. at 368. Such an approach is error
because it “mistakenly flips th[e] [extremely deferential
substantial evidence] standard on its head.” Id. Instead of,
as the dissent does here, searching the record for other
evidence that could reasonably support a conclusion other
than the one the agency reached, the “only question for
judges reviewing the BIA’s factual determinations is
whether any reasonable adjudicator could have found as the
agency did.” Id. (first emphasis in original, second emphasis
added).
32 G.C. V. BONDI
***
The dissent is correct that there is evidence in the record
that could have supported the conclusion that G.C.’s father
still meant to harm him, had the agency made such a finding.
Both the dissent and G.C. seize on such evidence at length,
and each spills much ink recounting all the record evidence
that favors G.C. Such arguments do not guarantee G.C.
victory, however, as they serve only to demonstrate how the
agency could have potentially marshalled the evidence
differently to afford CAT relief to G.C. But that is not the
conclusion reached by the BIA, and as explained above, the
record does not compel a conclusion contrary to the one the
agency actually reached. See Rodriguez-Zuniga, 69 F.4th at
1016. The agency’s conclusion that there is not a greater-
than-50% likelihood that G.C.’s father will torture him upon
his return to Mexico is supported by substantial evidence,
and G.C.’s CAT claim thus fails under our well-established
standard of review applied properly. 13
V. Conclusion
While G.C. regrettably suffered serious abuses at his
father’s hand during his childhood, the agency did not err by
denying his claims for withholding and CAT relief. It did
not abuse its discretion by concluding that G.C.’s mental
13
Because substantial evidence supports the agency’s conclusion
regarding the likelihood of future torture, we need not (1) address
whether substantial evidence also supports its conclusion that the
Mexican government would not acquiesce in such torture or (2) respond
to the dissent’s lengthy recounting of evidence suggesting the BIA could
have—but as discussed above, was not necessarily compelled to—
reached the opposite conclusion. Because failure at either step is fatal to
G.C.’s CAT claim, we need not proceed any further than G.C.’s failure
at the likelihood-of-future-torture prong of the analysis.
G.C. V. BONDI 33
illnesses and history of abuse did not mitigate his assault
conviction, nor did it devise and apply a new, overly
restrictive legal standard to the evidence of G.C.’s mental
illnesses. Moreover, because the definition of “torture” in
the CAT regulations expressly encompasses consent or
acquiescence by the government of the country of removal,
the agency did not err by excluding the past abuses G.C.
suffered in the United States from an analysis of past torture.
Finally, because a reasonable adjudicator could have
concluded based on (1) the passage of time, (2) the past
unfulfilled death threats, and (3) the conflicting evidence of
motive that G.C.’s father’s disposition toward him had
changed, we conclude that a “reasonable adjudicator would
[not] be compelled to” reach a conclusion “to the contrary”
of that reached by the agency in this case. Rodriguez-
Zuniga, 69 F.4th at 1016. We therefore deny G.C.’s petition
for review of his withholding and CAT claims.
PETITION DENIED.
SANCHEZ, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting
in part:
I concur with the majority that the Board of Immigration
Appeals (“BIA” or the “agency”) did not abuse its discretion
in concluding that G.C.’s assault conviction was a
particularly serious crime. Reading the record as a whole, it
is clear that the BIA was aware of and considered evidence
that G.C. suffered from several mental health conditions at
the time of the assault, but the agency concluded that the
evidence did not sufficiently mitigate its dangerousness
determination. See Gomez-Sanchez v. Sessions, 892 F.3d
985, 991 (9th Cir. 2018) (holding that “danger to the
34 G.C. V. BONDI
community” is the “essential key” to a particularly serious
crime determination (citation omitted)). G.C. is therefore
statutorily barred from withholding of removal. See 8
U.S.C. § 1231(b)(3)(B)(ii).
I write separately because I would find that G.C. is
entitled to protection under the Convention Against Torture
(“CAT”). Contrary to the majority’s portrayal of the record,
the evidence is not “mixed” concerning the likelihood that
G.C. will be tortured if removed to Mexico. G.C.’s father is
a member of the notorious Los Zetas cartel—one of the
largest criminal syndicates in Mexico—and a violent drug
dealer who beat, burned, sexually assaulted, and threatened
G.C. with death throughout G.C.’s childhood. Testimony
from G.C.’s brother and mother, found credible by the
Immigration Judge (“IJ”), details several recent death threats
and acts of violence by G.C.’s father directed at G.C. and his
family. G.C also provided extensive country conditions
evidence and uncontroverted expert testimony establishing
that Mexican officials acquiesce to acts of violence by Los
Zetas cartel. The uncontroverted evidence of a
particularized risk of harm and extensive country conditions
and expert evidence compels the conclusion that G.C. is
likely to be targeted and tortured by his father upon his
removal to Mexico. We have granted several petitions for
CAT relief in situations like these involving targeted
violence by the Zetas cartel in Mexico. We should do the
same here. I respectfully dissent from the Court’s denial of
CAT relief.
I.
A person ineligible for withholding of removal remains
statutorily eligible to seek deferral of removal under Article
III of CAT. 8 C.F.R. § 1208.17(a). G.C. must prove that
G.C. V. BONDI 35
upon his return to Mexico he “is more likely than not to be
tortured,” id., either “by, or at the instigation of, or with the
consent or acquiescence of a public official . . . or other
person acting in an official capacity,” id. § 1208.18(a)(1);
see also Avendano-Hernandez v. Lynch, 800 F.3d 1072,
1079 (9th Cir. 2015).
G.C. was born in Mexico in 1995 and came to the United
States at the age of one. In and out of prison during G.C.’s
childhood, G.C.’s father physically, emotionally, and
sexually abused G.C. and his siblings. G.C.’s father was
particularly abusive toward G.C. For more than a decade,
G.C.’s father burned him with cigarettes, beat him with
cables, groped his genitals, mocked his learning and speech
disabilities, forced him to use drugs and to steal, threatened
to kill him, and regularly showered him with insults,
including calling him “faggot” and “bitch.” The abuse ended
only when G.C. turned twelve and his father was arrested on
drug-trafficking offenses and later deported to Mexico.
The majority concludes that evidence such as “G.C.’s
testimony about his father’s history of abuse” in the United
States “says nothing at all about his willingness to do so in
Mexico,” reasoning that the harm does not qualify as “past
torture” under the CAT regulations. But this evidence
cannot be so easily dismissed. Even if the term “torture,” as
defined in 8 C.F.R. § 1208.18(a)(1), contemplates that an act
must occur “with the consent or acquiescence of” a person
acting in an official capacity in the country of removal,
significant past harm is relevant to the likelihood of future
torture when the perpetrator of that harm is in the country of
removal. The CAT regulations provide that we must
consider “all evidence relevant to the possibility of future
torture . . . , including, but not limited to” evidence of “past
torture.” See id. § 1208.16(c)(3) (emphases added).
36 G.C. V. BONDI
Evidence of significant prior harm at the hands of a person
now in the country of removal informs the ultimate inquiry
“whether it is more likely than not that an applicant would
be tortured in the proposed country of removal.” Id. 1
We addressed a similar situation in Xochihua-Jaimes v.
Barr, 962 F.3d 1175 (9th Cir. 2020), where we granted
petitioner’s request for CAT deferral because the petitioner
would be removed to Mexico where her past abusers and
their relatives were living. Id. at 1188. The petitioner had
an abusive relationship with a man connected to Los Zetas,
and his nephew had attempted to sexually assault her in
North Carolina. Id. at 1179. The Department of Homeland
Security later deported the nephew to Mexico, and the
petitioner sought CAT deferral based on her belief that her
ex-partner’s “Zetas relatives in Mexico would torture and
murder” her and her child if removed to Mexico. Id. at 1180.
In assessing the likelihood of future torture, we evaluated
evidence of the rapes, beating, and death threat the petitioner
had experienced in Mexico. Id. at 1188. But we also
considered evidence of harm that occurred in the United
States, such as death threats the petitioner received from her
ex-partner’s Zeta relatives in Arizona and the attempted
sexual assault in North Carolina. See id. Similarly here, the
almost-daily beatings, sexual assaults, and frequent death
threats G.C. experienced from his father for more than a
decade of his childhood demonstrate a likelihood that G.C.
1
Rather than engage with the proper standard under CAT for evaluating
evidence of future torture, see 8 C.F.R. § 1208.16, the majority cites 8
U.S.C. § 1158, a provision that concerns whether “the applicant is a
refugee” in the asylum claim. Our review under the applicable CAT
regulations requires us to consider G.C.’s evidence of the substantial
likelihood of future torture and compels a result contrary to the one
reached by the BIA and the majority.
G.C. V. BONDI 37
will be targeted for future violence in Mexico where his
father resides. See id. And as discussed below, the
likelihood that G.C will be murdered or tortured in Mexico
is greatly magnified by his father’s membership in Los
Zetas, a criminal organization with vast reach and influence
throughout Mexico. Like the BIA below, the majority errs
by excluding this highly probative evidence of past harm.
In addition, the agency’s factual findings concerning the
likelihood of future torture lack any evidentiary basis in the
record. As the majority notes, the agency concluded that
(1) the passage of time, (2) past unfulfilled death threats, and
(3) the lack of clarity regarding G.C.’s father’s motives “cast
doubt upon the likelihood that he would actually follow
through with killing or torturing [G.C.] now.”
The evidence compels a contrary conclusion. G.C.’s
father remains a member of Los Zetas cartel in Mexico and
continues to make death threats against G.C. to this day,
negating that the “passage of time” has had any material
effect on the intent of G.C.’s father to kill G.C. G.C.’s
brother submitted a declaration stating that in 2019, during
the pendency of G.C.’s immigration proceedings, he spoke
to their father who “said that he would kill [G.C.] if he is
deported to Mexico.” His brother added that he knows if
G.C. is deported, “he wouldn’t last a week.” G.C.’s mother
testified that when G.C.’s father spoke to their eldest son,
“Supposedly, he said he wanted to help [G.C.],” but she
“d[id]n’t believe him” “because he told [her] on several
occasions, that he was going to kill [G.C. and his siblings].”
G.C.’s former girlfriend also submitted a declaration that
G.C.’s father “has threatened to kill [G.C.] or any of his
siblings if they get deported.” She wrote that if G.C. “or any
of his other siblings fall onto the other side of the border,
they will get a bullet in their head.”
38 G.C. V. BONDI
Like the agency, the majority erroneously relies on the
fact that G.C. remains alive to discount his father’s “past
unfulfilled death threats.” Death, however, is not a
requirement for obtaining CAT relief. We would never
review a CAT claim where a petitioner has shown “fulfilled
death threats” because the petitioner would already be dead.
G.C.’s father was physically incapable of acting on his
threats for the past fifteen years because he was either
imprisoned or deported to Mexico. The majority counters
that, when G.C. was a child, his father surely had the
capability and opportunity to kill him but did not do so. But
the extreme pain and suffering G.C. suffered as a child, when
his father did have access to him, exemplifies the likelihood
of future torture that we can prevent through granting CAT
relief.
Finally, the record is unequivocal as to G.C.’s father’s
willingness and ability to follow through on his threats. The
last time G.C’s parents were together, his father beat and
threatened to kill his mother, attempting to “stab [her in the
eye] with a knife.” G.C.’s father also hired two young
women in Mexico and sent them to Guadalajara to “beat . . .
up” G.C.’s maternal grandmother—G.C.’s only close
relative still living in Mexico. The attackers relayed the
message that G.C.’s father had “sent them [and] that he paid
them money to go and beat her” to “retaliate against” G.C.’s
mother.
That G.C.’s father may be motivated by many different
reasons to target G.C. only bolsters G.C.’s CAT claim.
G.C.’s brother stated that his father wants to kill G.C.
because he “hates” him and has always viewed him as
“stupid” and “slow.” G.C.’s former girlfriend stated that his
father wants to kill G.C. because he “thinks someone from
his family called the police on him.” G.C.’s mother testified
G.C. V. BONDI 39
that his father would “seek vengeance” against G.C. “to
retaliate” against her for not getting back together with his
father. These multiple motives, rather than creating a
“mixed record,” underscore a clear desire by G.C.’s father to
target G.C. for violence or death. 2
II.
G.C. has also demonstrated through extensive country
conditions evidence and uncontroverted expert testimony
that Mexican public officials are likely to acquiescence to
future violence and torture by Los Zetas. “Public officials
acquiesce in torture if they: (1) have awareness of the
activity (or consciously close their eyes to the fact it is going
on); and (2) breach their legal responsibility to intervene to
prevent the activity because they are unable or unwilling to
oppose it.” Barajas-Romero v. Lynch, 846 F.3d 351, 363
(9th Cir. 2017) (citation and quotation marks omitted). Over
a decade ago, we held in another case involving torture by
Los Zetas in Mexico that “[m]any police officers are
‘involved in kidnapping, extortion, or providing protection
for, or acting directly on behalf of, organized crime and drug
traffickers.’” Madrigal v. Holder, 716 F.3d 499, 507 (9th
Cir. 2013) (quoting U.S. Dep’t of State, 2008 Human Rights
2
The majority spills considerable ink responding to a phantom argument
about the “deemed-true-or-credible rule.” That since-rejected rule
posited that “‘[i]n the absence of an explicit adverse credibility finding
[by the agency], we must assume that [the alien’s] factual contentions
are true’ or at least credible.” Garland v. Ming Dai, 593 U.S. 357, 364
(2021) (citations omitted). That rule has no application here because the
agency expressly found G.C., his mother, and his expert witness to be
credible. What the majority characterizes as my “reweighing evidence”
ignores that there is no reliable evidence in the record contradicting the
testimony that G.C.’s father wants to kill G.C. and has recently
threatened and targeted the family.
40 G.C. V. BONDI
Report: Mexico (2009)). We affirmed these conditions in
2020, noting that “extensive country conditions evidence
indicat[es] the prevalence of acquiescence by public officials
in the torture committed by Los Zetas generally . . . .”
Xochihua-Jaimes, 962 F.3d at 1185.
The record in G.C.’s case demonstrates that these
country conditions have not changed since our holding in
Xochihua-Jaimes and Mexican public officials continue to
acquiesce to Los Zetas’ violent acts. A 2018 State
Department Human Rights Report reiterated the findings
that some Mexican police officers at state and local levels
are “involved in kidnapping, extortion, and providing
protection for, or acting directly on behalf of, organized
crime and drug traffickers.” G.C.’s expert witness, Dr.
Robert Kirkland, testified that criminal-history information
sharing between the United States and Mexico “basically
warns the Mexican government of people [who] are
returning that . . . have this kind of record and [of] former
gang members, drug traffickers, et cetera.” Cartels such as
Los Zetas have “informants within the police, within the
security apparatus in Mexico and can access this data.”
Because G.C. has a criminal record and past gang
involvement, Mexican government officials will “be aware
of” G.C.’s deportation to Mexico, and Los Zetas—to include
G.C.’s father—will have access to this information. The IJ
found Dr. Kirkland’s testimony to be credible.
Relocation within Mexico will not mitigate the risk
posed by Los Zetas and G.C.’s father, who resides in the
vicinity of Tijuana. The record states that “[t]he Mexican
Defense Department [has] recognized [Los Zetas
paramilitary men] as ‘the most formidable death squad to
have worked for organized crime in Mexican history.’”
“[E]xtensive record evidence shows that Los Zetas operate
G.C. V. BONDI 41
in many parts of Mexico, including states far away from
Veracruz and surrounding areas.” Xochihua-Jaimes, 962
F.3d at 1187 (internal quotation marks omitted). As in
Xochihua-Jaimes, the record here depicts “torture,
kidnappings, and murders by Los Zetas in numerous states
throughout Mexico.” Id.
The majority acknowledges that Los Zetas has “a strong
presence in about 17 Mexican states—or half the country,”
but as we recognized in Xochihua-Jaimes, “[n]either the IJ
nor the BIA cited any evidence that there are states in
Mexico where Los Zetas are unable to operate.” Id.
(emphasis added). As Dr. Kirkland testified, Los Zetas
“certainly can leverage . . . their informants within the
Mexican security apparatus to be able to find out where
[G.C.] lives in Mexico.” He further testified that it will be
“difficult [for G.C.] to hide” or “go to anyplace in Mexico
and not have . . . the cartels know where [he] live[s].” As a
member of Los Zetas cartel, G.C.’s father can locate and
target G.C. for violence anywhere in Mexico with the
cooperation or acquiescence of Mexican public officials.
Removing G.C. to Mexico collocates him with his abuser, a
man who possesses the intent, the capability, and now a
newfound opportunity to torture and kill G.C.
***
For the foregoing reasons, I would grant the petition and
remand for the agency to grant deferral of removal pursuant
to CAT because the record compels the conclusion that
Petitioner will more likely than not be tortured if removed to
Mexico. Xochihua-Jaimes, 962 F.3d at 1188; see also Haile
v. Holder, 658 F.3d 1122, 1133 (9th Cir. 2011) (“Because
the evidence [petitioner] presents compels but one
conclusion and is unrebutted, there is no reason to remand in
42 G.C. V. BONDI
this case—we hold that [petitioner] is entitled to deferral of
removal under the CAT.”).
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT EDGAR G.C., No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT EDGAR G.C., No.
02ORDER AND PAMELA BONDI, Attorney General, AMENDED OPINION Respondent.
03On Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals Argued and Submitted April 2, 2024 Pasadena, California Filed July 30, 3034 Amended May 8, 2025 Before: Ryan D.
04Order; Opinion by Judge VanDyke; Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge Sanchez 2 G.C.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT EDGAR G.C., No.
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This case was decided on May 8, 2025.
Use the citation No. 10573977 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.