Juan Gamas-Vicente v. Todd Blanche - Asylum Denial
Summary
The Sixth Circuit denied Juan Gamas-Vicente's petition for review of a Board of Immigration Appeals decision, affirming that he failed to establish membership in a particular social group for asylum purposes. The court upheld the finding that his proposed social group was not cognizable under asylum law. Gamas-Vicente, a Guatemalan national who entered the US illegally in 2014, sought asylum based on alleged gang persecution and Mayan ethnicity.
What changed
The Sixth Circuit affirmed the BIA's denial of asylum, finding that Gamas-Vicente failed to establish a cognizable particular social group. The court concluded that his proposed groups—based on gang recruitment targeting and Mayan ethnicity combined with gang visibility—lacked the required particularity, social distinction, and numerical delineation to qualify for protection.
Immigration practitioners and detainees should note that gang-based particular social group claims remain difficult to establish in the Sixth Circuit. The decision reinforces that mere visibility or targeting by criminal organizations does not automatically create a cognizable social group for asylum purposes. Detainees pursuing similar claims should ensure their proposed groups meet all three elements: particularity, social distinction, and sufficient delineation.
What to do next
- Monitor for updates on similar particular social group cases
- Review asylum eligibility criteria for gang-based and ethnic-based claims
- Consult immigration counsel regarding cognizable social group standards
Penalties
Petitioner remains subject to removal order; removal proceedings may proceed
Source document (simplified)
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April 7, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
Juan Gamas-Vicente v. Todd Blanche
Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
- Citations: None known
- Docket Number: 25-3415
- Panel: Julia Smith Gibbons, Joan Louise Larsen
Judges: Julia Smith Gibbons; Amul R. Thapar; Joan L. Larsen
Combined Opinion
RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
File Name: 26a0109p.06
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
┐
JUAN LUIS GAMAS-VICENTE,
│
Petitioner, │
No. 25-3415│
v. │
│
TODD W. BLANCHE, Acting Attorney General, │
Respondent. │
┘
On Petition for Review from the Board of Immigration Appeals.
No. A 206 454 387.
Decided and Filed: April 7, 2026
Before: GIBBONS, THAPAR, and LARSEN, Circuit Judges.
COUNSEL
ON BRIEF: Margaret W. Wong, MARGARET WONG & ASSOCIATES LLC, Cleveland,
Ohio, for Petitioner. Andrea Gevas, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE,
Washington, D.C., for Respondent.
OPINION
THAPAR, Circuit Judge. Juan Luis Gamas-Vicente illegally entered the United States in
2014. He conceded that he was removable but has spent the last decade seeking asylum,
withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture. An immigration
judge rejected his application, and the Board of Immigration Appeals affirmed. They concluded
that Gamas-Vicente didn’t establish that he is a member of a particular social group facing
persecution. We agree, so we deny his petition for review.
No. 25-3415 Gamas-Vicente v. Blanche Page 2
Juan Luis Gamas-Vicente, a Guatemalan national, illegally entered the United States as
an unaccompanied minor. The next day, he received a notice to appear charging him with
removability. See 8 U.S.C. § 1182 (a)(6)(A)(i). But he didn’t show up for his first immigration
hearing. Or his second. When he failed to appear the second time, an immigration judge (IJ)
ordered Gamas-Vicente removed in absentia. Gamas-Vicente then filed a motion to reopen his
case. The IJ granted the motion and rescinded the removal order. Gamas-Vicente conceded
removability and applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the
Convention Against Torture (CAT).
Gamas-Vicente’s claims related to his alleged experiences with the Mara 18 gang in
Guatemala and his Mayan ethnicity. In his asylum application, he recounts that “everything
started” when Mara 18 members asked him to join their gang and he refused. AR 609. Gamas-
Vicente believes that Mara 18 kills people who refuse to join and that its members raped his
sister in retaliation for his refusal. Gamas-Vincente also alleges that “the Latino controlled
police and government treat Mayans as second-class,” so he fears the police won’t protect him
from the gang. Id. And that’s why he claims he left Guatemala and illegally entered the United
States.
An IJ held a hearing to evaluate Gamas-Vicente’s application. Gamas-Vicente testified
that when he was 17, five Mara 18 members armed with knives, a machete, and nunchucks asked
him to join their gang and commit crimes for them. When he said no, they “threw [him] to the
floor” and told him to think about it. AR 138. Gamas-Vicente alleged that eight gang members
approached him a few days later, and he again refused to join. They grew angry, threw him to
the floor, kicked him, and threatened him with a gun. And they told Gamas-Vicente they would
kill him if they found him again. Gamas-Vicente said the encounter left him with “lots of
bruises,” which his mother treated with plants. AR 142–43. He reported the incident to police,
who didn’t believe him or file a report. So Gamas-Vicente decided to leave Guatemala because
he believed the gang would carry out its threats.
No. 25-3415 Gamas-Vicente v. Blanche Page 3
Shortly after Gamas-Vicente left for the United States, his sister was raped. Gamas-
Vicente testified that Mara 18 members told him that the rape was in retaliation for his leaving
Guatemala. He further stated that gang members approached one of his other sisters and told her
that Gamas-Vicente “knows what we did to his sister. So if he ever comes back, we will kill
him.” AR 146. Since those events in 2014, his mother and five sisters have remained in
Guatemala, unharmed.
Gamas-Vicente had previously stated that when he was a child, Mara 18 kidnapped his
father. His mother and sister submitted letters saying the same. But at the hearing, Gamas-
Vicente retracted this statement and said he didn’t recall making it. Instead, he insisted that his
father abandoned the family.
Following the hearing, the IJ denied Gamas-Vicente’s applications for asylum,
withholding of removal, and CAT protection. Even though the IJ found Gamas-Vicente credible,
the IJ noted significant discrepancies in Gamas-Vicente’s testimony and contradictions with his
supporting evidence.
The IJ then turned to the merits of Gamas-Vicente’s asylum and withholding-of-removal
claims. Gamas-Vicente sought relief because he feared persecution based on his membership in
four particular social groups: (1) “young Guatemalan men who refuse to join gangs,” (2) “young
indigenous men in Guatemala who refuse to join gangs,” (3) “young indigenous men in
Guatemala who refuse to join gangs and lack police protection,” and (4) his own “immediate
family.” AR 128–29. The IJ rejected the first three groups because they swept too broadly and
weren’t sufficiently particular to be recognized as a discrete group by Guatemalan society. The
IJ also rejected all four groups for an independent reason: Gamas-Vicente failed to show that the
gang targeted him because of his membership in any of them. Instead, his testimony showed that
the gang recruited him solely to “increase its wealth and power.” AR 59. Additionally, the IJ
found that Gamas-Vicente failed to show that his past experiences with the gang amounted to
persecution, as required for an asylum application. Because Gamas-Vicente couldn’t meet the
lower standard for asylum, his withholding-of-removal claim also failed. Finally, the IJ rejected
Gamas-Vicente’s CAT claim because he hadn’t shown that he was likely to be tortured or that
the government would initiate, consent to, or acquiesce in any torture.
No. 25-3415 Gamas-Vicente v. Blanche Page 4
Gamas-Vicente appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals, which adopted and
affirmed the IJ’s decision regarding asylum and withholding of removal.1 The Board also found
that Gamas-Vicente had “waived” his claim for CAT protection. AR 5. He timely petitioned
this court for review.
II.
We review the Board’s written opinion as a final agency order, and the IJ’s opinion to the
extent that the Board adopted and affirmed its findings and reasoning. Kilic v. Barr, 965 F.3d
469, 472 (6th Cir. 2020). We apply the “highly deferential” substantial-evidence standard to the
agency’s factual findings. Nasrallah v. Barr, 590 U.S. 573, 582–83 (2020); 8 U.S.C.
§ 1252 (b)(4)(B). And we review questions of law de novo. Cristales-de Linares v. Bondi, 161
F.4th 401, 407 (6th Cir. 2025).
The Attorney General may discretionarily grant asylum to refugees. 8 U.S.C.
§ 1158 (b)(1). To successfully claim asylum, an alien must show (1) that he faced past
persecution (or has a well-founded fear of future persecution) (2) because of his membership in a
particular social group and (3) that the persecution was committed by government actors or non-
government actors the government was unable or unwilling to control. Vasquez-Rivera v.
Garland, 96 F.4th 903, 907 (6th Cir. 2024). Withholding of removal is more stringent than
asylum and requires the alien to show “a clear probability of persecution” in the designated
country of removal based on membership in a protected group. INS v. Stevic, 467 U.S. 407, 413
(1984). So, both forms of relief require aliens to show harm caused by group membership.
Gamas-Vicente brings various challenges related to the Board’s rejection of his claims.
But they all suffer from the same flaw: Gamas-Vicente forfeited his arguments about the
particular social groups he identified before the agency. And he failed to exhaust the three new
groups he presents in his petition for review. Without membership in a particular persecuted
social group, Gamas-Vicente’s claims fail.
1Gamas-Vicente claims the Board’s “summary affirmance” was “arbitrary and capricious” and thus legally
erroneous. Petitioner’s Br. at 27. But the Board didn’t summarily affirm. It issued an opinion that adopted and
affirmed the IJ’s decision. Adopting and affirming an IJ’s decision demonstrates that the Board “exercise[d] its
independent review authority over the case.” Gishta v. Gonzales, 404 F.3d 972, 980 (6th Cir. 2005).
No. 25-3415 Gamas-Vicente v. Blanche Page 5
A.
Our review of final orders of removal is limited to claims that the alien has already
presented to the Board. 8 U.S.C. § 1252 (d); Herrera v. Bondi, 162 F.4th 617, 621 (6th Cir.
2025). Although that exhaustion requirement isn’t jurisdictional, it is a mandatory claim-
processing rule that we must enforce when the government raises it. Id. The government has
done so here. So we must compare Gamas-Vicente’s brief before the Board to his brief before
our court to determine whether he exhausted his claims. Cuevas-Nuno v. Barr, 969 F.3d 331,
334 (6th Cir. 2020).
1.
Before the agency, Gamas-Vicente argued that he faced persecution based on his
membership in one of four particular social groups: (1) young Guatemalan men who refuse to
join gangs, (2) young indigenous Guatemalan men who refuse to join gangs, (3) young
indigenous men in Guatemala who refuse to join gangs and lack police protection, and (4) his
own immediate family. In his petition for review, however, he mentions none of those groups.
We can’t address his arguments about any of these groups. Like any other litigant, “an
immigration petitioner must raise a claim in the opening brief to preserve it.” Mbonga v.
Garland, 18 F.4th 889, 898 (6th Cir. 2021). But in his petition for review, Gamas-Vicente didn’t
contest the rejection of the four particular social groups he identified before the agency. So he
has forfeited any challenge based on those social groups.
2.
The new particular social groups described in his petition for review fare no better. We
can review an alien’s claim only after he has “exhausted all administrative remedies available to
[him] as of right.” 8 U.S.C. § 1252 (d). That exhaustion provision “require[s] precision”: The
alien must “preserve each claim” by exhausting his remedies before the Board. Cuevas-Nuno,
969 F.3d at 334 (emphasis in original) (quotation omitted). Gamas-Vicente asks us to evaluate
three new social groups: (1) indigenous Q’eqchi’ families in Ixcan resisting gang membership,
(2) young indigenous men in rural Guatemala refusing Mara 18 membership, and (3) family
No. 25-3415 Gamas-Vicente v. Blanche Page 6
members of gang victims in Guatemala. But those groups appear nowhere in his brief before the
Board. So he hasn’t exhausted his administrative remedies for his claims about the social groups
raised for the first time in his petition for review.
To be sure, the four groups Gamas-Vicente proposed before the agency might resemble
and overlap with the ones he’s proposed before this court. But mere resemblance isn’t sufficient
to conclude he presented them to the agency. Courts analyze the exact, granular contours of a
petitioner’s proposed particular social groups. Cf., e.g., Cristales-de Linares, 161 F.4th at 410–
11 (distinguishing between the proposed groups “Salvadoran women,” “single Salvadoran
women who are working professionals,” and “salon owners in El Salvador”). If we analyzed
Gamas-Vicente’s similar, but newly proposed groups after the agency rejected his first attempts
as “too broad” and “not sufficiently particular,” we would allow him to circumvent the INA’s
exhaustion requirement. AR 59; 8 U.S.C. § 1252 (d).
To see why, consider two of Gamas-Vicente’s proposed groups. Before the Board (but
forfeited on appeal), he identified the group of “young indigenous Guatemalan men who refuse
to join gangs.” AR 25, 128. Before us (but not exhausted before the agency), he identifies a
similar group: young indigenous men in rural Guatemala refusing Mara 18 membership. Even if
these groups resemble each other, our cases show why raising the former group didn’t exhaust
the latter. We routinely reject proposed groups as insufficiently particular if they “sweep[] in
broad demographics.” Cristales-de Linares, 161 F.4th at 409. We also require that the group is
“actually perceive[d]” as “a distinct class of persons subject to persecution.” Reyes Galeana v.
Garland, 94 F.4th 555, 559 (6th Cir. 2024). So Gamas-Vicente’s additional modifiers—limiting
the group to “rural” areas and a specific gang—change the group’s particularity and discreteness
by narrowing potential members from the entire country to a more limited segment and
increasing the likelihood that society would recognize it as a discrete social group. The INA’s
exhaustion requirement ensures that the Board, as the agency charged with implementing our
immigration laws, gets a full opportunity to review an alien’s claims before we weigh in—and to
create an administrative record for our review. Ramani v. Ashcroft, 378 F.3d 554, 559 (6th Cir.
2004). We would thwart that statutory design if we gave Gamas-Vicente this second bite at the
apple.
No. 25-3415 Gamas-Vicente v. Blanche Page 7
Without a particular social group, all of Gamas-Vicente’s other arguments related to
asylum and withholding of removal fail. That’s because an alien who can’t “show persecution
on account of” membership in a particular social group “cannot qualify for either asylum or
withholding.” Cristales-de Linares, 161 F.4th at 408 (emphasis added). So we need not
consider Gamas-Vicente’s other arguments, such as whether he experienced harm amounting to
persecution or whether he could relocate within Guatemala to avoid that persecution.
B.
Gamas-Vicente mounts a variety of challenges that don’t depend on the particular-social-
group requirement. All fail.
First, Gamas-Vicente argues in passing that the IJ’s opinion “[e]rred by [u]nfairly
[a]ssessing” the evidence and testimony for “discrepancies.” Petitioner’s Br. at 24. That claim
lacks merit because the IJ concluded Gamas-Vicente was credible and gave his testimony “full
evidentiary weight.” AR 55. Additionally, the IJ noted that Gamas-Vicente and his family
members “have very low levels of reading and writing abilities” and were young when these
events took place, which may have caused any “discrepancies.” Id. Far from “fail[ing] to weigh
these contextual factors,” the IJ thoughtfully considered them. Petitioner’s Br. at 24. So the
record disproves any error Gamas-Vicente now identifies.
Gamas-Vicente also raises a single challenge related to his CAT claim. He contends that
the IJ misapplied the “more likely than not” standard in denying him protection under the CAT.
But the Board concluded Gamas-Vicente “waived” his CAT claim by failing to challenge it on
appeal. AR 5. And Gamas-Vicente doesn’t challenge the Board’s waiver finding in his opening
brief, so he has forfeited any argument that he preserved the issue before the Board.
Gamas-Vicente also raises a due-process claim: that he lacked a meaningful opportunity
to present his case before the IJ and the Board due to “repeated and material deficiencies in
interpretation and language access.” Petitioner’s Br. at 23. Gamas-Vicente’s hearing included
interpreters for both languages that he spoke—Aguacateco, his primary language, and Spanish.
Although Gamas-Vicente mentioned some “interpretation issues” in his brief to the Board, he
never argued that his proceedings were constitutionally deficient. AR 18; see Cuevas-Nuno, 969
No. 25-3415 Gamas-Vicente v. Blanche Page 8
F.3d at 334. So he didn’t exhaust his due-process claim as required by statute. 8 U.S.C.
§ 1252 (d); Herrera, 162 F.4th at 621. The government has raised the exhaustion requirement, so
we decline to review Gamas-Vicente’s late-raised claim.
The petition for review is denied.
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