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Amadou Sy v. Pamela Bondi - Immigration Appeal

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Filed March 3rd, 2026
Detected March 4th, 2026
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Summary

The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals denied Amadou Sy's petition for review of the Board of Immigration Appeals' decision. The court found substantial evidence supported the rejection of Sy's asylum, withholding of removal, and CAT protection claims due to a lack of credible testimony.

What changed

The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, in the case of Amadou Sy v. Pamela Bondi (Docket No. 25-3631), has denied a petition for review concerning an immigration appeal. The court affirmed the Board of Immigration Appeals' decision to reject the petitioner's claims for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture (CAT). The denial was based on the finding that the petitioner's testimony lacked credibility, and substantial evidence supported this conclusion.

This ruling means the petitioner's claims for protection have been definitively rejected by the appellate court. For legal professionals and immigration detainees involved in similar cases, this decision reinforces the importance of consistent and credible testimony in asylum and withholding of removal proceedings. There are no immediate compliance actions required for regulated entities, but this case may serve as precedent for future immigration appeals where credibility is a central issue.

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March 3, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

Amadou Sy v. Pamela Bondi

Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit

Combined Opinion

                        by [Alice Moore Batchelder](https://www.courtlistener.com/person/200/alice-moore-batchelder/)

RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
File Name: 26a0062p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT


AMADOU SY,

Petitioner, │

   No. 25-3631


v. │

PAMELA BONDI, Attorney General, │
Respondent. │

On Petition for Review from the Board of Immigration Appeals.
No. A 221 158 035.

Decided and Filed: March 3, 2026

Before: BATCHELDER, THAPAR, and MATHIS, Circuit Judges.


COUNSEL

ON BRIEF: Nicole Abruzzo Hemrick, HEMRICK O’MALLEY PLLC, New York, New York,
for Petitioner. Lindsay Corliss, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington,
D.C., for Respondent.


OPINION


THAPAR, Circuit Judge. Amadou Sy illegally entered the United States. After
authorities detained him, Sy sought asylum, withholding of removal, and CAT protection. He
argued that he would face persecution if he returned to his home country. But an immigration
judge and the Board of Immigration Appeals rejected Sy’s claims because his testimony wasn’t
credible. Since substantial evidence supports that conclusion, we deny Sy’s petition for review.
No. 25-3631 Sy v. Bondi Page 2

I.

Amadou Sy, a Mauritanian national, entered the United States illegally. So a few months
later, immigration officials detained him and began removal proceedings. Sy admitted that he
was removable but applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the
Convention Against Torture (CAT). He said he was afraid that the government of Mauritania
would kill or torture him based on his ethnicity and his past participation in protests against the
government.

To substantiate that fear, Sy filled out an application form asking him to recount
instances when “[he] or [his] family” had been persecuted. AR 643. In his responses and
declaration, Sy stated Mauritanian police had repeatedly arrested him, jailed him for five days,
and tortured him because he was black and a member of the Fulani ethnic group. Sy indicated
that he had been jailed, beaten, and released a total of four times. Sy’s declaration also stated
that the police had arrested two of his friends and beaten them to death. But neither the affidavit
nor Sy’s application responses suggested that his family members had been persecuted.

Later, Sy testified before an immigration judge about this alleged persecution. Yet his
stories about each arrest were strikingly similar. For example, Sy detailed that in 2011 he was
arrested after protesting for rights for the Fulani people. The police held him for five days,
stripped him naked, beat him, and threw him out of the police station after they thought he was
dead. Then, a passerby found Sy and took him to the hospital. He testified that the exact same
series of events happened in 2021: Sy was supposedly taken to the police station after protesting
for rights for the Fulani people, stripped, beaten, held for five days, thrown out of the police
station after police thought he was dead, and then taken to the hospital by a passerby. And Sy
says the same exact thing happened in 2022. That’s also what Sy testified happened in 2023
except for one alteration: After being held at the police station for five days—just like the last
three times—Sy claimed that he and his fellow prisoners broke the lock and escaped on their
own.
No. 25-3631 Sy v. Bondi Page 3

Sy’s other testimony to the immigration judge contradicted his written application. Sy’s
application did not include any information about other family members who had been
persecuted in Mauritania. Yet he testified to the immigration judge that his two brothers had also
protested and been arrested, beaten, and released alongside Sy in 2011, 2021, and 2022. And he
recalled that, in 2023, one of his brothers was with him when he was arrested. The other brother
had, according to Sy, left Mauritania and begun living in New York. Neither brother testified
during Sy’s immigration hearing or provided a written declaration in support of Sy’s account of
events. Because Sy’s testimony didn’t match his earlier application, the immigration judge
repeatedly asked him why he hadn’t mentioned his brothers before. At first, Sy claimed that he
“did talk about them” in his earlier application. AR 348. But Sy’s attorney agreed with the
immigration judge that Sy had not mentioned his brothers in his application. So Sy then argued
that his “lawyer probably didn’t write it,” even though Sy “did mention it.” AR 351.

Sy further testified that, following these arrests, the Mauritanian police were looking for
him and wanted to kill him. So he decided to leave Mauritania. First, he took his wife and
children to Senegal, which borders Mauritania. He told his wife to stay there, and then Sy left
her and his children and returned to Mauritania. Next, Sy obtained a passport. In his
declaration, Sy claimed he couldn’t get a passport from the Mauritanian government because he
was “black” and “did the protests,” so he instead bought one from a “business person.” AR 442.
But in his later testimony to the immigration judge, Sy recounted that he went to the “white
Mauritania[n] police” and gave them money in return for a passport. AR 353.

Either way, Sy eventually left Mauritania for good. He traveled through many countries,
including Morocco, Spain, El Salvador, and Mexico. But Sy didn’t seek asylum in any of these
countries. When asked why he didn’t go back to his wife and children, Sy stated simply that “I
did not think to go with them in Senegal. I just [decided] to come here” to the United States. Id.

After hearing from Sy and an expert witness, the immigration judge denied Sy’s
applications and found him removable. That’s because the judge determined Sy wasn’t credible.
To make that determination, the judge first stressed the inconsistencies in Sy’s testimony about
whether his brothers were present during his arrests in Mauritania. Likewise, there was “no
reasonable explanation” for why Sy’s brother who lived in New York failed to testify on Sy’s
No. 25-3631 Sy v. Bondi Page 4

behalf—even by affidavit or video—or for how Sy obtained a passport from an allegedly hostile
government. AR 92–94. The judge doubted that the Mauritanian government would “stamp[]
his passport” and let him leave the country when Sy was allegedly a wanted man. AR 93.
Finally, the immigration judge observed that the similarities between Sy’s stories about each of
his arrests “just seem[ed] incredible.” AR 97. And the immigration judge found Sy’s lack of
medical records suspicious because he claimed to have gone to the hospital after the first three
beatings left him near death. In short, Sy had “failed to corroborate his case in frankly any way.”
AR 92.

What’s more, the immigration judge found that Sy’s status as a black man of Fulani
descent, on its own, didn’t mean that Sy would be in danger if he returned to Mauritania. The
judge concluded that Fulanis don’t face a pattern of persecution in Mauritania after being
deported from the United States. That meant Sy couldn’t establish that he feared persecution or
torture upon return to his home country as required for asylum, withholding of removal, or CAT
protection. See 8 U.S.C. §§ 1158 (b)(1), 1231(b)(3)(A); 8 C.F.R. §§ 208.16 (c), 208.17(a). So the
immigration judge denied Sy’s applications.

Sy timely appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals. But the Board dismissed his
appeal. It found that “specific, cogent reasons” supported the immigration judge’s decision and
that the judge didn’t clearly err in finding that Sy wasn’t credible. AR 9–11. It also agreed that
there was no pattern or practice of persecuting Fulanis in Mauritania. That’s because Sy’s
evidence showed only “widespread discrimination rather than persecution,” which isn’t enough
to justify asylum. AR 10.

Sy timely petitioned for review of the agency’s decision. He argues that the Board erred
by (1) upholding the immigration judge’s determination that Sy wasn’t credible, and (2) finding
that there was no pattern or practice of persecuting black Fulanis in Mauritania.

II.

Because the Board provided a written opinion, we review that order as the agency’s final
decision. Kilic v. Barr, 965 F.3d 469, 472 (6th Cir. 2020). To the extent that the Board adopted
the immigration judge’s reasoning, we also review the immigration judge’s decision. Id. We
No. 25-3631 Sy v. Bondi Page 5

review legal questions de novo and factual findings—including credibility determinations—for
substantial evidence. Id. at 473. That means the Board’s determinations must “stand unless any
reasonable adjudicator would be compelled to disagree.” Id. (quoting Nasrallah v. Barr, 590
U.S. 573, 584
(2020) (cleaned up)). Substantial evidence supports the Board’s findings here, so
it didn’t err by denying Sy relief.

A.

Sy first argues that the Board erred by finding that he wasn’t credible. To determine
whether a petitioner is credible, the agency must consider the totality of the circumstances.
Hachem v. Holder, 656 F.3d 430, 434 (6th Cir. 2011). Relevant factors include whether the
applicant’s story is inherently believable, whether his written and oral statements are consistent,
and whether there are any inaccuracies or falsehoods in his narrative. 8 U.S.C.
§ 1158 (b)(1)(B)(iii). And when the agency finds that the petitioner isn’t credible, that finding is
“fatal” to his claims for asylum, withholding of removal, and CAT protection. Slyusar v. Holder,
740 F.3d 1068, 1073–74 (6th Cir. 2014). In other words, the agency doesn’t have to consider the
merits of a non-credible petitioner’s claims.

Substantial evidence supports the Board’s finding that Sy wasn’t credible. First, Sy’s
written declaration about his alleged persecution in Mauritania is inconsistent with his oral
testimony. Sy’s written application didn’t state that his brothers were arrested with him—even
in response to the specific question about whether Sy “or [his] family members” had been subject
to persecution. AR 643 (emphasis added); cf. Kolov v. Garland, 78 F.4th 911, 922 (6th Cir.
2023) (finding that a material omission suggests a lack of credibility), abrogated on other
grounds by, Riley v. Bondi, 606 U.S. 259 (2025). By contrast, Sy testified at length about his
brothers’ involvement in each of his supposed arrests in 2011, 2021, 2022, and 2023. This
inconsistency undermines Sy’s testimony that his family’s experiences make him fear returning
to Mauritania.

Sy fails to explain this conflict. Instead, he first denied that he left out what happened to
his brothers from his written application. Sy then suggested that his “lawyer probably didn’t
write it” in his application, even though he had mentioned his brothers. AR 348, 351. Yet Sy
No. 25-3631 Sy v. Bondi Page 6

swore under oath that his earlier written application was “truthful, accurate, and complete.”
AR 177. Both statements can’t be true at once—even if we believe that Sy told his lawyer about
his brothers’ involvement, that means his sworn statement that his application was “complete”
wasn’t true. The application omitted key information that other family members had also been
persecuted. See 8 U.S.C. § 1158 (b)(1)(B)(iii). This inconsistency alone provides substantial
evidence to support the determination that Sy wasn’t credible.

Second, Sy’s story of his arrests in Mauritania is inherently implausible, as both the
immigration judge and the Board recognized. Sy insists that—on three separate occasions—he
was arrested, held for precisely five days, beaten, released, and taken to the hospital in exactly
the same way. And the same thing allegedly happened in 2023, except he escaped on his own by
breaking the lock of his cell. First, the jailbreak story contradicted Sy’s earlier affidavit, which
claimed that the police “let [him] go” after all four arrests. AR 441. But more importantly, the
striking similarities between the four arrests cast serious doubt on Sy’s recollections. After all,
common sense dictates that there would be at least some variation in how he was arrested each
time over a span of 12 years. And it surely is not unreasonable, let alone clearly erroneous, for
the immigration judge to doubt that each event occurred in exactly the same way.

Third, Sy’s explanation of how he left Mauritania also makes little sense. Sy claims that
he went to the Mauritanian police to buy a passport—the same police that he claims were
searching for him and trying to kill him. (At one point, Sy claimed he got the passport from a
“business person,” but he later abandoned this story.) AR 442. Sy then notes that the
Mauritanian government stamped his passport when he left the country—again, despite his status
as a wanted man. So even after escaping police custody, Sy recounts that he willingly gave the
Mauritanian authorities multiple opportunities to arrest him or kill him. And despite these
opportunities, Sy managed to leave unhindered and unharmed. As the immigration judge found,
that story simply doesn’t add up. So the Board reasonably concluded that Sy wasn’t credible.

In response, Sy points to an out-of-circuit decision which, according to him, shows that
obtaining a passport doesn’t undermine an asylum seeker’s credibility. See Tandia v. Gonzales,
487 F.3d 1048 (7th Cir. 2007). In Tandia, the Seventh Circuit found it was “speculati[ve]” that
the Mauritanian government had approved the asylum seeker’s travel plans because he obtained
No. 25-3631 Sy v. Bondi Page 7

his passport through bribery. Id. at 1054. So the asylum seeker’s ability to secure a passport
didn’t necessarily undermine his credibility. Id. But this case is very different. According to
Sy, he obtained his passport from the very police who were allegedly attempting to kill him.
And the Seventh Circuit didn’t address a blatant inconsistency like that.

Sy’s testimony has other holes. For instance, he provided no reason why his brother—
who now lives in New York—failed to testify or even provide an affidavit in support of his
petition. Yet Sy claims this brother was with him during his arrests in 2011, 2021, and 2022, so
his brother could corroborate his allegations. See 8 U.S.C. § 1158 (b)(1)(B)(ii) (requiring an
asylum applicant to corroborate his story when his testimony alone isn’t sufficient). When asked
why his brother didn’t testify, Sy simply said, “I don’t know.” AR 352. Sy also didn’t provide
any medical records from his repeated hospital visits following his alleged beatings.

And Sy doesn’t explain why, after leaving Mauritania, he failed to seek asylum in any of
the countries he passed through on his way to the United States. If he were really looking for
safety from the Mauritanian government, he could have asked any of those countries for asylum
rather than wait to petition the United States for asylum when he was on the verge of removal.

Sy ultimately tries to explain away these shortcomings by saying that he is “uneducated.”
Petitioner’s Br. at 9. For example, Sy points to his inability to spell his own children’s names or
give their ages. But Sy doesn’t explain how his lack of education affects his credibility. After
all, even an “uneducated” person should be able to remember whether his brothers were with him
when he was repeatedly arrested by police or how he obtained a passport to leave Mauritania.

In short, substantial evidence supports the agency’s finding that Sy wasn’t credible. And
that finding is “fatal” to Sy’s petitions for asylum, withholding of removal, and CAT protection.
See Slyusar, 740 F.3d at 1072.

B.

Sy next argues that the Board erred by finding that he didn’t establish a pattern or
practice of persecution against black Fulanis in Mauritania. Establishing a pattern of persecution
is no easy task. After all, “persecution is an extreme concept that does not include every sort of
No. 25-3631 Sy v. Bondi Page 8

treatment our society regards as offensive.” Ali v. Ashcroft, 366 F.3d 407, 410 (6th Cir. 2004)
(cleaned up). Instead, persecution requires “punishment or the infliction of suffering or harm.”
Mikhailevitch v. I.N.S., 146 F.3d 384, 389 (6th Cir. 1998). So discrimination alone doesn’t
qualify. Id. at 389–90.

Substantial evidence supports the Board’s finding there is no pattern or practice of
persecution against black Fulanis in Mauritania. To start, Fulanis are the largest ethnic group of
black Africans in Mauritania—they’re not a small or isolated minority. And there has been no
broad attempt to harm or imprison Fulanis in Mauritania. Sy also hasn’t shown that Fulanis
experienced recent enslavement or face future enslavement despite Mauritania’s legal
protections.

Nor does Sy’s expert testimony establish a pattern of persecution against Fulanis in
Mauritania. Sy presented a professor, Charlotte Walker-Said, as an “expert” in human rights,
ethnicity, and slavery in Mauritania. She explained that black Mauritanians constitute “an
uneducated and marginalized black underclass” who are “effectively resigned to various forms
of . . . manual labor.” AR 300. Even if true, her testimony doesn’t establish that black Fulanis
are persecuted. After all, lack of education isn’t “punishment” or “harm.” Mikhailevitch, 146
F.3d at 389
. The same goes for Walker-Said’s testimony that black Fulanis perform manual
labor because of economic necessity. Once again, a lack of access to high-paying jobs doesn’t
establish persecution because it’s not “punishment” or “suffering.” Id. So even accepting
Walker-Said’s description about conditions in Mauritania, the Board correctly concluded that
Fulanis are at most subject to discrimination—not persecution.

Finally, Sy’s argument also fails to the extent that he contends that the Board erred by not
considering his own experiences of persecution in determining whether a pattern or practice
existed. Sy’s pattern-or-practice claim turns on whether he is likely to experience persecution
based on “what has happened to others who are similarly situated.” Ali, 366 F.3d at 411. So Sy
needed to provide persuasive evidence of other Fulanis who were persecuted, not just repackage
his stories of his own arrests, which the Board had already rejected. He failed to do that. The
Board thus didn’t err by finding that there was no pattern or practice of persecution of black
No. 25-3631 Sy v. Bondi Page 9

Fulanis in Mauritania. And it didn’t err by denying Sy’s petitions for asylum, withholding of
removal, and CAT protection.


The petition for review is denied.

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
Courts
Filed
March 3rd, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Immigration detainees Legal professionals Government agencies
Geographic scope
National (US)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Immigration
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Asylum Appeals

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