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Ortiz Rodriguez v. Bondi - Immigration Habeas Corpus

Favicon for www.courtlistener.com 6th Circuit Court of Appeals
Filed March 10th, 2026
Detected March 11th, 2026
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Summary

The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals issued a non-precedential opinion in Ortiz Rodriguez v. Bondi, denying a petition for review of a Board of Immigration Appeals decision. The court affirmed the denial of withholding of removal, finding that the petitioner failed to demonstrate the government's unwillingness or inability to protect him from gang violence.

What changed

The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals has issued a non-precedential opinion in Dario Humberto Ortiz Rodriguez v. Pamela Bondi, denying the petitioner's request to avoid deportation. The court affirmed the Board of Immigration Appeals' decision, which found that the petitioner did not demonstrate that Honduras was unable or unwilling to protect him from gang violence, a necessary condition for withholding of removal. The court also noted that claims under the Convention Against Torture and for cancellation of removal were forfeited due to failure to exhaust administrative remedies.

This ruling means the petitioner's deportation order stands. For legal professionals and government agencies involved in immigration cases, this opinion reinforces the substantial evidence standard for reviewing such decisions and highlights the importance of exhausting all administrative claims before appealing to federal court. While this is a non-precedential opinion, it serves as an example of how courts may rule on similar cases concerning protection from gang violence and the government's ability to provide it.

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March 10, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

Dario Humberto Ortiz Rodriguez v. Pamela Bondi

Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit

Combined Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 26a0115n.06

No. 25-3757

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
FILED
Mar 10, 2026
) KELLY L. STEPHENS, Clerk
DARIO HUMBERTO ORTIZ RODRIGUEZ,
)
Petitioner, )
) ON PETITION FOR REVIEW
v. ) FROM THE UNITED STATES
) BOARD OF IMMIGRATION
PAMELA BONDI, Attorney General, ) APPEALS
Respondent. )
) OPINION

Before: BOGGS, SILER, and KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judges.

BOGGS, Circuit Judge. Petitioner Dario Humberto Ortiz Rodriguez, a Honduran national

who entered this country illegally in 2005, seeks to avoid deportation on the ground that gangs in

Honduras would harm him because of his brother’s past gang ties. He alleges that gang members

cut his foot in 2000, later shot his brother, and threatened to kill him if he returned. An Immigration

Judge denied relief, and the Board of Immigration Appeals affirmed on the dispositive ground that

Honduras was not unable or unwilling to protect him. This petition followed. For the reasons

below, we deny the petition.

Before turning to the merits, we narrow the field. Petitioner did not exhaust his claims for

protection under the Convention Against Torture or for cancellation of removal or voluntary

departure before the Board. Those arguments are forfeited. That leaves only withholding of

removal. See 8 U.S.C. § 1231 (b)(3).

Even there, petitioner misdirects much of his fire. His brief devotes substantial attention

to the Immigration Judge’s adverse credibility determination. But the Board decision did not rest
No. 25-3757, Ortiz Rodriguez v. Bondi

on credibility. It concluded that, even if petitioner’s personal account were accurate, he

nevertheless failed to show that the government was unable or unwilling to protect him from gang

violence. That is the ground of decision before us, and that is the question we address.

Our review is for substantial evidence. We may reverse only if the record compels the

opposite conclusion—if every reasonable adjudicator would be required to find that the

government is unwilling or unable to protect petitioner. 8 U.S.C. § 1252 (b)(4)(B).

This record does not depict a government that refuses protection from gangs. It shows a

government that has, at times, provided it imperfectly. Petitioner testified that when gang members

attacked him in 2000, police intervened, took multiple reports, prevented an assault, investigated,

and relocated him. That is affirmative evidence of state protection. Although that protection

occurred years ago, petitioner identifies no record evidence that the government has since

abandoned such efforts, ceded control to gangs, or otherwise withdrawn from confronting gang-

related violence. Petitioner’s assertions of governmental incapacity in his brief are not evidence.

Nor are his unelaborated blanket references to country-conditions reports. See Martinez v. City of

Memphis, No. 25-5494, 2025 WL 3516448, at *3 (6th Cir. Dec. 8, 2025) (citing United States

v. Watkins, 179 F.3d 489, 500–01 (6th Cir. 1999)) (refusing to consider blanket record references

on appeal). Moreover, proof of crime or corruption in the abstract cannot establish a governmental

failure to protect this particular petitioner. In sum, the agency was not required to treat the 2000

episode as legally irrelevant.

The more recent shooting of petitioner’s brother was likewise gang-related and

accompanied by a threat directed at petitioner. Police took a report, and the crime remains

unsolved. But that fact, standing alone, does not compel the conclusion that petitioner seeks. It is

not evidence of unwillingness. It is not evidence of incapacity. It is evidence that criminals

sometimes get away with crimes. Were that enough, asylum law would convert every country
-2-
No. 25-3757, Ortiz Rodriguez v. Bondi

confronting persistent gang violence into a per se “unable or unwilling” jurisdiction. Petitioner’s

brief gestures at additional threats and assaults directed at his family but fails to connect them to

any denial of state protection. Petitioner has thus forfeited this perfunctory argument. See

Hamilton v. Fleming, No. 25-1386, 2026 WL 103462, at *7 (6th Cir. Jan. 14, 2026) (arguments

merely gestured at on appeal are forfeited). In any event, the agency was entitled to view the more

recent violence as reflecting the limits of law enforcement rather than its absence.

Petitioner’s assertion that the Board “ignore[ed]” the shooting incident fares no better. The

Board expressly acknowledged the gang attacks on his family. We can fairly discern that it held

that such attacks could not overcome the countervailing evidence of police intervention. Reasoned

decision-making requires no more than that. Palucho v. Garland, 49 F.4th 532, 539 (6th Cir.

2022); Aoraha v. Gonzales, 209 F. App'x 473, 476 (6th Cir. 2006) (“The [Board’s] decision is

entitled to a presumption of regularity and thus a presumption that . . . evidence [not expressly

discussed] was considered.”). We decline to reweigh the record simply because petitioner would

have struck the balance differently.

PETITION DENIED.

-3-

Source

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

Classification

Agency
Federal and State Courts
Filed
March 10th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Non-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
Deportation Asylum

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