This appeal presents the issue of whether an alien who was convicted of an aggravated felony after the effective date of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act, Pub.L. No. 104-208 (1996) (codified in scattered sections of 8 U.S.C.) (IIRIRA), may obtain habeas relief on the ground that the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) failed to exercise discretion when it initiated deportation proceedings against him. The dis
*67
trict court found this issue lurking in the penumbra of the case; deemed it a sufficient basis to grant relief in favor of petitioner-appellee Edovidio R. Carranza; and therefore ordered further consideration of the petitioner’s situation by the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA).
See Carranza v. INS,
I. BACKGROUND
The petitioner is a Guatemalan national who entered this country over two decades ago. He lived in Maine with his common-law wife and children, but worked in Boston. On March 23, 1996, police officers in that city arrested him after he engaged in a violent dispute with his mistress. On October 1, 1997, the petitioner entered a guilty plea in state court to reduced charges (assault with a dangerous weapon and unlawful possession of a firearm). The court imposed a three-year incarcera-tive sentence.
Roughly ten weeks later, the INS commenced deportation proceedings by issuing a notice to appear before an immigration judge (IJ). The IJ held a removal hearing on March 5, 1998. The petitioner appeared pro se. The hearing was not completed on that date, and the petitioner filed an application for suspension of deportation, citing family and economic concerns. When the hearing resumed (June 2, 1998), the petitioner admitted to the assault conviction. He would not take responsibility for the firearms conviction, however, adamantly asserting that the weapon was not his.
The IJ found that the INS had sustained its burden of showing removability pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(C); took the firearms conviction at face value; and held that the petitioner, as a firearms offender who had committed an aggravated felony, see id. § 1101(a)(43)(F), was ineligible for cancellation of removal (the IIRIRA’s equivalent of suspension of deportation). The petitioner appealed, and the BIA upheld the decision.
The petitioner essayed a court challenge to the BIA’s decision. He filed papers in this court in which he effectively conceded both his, aggravated felon status and his ineligibility for the cancellation of removal process established under 8 U.S.C. § 1229b. Citing the bar to direct review contained in 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(C), we determined that we lacked jurisdiction to scrutinize the BIA’s decision. Carranza v. INS, No. 99-1428 (1st Cir. May 3, 1999) (unpublished order). Withal, we noted that the petitioner’s papers could be read as requesting relief in the nature of habeas corpus and transferred the matter to the district court for consideration of that claim. Id. at 1-2 (referencing 28 U.S.C. § 2241).
In the district court, the petitioner claimed that he had not been properly advised of the consequences of pleading guilty to the firearms charge and asserted that he would have contested that charge had he known the ramifications. To show that he had a viable defense, he tendered a statement from his landlord maintaining that the landlord (rather than the petitioner) owned the gun. He also proffered evidence of his good character and his son’s delicate medical condition.
The district court held a non-evidentiary hearing on January 20, 2000. The petitioner again appeared pro se. Although the petitioner had not raised the question, the court expressed concern as to whether the Attorney General had exercised discretion before initiating removal proceedings. Counsel for the INS stubbornly refused to address this concern, but, rather, (1) ques *68 tioned the district court’s jurisdiction to hear the matter, and (2) asserted that when an alien had been convicted of an aggravated felony, the IIRIRA left the Attorney General no choice but to proceed with deportation.
On February 29, 2000, the district court issued an opinion in which it rejected the INS’s contention that the court lacked ha-beas jurisdiction.
Carranza I,
The INS promptly moved to alter or amend' the judgment.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e). It asserted that the district court had misunderstood its position and argued that the decision to institute removal proceedings against the petitioner itself represented the required exercise of discretion. The district court rejected this entreaty, stating that the INS had “conflat[ed] an act of discretion with an act (unmodified).”
Carranza II,
Available evidence strongly supports the inference ... that employees of the INS do not recognize the scope of their discretionary power in assessing the merits of individual cases before proceeding, and during proceedings, and that in the case of [petitioner] they did not make a discretionary determination as to the propriety of instituting proceedings against him.
Id. at 64. This timely appeal followed.
II. ANALYSIS
We think it useful to begin by attempting to distill some semblance of clarity from the Byzantine realm of immigration law. We then mull the particulars of the case at hand.
A. Historical Overview.
The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, ch. 2, § 212, 66 Stat. 187 (1952) (repealed 1996) (INA), gave the Attorney General discretion to permit aliens lawfully admitted for permanent residence to return after a temporary absence.
2
This seemingly innocuous provision was later interpreted to permit the Attorney General, as a matter of discretion, to waive deportation for removable aliens already within the United States.
Wallace v. Reno,
In
United States ex rel. Accardi v. Shaughnessy,
If petitioner can prove the allegation, he should receive a new hearing before the Board without the burden of previous proscription by the [Attorney General’s bias]_ [I]n arriving at its decision [the Board must] exercise its own independent discretion, after a fair hearing, which is nothing more than what the regulations accord petitioner as a right.
Id.
Critical to this analysis was the admonition that a court reviewing a habeas claim could not pass upon the merits of the BIA’s final decision on the appropriateness of discretionary relief.
See id.
(warning that the petitioner “may still fail to convince the Board or the Attorney General, in the exercise of their discretion, that he is entitled to suspension”). The Court reiterated this point two years later, declaring that “[although ... aliens have been given a right to a discretionary determination on an application for suspension, a grant thereof is manifestly not a matter of right under any circumstances, but rather is in all cases a matter of grace.”
Jay v. Boyd,
This, then, was the state of the law while the INA remained in force. Because section 212(c) afforded a deportable alien an opportunity to apply for discretionary relief, an eligible alien could seek habeas review if and when the INS refused to entertain such an application
at all.
This is not an especially radical view of the law, but, rather, a particularized application of the precept that as long as a regulation is properly promulgated and stays in force, “the Executive Branch is bound by it, and indeed the United States as the sovereign composed of the three branches is bound to respect and to enforce it.”
United States v. Nixon,
In 1996, Congress enacted the IIRIRA, 3 and the tectonic plates shifted. One section of the IIRIRA provides that “notwithstanding any other provision of law, no court shall have jurisdiction to hear any cause or claim by or on behalf of any alien arising from the decision or action by the Attorney General to commence proceedings, adjudicate cases, or execute removal orders against any alien under this chapter.” 8 U.S.C. § 1252(g). Another section prohibits judicial review of any appeal challenging a final order of removal if initiated by an alien convicted of an aggravated felony. Id. § 1252(a)(2)(C).
The IIRIRA also changed the form and method by which the Attorney General (and through him or her the INS, see supra note 2) may grant discretionary relief. Congress abolished 212(c) waivers entirely and substituted a process called *70 “cancellation of removal.” Id. § 1229b. The new procedure is considerably more restrictive. Of particular interest here, it prohibits the Attorney General from exercising his or her discretion to halt the removal of any alien convicted of an aggravated felony. Id. § 1229b(a)(3).
The import of these statutes was not immediately apparent. In
Goncalves v. Reno,
A year later, the Supreme Court decided
Reno v. American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, 525
U.S. 471,
We addressed the impact of
AADC
in
Mahadeo v. Reno,
The Supreme Court reentered the fray last term in two companion cases.
See INS v. St. Cyr,
If it were clear that the question of law could be answered in another judicial forum, it might be permissible to accept the INS’ reading of § 1252. But the absence of such a forum, coupled with the lack of a clear, unambiguous, and express statement of congressional intent to preclude judicial consideration on habeas of such an important question of law, strongly counsels against adopting a construction that would raise serious constitutional questions. Accordingly, we conclude that habeas jurisdiction under [28 U.S.C.] § 2241 was not repealed by AEDPA and IIRIRA.
St. Cyr,
B. The Case at Hand.
In light of St. Cyr, INS’s principal argument — that section 1252(g) forecloses the exercise of habeas jurisdiction over cases in which an alien challenges his imminent deportation — is a dead letter. Here, however, the habeas petition is filed by an aggravated felon who was convicted of the predicate crime after the effective date of the IIRIRA. Under 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(a)(3), such an alien has no statutory right to any particular process for withholding deportation. The question, then, is whether a claim grounded solely in the INS’s failure to exercise its prosecutorial discretion is colorable under 28 § U.S.C. 2241. We think not.
In each of the cases that we have dis
cussed
— Accardi and
Goncalves
are prime examples — an alien was afforded a statutory right to have an application for discretionary relief considered.
See Accardi,
Analytically, the decision whether an alien is eligible to be considered for a particular discretionary form of relief is a statutory question separate from the discretionary component of the administrative decision whether to grant relief. .... The Court has determined that the refusal of the BIA to consider an alien’s request for discretionary relief, in violation of statute or regulations, is a valid claim on habeas corpus. In making certain aliens eligible for discretionary relief, Congress intended the Attorney General or her designated subordinates to make a judgment. A refusal to make that judgment would frustrate Congress’ intent.... Thus it is no answer to [the petitioner’s] argument to emphasize the broad discretion of the political branches in immigration matters. It was the intent of Congress that such discretion be exercised.
The question, then, reduces to whether, in the circumstances of this case, the petitioner has shown an established right to a particular process. Such an established right may inure by statute or *72 by constitutional command. See 28 U.S.C. § 2241(c)(3) (extending the writ of habeas corpus to persons held “in violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States”). Without such an established right, however, an alien’s claim simply is not cognizable under the habeas statute.
No such right exists here. The petitioner, following the district court’s lead, questions whether the INS exercised its discretion at all. In the habeas context, we may conduct an inquiry into the exercise
vel non
of discretion only when Congress has afforded the alien a statutory right to be considered for discretionary relief. While the INS retains inherent prosecutorial discretion as to whether to bring removal proceedings,
see AADC,
The only remaining issue is whether the petitioner maintains some residual constitutional right, presumably emanating from the Due Process Clause, to have the INS weigh the equities of his appeal — or as the district court phrased it, to have the INS perform “an act of discretion” rather than “an act (unmodified).”
Carranza II,
This construct comports with the way in which writs of habeas corpus historically have been employed in the immigration context. As a general rule, the type of claims that are available to aliens on habe-as are restricted,
see Bowrin v. INS,
That ends the matter. Unlike the alien in
St. Cyr,
III. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. Barring a col-orable statutory or constitutional claim, the failure of the INS to exercise individualized discretion in its decision to initiate deportation proceedings against an alien convicted of an aggravated felony after the effective date of the IIRIRA does not fall within the purview of the residual federal habeas statute, 28 U.S.C. § 2241. Thus, we hold that the petitioner — an alien convicted of an aggravated felony after the IIRIRA’s effective date — lacks any entitlement to pursue habeas relief on the ground that the INS refused to exercise discretion in instituting deportation proceedings. On this basis, we reverse the judgment below and remand the matter to the district court with instructions to dismiss the petitioner’s habeas application for want of subject matter jurisdiction.
Reversed.
Notes
. The petitioner has not appealed from this portion of the district court's ukase.
. The Attorney General's discretion in this field has from time to time been delegated to the BIA and/or the INS.
See United States ex rel. Accardi v. Shaughnessy,
. Some of the provisions cited herein are, in fact, amendments to the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214 (1996).
See Goncalves v. Reno,
. Congress established certain transitional rules to apply to cases pending at the time that the IIRIRA was enacted.
See
IIRIRA § 309(c). Under these rules, Congress delayed the enforcement of section 1252(b)(9) (removing jurisdiction for judicial review of INS decisions to commence removal) until April 1, 1997, but made section 1252(g) (eliminating judicial review of appeals launched by aggravated felons) effective immediately.
Id.
§ 309(a). The parties quarrel about whether section 1252(g) or section 1252(b)(9) applies after the expiration of the transitional rules. There is a simple solution to this quandary: both sections apply. From and after April 1, 1997, Congress eliminated judicial review not only over decisions to initiate removal but also over attempts by aliens thereafter convicted of aggravated felonies to appeal removal orders.
See AADC,
. We exempt from this general proscription, of course, government misconduct that violates the Equal Protection Clause.
See Borderikircher v. Hayes,
. Purely legal questions are suitable for habe-as review because answering them does not necessitate second-guessing "the agency’s factual findings or the Attorney General's exer
*73
cise of her discretion.”
Henderson v. INS,
. This holding does not in any way implicate the Suspension Clause.
See Delaney v. Mates-anz,
