Undеr the Immigration and Nationality Act, an alien who marries a United States citizen is entitled to petition for permanent residency on a conditional basis. See 8 U.S.C. §§ 1151(b)(2)(A)(i), 1154(a)(1)(A)® & (ii), and 1186a(a)(l). Within 90 days of the second anniversary of the conditional admission, the couple (if the citizen is not deceased) may jointly petition for the removal of the condition. See 8 U.S.C. §§ 1186a(c)(l)(A) & 216(d)(2)(A). Each *98 such petition is required to state, inter alia, that the marriage has not been judicially annulled or terminated, and that it was not entered into for the purpose of prоcuring the alien spouse’s admission as an immigrant. See 8 U.S.C. § 1186a(d)(1)(A)(i)(II) & (III).
If the couple has divorced within two years of the conditional admission, the alien spouse may still apply to the Attorney General to remove the conditional nature of her admission by granting a “hardship waiver.” 8 U.S.C. § 1186a(e)(4). Insofar as is relevant here, the statute authorizing the Attorney General to grant such applications provides:
The Attorney General, in the Attorney General’s discretion, may remove the сonditional basis of the permanent resident status for an alien who fails to meet the [conditions described above] if the alien demonstrates that ...
(B) the qualifying marriage was entered into in good faith by the alien spouse, but the qualifying marriage has been terminated (other than through the death of the spouse) and the alien was not at fault in failing to meet the [conditions described above]....
In acting under applications under this paragraph, the Attorney Genеral shall consider any credible evidence relevant to the application. The determination of what evidence is credible and the weight to be given that evidence shall be within the sole discretion of the Attorney General ....
8 U.S.C. § 1186a(c)(4)(B).
On September 15,1997, petitioner Agnes Cho, a Chinese citizen of Burmese descent, married a United States citizen of Burmese descent. Subsequently, Cho secured conditional admission as a permanent United States resident. The сouple divorced within two years of the marriage, and Cho applied to the Attorney General for a hardship waiver. But the Attorney General, acting first through an INS district director, then through an immigration judge, and finally through the Board of Immigration Appeals, denied Cho’s application on the ground that she failed to establish that she had married in good faith and thus failed to establish eligibility for a hardship waiver. Cho petitions to vacate the order of removal that fоllowed these determinations, arguing, inter alia, that the record lacks substantial evidence to support the Attorney General’s ruling. The Attorney General responds that we lack jurisdiction to entertain this petition and, alternatively, that the removal order is grounded in substantial evidence.
We begin with the jurisdictional issue. The Attorney General argues that we lack power to consider the petition under a permanent, jurisdiction-stripping statute enacted into law as part of the Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996. In relevant part, the statute reads:
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no court shall have jurisdiction to review — ■
(i) any judgment regarding the granting of relief under [certain statutory grants of discretionary authority to the Attorney General not here relevant], or
(ii) any other decision or action of the Attorney General the authority for which is specified under this subchapter to be in the discretion of the Attorney General, other than the granting of relief under [another statute not here relevant],
8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(B). The parties agree that the Attorney General’s rejection of an application for a hardship waiver under 8 U.S.C. § 1186a(c)(4)(B) is a decision made pursuant to the relevant statutory “subchapter” mentioned in sub- *99 paragraph (ii). They also agree that the Attorney General’s general authority to grant a hardship waiver under § 1186a(c)(4)(B) is specified to be within the Attorney Genеral’s discretion. But they disagree over whether' these two facts resolve the jurisdictional issue.
The Attorney General says that they do. He primarily argues that the “decision or action” referred to in 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(B)(ii) is his final order, which he says is his denial of the hardship waiver, and not the threshold eligibility ruling — that Cho failed to prove that she married in good faith — on which that order was based. And because this “decision or action” involves the withholding of discretionary relief, the argument goes, we have no power of review.
Cf. Pilch v. Ashcroft,
We think that Cho has the better of this argument. We start with the fact that the Attorney General’s position proves too much. Even if we were to accept for the sake of argument that the final agency order at which the petition is directed, and not the eligibility ruling leading to the order, is the “decision or action” to which 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(B)(ii) refers, the final agency order in this case would not be the Attorney General’s rejection of Cho’s application for a hardship waiver. Rather, it would be the removal order itself, which is the final decision of the Attorney General that we hаve jurisdiction to review under 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(1).
See Subhan v. Ashcroft,
Accordingly, and contrary to the position he takes in his brief, the Attorney General néeds us to look to the rationale underlying his order, and not simply the nature of the order itself, if 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(B)(ii) is ever to preclude court review of a final removal order. And in this case, the rationаle for the final removal order was not that the Attorney General, in an exercise of the discretion conferred upon him by 8 U.S.C. § 1186a(c)(4)(B), saw fit to reject Cho’s application for a hardship waiver; it was that Cho is ineligible as a mátter of law for a discretionary hardship waiver under § 1186a(c)(4)(B) because she failed to establish that she married in good faith. So even if we assume arguendo that the “decision or action” to which § 1252(a)(2)(B)(ii) refers in the context of this case is not the removal order, but is the specific decision leading to the removal order, we would not accept the Attorney General’s characterization of that decision as involving a discretionary denial of a hardship waiver to an eligible alien under § 1186a(c)(4)(B).
Treating the Attorney General’s ineligibility ruling as the relevant “decision or action” (again, assuming for the sake of argument that the relevant “decision or
*100
action” is not the removal order itself) is consistent with the approach we have taken in other cases interpreting similar jurisdiction-stripping provisions of the IIRIRA. In those cases, we have consistently emphasized that, in deciding whether a jurisdiction-stripping statute applies, we should engage in a precise reading of both the agency decision and the petition.
See Succor v. Ashcroft,
The reasons for reading precisely provided in those cases pertain here as well. First, if Congress had intended to preclude all court review of agency decisions involving hardship waiver applications, it is hard to see why it would not have said so more clearly and categorically, using language such as that in, for example, IIRIRA § 309(c)(4)(G) (“[T]here shall be no appeal permitted in the case of an alien who is inadmissable or deportable by reason of having committed [certain criminal offenses]”) — a transitional rulе which we have read to preclude
all
court review in the case of an alien who was deemed by the agency to be inadmissible or deporta-ble by reason of having committed one of the specified criminal offenses.
See Bernal-Vallejo,
Second, the IIRIRA’s jurisdiction-stripping provisions have been interpreted
not
to preclude judicial review “of the legal question of interpretation of the statute as to whether an alien is
eligible
for consideration of relief.”
Succor,
Third, and relatedly, the eligibility ruling challenged here is
not
one that historically has been regarded as entirely discretionary.
See Bernal-Vallejo,
Our jurisdictional inquiry does not end with our decision to treat the Attorney General’s eligibility ruling, and not his denial of the hardship waiver, as the relevant “decision or action” for purposes of assessing the effect of 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(B)(ii) on Cho’s petition. The Attorney General has a fallback position: that his eligibility rulings are themselves discretionary decisions or actions shielded from substantial evidence review under § 1252(a)(2)(B)(ii). At first, this argument seems implausible in light of the authority, set forth in the preceding paragraph, suggesting that the decision whether an alien has married in good faith is not completely discretionary but is, rather, a decision with a legal component that helps define the class of aliens eligible for hardship waivers. But as the Attorney General correctly points out, 8 U.S.C. § 1186a(e)(4)(B) not only commits to the Attorney General’s discretion the decision whether to grant eligiblе aliens hardship waivers, but it also contains the provision which states: “In acting on applications under this paragraph, the Attorney General shall consider any credible evidence relevant to the application. The determination of what evidence is credible and the weight to be given that evidence shall be within the sole discretion of the Attorney General.”
In the Attorney General’s- view, this “sole discretion” provision effectively describes all that goes into a threshold eligibility ruling under 8 U.S.C. § 1186a(c)(4)(B), and thus renders all such rulings “decision(s) or action(s)” textually committed to the Attorney General’s unre-viewable discretion per 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(B)(ii). The Attorney General says that the Third Circuit has accepted this rqading of the statute.
See Urenar-Tavarez v. Ashcroft,
Although
Urena-Tavarez
and the cases which follow it use sweeping language, they do not unequivocally hold that 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(B)(ii) bars
all
court challenges to determinations by the Attorney General that an alien has failed to prove that shе married in good faith and thus is ineligible for discretionary relief under 8 U.S.C. § 1186a(c)(4)(B). Of the three opinions, only
Urenar-Tavarez
describes in any detail the nature of the arguments made in the petition for review, and it is clear that the arguments in that case were directed at the Attorney General’s credibility determinations and the weight he gave to the evidence that he credited.
See
But we think it evident that the portion of 8 U.S.C. § 1186a(c)(4)(B) which commits to the Attorney General’s “sole discretion” the tasks of deciding what evidence is credible and the weight to be given to that evidence should not be read also to commit
*102
to the Attorney General’s sole discretion the qualitatively different tasks of interpreting applicable background legal questions and apрlying those standards to the evidence ultimately credited and deemed weighty. Such a reading would broadly interpret the relevant statutory language, unnaturally we think, to yield an outlier enclave of administrative law in which the courts are stripped of their customary power to be the final word on the meaning of legal concepts imbedded in our immigration statutes.
2
Not surprisingly, the Supreme Court has cautioned against such outcomes.
See INS v. St. Cyr,
We conclude our discussion of jurisdiction by observing that the concern expressed by Judge Easterbrook in
Pilch
and noted above — that allowing a peek behind the veil at the actual rationale of the Attorney General’s decision would open the door to the
de facto
nullification of the jurisdiction-stripping statute,
see
We turn now to whether there is substantial record evidence supporting the Attorney General’s decision, here delegated to and made by the BIA, that Cho failed to prove that she married in good faith. The relevant legal standard is, again, whether Cho intended to establish a life with her spouse at the time she married him.
See Rodriquez,
We start with the fact that Cho made a very strong showing that she married with the requisite intent to establish a life with her husband. Cho introduced uncontra-dicted evidence — expressly credited by the IJ and never questioned by the BIA — that she and her future husband engaged in a nearly two-year courtship prior to marrying (Cho lived in Taiwan at the time she was telephonically introduced to her future husband by a mutual acquaintance in January 1996); that she and her future husband were in frequent telephonic contact during the portions of this two-year period when they lived apart (telephone records were introduced to substantiate this); that her future husband traveled to Taiwan and then to Burma in December 1996 (he stayed through early 1997) to meet her and her family; that she paid a ten-day visit to her future husband in the United States in March 1997 to meet his family and to sightsee; that she returned to the United States in June 1997 (on a visitor’s visa which permitted her to remain in the country through late September 1997) to decide whether she would remain in the United States or whether her future husband would move with her to Taiwan; that the two decided to marry civilly on September 15, 1997 and then to return to Taiwan to hold a more formal reception (a receptiоn that was never held because of emergent marriage troubles traceable, inter alia, to her husband’s physical and emotional abuse and intimate relationship with a former girlfriend); and that the two lived together at his parents’ house from the time of her arrival in the United States in June 1997 until he asked her to move out on April 22, 1998 (the day of her conditional residency interview, at which she angered her husband by arriving with counsel and an affidavit detailing his abuse of her).
In addition, Cho introduced evidence that, after the marriage, she and her husband jointly enrolled in a health insurance policy, filed tax returns, opened bank accounts, entered into automobile financing agreements, and secured a credit card. See 8 C.F.R. § 216(e)(2)® (noting the potential relevance to the good-faith determination of “[djocumentation relating to the degree to which the financial assets and liabilities of the parties were combined”). Cho also introduced extensive counseling records from the period following her separation which detailed her therapists’ perceptions that she harbored a strong desire to make her marriage work and her serious depression over its troubles and eventual failure.
The BIA cited four facts in support of its conclusion that, in spite of this evidence (which the Board acknowledged but did not discuss), Cho had failed to carry her burden: (1) her application to secure conditional permanent residency, and a visa petition her husband concomitantly submitted on her behalf, were prepared in Cho’s handwriting within two weeks of the marriage; (2) Cho and her husband married one week prior to the expiration of the visitor’s visa by which she came to the United States in June 1997; (3) Cho’s husband maintained an intimate relationship with another woman during the marriage; and (4) Cho obtained employment and moved out of the marital residence shortly *104 after obtaining conditional residency. These findings are problematic and do not, alone or in combination, sufficiently ground the Attorney General’s inference about Cho’s intent at the time of her marriage.
The BIA did not explain, and we do not see, how Cho’s prompt submission of a conditional residency application after her marriage tends to show that Cho did not marry in good faith. As we already have stated, the visitor’s visa by which Cho entered the country expirеd just after the marriage, so Cho had to do something to remain here lawfully. So too with the fact that the relevant forms were filled out in Cho’s handwriting; how this tends to show a sham marriage is unexplained and not apparent to us (especially in light of the uneontradicted record evidence that Cho filled out the forms because she wrote more legibly in English than- did her husband). And while Cho’s husband’s intimate relationship with another woman during the marriage might well have been probative of Cho’s marital intentions if there were some evidence that Cho knew of the relationship and its nature at the time she married, the uncontradicted evidence was that Cho learned of the affair only after the marriage. These facts thus do little to substantiate the conclusion that Cho failed to establish the bona fides of her marriage.
This leaves the two findings regarding the timing of the marriage and the separation. Taken in isolation, thése findings might seem to identify substantial evidence in support of the Attornеy General’s decision. After all, the findings are supported by the record, and ordinarily, one who marries one week prior to the expiration of her visitor’s visa and then moves out of the marital home shortly after the conditional residency interview might reasonably be thought to have married solely for an - immigration benefit. But we are not permitted to analyze these findings in isolation; we must evaluate them' in context.
See, e.g., Mukamusoni v. Ashcroft,
The substantial evidence test requires that we “ ‘conscientiously find that the evidence supporting [the Attorney General’s] decision is substantial, when viewed in the light that the record in its entirety furnishes, including the body of evidence opposed to the Board’s
view.’Mukamusoni,
*105 So ordered. 3
. We acknowledge with gratitude the efforts of the Family Violence Prevention Fund, the Massachusetts Law Reform Institute, the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild, and Greater Boston Legal Services, who jointly filed a brief as amici curiae in support of Cho.
Notes
. Indeed, one should be careful not to read the "sole discretion” language too broadly, because such a reading could be in tension both with the previous sentence in the statute — directing that (our emphasis) "the Attorney General shall consider any credible evidence relevant to the application” — and the legislative history describing the origin and purpose of the two sentences, as a pair. See H.R. Rep. 103-395 (describing purpose of section 242); H.R. Conf. Rep. 103-711 at 164-65.
