George Morgan, a native and citizen of Jamaica, petitions for review of a December 13, 2004 order of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) affirming a November 13, 2004 order of Immigration Judge (“IJ”) Philip J. Montante, Jr. denying Morgan’s request for a continuance of his deportation proceedings. File No. A 76 161 555. Specifically, Morgan maintains that the IJ abused his discretion and violated Morgan’s right to due process of law. We find the petition to lack merit, and we deny it.
We recount the facts of this case only to the extent necessary to resolve the petition. George Morgan was admitted to the United States as a non-immigrant visitor on July 21, 1993 with authorization to remain only for six months. Morgan has stayed in the United States ever since. He married Michelle Green, a United States citizen, on February 19, 1999, and on April 2,1999, she filed a visa petition on his behalf. Morgan and Green were each interviewed on April 16, 2002, 1 and the Immigration and Nationalization Service (“INS”) denied the visa petition on April 19, 2002 after finding that Morgan and Green lacked a “bona fide marital relationship.” The INS’s decision discussed various responses that Morgan and Green gave to questions that gauged their familiarity with one another. Morgan and Green did not know one another’s date of birth. In addition, they provided inconsistent responses to questions relating to what Morgan gave Green as a birthday gift in the prior year, whether Morgan was right-handed or left-handed, the brand of cigarettes that Green smoked, when they met, how long they had known one another before getting married, whether Green had ever met Morgan’s daughter, whether Green and Morgan paid their electricity bill separately from their rent, whether there were lamps in their bedroom, and whether Green had slept at home the night before the interview.
In July 2002, the INS brought removal proceedings against Morgan, charging him with removability pursuant to the Immigration and Nationality Act § 237(a)(1)(B), 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(1)(B), for having remained in the United States longer than allowed by his non-immigrant visa. Morgan was scheduled to appear for a hearing in New York City on January 14, 2003, but moved by letter dated December 13, 2002 for a change of venue to Buffalo, New York because he allegedly had moved to Utica, New York. That motion was granted on December 30, 2002, and Morgan was scheduled to appear before an IJ in Buffalo on February 12, 2003. Morgan then moved for a continuance on the ground that his counsel was unavailable, and the IJ granted the motion.
Morgan appeared with counsel on February 26, 2003 and sought a second continuance so that Green could file another I-130 visa petition. The government did not *551 object to a continuance to the extent Morgan’s counsel wanted additional time to prepare, but it opposed a continuance pending the adjudication of an 1-130 visa petition. The IJ granted Morgan’s request for a continuance for approximately six months until August 20, 2003.
On August 20, 2003, Morgan moved for a third continuance until the 1-130 visa petition that Green had filed on March 14, 2003 was adjudicated. The IJ this time denied the motion. Then, on August 27, 2003, Morgan filed a motion for a continuance — his fourth request in less than one year — of his voluntary departure hearing because his attorney allegedly was not available. That motion was granted, and Morgan’s hearing was rescheduled to November 14, 2003.
At the hearing concerning the voluntary departure application on November 14, 2003, Morgan once again requested an indefinite continuance pending the outcome of Green’s March 14, 2003 1-130 visa application. The government opposed this fifth request for a continuance, and the IJ denied the request on the ground that Morgan’s case had been pending for over a year, that Morgan had been given repeated continuances, and that the mere fact that an application was pending did not qualify him for any relief from removal. During the voluntary departure hearing, Green testified that Morgan lied during his interview in connection with her original 1-130 petition when he told the interviewer that Green had slept at home the night before the interview because Morgan had thought that if he had testified truthfully that she had not slept at home, the petition would be denied. The IJ granted Morgan’s application for voluntary departure.
Morgan filed with the BIA a timely notice of appeal from the IJ’s November 14, 2003 denial of a continuance. He then sought an extension of time in which to file a brief in support of his appeal, and the BIA granted the request.
On December 13, 2004, the BIA affirmed the decision because the IJ had “committed no error” in light of the fact that Morgan “failed to demonstrate good cause for a continuance.” In re Morgan, File A 76 161 555, at 1 (BIA Dec. 13, 2004) (citing 8 C.F.R. §§ 1003.29, 1240.6).
Morgan argues that the denial of his request for an additional continuance so that Green’s I-130 application could be adjudicated was an abuse of discretion and violated his right to due process of law. Recently, in
Sanusi v. Gonzales,
Morgan does not dispute that at the time his continuance was denied he was ineligible for adjustment of status pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1255(a) because he did not have a qualifying visa “immediately available.” Nonetheless, he contends that the IJ’s decision was an abuse of discretion because “the continuance request in this case was predicated solely upon the delay by [the Department of Homeland Security] in adjudicating the Morgans’ 1-130 petition.” 2 Pet’r’s Reply Br. at 7. He also argues that by virtue of the denial of the requested continuance his “rights to fundamental fairness and due process were violated.” Pet’r’s Br. at 8.
Despite Morgan’s argument to the contrary, he had no right to the adjudication of a second 1-130 petition stemming from a marriage that had already been determined to lack
bona fides. See In re Garcia,
16 I. & N. Dec. 653, 657 (BIA 1978) (“It clearly would not be an abuse of discretion for the immigration judge to summarily deny a request for a continuance ... upon his determination that the visa petition is frivolous or that the adjustment application would be denied on statutory grounds or in the exercise of discretion notwithstanding the approval of the petition.”),
modified on other grounds by In re Arthur,
20 I. & N. Dec. 475 (BIA 1992);
see also Onyeme v. INS,
Morgan’s finds no support for his asserted right to a continuance in the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Although an alien in deportation proceedings is entitled to due process of law,
see Reno v. Flores,
We disagree with Morgan’s contention that it was outside the range of permissible decisions for the IJ to deny the requested continuance even though there was a visa petition Sled on Morgan’s behalf that was pending.
See
Pet’r’s Reply Br. at 7 (arguing that “the IJ does not possess ‘discretion’ to allow [the Department of Homeland Security] to pursue a final deportation order when it has a petition before it that requires adjudication”). Just as an IJ may grant a motion to reopen completed proceedings “in the exercise of discretion” to allow an alien to pursue an application for adjustment of status if certain factors are present,
see In re Velarde-Pacheco,
23 I.
&
N. Dec. 253, 256 (BIA 2002), so too may an IJ,
in his discretion,
decide whether to delay pending proceedings so that an alien can seek eligibility for particular relief.
See, e.g., Witter v. INS,
We have recently commented that immigration cases are not “games.”
See Ming Shi Xue v. BIA,
We have considered all of Morgan’s arguments and find them to be without merit. Accordingly, we DENY the petition for review.
Notes
. Those interviews, meant to assess the legitimacy of the marriage, were conducted pursuant to the consent decree in Stokes v. INS, No. 74 Civ. 1022 (S.D.N.Y. Nov. 10, 1976).
. As of March 1, 2003, the INS was reconstituted into two agencies, the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, both within the Department of Homeland Security.
See Sall v. Gonzales,
