ORDER
Respondent Attorney General John Ashcroft requests that we modify our opinion issued on October 13, 2004, arguing that our decision to remand the case with instructions to enter an order granting asylum contravenes the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
INS v. Ventura,
The issue in
Ventura
was whether the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals exceeded its authority by resolving a factual issue that an agency had not considered. The petitioner, a citizen of Guatemala, sought asylum after being threatened with harm unless he joined the guerrilla army.
Ventura,
On petition for certiorari, the Supreme Court held that the Ninth Circuit should have remanded the factual question of whether circumstances in Guatemala had changed significantly to the BIA.
Id.
at 17,
The respondent argues that our decision contravenes Ventura in two respects: (1) “that once an agency error is identified, a court of appeals should remand a case for additional investigation or explanаtion;” and (2) “appellate courts should not decide issues when an agency has not considered them.” (Request for Modification at 5.) The respondent does not take issue with the substance of our analysis, but -asks only that in remanding the case to the BIA, we do so without instruction to the Attorney General to enter an order granting asylum.
With regard to the first issue rаised by the respondent, we do not agree that
Ventura
stands for the broad proposition that a court of apрeals must remand a case for additional investigation or explanation once an error is identified. As pоinted out above, the issue in
Ventura
was whether the Ninth Circuit impermissibly usurped the BIA’s fact-finding role; here, however, the issue does nоt require finding new facts, but rather is narrowly confined to whether the undisputed record evidence compels the сonclusion that Ghebremedhin would be subject to persecution on account of his religion if returned to Eritrea. Wе are well-within our authority to reverse the IJ’s eligibility determination if manifestly contrary to law, 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(4)(C);
Camara v. Ashcroft,
Further, we do not take issue with the general principles of administrative law advanced by the respondent. But the reach of the propositions cited — such as “the function of the reviewing court ends when an error of law is laid bare,” (Request for Modification at 5) — can sometimes be overstated.
Ventura’s,
admonition against
de novo
inquiry into a petitioner’s asylum application simply restates the rule that “[i]f an order is valid only as a determination of policy or judgment which the agency alone is authorized to make and which it has not made,” courts must remand for the agency to make the decision in the first instance.
SEC v. Chenery Corp.,
This brings us to the respondent’s seсond argument. The Attorney General does not contest that Ghebremedhin is statutorily eligible for asylum, but instead argues that the panel essentially exercised a purely administrative function by remanding with instructions to enter an order granting asylum. Wе agree that the power to grant asylum is vested solely in the hands of the Attorney General, 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(1), and that even if an alien is otherwise eligible, the Attorney General is empowered by statute to deny relief,
id.; INS v. Cardoza-Fonseca,
