Harrypersad Sundar, a citizen of Trinidad and Tobago, lived in the United States as a lawful permanent resident until his removal was ordered by an immigration judge because he had committed a crime of moral turpitude. Sundar did not appeal that removal order to the Board of Immigration Appeals, but instead did nothing for four-and-а-half years and then filed a 28 U.S.C. § 2241 petition for a writ of habeas corpus to overturn the removal order. The district court denied the habeas petition because Sundar’s failure to appeal the removal order to the BIA constituted a failure to exhaust his administrative remedies as required in 8 U.S.C. § 1252(d)(1).
In this appeal by Sundar from that denial of habeas relief we are faced with the question of whether § 1252(d)(l)’s exhaustion requirement applies in § 2241 habeas proceedings or only in direct appeals to this Court from the BIA. Concluding that it does apply in habeas proceedings, we affirm the district court’s denial of the petition.
I.
Sundar enterеd the United States in 1988 and was granted legal permanent resident status that same year. In 1990, he pleaded guilty in New York to burglary and was sentenced to an indeterminate sentence of not less than two years and not more than six years of imprisonment. In June 1998, Sundar traveled to Trinidad, and upon his return to the United States, the Immigration and Nаturalization Service detained him at the airport. Based on his 1990 burglary conviction, the INS issued a notice to appear, which alleged that Sundar was subject to removal from the United States because he had committed a *1322 crime of moral turpitude, pursuant to § 212(a)(2)(A)(i)(I) of the Immigration and Naturalization Act (INA), and it begаn removal proceedings against him.
At the hearing that resulted, the immigration judge decided Sundar was subject to removal on the charge alleged in the notice to appear. According to Sundar, the judge also ruled during the course of the hearing that because he had been convicted of an aggravatеd felony Sundar was not eligible for discretionary relief under INA § 212(c). 1 On August 6, 1998, the immigration judge entered a removal order. Sundar did not appeal the removal order to the BIA. On November 9, 1998— eight years after he had been convicted of the aggravated felony that caused the removal — Sundar was finally removed from the United Stаtes. 2
On May 30, 2002, Sundar filed a habeas petition attacking his 1998 removal. Sun-dar acknowledges that the immigration judge’s ruling that Sundar was not eligible for discretionary relief was consistent with immigration law at the time.
See In re Yeung,
21 I. & N. Dec. 610 (BIA 1996) (en banc). However, Sundar argues,
INS v. St. Cyr,
The district court disagreed. It acknowledged that the Supreme Court’s St. Cyr decision establishes that Sundar should have been entitled to seek discretionary relief from deportation under INA § 212 because his aggravated felony conviction, which would have disqualified him from discretionary relief under the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, Pub.L. No. 104-208,110 Stat. 3009 (IIRIRA), predated the enactment of the IIRIRA. Habeas relief was nonetheless due to be denied, the court reasoned, because Sundar’s fаilure to appeal the immigration judge’s decision to the BIA constitutes a failure to exhaust administrative remedies which precludes him from collaterally attacking the removal order in a habeas petition. Alternatively, on the merits of Sundar’s due process claim, the district court decided that because the grant of relief pursuant to INA § 212 is completely discretionary, any det *1323 riment from being held ineligible for such relief is purely speculative, meaning Sun-dar cannot show the violation of a constitutionally protected interest.
II.
The exhaustion requirement applicable to immigration cases is found in 8 U.S.C. § 1252(d)(1), which provides that “[a] court may review a final order of removal only if ... the alien has exhausted all administrative remedies available to the alien as of right.” We have interpreted that requirement to be jurisdictional, so we lack jurisdiction to consider claims that have not been raised before the BIA.
Fernandez-Bernal v. Attorney General,
Although our decisions in
Femandez-Bemal, Galindo-Del Valle,
and
Asencio
were issued in circumstances where the alien had filed petitions in this Court seeking direct review оf BIA decisions in removal proceedings, the Fourth Circuit held in
Kurfees v. INS,
While upholding the exhaustion requirement may seem strict in an individua,! case, exhaustion serves the twin purposes of protecting administrative agency authority and promoting judicial efficiency. The BIA was not given the opportunity to review the сase because Kurfees neglected to appeal. The exhaustion doctrine embodies a policy of respect for administrative agencies, which allows them to carry out their responsibilities and “to discover and correct [their] own errors.” A rule that allowed parties to circumvent the administrative process under the circumstances of this case would undermine agency functions and clog the courts with unnecessary petitions. The rules are clear: before proceeding to federal court, an alien must exhaust his or her administrative remedies. Kurfees failed to exhaust.
Id. at 336 (internal citation omitted).
We agree with the Fourth Circuit’s reasoning in
Kurfees,
but we have to go be
*1324
yond it in order to address Sundar’s chief argument to the contrary. He argues that because § 1252(d)(1) refers to what a court “may review” (just as the predecessor § 1105a(c) referred to what shall not “be reviewed”), it applies only to direct review proceedings and not to habeas proceedings. That argument finds some support in the observаtion in the
St. Cyr
opinion, which was not addressed in the
Kurfees
decision, that “[i]n the immigration context, ‘judicial review* and ‘habeas corpus’ have historically distinct meanings.”
St. Cyr,
Sundar reads
St. Cyr
too broadly. The language he relies upon from that opinion arose in a materially different context. The INS asserted in
St. Cyr
that certain sections of 8 U.S.C. § 1252 (including (a)(1), (a)(2)(C), and (b)(9))
4
removed entirely from the federal courts the jurisdiction to hear habeas cases involving certain types of immigration orders, even when all administrative remedies had beеn exhausted.
Id.
at 310-11,
But what we have here is different. The exhaustion requirement of § 1252(d)(1) is not tantamount to a complete preclusion of jurisdiction. Telling a petitioner that he must seek the remedy for an error before an administrative agency or another court prior to seeking it in a habeas proceeding is not the same thing as telling him that he may not pursue the remedy in a federal habeas proceeding in any event. Compelling a petitioner to seek review of an immigration order in the BIA before he can seek to have it set aside in a habeas proceeding is different from barring all habe-as review of the order regardless of exhaustion. The difference is that between a reasonable condition precedent and an unconditional preclusion.
Section 1252(d)(1), unlike the provisions involved in
St. Cyr,
does not invoke the
*1325
rule disfavoring the repeal of habeas jurisdiction, because it does not repeal habeas jurisdiction. It only conditions that jurisdiction and its exercise on exhaustion of remedies, a condition that serves valuable interests.
See Kurfees,
Some courts have indicated in dicta that constitutional challenges to the INA and INS procedures and some due process claims do not require exhaustion, because the BIA does not have the power to adjudicate those claims.
See, e.g., Bernal-Vallejo v. INS,
Sundar’s claim is not a constitutional challenge to the INA itself or a due process claim that could not be resolved by a BIA decision. Instead, his claim in essence is that the immigration judge in this case and the BIA in. its previous decision in
In re Yeung
shоuld not have interpreted IIRIRA § 348 to apply retroactively to cases in which the petitioner had pleaded guilty to an aggravated felony before enactment of that provision. It was within the BIA’s authority to reconsider and change its decision in
In re Yeung,
and in order to exhaust his administrative remedies Sundar should have asked it tо do so. The decision in
Engle v. Isaac,
Likewise, an alien with a claim he wants to bring in a habeas proceeding may not bypass the BIA simply because he thinks it will be unsympathetic to his claim, because the BIA may decide, upon reflection, that the contention is valid. On appeal, the BIA could have accepted Sundar’s interpretation and reversed its decision in
In re Yeung.
If it had, the due process violation Sundar claims would have been remediеd, rendering this habeas proceeding unnecessary. By failing to appeal the immigration judge’s decision to the BIA, Sundar deprived it of the opportunity to “discover and correct [its] own error[].”
Kurfees,
Because Sundar did not exhaust his administrative remedies by appealing to the BIA before seeking habeas review of the immigration judge’s removal order, the district court’s denial of his habeas petition on that ground was proper.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. It appears from the recоrd that Sundar did not even apply for discretionary relief, but that fact is not essential to our decision. The immigration judge denied discretionary relief regardless of whether Sundar sought it, and his failure to appeal that denial is the pivotal fact for our decision.
. Thereafter, Sundar returned to the United States, and on February 25, 2002, the INS found him in the Broward County, Florida, jail where he was being detained on charges that included armed car jacking and aggravated battery with a deadly weapon. On April 23, 2002, Sundar was indicted for entering the United States after he had been removed, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326. He filed a motion to dismiss that federal indictment on the ground that his 1998 removal order was invalid, a motion the district court denied. Sundar thereafter entered a conditional guilty plea, reserving his right to appeal from the denial of his motion to dismiss. Sundar was convicted and sentenced to a prison term of 57 months on the reentry charge, and that conviction was affirmed by this Court on March 26, 2003 (it is our case no. 02-14759). We set all of this out here because the § 1326 charge obviously was the impetus behind Sundar’s belated attempt to set aside the 1998 removal order that is the target of his habeas petition in this case.
. 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(c) (1995) was the predecessor statute to 8 U.S.C. § 1252(d)(1) and provided "[a]n order of deportation or of exclusion shall not be reviewed by any court if the alien has not exhausted the administrative remedies available to him as of right under the immigration laws and regulations.”
. 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(1) provides, "Judicial review of a final order of removal (other than an order of removal without a hearing pursuant to section 1225(b)(1) of this title) is governed only by chapter 158 of Title 28, except as provided in subsection (b) of this section.”
8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(C) provides, "Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no court shall have jurisdiction to review any final order of removal against an alien who is removable by reason of having committed” certain criminal offenses.
8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(9) provides, "Judicial reviеw of all questions of law and fact, including interpretation and application of constitutional and statutory provisions, arising from any action taken or proceeding brought to remove an alien from the United States under this subchapter shall be available only in judicial review of a final order under this section.”
. Sundar's counsel at oral argument contended that
Hoang v. Comfort,
