Thomas Holder petitions for review of the final order of removal issued by the Board of Immigration Appeals (the Board). After careful review, we deny the petition.
I.
Thomas Holder is a Liberian citizen whom the Government charged in 2000 as being removable. On June 13, 2003, an Immigration Judge issued a written order denying Holder’s request for voluntary departure and ordering him removed from the United States. Pursuant to the regulations of the Board of Immigration Appeals, Holder had 30 days from this order in which to file a notice of appeal at the Board’s offices in Falls Church, Virginia. See 8 C.F.R. § 1003.38(b). Because the 30-day period was set to expire on Sunday, July 13, 2003, Holder had until Monday, July 14, to file his appeal. Id On Friday, July 11, 2003, Holder sent his notice of appeal via Federal Express overnight delivery. The package was scheduled to be delivered on Monday, July 14, as the Board’s offices are closed on weekends.
However, when Holder addressed the package containing the appeal notice, he transposed two numbers in the zip code on the package address label. He used the correct street address, city, and state for the Board’s offices in Falls Church, but the zip code was for a different city, Freder-icksburg, Virginia. Because of this error, delivery of the package was delayed and Holder’s appeal was not delivered to the Board until Tuesday, July 15, 2003, one day past the appeal deadline.
As a result of the untimely filing, the Board determined that it lacked jurisdiction over Holder’s appeal and dismissed it. Holder filed a motion for reconsideration with the Board, which was denied, and then filed a petition for review in this court. We remanded the case with instructions to consider whether Holder’s appeal was timely based on evidence that he had sent the package via overnight carrier. The Board vacated its prior orders, determined after reviewing the record that the appeal was untimely filed and that Holder had not demonstrated “unique circumstances” justifying acceptance of his untimely appeal, and issued a final order of removal. Holder then filed this petition, contending that the Board erred in finding that his untimely appeal did not demonstrate the type of circumstances that justified use of the Board’s procedures certifying jurisdiction to itself. See 8 C.F.R. 1003.1(b). Holder also argues that the Board violated his Due Process rights by its refusal to modify its appeals process to allow for either a mailbox rule for filing or allowing appeals to be filed in locations other than the Virginia office. After careful review, we deny Holder’s petition.
II.
A. Jurisdiction
Holder first argues that the Board’s determination that the appeal was untimely was erroneous because there was evidence that the initial attempt to deliver the package may have been timely. We review the Board’s decision “using the substantial evidence standard and will reverse only if ‘it would not be possible for any reasonable fact-finder to come to the conclusion’” in question.
Shahinaj v. Gonzales,
Holder also contends that the Board abused its discretion by determining that there were no “unique circumstances” that justified an exception to the Board’s filing regulations and accepting the appeal using the Board’s procedures for certifying an appeal despite it being untimely.
Oh,
In addition, while Holder makes much of the fact that he sent the package three days in advance of the due date, he actually sent the package the last business day before it was due, similar to a situation where a package is mailed on a Thursday for overnight delivery to meet a Friday deadline. Holder allowed little to no time for delay within the delivery system he chose. See In re Liadov et al., 23 I & N Dec. 990, 992 (BIA 2006) (holding that slight delays by an overnight couriers are not “rare” circumstances or “extraordinary” events that justify the Board certifying a case to itself when the appeal was untimely, despite the fact it was mailed 48 hours in advance of the filing deadline via overnight courier and not delivered until the day after the deadline).
There is also no dispute that Holder erred in addressing the package when he transposed two numbers in the zip code, resulting in the package zip code indicating a different city in Virginia than where the Board’s offices were located. Any error attributable to the error in the zip code is attributable to Holder, not the mail courier.
See
BIA Practice Manual, Ch. 3.1(b)(iv), p. 34 (rev. July 30, 2004) (noting in the most recent edition that “[d]e-
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lays caused by incorrect postage or mailing error by the sending party do not affect existing deadlines”). The Board’s decision-that Holder’s appeal, filed on the last business day before it was due and containing an incorrect zip code in the address, did not involve unique circumstances justifying the Board certifying jurisdiction to itself-is not erroneous.
See generally, Malak v. Gonzales,
B. Due Process
Holder asserts that the Board’s regulations regarding timing and delivery of appeals violated his due process rights. He contends that the Board should amend its regulations to allow for notices of appeal to be delivered to and accepted at designated locations across the country, not solely at the Board’s offices in Virginia, or that a mailbox rule should apply such that notices of appeal should be deemed filed upon mailing.
“[T]he procedures employed on appeal must provide appellants with due process of law.”
Talamantes-Penalver v. I.N.S.,
While the Board’s appeal regulations have changed since Talamantes-Pen-alver, the basic analysis remains sound. No due process violation occurs by requiring a notice of appeal to be filed within thirty days at the Board’s office in Virginia. The availability of overnight couriers *830 and priority mail makes delivery methods available nationwide, and the Board’s procedures for accepting even untimely notices of appeal based on individual unique circumstances bring this regulation within constitutional requirements. While we noted that a ten-day filing period might be unconstitutional in certain circumstances, allowing 30 days for a notice of appeal to be delivered from anywhere in the nation to one central location is not a due process deprivation, considering the breadth of mailing options available, the relatively low risk of erroneous deprivation, and the burdens of implementing other procedures. Id. at 136. 2
We also see no constitutional need to require that local filing be an option for filing a notice of appeal. The 30 days allowed by the regulations allow sufficient time to fill out the brief form required by the Board, send it, and have it arrive in the Board’s office by the required date. In different circumstances, such as if the time to file an appeal was much shorter, local filing might be a required option to avoid infringing on an alien’s due process rights.
See id.,
at 136 & n. 3. However, local filing would place a much larger burden on the Board if it is attempting to process in its offices in Virginia the notices of appeal filed in multiple locations across the country. The filing deadlines and regulations set forth by the Board implementing its appeal procedures are rationally related to a legitimate governmental interest. The fact that other alternatives to the filing regulations may be available does not mean that those in place violate Holder’s due process rights.
See Gunderson v. Hvass,
In
Talamantes-Penalver,
we rejected the contention that a mailbox rule should be placed into effect by the Board in order to address an alleged due process violation.
C. Equal Protection
Holder further alleges a violation of his constitutional equal protection rights, claiming that the requirement that notices of appeal be filed only in Virginia improperly favors filers who reside in that area over others throughout the country. Even if we assume that the regulation creates such a classification, there is no violation of Holder’s equal protection rights. Non-Virginians are not a suspect class, and the regulation is subject to rational review, meaning that the regulation is constitutional so long as it is reasonably related to a legitimate government interest.
See
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Geach v. Chertoff,
III.
Accordingly, we deny the petition for review.
Notes
. We need not decide whether the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Bowles v. Russell,
— U.S. -,
. We note that the highest court in this country, the United States Supreme Court, has one central location where petitions for certiorari must be filed, no matter from what state or territory the petition originates. While the Supreme Court has a 90-day filing period, the substantive requirements for filing a petition for certiorari are much more involved than those for filing a simple, uncomplicated notice of appeal with the Board.
