Ilkо Guentchev wanted to be a policeman in his native Bulgaria. He was turned down — because, he says, he practiced the Eastern Orthodox faith, and because some ancestors hаd been police before the communists came to power in 1944, for which he was unwilling to atone by joining the Communist Party. So he took other, less satisfying, employment. In 1990 Guentchev arrived in the United States as a tourist and did not leave when his visa expired. Instead of approaching the INS to claim asylum as a refugee, he kept his head low. After the INS caught up with him, Guentchev argued that his rеligion and family history had been bases of persecution, supporting his demand for asylum under 8 U.S.C. § 1158(a) and withholding of deportation under 8 U.S.C. § 1253(h).
The immigration judge was not impressed by the idea that inability to work in Bulgariа as a policeman is a form of persecution allowing one to live permanently in the United States — especially not when the government of Todor Zhivkov fell in November 1989 and has been replaced by a democratic one. Guentchev observes that today’s Bulgarian government includes persons who played roles in the repressive pre-1990 regime. Still, the State Department believes that Bulgaria has ceased to persecute people on grounds of religion and politics. The Immigration Judge held that Guentchev had not established either past persecution (he had a good job despite his disappointment at his inability to join the police, and his wife was employed as an accountant) or a probability of futurе persecution. Substantial evidence supports both aspects of this decision. See
INS v. Elias-Zacarias,
What the immigration judge found is not necessarily dispositive, however. The Board of Immigration Appeals usually exercises the statutory power reposed in the Attorney General. Guentchev appealed to the Board, which sent him packing on a two-paragraph order that, beyond formal matters (and a grant of voluntary departure), says only: “As we find that the immigration judge adequately and correctly addressed the issues raised on appeal, his decision is affirmed based upon and for the reasons set forth in that decision.” Guentchev argues at length that this summary affirmance violates the due process clause of the fifth amendment.
The Constitution does not entitle aliens to administrative appeals. Even litigants in the federal courts are not constitutionally entitled to multiple layers of review. The Attorney General could dispense with the Board and delegate her powers to the immigration judges, or could give the Board discretion to choose which cases to review (a la thе Appeals Council of the Social Secu
*1038
rity Administration, or the Supreme Court exercising its certiorari power). The combination of a reasoned decision by an administrative law judge plus review in a United States Court of Appeals satisfies constitutional requirements. See also
Taylor v. McKeitken,
The premise of Guentchev’s argument is that, by affirming on the opinion of the immigration judge, the Board has concealed from the reviewing court what the Board thinks of the case — if, indeed, the Board has thought about the case. Perhaps some summаry dispositions obscure the Board’s reasons, or hide the lack of reasons. What the Board’s order says, however, is that the Board agrees with the immigration judge’s reasons, and we have no greater reason to doubt that statement than we have to doubt that the explanation in an elaborate opinion is an honest recapitulation of the reasons for decisiоn. To adopt someone else’s reasoned explanation
is
to give reasons. The risk that adoption hides intellectual laziness, or intellectual dishonesty, is no greater than the risk that a judicial opinion drafted by a law clerk befogs the judge’s thoughts. District judges regularly adopt the reports of magistrates; some appellate courts adopt the work of commissiоners. Writing imposes mental discipline, but we lack any principled ground to declare that members of the Board must use words different from those the immigration judge selected. It is therefore no surрrise that this court has repeatedly held that the Board fulfils its duty by summarily affirming an immigration judge’s opinion.
Urukov v. INS,
Substantial evidence supporting the immigration judge’s decision therefore is dis-positive against Guentchev. He protests that developments in Bulgaria after the immigration judge’s decision of 1993 call its analysis into question. But he did not make this argument to the Board, even though the Board could have received additional submissions after the 1994 Bulgаrian elections, so it is foreclosed here.
Milosevic v. INS,
Actually, Guentchev is fortunate to have received even this review, for his lawyer violated Fed.R.App.P. 30(a) and Circuit Rule 30(b)(3) by omitting the immigration judge’s opinion from the appendix to his brief. Apрellate Rule 30(a)(2) provides that the appendix must include “any relevant portions of the pleadings, charge, findings or opinion”; an immigration judge’s opinion fits this description in every case, and the Board’s order adopting its reasoning made its relevance pellucid. But Appellate Rule 30(a) is often misunderstood, so Circuit Rule 30 adds detail. Circuit Rule 30(b)(3) directs counsel to include “[cjopies of all opinions, orders, find *1039 ings of fact and conclusions of law rendered in the case by administrative agencies (including their administrative law judges).” The Board is an agency, and an immigration judge is an administrative law judge, covered by this rule.
Compliance with these rules is vital to the appellate function. How can a court of appeals review a decision it does not have? The opinion is essential to understand and evaluate the arguments in the brief; that is why it must appear in the appendix, and not just in the record, which usually is inaccessible when the judges read the briefs. To ensure that counsel are aware of their obligations, we require them to state that they have complied; a brief lacking the necessary certificate is rеturned. Royal F. Berg, who represents Guentchev in this court, included a statement that does not itself comply with the rules. Circuit Rule 30(c) provides: “The appendix to each appellant’s briеf shall contain a statement that all of the materials required by parts (a) and (b) of this rule are included. If there are no materials within the scope of parts (a) and (b) of this rule, counsel shall so certify.” Berg wrote “that the decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals, which is the subject of this Petition for Review is attached”. This is accurate, as far as it goes, but does not conform to Rule 30(c), and the Clerk should have returned the brief.
In ordinary civil litigation, failure to supply the court with the decision under review leads to summary affirmance. E.g.,
Urso v. United States,
The order of the Board of Immigration Appeals is affirmed.
