The sole and exclusive means for challenging a final order of removal is to file a petition for review in a federal court of appeals. If a petition for review is filed more than 30 days after the order of removal, the court of appeals lacks jurisdiction over the petition. Here, Worklis Luna and Tasmann Anthony Thompson filed petitions for review after the 30-day deadline, alleging that their constitutional rights were violated because they were prevented from filing timely peti *87 tions by ineffective assistance of counsel and governmental interference, respectively. Petitioners argue that the 30-day filing requirement, as applied to them, would violate the Suspension Clause if it barred them from raising their constitutional claims through a petition for a writ of habeas corpus or an adequate and effective substitute.
We note at the outset that the petitions before us raise important and difficult issues. On the one hand, Luna and Thompson claim that their efforts to challenge their removal orders have been impeded by the deprivation of their constitutional rights, including the right to due process under the Fifth Amendment. Luna, Thompson, and others like them cannot be left with no forum in which to raise plausible claims of constitutional violations. Hence, the possible foreclosure of habeas relief at issue here raises legitimate Suspension Clause concerns. On the other hand, permitting aliens to assert these claims through habeas may allow those with frivolous claims to delay their removals and inappropriately clog the judicial system. Indeed, in its treatment of habeas and its substitutes, Congress has expressed concern about the abuse of the habeas procedure. In approaching Luna and Thompson’s petitions, we have had these two conflicting points very much in mind. In view of the Government’s concessions and the structure of the process, we believe that the statutory motion to reopen process before the Board of Immigration Appeals (the “BIA”), subject to de novo review of legal issues and with equitable tolling and the removal of the departure bar, permits the BIA to readily sort frivolous claims from those deserving a day in court, thus vindicating both values to the fullest extent possible.
We hold that applying the 30-day filing deadline to Petitioners does not violate the Suspension Clause because the statutory motion to reopen process as described herein is an adequate and effective substitute for habeas review. We reach that conclusion based on our further holdings that (1) the statutory motion to reopen process cannot be unilaterally terminated by the Government and (2) agency denials are subject to meaningful judicial review. Accordingly, we dismiss as untimely Petitioners’ petitions for review.
I.
A.
In September 2007, Thompson, a native and citizen of Jamaica, was charged in a Notice to Appear with removability pursuant to the Immigration and Nationality Act (the “INA”) Section 237(a)(2)(A)(ii), based on his convictions for two crimes involving moral turpitude not arising out of a single scheme of criminal misconduct, and Section 237(a)(2)(A)(iii), based on his conviction for an aggravated felony. Thompson, appearing pro se before an immigration judge (“IJ”) in Hartford, Connecticut, requested that the IJ appoint counsel because “this matter has become complex and the respondent never attended any law school, nor is he an attorney.” In January 2008, the IJ found him removable on the aggravated felony charge and ordered him removed to Jamaica. Thompson appealed to the BIA, asserting that he was denied his right to counsel and that he was innocent of the crimes underlying his convictions. The BIA dismissed his appeal on April 28, 2008. On August 18, 2008, Thompson filed a motion to reopen, seeking protection under the Convention Against Torture (the “CAT”). On September 9, 2008, the BIA denied Thompson’s motion to reopen, concluding that Thompson had failed to establish a prima facie ease for protection under the CAT.
*88 On October 1, 2008, Thompson filed in this Court a “motion asking for time to appeal” the BIA’s April 28, 2008 order. The motion was docketed in this Court as a petition for review. Thompson stated that when the BIA dismissed his appeal, he was detained in the Wyatt Detention Facility in Central Falls, Rhode Island and was “unable to get [his] legal documents at this facilityf.] ITS [sic] PROHIBITED.” In response, the Government filed a motion to dismiss the petition for review as untimely.
In March 2009, this Court learned that the Government had removed Thompson to Jamaica. Two months later, the Government acknowledged that this Court retains jurisdiction over the petition despite Thompson’s removal.
See Nken v. Holder,
— U.S. -,
B.
In December 2006, Luna, a native of the Dominican Republic, was charged in a Notice to Appear with removability pursuant to INA Section 237(a)(2)(B)(i), based on his conviction for a controlled substance violation, and Section 237(a)(2)(A)(iii), based on his conviction for an aggravated felony. In a hearing before an IJ in Napanoch, New York, Luna, appearing pro se, argued that he was not removable under Section 237 of the INA because he was a citizen of the United States. Luna argued that he was a dual citizen of the Dominican Republic and the United States, and that he had derivative U.S. citizenship based on his father’s naturalization. In May 2007, the IJ determined that Luna had not derived U.S. citizenship from his father, that his removability had been established by clear and convincing evidence, that he was statutorily ineligible for various forms of relief, and that he had not established a prima facie claim for deferral of removal under the CAT. Accordingly, the IJ ordered Luna removed to the Dominican Republic. Luna, detained at the Buffalo Federal Detention Facility in Batavia, New York, appealed to the BIA through counsel. By an order issued July 20, 2007, the BIA dismissed Luna’s appeal.
On August 9, 2007, Luna’s attorney sent a letter to Luna’s mother, stating that he did not believe that he could make an argument in a petition for review that would wari’ant reversal of the BIA’s decision. Luna’s attorney also stated that the deadline for filing a petition for review was August 20, 2007. However, Luna stated that his attorney did not send him a letter and he did not receive the letter the attorney sent to his mother until August 25, 2007 — five days after the filing deadline. Nor, Luna says, did his attorney otherwise inform him that he would not file a petition for review. On September 5, 2007, sixteen days after the filing deadline and eleven days after allegedly receiving his attorney’s letter, Luna, pro se, petitioned for review of the BIA’s decision. Luna sought “an enlargement of time to file a petition for review” because of his former attorney’s “neglect, sudden loss of interest, and giving [Luna the] false impression that he would submit all the necessary papers and continue to represent [Luna].” The government moved to dismiss the petition for review as untimely. In response, Luna submitted his former attorney’s August 9 letter to his mother and asserted that “pri- or counsel’s] lack of proper communication kept petitioner from filing his petition *89 on time.” Luna argued that he “should have been notified by counsel at his place of detention to make sure that [he] received the correspondence in a timely manner, which would [have] allow[ed him] to file his petition within the thirty-day filing deadline.”
C.
In February and August 2009, another panel of this Court ordered the appointment of pro bono counsel as amicus curiae and directed briefing on the following issue:
[W]hether there is merit to an as-applied Suspension Clause challenge for a petitioner who lacked any reasonable opportunity to file a petition for review during the 30-day filing period because of circumstances created by the government, or because of attorney error, in light of our opinion in Ruiz-Martinez v. Mukasey,516 F.3d 102 (2008).
The American Civil Liberties Union’s (“ACLU”) Immigrants’ Rights Project was subsequently appointed as amicus counsel in both appeals.
In its briefs to the Court, the ACLU argued that the 30-day filing deadline would violate the Suspension Clause if it barred Petitioners from filing a writ of habeas corpus or seeking adequate and effective relief.
In response, the Government argued that the 30-day deadline to file a petition for review, as applied to Luna and Thompson, did not raise Suspension Clause concerns because the motion to reopen process offers constitutionally adequate review. The Government stated that “an alien has a ‘statutory right’ to file ... a motion [to reopen]” with the BIA after a final order of removal is issued. The noncitizen specifically would ask the BIA to reopen proceedings and determine whether ineffective assistance or governmental interference prevented the noncitizen from filing a timely petition for review. If so, the BIA would reissue the final order of removal, providing the non-citizen 30 days from that date to petition for review of the merits of the removal order. If the BIA denied the motion to reopen, the noncitizen could file a petition for review within 30 days. The Government stated that “the Court’s review of a reopening denial entails de novo review of any legal (including constitutional) conclusions.” This Court, the Government concluded (before later “amending” its position), could order the BIA to reissue the final order of removal if it found that the BIA erroneously denied the motion to reopen.
The ACLU agreed in large part with this approach but argued that, for the motion to reopen process to be an adequate substitute, (1) the BIA must have the authority to hear such motions regarding ineffective assistance and governmental interference; (2) removal of a noncitizen must not terminate such motions; (3) the BIA must not be able to insulate its denial of a motion to reopen from de novo judicial scrutiny by styling it as discretionary; and (4) noncitizens should be eligible for equitable tolling when government-created circumstances prevent them from timely filing a petition for review.
D.
On September 3, 2010, this Court issued an opinion holding that the 30-day deadline did not violate the Suspension Clause as applied to Petitioners. We held that the REAL ID Act of 2005 did not withdraw habeas jurisdiction over Petitioners’ claims that they were prevented from filing a timely petition for review by ineffective assistance of counsel or governmental interference. We transferred the petitions *90 to the district courts in which Petitioners’ removal proceedings were completed and stayed Luna’s removal pending the receipt of his habeas petition in district court.
Significantly, in the September 3 opinion, this Court rejected the motion to reopen process as an adequate and effective substitute for habeas. First, we stated that “[t]he granting of a stay is discretionary, 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(f), and [a] motion to reopen is automatically terminated if the alien is removed while the motion is pending,
id.
§ 1003.2(d).” Op. at 90 n.4 (citing
Xue Yong Zhang v. Holder,
We concluded:
If a petition for review is the “sole and exclusive means” for petitioners to make their claims regarding the timeliness of their petitions for review, and if we are jurisdictionally barred from considering such claims because of the 30-day filing requirement, then we would have to decide whether the 30-day deadline, as applied to petitioners, would constitute a suspension of the writ of habeas corpus. Because we conclude that the REAL ID Act can be construed to preserve habeas jurisdiction over petitioners’ claims, however, we need not decide that question.
Op. at 91-92.
Shortly after the opinion was issued, we granted the Government’s request to recall the mandate, ordered the opinion to be withdrawn, and requested supplemental briefing on whether the statutory motion to reopen process is an adequate and effective substitute for habeas. Our September 3 opinion failed to analyze the statutory motion to reopen process, which is part of the Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”). Rather, it referred only to the sua sponte motion to reopen process, which is “a creature of regulations promulgated by the Attorney General.”
Xue Yong Zhang,
II.
As an initial matter, the Government requests that we deny Petitioners’ petitions for review on futility grounds. The Government asserts that we need not decide whether the 30-day filing require *91 ment, as applied, violates the Suspension Clause because even if Petitioners file timely petitions for review of their final orders of removal, such petitions would be futile. The Government argues that Petitioners would be unable to raise in a timely petition for review a colorable issue over which this Court has jurisdiction.
Dismissal on futility grounds is appropriate only if “there is no realistic possibility” of success.
See, e.g., Alam v. Gonzales,
Here, both Petitioners are aggravated felons. Therefore, in a petition for review challenging Petitioners’ final orders of removal, we would have jurisdiction to consider only “constitutional claims or questions of law.” 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(C)-(D). Petitioners, who currently are seeking the opportunity to file such a petition, have not yet detailed the claims they would raise in a petition for review. Nor is it their burden to inform us of such claims in advance. Because the Government raises the futility argument, it is the Government’s burden to show that “there is no realistic possibility” that Petitioners could gain relief via a petition for review.
See Alam,
We conclude that neither Thompson nor Luna lacks any realistic possibility of gaining relief from a timely petition for review. Thompson preserved his right to argue that, in this case, he was denied a right to counsel under the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause. He raised the issue before and during his IJ hearing and raised the issue on appeal to the BIA. Thompson argued that he “wouldn’t be able to represent himself pro-se in [this] matter” because “this matter has become complex and [he] never attended any law school, nor is he an attorney.” Although a person in removal proceedings enjoys a right to due process under the Fifth Amendment,
see, e.g., Jian Yun Zheng v. U.S. DOJ,
Likewise, Luna does not lack any realistic possibility of success via a petition for review. Luna, appearing pro se before the IJ, argued that he was a citizen through the naturalization of his father. However,
*92
for his appeal to the BIA Luna hired an attorney who failed to raise this argument. As we have held, “in order to preserve an issue for review by this Court, the petitioner must not only raise it before the BIA, but do so with specificity.”
Brito v. Mukasey,
In sum, we reject the Government’s request that we deny Petitioners’ petitions for review on futility grounds. Therefore, we proceed to determine whether the 30-day deadline for filing a petition for review violates the Suspension Clause as applied to Petitioners.
III.
Under the INA, “[a] petition for review must be filed not later than 30 days after the date of the final order of removal.” 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(1). This 30-day filing requirement “is jurisdictional and is not subject to equitable tolling.”
Ruiz-Martinez,
However, Ruiz-Martinez did not rule out the possibility that the 30-day deadline could amount to a suspension of the writ as applied to an individual petitioner. Here, Petitioners, who filed untimely petitions for review, argue that the 30-day filing requirement violates the Suspension Clause when a petitioner misses the deadline because of ineffective assistance of counsel or governmental interference. In these circumstances, Petitioners contend, there is no reasonable opportunity to seek meaningful judicial review.
IV.
The Suspension Clause of the U.S. Constitution provides that “[t]he Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it.” U.S. Const, art. I, § 9, cl. 2. “Because of that Clause, some judicial intervention in deportation cases is unques
*93
tionably required by the Constitution.”
St. Cyr,
Prior to 1996, an alien could challenge a removal order either in a petition for review filed in the court of appeals or in a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the district court.
See Ruiz-MaHinez,
Shortly thereafter, a noncitizen found removable by the BIA because of his conviction for an aggravated felony filed a habeas petition in the District of Connecticut, raising a purely legal question regarding the impact of AEDPA and IIRIRA on conduct that occurred before their enactment.
St. Cyr,
*94
While the Supreme Court in
St. Cyr
did not define the exact scope of constitutional protection required, it said that “at the absolute minimum, the Suspension Clause protects the writ [of habeas corpus] ‘as it existed in 1789.’ ”
Id.
at 301,
In response to the Supreme Court’s decision in
St. Cyr,
Congress passed the REAL ID Act, again channeling review of removal orders into the courts of appeals. With this Act, “Congress intended to provide a scheme of judicial review which is an adequate and effective substitute for habeas corpus.”
Id.
at 326,
This Court has construed “the intent of Congress’s restoration under the REAL ID Act rubric of ‘constitutional claims or questions of law’ to encompass the same types of issues that courts traditionally exercised in habeas review over Executive detentions.”
Xiao Ji Chen,
V.
A.
Petitioners raise precisely the types of constitutional claims for which habeas review, or an adequate and effective substitute, is most essential. Luna and Thompson allege that they were deprived of their right to fundamental fairness under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Luna alleges that his counsel prevented him from filing a timely petition for review and argues that his counsel’s conduct was so ineffective that it impinged on the fundamental fairness of the removal proceeding.
See, e.g., Omar v. Mukasey,
If Petitioners lack a forum in which to raise such claims, then we are confronted squarely with the “serious constitutional questions” raised by the Supreme Court in
St. Cyr,
B.
The Government argues that by codifying the motion to reopen process, Congress has provided a mechanism by which Petitioners can raise their claims that they were prevented by ineffective assistance or governmental interference from filing timely petitions for review. As the Government emphasizes, the Supreme Court repeatedly has described the motion to reopen process as “an ‘important safeguard’ intended ‘to ensure a proper and lawful disposition’ of immigration proceedings.”
Encana v. Holder,
— U.S. --,
Before 1996, aliens involved in immigration proceedings could move to reopen their proceedings before the BIA. However, the authority for such motions derived solely from regulations promulgated by the Attorney General. The regulations also provided that a noncitizen removed from the United States could not file a motion to reopen, and if a noncitizen was removed from the United States, her motion to reopen would be deemed withdrawn.
See
8 C.F.R. § 3.2 (predecessor to 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(d)). This regulation regarding a noncitizen’s departure largely paralleled a statutory provision, 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(c)(1962), that barred courts from exercising jurisdiction over immigration orders when the noncitizen had departed the country. In addition, Section 1105a “provid[ed] most aliens with an automatic stay of their removal order while judicial review was pending,” so that an alien who challenged an order of l’emoval was “typically entitled to remain in the United States for the duration of judicial review.”
Nken,
Congress, by enacting IIRIRA, made two important changes to the existing process. First, Congress codified procedures governing the filing of motions to reopen and provided noncitizens the right to “file one motion to reopen proceedings under this section.” 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(c)(7)(A) (originally designated as 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(c)(6)(A)). For example, a noncitizen generally can file only one statutory motion to reopen and generally must do so within 90 days of the final order of removal. § 1229a(c)(7)(A), (C). Those numerosity and timeliness requirements are not jurisdictional and therefore qualify for equitable tolling if the petitioner has been diligent.
E.g., Jin Bo Zhao v. INS,
After Congress enacted IIRIRA, the Attorney General promulgated new regulations. Among the new regulations, the Attorney General provided for sua sponte motions to reopen and imposed a bar to BIA review of motions to reopen when a noncitizen had departed the country. See Inspection and Expedited Removal of Aliens; Detention and Removal of Aliens; Conduct of Removal Proceedings; Asylum Procedures, 62 Fed. Reg. 10,312, 10,321 (Mar. 6, 1997) (discussing departure bar regulation currently at 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(d)).
This Court, and the Supreme Court, have treated statutory motions to reopen differently from regulatory (i.e., sua sponte) motions to reopen. For example, we have held that Section 1252(a)(2)(B), which eliminates our jurisdiction to review denials of discretionary relief in removal proceedings, applies to regulatory motions to reopen.
Xue Yong Zhang,
Similarly, although this Court found that the Attorney General’s departure bar regulation applied to regulatory motions to reopen,
Xue Yong Zhang,
C.
The Government argues that the 30-day filing deadline does not raise Suspension Clause concerns because the statutory motion to reopen process is an adequate and effective substitute for habeas corpus.
1.
“At its historical core, the writ of habeas corpus has served as a means of reviewing the legality of Executive detention, and it is in that context that its protections have been strongest.”
St. Cyr,
As the Supreme Court has stated, it is “uncontroversial” that the writ of habeas corpus allows a detainee “a meaningful opportunity to demonstrate that he is being held pursuant to ‘the erroneous application or interpretation’ of relevant law.”
Id.
at 779,
Although the Supreme Court has not comprehensively detailed what makes a substitute for habeas adequate and effective, it has provided guideposts that help us determine this case. First, in the cases in which the Supreme Court has found a substitute to be adequate and effective, “the purpose and effect of the [substitute] was to expedite consideration of the [detainee’s] claims, not to delay or frustrate it.”
Id.
at 775-76,
Here, the Government argues that the statutory motion to reopen process is an adequate and effective substitute for habeas in the context of a noncitizen’s claim that he was prevented from filing a timely petition for review by ineffective assistance of counsel or governmental interference.
In broad strokes, the statutory motion to reopen process is as follows: a noncitizen with such a claim would first file a statutory motion to reopen with the BIA, 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(c)(7), requesting that the BIA reissue the final order of removal in light of the alleged ineffective assistance of counsel or governmental interference. If the BIA does so, the noncitizen has a new 30 days to file in this Court a petition for review of the merits of the removal order.
Lewis v. Holder,
We believe this process, as more fully described below, provides Petitioners with an adequate and effective substitute for habeas.
2.
Amicus counsel, while conceding that a substitute for habeas could resolve Sus
*98
pension Clause concerns, emphasized that if the statutory motion to reopen procedure is to be an adequate substitute, that process cannot be meaningfully “more limited” than habeas review.
See Boumediene, 553
U.S. at 778, 783,
As an initial matter, the BIA has the authority to hear claims that government-created circumstances prevented an alien from filing a timely petition for review. The Government acknowledges that the BIA has the authority to reissue a final order of removal if “the government had impeded Thompson from filing a timely petition for review.” Moreover, the Government correctly notes that in Matter of Compean, 25 I. & N. Dec. 1, 3 (A.G.2009), the Attorney General “reaffirmed his previous determination that the Board [the BIA] had jurisdiction to review ineffective assistance of counsel claims based on attorney conduct subsequent to a final order of removal.” We emphasize that this authority, as reflected in Compean, is essential to our holding. If the Attorney General later withdraws the BIA’s authority to consider claims that ineffective assistance or governmental interference prevented an alien from filing a timely petition for review, then the statutory motion to reopen process would be meaningfully “more limited” than habeas review and therefore an inadequate substitute for habeas.
Although the BIA has authority to consider such claims regarding ineffective assistance and government-created circumstances, the statutory motion to reopen process would not be an adequate substitute for habeas if our review of BIA decisions was meaningfully “more limited” than it would be on habeas.
See Bournediene, 553
U.S. at 783,
The Supreme Court has clarified that we have jurisdiction to review denials of statutory motions to reopen, regardless of how the Attorney General styles such decisions.
Kucana,
The Government further acknowledged that we review such questions de novo. And we have done so in numerous cases.
E.g., Xue Yong Zhang,
3.
For a statutory motion to reopen to be a constitutionally adequate substitute for habeas, it must be available to a diligent petitioner. That is, an alien who was prevented by ineffective assistance of counsel or governmental interference from filing a timely petition for review cannot also be prevented by the same circumstances from filing a statutory motion to reopen.
Although an alien generally may file only one statutory motion to reopen, 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(c)(7)(A), and generally must do so within 90 days of a final order of removal, § 1229a(e)(7)(D)(I), neither requirement is jurisdictional.
Jin Bo Zhao,
In sum, we agree with amicus counsel that for the statutory motion to reopen process to be an adequate substitute for habeas, aliens must be eligible for equitable tolling when ineffective assistance of counsel or governmental interference prevent them from timely filing a petition for review. An alien who files a motion to reopen is entitled to equitable tolling when he exercises due diligence in filing the motion and shows that he was prevented by ineffective assistance of counsel or governmental interference from filing the motion on time. See id. If the BIA denies such equitable tolling, the alien may petition this Coxxrt for review of that decision. Id.
4.
For a motion to reopen to be a constitutionally adequate substitute for habeas, it cannot be “subject to manipulation” by the Government.
Boumediene,
The BIA has stated that it lacks jurisdiction over motions to reopen when the movant departs the United States. While the Attorney General’s departure bar regulation, 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(d), could be read to apply to only regulatory (sua sponte) reopenings, the BIA has declared, albeit in dicta, that the departure bar regulation deprives the BIA of jurisdiction to consider statutory motions to reopen after the movant’s departure from the United States.
Matter of Armendarez-Mendez,
24 I. & N. Dec. 646, 653-60 (BIA 2008) (criticizing
William v. Gonzales,
As the Supreme Court has held, an administrative agency cannot contract its own jurisdiction either by regulations or decisions in litigated proceedings.
Union Pac. R.R. Co. v. Bhd. of Locomotive Eng’rs,
— U.S. -,
We hold that the BIA may not contract the jurisdiction that Congress gave it by applying the departure bar regulation, 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(d), as suggested by the BIA in
Armendarez-Mendez,
to statutory motions to reopen. Congress alone controls the BIA’s jurisdiction to hear motions to reopen filed under 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(e)(7).
Cf. Union Pac.,
Congress, by enacting IIRIRA, codified selected regulations regarding the motion to reopen process, providing “the BIA jurisdiction to consider [a] motion [to reopen] if it is filed within ninety days after the removal decision becomes final.”
Xue Yong Zhang,
Nor did Congress otherwise act to make jurisdiction depend on the alien’s presence in the United States. Indeed, IIRIRA repealed the earlier statutory bar to judicial review of removal orders when the alien had departed the country. IIRIRA § 306(b) (repealing 8 U.S.C. § 1105a). In addition, IIRIRA repealed the automatic stay provision.
Nken,
Nor has Congress indicated since it enacted IIRIRA that an alien’s departure after filing a motion to reopen should be a jurisdictional bar. In May 2005, Congress enacted the REAL ID Act.
Ruiz-Martinez,
In sum, since Congress enacted IIRIRA in 1996, “nothing in the [INA] undergirds a conclusion that the Board [of Immigration Appeals] lacks ‘jurisdiction’ ... to issue decisions that affect the legal
*102
rights of departed aliens.”
Marin-Rodriguez v. Holder,
We decline to decide the validity of the departure bar regulation, 8 C.F.R. § 1003.2(d), in every possible context.
Compare William v. Gonzales,
In sum, the Government’s power to remove aliens subject to a final order of removal does not make the motion to reopen process “subject to manipulation” by the Government. The BIA retains jurisdiction over such motions,
Marin-Rodriguez,
5.
Although the BIA cannot contract its jurisdiction to hear statutory motions to reopen,
see supra
Section V.C.4, such a mechanism for review would be “an insufficient replacement” for habeas if it were “wholly a discretionary” mechanism,
Boumediene,
On petitions for review of denied motions to reopen, we review de novo constitutional claims and questions of law.
See supra
Section V.C.2. In addition, a failure to consider facts relevant to the motion to reopen is, as a matter of law, reversible error.
Ping Chen v. U.S. Att’y Gen.,
6.
Lastly, this Court, on a petition for review of a denied motion to reopen, “must have adequate authority ... to formulate and issue appropriate orders for relief.”
Boumediene,
The All Writs Act empowers the Court to “issue all writs necessary or appropriate in aid of [its] respective jurisdiction ] and agreeable to the usages and principles of law.” 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a). As the Supreme Court has held, “Congress’s failure expressly to confer the authority [to issue a writ] in a statute allowing appellate review should not be taken as an implicit denial of that power.”
Nken,
However, for the purpose of our inquiry into the constitutional adequacy of the statutory motion to reopen process, we find that, at a minimum, this Court has inherent authority to direct the BIA to reissue an order of removal. Federal courts have “inherent authority to protect their proceedings and judgments in the course of discharging their traditional responsibilities.”
Degen v. United States,
This Court has the authority to direct the BIA to reissue a final order of removal. Congress has not specifically deprived the court of the authority to direct the BIA to reissue a final order of removal if this Court grants a petition for review of a denial of a motion to reopen. Indeed, we believe that Congress envisioned that we would grant such remedies in appropriate cases. Congress passed the REAL ID Act to “provide a scheme of judicial review which is an adequate and effective substitute for habeas corpus.”
Xiao Ji Chen,
In sum, in the context of Luna and Thompson’s appeals, the statutory motion to reopen process as described herein is an adequate and effective substitute for habeas. We emphasize that because habeas is “designed to restrain” the Government’s power, the Government must ensure that the motion to reopen process remains an adequate and effective substitute for habeas.
Boumediene,
VI.
Having determined that an adequate and effective substitute for habeas review is available for Luna’s and Thompson’s claims regarding the timeliness of their appeals, we conclude that the 30-day filing deadline as applied to Luna and Thompson does not violate the Suspension Clause. Thus, we lack jurisdiction over their petitions for review.
Ruiz-Martinez,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Thompson and Luna’s petitions for review are DISMISSED.
Notes
. To avoid any confusion, we note that a reviewing court ordinarily should remand rather than decide a matter that (1) is primarily committed to the BIA’s discretion and (2) has not yet been considered by the BIA.
INS
v.
Orlando Ventura,
. We express no opinion on the merits of such motions or the diligence of Petitioners. However, given the uncertainty about whether the statutory motion to reopen process was an adequate and effective substitute for habeas, as reflected in our earlier opinion, it would seem harsh to charge these pro se Petitioners, who lacked the benefit of the present opinion, with lack of diligence if they can show that they diligently filed petitions for review with this Court.
