On June 23, 2003, petitioner-appellant Maurice Gittens filed a pro se petition for habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2241, challenging his detention and underlying deportation order on the grounds that he *383 had not been apprised of his right to seek discretionary relief under § 212(c) of the Immigration & Nationality Act (“INA”) of 1952, 8 U.S.C. § 1182(c) (repealed Sept. 80, 1996), when he consented to deportation. Because Gittens had unsuccessfully sought habeas relief on multiple occasions between November 2000 and January 2003, asserting substantially the same-argument each time, the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Mukasey, C.J.) treated Gittens’ petition as a second and successive motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 and transferred it to this court for review under the gatek-eeping requirements of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”), Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214 (codified at 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)).
When the petition was originally submitted to us, the government acknowledged that the district court had erred in its construction of Gittens’ application and agreed with him that we should consider his filing as a habeas petition under § 2241, a statutory route that Gittens had pursued only once before. Cast as a § 2241 petition, Gittens’ case presented the question of whether the AEDPA’s ga-tekeeping standards apply to a second ha-beas petition filed pursuant to § 2241.
1
Resolution of that issue is, however, no longer necessary for Gittens’ case in light of the passage, on May 11, 2005, of the REAL ID Act of 2005, Pub.L. No. 109-13, 119 Stat. 231 (hereinafter “REAL ID Act” or “Act”). The REAL ID Act “eliminates habeas corpus review of orders of removal and requires that any § 2241 petition pending in the district court at the time of its enactment be transferred to the court of appeals in which the petition could have been properly brought as a petition for review from a final order of removal under 8 U.S.C. § 1252.”
See Marquez-Almanzar v. INS,
BACKGROUND
Gittens’ criminal background is no less extensive than the procedural history of his case. A native and citizen of Jamaica, Gittens was first convicted in 1977 of first and second degree robbery in violation of New York state law. Although he was sentenced to consecutive terms of seven and ten years in prison, he was released on parole in 1980. Two years later, after being convicted of criminal possession of a weapon, second degree grand larceny, and attempted burglary, Gittens was sentenced to ten years in prison. Upon his release on parole in 1988, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) arrested Gittens and brought him béfore an immigration judge.
The circumstances surrounding Gittens’ 1988 immigration hearing remain disputed and provide the factual predicate for Git-tens’ present and previous habeas applications. In essence, Gittens contends that he did not consent to deportation voluntarily because of the undue pressure the immigration judge applied on him to waive his right to seek § 212(c) relief. A deportation order was entered, and Gittens was
*384
duly deported. This order has been twice reinstated following petitioner’s unauthorized returns to the United States. In October 1989, following his first illegal reentry into the country, Gittens was convicted of attempted criminal possession of a weapon and was again deported to Jamaica in 1992. The INS apparently lost track of Gittens until February 1997 when they “found” him in the United States after learning that he had been arrested in South Carolina in 1993 for possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. Gittens was once more arrested in February 1999 and finally prosecuted for his unlawful return to the United States. Gittens pleaded guilty under 8 U.S.G. § 1326(a)-(b)(2) of illegal reentry after having been deported for aggravated felony convictions, and was sentenced to 77 months in prison.
See United States v. Gitten,
Since. November 2000 when his conviction and sentence for illegal reentry, became final, Gittens has pursued multiple avenues of judicial review, unsuccessfully challenging his detention and deportation on several different grounds.
See, e.g., United States v. Gitten,
Of these decisions, most relevant to the instant petition is the denial of Gittens’ first § 2241 petition by the District Court for the Southern District of New York (Chin, /.). Rejecting the argument that Gittens had been wrongly deprived of the opportunity to seek discretionary relief under § 212(c) of the INA, the court found that Gittens was statutorily ineligible for § 212(c) relief because “Gittens [had] been convicted of several aggravated felonies for which he [had] served more than five years in prison.”
Gittens v. Ashcroft,
DISCUSSION
Without considering the merits of Git-tens’ claims in the instant case, the district court (Mukasey, J.) transferred Gittens’ latest petition to us for review under the AEDPA’s gatekeeping provisions. While this case was pending, however, Congress enacted the REAL ID Act on May .11, 2005. This Act eliminates habeas jurisdiction over final orders of deportation, exclusion, and removal, providing instead for petitions of review under § 1252, which circuit courts alone can consider. See REAL ID Act, 119 Stat. 231, § 106(a). By its express terms, the Act is retroactive and applies to cases “in which the final administrative order of removal, deporta *385 tion, or exclusion was issued before, on, or after” the date of enactment. See id. at § 106(b). In addition, with respect to cases pending before a district court on the date of enactment, § 106(c) directs that these petitions be transferred to the court of appeals “in which a petition for review could have been properly filed.” See id. at § 106(e). In these circumstances, the court of appeals should “treat the transferred case as if it had been filed pursuant to a petition for review” under § 1252. See id.
In light of the changes wrought by the REAL ID Act, the first issue before us is whether we should consider Gittens’ petition ourselves or whether the case should be remanded to the district court from which it was transferred. Although Congress expressly prescribed the transfer protocol for cases pending before
district
courts at the time of the Act’s enactment, it failed to state how similar habeas petitions pending before
circuit
courts should be handled. The Third, Fifth and Ninth Circuits have considered this question and have concluded that “it is readily apparent, given Congress’ clear intent to have all challenges to removal orders heard in a single forum (the courts of appeals), that those habeas petitions that were pending before this court [of appeals] on the effective date of the Real ID Act are properly converted to petitions for review and retained by this court.”
Bonhometre v. Gonzales,
In
Marquez-Almanzar,
which considered an appeal of a district court’s conclusion that it was jurisdictionally barred from hearing the habeas petition that had been presented to it, we ourselves noted the inefficiency of remanding a case that would, straight away and mechanically, be rerouted back to us for further adjudication: “[I]t would be pointless to remand this case to the district court, as the district court would be obliged by section 106(c) of the Act to transfer the case back to us for resolution on the merits.” Mar
quez-Almanzar,
On the foregoing issue, the parties are in substantial agreement with each other and with the position we have adopted. They part company, however, as to whether Gittens’ petition for review should be governed by § 1252(d)(2), or whether the traditional “abuse of the writ” standard enunciated in
McCleskey v. Zant,
For the foregoing reasons, Gittens’ petition for review is hereby Denied.
Notes
. To date, we have not resolved this question. A number of other circuits have concluded, however, that the AEDPA's gatekeeping provisions do not apply to second and successive § 2241 petitions. See, e.g.,
Rosales-Garcia v. Holland,
. Earlier decisions disposing of Gittens' various appeals use alternate spellings of petitioner’s name in the caption (spelling it with and without an 's’). We report the cases as they are published, i.e., without correction.
.
See Belnome v. Gonzales,
. In doing so, we also note the First Circuit’s rationale, which stressed that petitions pending before a court of appeals are, as a technical matter, also pending before the district court below. Such petitions, it reasoned, therefore fall squarely within the textual ambit of the REAL ID Act:
Here, on the date of enactment [of the Act], the appeal from the district court’s dismissal order was pending in our court; the habeas petition itself had been dismissed in the district court. Nonetheless, we think the habeas case was still "pending” in the district court within the meaning of the Real ID Act. Until our court acted on the appeal, the case necessarily remained alive in the lower court although dormant.
Ishak v. Gonzales,
. In this respect, we note that a seeming difference between
McCleskey
and § 1252(d)(2) is that the abuse of the writ doctrine, adopted by
McCleskey,
permits review to rectify a "fundamental miscarriage of justice,” while no such language exists in § 1252(d)(2). Such a condition may, however, be implicit in the statutory provision. The REAL ID Act functionally replaces habeas jurisdiction with petitions for review under § 1252. As a result, that Act might give rise to Suspension Clause problems if the remedy made available under § 1252 is not an adequate substitute for traditional habeas review.
See INS v. St. Cyr,
Thus, had Gittens presented a colorable challenge to his deportation, we might have been required to decide (a) whether the McCleskey doctrine or § 1252(d)(2) applied, and (b) if the latter governed, whether some judicial review to remedy a miscarriage of justice were nonetheless available under § 1252(d)(2). Since, however, petitioner's deportation challenge fails on any of these theories, we can leave all these issues to another day.
