Raul Padilla-Ramirez appeals from the district court's judgment denying his habeas corpus petition, in which he seeks a custody redetermination as he awaits the outcome of administrative proceedings to determine whether he has a reasonable fear of returning to his native country of El Salvador. We have jurisdiction pursuant to
I.
We review the district court's denial of Padilla-Ramirez's habeas petition de novo. Singh v. Holder ,
*829II.
The facts of this case are undisputed. In 1999, Padilla-Ramirez unlawfully entered the United States without applying for admission or parole. When Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) initiated removal proceedings against him in 2006, Padilla-Ramirez sought to avoid removal by applying for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (Convention). These applications were denied, but the immigration judge (IJ) allowed Padilla-Ramirez to depart the country voluntarily. In the event that Padilla-Ramirez failed to depart timely, the order of voluntary departure would become an order of removal.
Padilla-Ramirez appealed unsuccessfully the IJ's orders to the Board of Immigration Appeals (Board). He managed to obtain a sixty-day extension of his voluntary departure period, but failed to depart by the deadline. As a result, the voluntary departure order was converted into a removal order that became effective on January 25, 2009. ICE removed Padilla-Ramirez to El Salvador in February 2010.
In December 2015, ICE discovered that Padilla-Ramirez had re-entered the country illegally and was being detained in Idaho in connection with a state criminal prosecution. ICE promptly reinstated Padilla-Ramirez's original removal order pursuant to
Padilla-Ramirez filed the instant habeas petition after the IJ denied his request for a bond hearing on grounds that she lacked jurisdiction to consider the request. The district court denied the petition on substantially the same grounds, concluding that Padilla-Ramirez is detained pursuant to a provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act (Act) that does not allow for bond hearings. Padilla-Ramirez appeals.
III.
Our task in this case is to determine which provision of the Act governs Padilla-Ramirez's detention. Padilla-Ramirez argues that he is detained pursuant to
Conversely, the government contends that Padilla-Ramirez is detained pursuant to
Our decision only addresses Padilla-Ramirez's entitlement to an initial bond hearing under
A.
Our analysis begins with the text of the provisions at issue. Am. Tobacco Co. v. Patterson ,
We are concerned here only with the date of administrative finality. See
The question before us, then, is whether Padilla-Ramirez's reinstated removal order is administratively final. If it is, then section 1231(a) controls. If not, *831then section 1226(a) provides the only authority for detaining him.
Under the Act, a removal order becomes final "upon the earlier of ... a determination by the Board ... affirming such order ... or the expiration of the period in which the alien is permitted to seek review of such order by the Board."
The government urges us to defer to a federal regulation which, it contends, answers the question before us. That regulation reads: "Execution of the reinstated order of removal and detention of the alien shall be administered in accordance with this part."
Reinstatement of a removal order is governed by section 1231(a)(5), which reads as follows:
If the Attorney General finds that an alien has reentered the United States illegally after having been removed or having departed voluntarily, under an order of removal, the prior order of removal is reinstated from its original date and is not subject to being reopened or reviewed, the alien is not eligible and may not apply for any relief under this chapter, and the alien shall be removed under the prior order at any time after the reentry.
Second, the reinstatement provision is located in the same section of the Act, tellingly entitled "Detention and removal of aliens ordered removed ,"
Notwithstanding section 1231(a)(5)'s mandatory language, it offers some leeway with respect to withholding-only proceedings.
*832Andrade-Garcia ,
Withholding-only proceedings do not, however, purport to override section 1231(a)(5)'s prohibition on reopening or reviewing a prior removal order. See Ortiz-Alfaro ,
B.
Section 1226(a), which applies only while "a decision on whether the alien is to be removed from the United States" is "pending,"
In this respect, Zadvydas v. Davis ,
Like Zadvydas, Padilla-Ramirez is subject to an order of removal that is, by all appearances, administratively final. Like Zadvydas, the only obstacles to Padilla-Ramirez's removal from the United States are potential individualized determinations that he cannot be removed to specific countries. There is an obvious distinction between the two cases in that those determinations may be made in domestic administrative proceedings in Padilla-Ramirez's case, whereas Zadvydas was made unremovable by virtue of other countries' refusals to accept him. However, the touchstone of section 1226 is the nature of the decision to be made, not the identity of the decision-maker, and the decision to be made in this case is the same as in Zadvydas : whether Padilla-Ramirez's removal order may be executed with respect to particular countries. The fact that Zadvydas was detained pursuant to section 1231(a) even while the government cycled through the list of possible removal countries indicates that such country-specific determinations are not "decision[s] on whether the alien is to be removed from the United States."
C.
Padilla-Ramirez argues that we are foreclosed from holding that section 1231(a) governs his detention because we have already decided that reinstated removal orders are not final during the pendency of withholding-only proceedings. In Ortiz-Alfaro v. Holder , an alien subject to a reinstated removal order sought to challenge a federal regulation governing withholding-only proceedings because it prevented him from applying for asylum.
At first blush, Ortiz-Alfaro appears to support Padilla-Ramirez's position. But the case is readily distinguishable because its holding rested on the canon of constitutional avoidance. We acknowledged that there were "compelling arguments in favor of finding that [the alien's] reinstated removal order [wa]s final," but observed that such a conclusion "would make it impossible for [the alien] to timely petition for review of any IJ decisions denying him relief or finding that he does not have a reasonable fear."
Holding that Padilla-Ramirez's reinstated order is administratively final for detention purposes poses no such constitutional difficulty, so the avoidance canon need not dictate the outcome here. In *834such a situation, the normal presumption that a particular word has the same meaning in different parts of a statute can give way if the provision at issue points toward a different meaning. See Sun v. Ashcroft ,
Our recent decision in Ayala v. Sessions ,
We faced a jurisdictional dilemma. Although the petition had been filed within four days of the Board's dismissal of the alien's appeal, more than thirty days had elapsed since the IJ's denial of the motion to reopen.
Ayala tracks Ortiz-Alfaro in all important respects, as both cases addressed the finality of reinstated orders for purposes of judicial review and were decided in large part to preserve the petitioners' ability to obtain such review. Our statement in Ayala that "a removal order is considered final only when 'all administrative proceedings have concluded,' "
D.
We are not the first federal appellate court to consider this issue. In Guerra v. Shanahan ,
For the reasons already explained, we respectfully disagree with the Second Circuit's reading of section 1226(a). In concluding that "the purpose of withholding-only proceedings is to determine precisely whether 'the alien is to be removed from the United States,' "
The cases cited by the Second Circuit do not convince us otherwise. First, the court attempted to draw an analogy to asylum-only proceedings, whereby an alien obtains entry to the country by waiving his right to challenge removal except by applying for asylum. Guerra ,
Far from supporting the Second Circuit's analogy, Kanacevic underscores a critical distinction between asylum-only proceedings and withholding-only proceedings: in the former, the denial of asylum is the order of removal. Consequently, there can be no removal order, final or otherwise, until the alien's claim for relief is resolved. Not so in withholding-only proceedings, where a final removal order has been not only entered but executed by the time a withholding-only claim is made. Also, in contrast to withholding-only proceedings, the removal order itself is at issue in asylum-only proceedings, as evidenced by the fact that the order (i.e., denial of asylum) is subject to judicial review. See
The second case relied on by the Second Circuit, Chupina v. Holder ,
Finally, the Second Circuit fell back on "principles of administrative law" to reject the "tiers of finality" that the government urges in this case. Guerra ,
IV.
As a general rule, "we decline to create a circuit split unless there is a compelling reason to do so." Kelton Arms Condo. Owners Ass'n, Inc. v. Homestead Ins. Co. ,
AFFIRMED.
Padilla-Ramirez did not challenge the factual predicates for reinstatement. We do not consider whether such a challenge would trigger section 1226.
We underscore that section 1231(a)(5)'s bar against collateral challenges to the underlying removal order is not absolute. "Although § 1231(a)(5) limits the scope of judicial review of reinstated removal orders, § 1252(a)(2)(D) reinstates this court's jurisdiction over certain constitutional claims and questions of law." Villa-Anguiano ,
