ORDER AND AMENDED OPINION
ORDER
The Opinion filed on November 12, 2003, and published at
*594 At page 1128, section I, amend the entire third paragraph to read as follows:
On February 3, 2000, the IJ rescheduled Reyes’s hearing for March 2, 2001, and properly notified Salazar of the changed date. When Reyes failed to appear for the rescheduled hearing, Salazar moved to withdraw as his counsel of record. The IJ granted Salazar’s motion and issued a removal order.
At page 1131 through page 1132, amend the entire section C to read as follows:
C.
Reyes’s petition for review fails for an alternative reason: he has not shown that he provided the required notification to Salazar of the ineffective assistance allegations. Although Reyes’s undated complaint letter to thе California State Bar concludes with the statement “ce: Armando G. Salazar,” this notation indicates at best that Reyes intended to send Salazar notice of the state disciplinary proceedings; it is not proof that Reyes actually did. Nor does the undated letter demonstrate that Salazar received an adequate “opportunity to respond” before Reyes filed his motion to reopen. In theory, Reyes could have mailed the complaint letter and filed the motion to reopen simultaneously, thereby affording Salazar no opportunity to furnish a timely response and thus sidestepping Lozada’s requirement to submit “any subsequent response from counsel” with the motion to reopen, Lozada, 19 I. & N. Dec. 637, at 639.
Reyes’s failure to meet his burden with respect to these issues is significant. In Lozada, the Board explained that the notice requirement provides a mechanism by which the IJ may more accurately assess the merits of a petitioner’s ineffective assistance claim. “[T]he potential for abuse is apparent,” the Board cautioned, “where no mechanism еxists for allowing former counsel, whose integrity or competence is being impugned, to present his version of events if he so chooses, thereby discouraging baseless allegations.” Id.
Here, Reyes may have put Salazar on notice concerning the substance of his ineffective assistance allegations (i.e., if he actually sent Salazar a copy of the complaint letter), but he offers absolutely no evidence that Salazar enjoyed a timely opportunity to respond. Because Reyes cannot prove he gave Salazar notice of the ineffective assistance allegations or an adequate opportunity to respond, we conclude that Reyes has not substantially satisfied Lozada. Id.
PETITION DENIED
OPINION
Pedro Vilarde Reyes petitions for review of a Board of Immigration Appeals (Board) order denying his motion to reopen deportation proceedings. Reyes argues that the Board abused its discretion because his motion to reopen substantially complied with the Board’s threshold procedurаl requirements outlined in
Matter of Lozada,
19 I.
&
N. Dec. 637,
I.
Reyes, a native and citizen of the Philippines, entered the United States on a non-immigrant visa on February 5, 1990. He remained in the United States after his visa’s May 30, 1990, deadline, and a nоtice to appear issued more than eight years *595 later on September 24, 1998. The notice charged Reyes with being subject to removal pursuant to section 237(a)(1)(B) of the Immigration and Naturalization Act (INA), 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(1)(B), because he remained in the United States beyond his visa’s expiration. Reyes responded by filing an asylum application, alleging that he would more likely than not suffer “threats, attempts against[his] life, and possible torture and death” at the hands of a government-backed paramilitary group if returned to the Philippines.
On February 8, 1999, Reyes appeared at his deportation hearing accompanied by his attorney of record, Armando G. Salazar, and Salazar’s associate, Nadeem H. Makada. The Immigration Judge (IJ) immediately rescheduled the hearing for March 29,1999, and Reyes returned on the appointed date with Makada. At the second hearing, Reyes admitted the allegations contained in the notice to appear and conceded deportability. The IJ designated the Philippines as Reyes’s potential destination for deportation and scheduled a hearing for March 9, 2000, to consider Reyes’s asylum application.
On February 3, 2000, the IJ rescheduled Reyes’s hearing for March 2, 2001, and properly notified Salazar of the changed date. When Reyes failed to appear for the rescheduled hearing, Salazar moved to withdraw as his counsel of record. The IJ granted Salazar’s motion and issued a removal order.
Reyes thereafter obtained new counsel and moved to reopen his deportation proceedings on October 4, 2001. In his motion to reopen, Reyes argued that he was denied effective assistance of counsel because Salazar never informed him of thе March 2, 2001, hearing. Reyes submitted with his motion a copy of a letter complaining about Salazar, which he allegedly sent to the California State Bar. The letter contains a line stating “ce: Armando G. Salazar,” but the letter is neither dated nor notarized, and Reyes has not shown that it actually reached thé addressees. The letter discusses Reyes’s relаtionship with Salazar and asserts that Salazar negligently failed to notify Reyes that the hearing had been rescheduled for a later date. Reyes allegedly “kept [Salazar] abreast of [his] new phone numbers ... and [his] new address,” but Salazar did not communicate with Reyes in the months preceding the final deportation hearing from which he was absent.
On Octоber 23, 2001, the IJ denied Reyes’s motion to reopen on two grounds: first, Reyes failed to furnish a personal affidavit outlining his agreement with Salazar and describing Salazar’s alleged misconduct; and second, the IJ found no evidence that Reyes had notified Salazar of his ineffective assistance allegations or that Salazar accepted resрonsibility for failing to notify Reyes of the final deportation hearing. Citing Lozada and related Ninth Circuit decisions, the IJ denied Reyes’s motion to reopen. On May 9, 2002,. the Board summarily affirmed the IJ’s decision, and Reyes filed a timely petition for review.
II.
We review the Board’s ruling on a motion to reopen for an abuse of discretion.
Shaar v. INS,
*596 A.
The Board may rescind the
in absentia
deportation order
of Reyes if
he demonstrates that he failed to appear due to “exceptional circumstancеs.”
Sharma v. INS,
Although the Sixth Amendment’s effective counsel right does not attach to deportation proceedings,
see INS v. Lopez-Mendoza,
Before the Board will consider an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, however, Reyes first must satisfy
Lozada’s
threshold procedural requirements.
Iturribarria,
When we apply Lozada, our primary concern is to effectuate the purposes underlying its requirements. Three policy goals predominate. First, by forcing petitioners to provide a clear and detailed exрosition of their factual allegations, Lozada furnishes “a basis for assessing the substantial number of claims of ineffective assistance of counsel that come before the Board.” Lozada, 19 I. & N. Dec. at 639. Second, Lozada enhances the Board’s ability to weed out false and frivolous claims. Requiring sworn affidavits and formal grievance letters reduces petitioners’ ability to slip meritless claims рast the Board, as does the requirement that petitioners notify their former counsel concerning the ineffective assistance allegations. Id. Finally, Lozada promotes professional responsibility by “highlighting] the standards which should be expected of attorneys who represent persons in immigration proceedings.” Id. at 639-40.
Here, the IJ denied Reyes’s motion to reоpen because Reyes did not submit a proper affidavit and provided no evidence that he informed Salazar regarding the *597 ineffective assistance allegations. Reyes concedes that his motion cannot survive a strict construction of the Lozada requirements because he did not file the requisite affidavit. Instead, he contends that his putativе complaint letter substantially complies with all three Lozada criteria: (1) the letter substitutes for a personal affidavit because it describes Reyes’s former attorney-client relationship with Salazar and outlines the basic factual allegations upon which his ineffective assistance claim relies, (2) the letter’s “ec:” to Salazar provides sоme evidence that Salazar received notice of Reyes’s ineffective assistance allegations, and (3) the letter shows that Reyes filed a proper complaint with the California State Bar. Given the alleged substantial compliance, Reyes argues that the IJ therefore abused his discretion by denying the motion to reopen.
B.
In assessing Reyes’s substantial compliance argument, we look to our prior
Lozada
decisions for guidance. Two general principles emerge. First, we have recognized that “the
Lozada
requirements are generally reasonable, and under ordinary circumstances the [Board] does not abuse its discretion when it denies a motion to remand or reopеn based on alleged ineffective assistance of counsel where the petitioner fails to meet the requirements of
Lozada." Castillo-Perez,
Thus, although we have, not enforced
Lozada
rigidly, neither have we applied its requirements as loosely as Reyes suggests. In particular, we have never excused a petitioner’s failure to provide an affidavit where, as here, the facts underlying the petitioner’s claim were not “plain on the face of the administrative record.”
Cf. Rojas-Garcia v. Ashcroft,
Here, Reyes’s cursory factual allegations find little support in the administrative record; on the contrary, Salazar’s motion to withdraw directly contradicts the allegations in Reyes’s complaint letter. Moreover, Reyes offers
no
reason why he could not have filed an appropriate affidavit. Under such circumstances,
Lozada’s
affidavit requirement is not “arbitrary” because it expands the factual reсord, discourages petitioners from filing meritless claims, provides an indication of a petitioner’s testimony, and enhances the IJ’s ability to weed out meritless claims. Had Reyes submitted an affidavit, he might have divulged information under oath that would have undermined or invalidated his ineffective assistance claim. Indeed, Reyes’s failure to furnish the requisite affidavit with his current motion may be significant in itself, because the omission could reflect an apprehension that his claim is, in fact, meritless.
Lozada’s
purpose to deter meritless claims certainly is not “fully served” by an unsworn complaint letter addressed to another forum.
Lozada’s
affidavit requirement may not be the least restrictive method to eliminate meritless claims, but it is not an
arbitrary
оne. This is especially true when the underlying claims are controverted and petitioner could have produced a satisfactory affidavit through diligent effort.
Cf. Ontiveros-Lopez,
Under the circumstances, the IJ’s application of Lozada’s affidavit requirement was neither arbitrary nor unduly onerous. Reyes prepared his motion to reopen with the assistance of new counsel, and he has not provided any evidence tо suggest that he could not have also filed an appropriate affidavit with reasonable diligence. We conclude, therefore, that the IJ did not abuse his discretion by denying Reyes’s motion to reopen based on Reyes’s failure to satisfy Lozada’s important affidavit requirement.
C.
Reyes’s petition for review fails for an alternative reason: he has not shown that he provided the required notification to Salazar of the ineffective assistance allegations. Although Reyes’s undated complaint letter to the California State Bar concludes with the statement “cc: Armando G. Salazar,” this notation indicates at best that Reyes intended to send Salazar notice of the state disciplinary proceedings; it is not proof that Reyes actually did. Nor does the undated letter demonstrate that Salazar received an adequate “opportunity to respond” before Reyes filed his motion to reopen. In theory, Reyes could have mailed the complaint letter and filed the motion to reopen simultaneously, thereby affording Salazar no opportunity to furnish а timely response and thus sidestepping Lozada’s requirement to submit “any subsequent response from counsel” with the motion to reopen. Lozada, 19 I. & N. Dec. 637, at 639.
*599 Reyes’s failure to meet his burden with respect to these issues is significant. In Lozada, the Board explained that the notice requirement provides a mechanism by which the IJ may more accurately assess the merits of a petitioner’s inеffective assistance claim. “[T]he potential for abuse is apparent,” the Board cautioned, “where no mechanism exists for allowing former counsel, whose integrity or competence is being impugned, to present his version of events if he so chooses, thereby discouraging baseless allegations.” Id.
Here, Reyes may have put Sаlazar on notice concerning the substance of his ineffective assistance allegations (i.e., if he actually sent Salazar a copy of the complaint letter), but he offers absolutely no evidence that Salazar enjoyed a timely opportunity to respond. Because Reyes cannot prove he gave Salazar notice of the ineffective assistance allegations or an adequate opportunity to respond, we conclude that Reyes has not substantially satisfied Loza-da. Id.
PETITION DENIED.
