Aftеr spending all but the first eight months of his life in the United States, Miseal Roque-Espinoza was removed from the United States and sent back to his native Mexico in July 1998, after serving time in prison for marijuana distribution and attempted murder. Roque-Espinoza illegally re-entered the United States some time in 1999 and was arrested for drunk driving in October 2000. His arrest alerted the immigration authorities to his return, and it was not long thereafter that he was charged with violating 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a) and (b)(2). Roque-Espinoza first pleaded guilty to the charge against him, but then he filed a motion to withdraw his guilty plea in light of the Supreme Court’s intervening decision in
INS v. St. Cyr,
I
Roque-Espinoza was released from the Illinois Department of Corrections after serving three years for drug distribution and attempted murder. As we noted, Ro-que-Espinoza had lived in the United States since infancy. Nevertheless, he is not a United States citizen, and he suffered the normal consequence of removal (given the nature of his crimes of conviction) in 1998 after he was released from prison.
We have gleaned certain facts about the proceedings that led up to Roque-Espino-za’s 1998 removal from the transcripts and the government’s filings in the district court. Unfortunately, the record on appeal does not contain tape recordings or a transcript of Roque-Espinoza’s removal hearings, and so we are unable to verify exactly what transpired there. We understand, however, that the tapes were available to the parties in the district court proceedings on this matter, and Roque-Espinoza does not now contest the government’s сharacterization of those proceedings, on which we rely in what follows.
Roque-Espinoza was removed following a hearing conducted by an Immigration Judge (IJ) during which he was represented by a lawyer (whom he had obtained after the IJ granted two continuances for that purpose). After the IJ ruled at the merits hearing that Roque-Espinoza was to be removed, Roque-Espinoza’s lawyer asked the IJ to grant his client discretionary relief from removal under § 212(c) of the Immigration and Naturalization Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1182(c) (1994) (repealed). The IJ denied that request because he believed that the legislation making such relief available had been repealed. Nonetheless, the IJ informed Roque-Espinoza of his right to appeal the removal order, and Roque-Espinoza’s lawyer indicated that his client would take an administrative appeal from that order. Despite this representation, however, he never did so.
Prior to being removed, Roque-Espino-za was warned that he could re-enter the United States only with the permission of the Attorney General. This warning obviously made little impression on him, be *726 cause a short time later, sometime in 1999, he surreptitiously returned to the United States. Once back, he failed to keep a low profile; instead, he was arrested on October 14, 2000, by the Bellwood, Illinois, police for drunk driving. That arrest set in motion the chain of evеnts that led to federal charges of unlawful re-entry in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a) and (b)(2), which is the statute that makes it a crime for an alien to enter the United States following an earlier denial of admission, exclusion or removal without the permission of the Attorney General. It is uncontested that Roque-Espinoza did not seek permission from the Attorney General pri- or to re-entering the United States. Ro-que-Espinoza pleaded guilty to these charges on May 10, 2001.
Three and one half months after Roque-Espinoza entered his guilty plea, his lawyer sought permission from the court to withdraw the plea. His reason was that the Supreme Court’s decision in
St. Cyr,
which was rendered after his guilty plea, demonstrаted that his earlier removal in 1998 could not as a matter of law serve as a predicate for the § 1326 conviction.
St. Cyr
held that the repeal of § 212(c) discretionary relief from removal contained in the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (IIRIRA), Pub. L. No. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009 (Sept. 30, 1996), does not apply retroactively to defendants who plеaded guilty to criminal charges prior to the act’s passage.
II
The Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure allow a defendant to withdraw a guilty plea for “a fair and just reason.”
United States v. Bennett,
*727
Roque-Espinoza urges us to find just such an abuse of discretion in the district court’s ruling. In his view,
St. Cyr
establishes that the IJ erred in finding him ineligible for discretionary relief from removal. This error, he continues, is enough by itself to invalidate his original removal. If he is entitled to present his arguments on the merits of that removаl in this collateral attack, and he persuades us that
St Cyr
indeed has the effect he claims, then he asserts that he has a winning defense to the charge of illegal re-entry in violation of § 1326. In making this argument, Roque-Espinoza also invokes the Supreme Court’s decision in
United States v. Mendoza-Lopez,
We pause at the outset to reject the “waiver” argument that the government advances in response to Roque-Espinoza’s appeal. (The government uses the term “waiver” in its brief, but we think the more accurate characterization of the argument it presents is forfeiture.) The government asserts, in effect, that RoqueEspinoza has forfeited the argument that he presses on appeal because he failed to develop it fully before the district court. It seizes on the fact that Roque-Espinoza’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea and memorandum of law in support of that motion did not in so many words allege a due process violation аt his removal hearings or that he was deprived of the opportunity to seek judicial review of the removal order. In the government’s view, these shortcomings in Roque-Espinoza’s filings before the district court mean that he has forfeited his right to pursue this claim on appeal.
No one would call Roque-Espinoza’s motion to withdraw his guilty pleа and the supporting memorandum models of trial advocacy, but that does not mean that they were so wanting that we should find forfeiture. At worst, the arguments he is presenting now were woefully underdeveloped. But Roque-Espinoza did indicate that he was trying to make a collateral attack on the IJ’s 1998 removal order on the basis of a violаtion of his due process rights at the removal hearing. His motion to withdraw his guilty plea and the supporting memorandum of law cited the Supreme Court’s decisions in St. Cyr and Mendoza-Lopez. The district judge was plainly able to discern from Roque-Espinoza’s filings that he was relying on a combination of Mendoza-Lopez and St. Cyr to attack his 1998 deportation. We therefore reject the government’s аrgument and move on to the merits.
In
United States v. Mendoza-Lopez,
the Supreme Court did not offer specific guidance about the minimal due process requirements for a deportation proceeding. It did, however, describe why the proceedings at issue there fell short of the constitutional guarantees. The Court found that the circumstances surrounding Mendoza-Lopez’s deportation — that he was deported following a mass deportation proceeding during which he did not knowingly and intelligently waive his right to appeal, and during which he was not informed of his right to seek discretionary relief from deportation- — “amounted to a complete deprivation of judicial review of the determination.”
Id.
at 840,
Reasoning from the holding in
Mendo-zctr-Lopez,
this court has since held that to attack a deportation or removal collaterally in a § 1326 case, the defendant must first show that the underlying order was the result of a “deportation hearing [that] effectively foreclosed his right to direсt judicial review of the deportation order,” and then establish that “the deportation hearing was fundamentally unfair.”
United States v. Espinoza-Farlo,
Several of our sister circuits have held that because § 1326(d)’s three requirements are stated in the conjunctive, they are mandatory and thus a defendant must satisfy all three in order to prevail in her collateral attack.
United States v. Wilson,
It is undisputed that Roque-Espinoza did not pursue an appeal of the IJ’s deportation order with the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA). It is also clear that both he and his lawyer were informed of his right to pursue such an appeal and that his lawyer indicated that his client would appeal the IJ’s decisiоn. RoqueEspinoza’s only response to these otherwise damaging facts is to argue that he should have been excused from administrative exhaustion on futility grounds. At the time the IJ decided Roque-Espinoza’s case, the BIA had taken the position that the provisions of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) repealing § 212(c) discretionary relief applied retroactively. See AEDPA, Pub. L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214, 1277;
In re Soriano,
21 I. & N. Dec. 516, 519,
Even though Roque-Espinoza may have had good reason for thinking that he was not eligible for discretionary relief from removal, because the IJ had so informed him, he should have realized that avenues of judicial review were available to him. Apart from a direct appeal to the court of apрeals from a BIA order finding him ineligible for § 212(c) relief, which may have been possible, he could also have filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2241. See
Calcano-Martinez v. INS,
Given this conclusion, we have no need to reach Roque-Espinoza’s further argument that the proceedings leаding up to his 1998 removal were fundamentally unfair: this is an issue he could have tested earlier, but did not. We note, however, that it would be hard to show that the loss of a chance at wholly discretionary relief from removal is the kind of deprivation of liberty or property that the due process clause is designed to protect. See
United States v. Lopez-Ortiz,
There may be an important distinction between an alien’s claim that she has a right to seek discretionary relief, and the very different claim that she has a right to have that discretion exercised in a particular way. Depending on the nature of the underlying interest implicated, denial of the first might violate basic principles of due process, even though it is clear that no claim can be stated with regard to the latter. For example, it is well established that there is no constitutional right to parole.
Greenholtz v. Inmates of Nebraska Penal & Corr. Complex,
Ill
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. As this court explained in
Bennett,
