An immigration judge concluded that Vassil Sapoundjiev, a citizen of Bulgaria, is not entitled either to asylum or to withholding of removal. On January 28, 2004, the Board of Immigration Appeals affirmed that decision, which affected not only Vassil but also his wife Encheva and son Hristo, for their applications are derivative from his. Immigration officials sent the three Sapoundjievs notices (often called bag-and-baggage letters) directing them to report for custody and removal on May 13, 2004. Six days before that date arrived, the Sapoundjievs filed an application for stay of removal. On May 12 a judge entered a temporary stay of removal pending a response by the Attorney General. This order did not affect the Sa-poundjievs’ obligation to surrender, so that removal could be implemented if the stay should be lifted. Nonetheless, the family did not report as directed. Contending that the Sapoundjievs are fugitives, the Attorney General has asked us to vacate the temporary stay and deny any further relief.
Every circuit that has considered the issue has concluded that the fugitivedisentitlement doctrine applies to immigration cases, and that aliens who avoid lawful custody forfeit judicial review. See
Bar-Levy v. INS,
Counsel representing the Sapoundjievs contends that, because immigration officials know where the family lives, they are not trying to have things both ways. Now it is far from clear that the Sapoundjievs will choose to be at home when agents arrive to arrest them, and hard to see how the judiciary could tell whether to believe a promise to show up if the case should be decided adversely. The point of custody is to end the guessing game. That’s why anyone who is told to surrender, and does not, is a fugitive.
†
See
Bar-Levy,
We are unimpressed by counsel’s argument that aliens are
entitled
to ignore bag- and-baggage letters because custody “prevents Petitioners from having a meaningful opportunity to be heard” on their claims for relief. An appeal in a criminal case remains meaningful even if the defendant is incarcerated while the matter is under advisement. A convict who asserted that he is entitled to appellate review before
*730
spending the first day in custody would not fare well. Likewise with aliens. Time in administrative custody differs from removal. Doubtless there is a risk of erroneous removal while the litigation continues, but we have no reason to think that errors are common; immigration officials in this circuit have taken steps to make sure that even after-hours stays will be implemented. See
Dimitrov v. Ashcroft,
Ortega-Rodriguez holds that the fugitive-disentitlement doctrine applies only while the criminal remains at large. Again the same approach should be applied to alien removal proceedings. Two months have passed since the Attorney General invoked the fugitive-disentitlement doctrine as the basis for his opposition to the Sapoundjievs’ request for a stay of removal and his request that their petition be denied. They did not surrender in order to preserve their legal claims; to the contrary, as we have recounted, they have asserted through counsel that they are entitled to ignore the bag-and-baggage order and wait for agents to locate and arrest them. Consequently, the temporary stay is vacated, the motion for stay of removal is denied, and the petition for review is dismissed.
Notes
In a brief filed at our request as
amicus curiae
on behalf of the alien in
Zheng v. Ashcroft,
No. 03-1185, attorney Laura E. Juhnke contends that under
United States v. Marshall,
