In 1988, Petitioner, Victor Saravia-Pa-guada, a legal permanent resident (“LPR”), was convicted of several felonies in California, for which he served three years and two months in prison. After his release, Petitioner conceded deportability but requested discretionary relief under former § 212(c) of the Immigration and Naturalization Act (“INA”). While his deportation proceedings were pending, in 1992 Petitioner was again convicted for felony offenses and received a sentence of six years and four months, which reflected in part a three-year recidivist enhancement. Petitioner served three years and three months of this sentence. In 2002, the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) summarily affirmed the immigration judge’s (“IJ”) pretermitting of relief under formеr § 212(c) because, by an intervening act of Congress, eligibility for relief was barred for any alien who has been convicted of “one or more aggravated felonies and has served for such felony or felonies” a term of imprisonment of at least five years. See § 306(a)(10) of the Miscellaneous and Technical Immigration and Naturalization Amendments, Pub.L. No. 102-232, 105 Stat. 1733, 1751 (effective Dec. 12, 1991) (“Technical Amendments”) (modifying § 511(a) of the Immigration Act of 1990, Pub.L. No. 101-649, 104 Stat. 4978, 5052 (effective Nov. 29, 1990) (“IM-MACT”)). 1 Petitioner petitions for review of the BIA’s summary affirmance, claiming that time served pursuant to the recidivist statute should not have been counted for purposes of the IMMACT bar, and, in the alternative, that applying the IMMACT bar to the 1988 sentence had an impermis-sibly retroactive effeсt on the criminal conduct underlying Petitioner’s convictions. We deny the petition for review.
I
The Petitioner is a Honduran national who has been an LPR in the United States since 1966 and has returned to Honduras only once for a brief stay. Petitioner asserts that he was raised in the United States from an early age and has no appreciable ties to his native country. Petitioner also asserts that his mother, daughter and siblings are either U.S. citizens or LPRs who live in the United States.
On October 19, 1988, a jury in California convicted Petitioner of the following offenses: (1) possession of cocaine for sale in violation of California Health and Safety Code § 11351; (2) possession for sale of methamphetamine in violation of California Health and Safety Code § 11378; (3) conspiracy to sell cocaine and methamphetamine in violation of California Penal Code § 182.1 and California Health and Safety Code §§ 11352 and 11379; and (4) possession of a throwing star in violation of California Penal Code § 12020(c). The superi- or court in Santa Clara County imposed a prison term of five years and eight months, of which Petitioner served three years and two months.
On May 2,1990, the former Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) initiated deportation proceedings under former § 241(a)(ll) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. § 1251(a)(ll), in connection with Petitioner’s conviction for possession of cocaine for sale. Conceding deportability, Petitioner sought discretionary relief under former § 212(c) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. § 1182(e) (1996). While the deportation proceedings were pending, however, Petitioner was *1125 convicted on June 30, 1992, after a guilty plea, for violation of California Health and Safety Code §§ 11378 (possession for sale of methamphetamine) and 11358 (cultivation of marijuana). This time the Santa Clara County superior court imposed a sentence of six years and four months, which in part reflected a three-year sentencing enhancement pursuant to a recidivist statute, California Health and Safety Code § 11370.2, in light of Petitioner’s pri- or convictions. Petitioner served three years and three months.
On February 23, 1996, the IJ pretermit-ted § 212(c) relief because he determined that Petitioner served in aggregate six years and five months for the 1988 and 1992 aggravated felony convictions. 2 The IJ rested his decisiоn on an intervening amendment to § 212(c) that barred relief for any alien who has been convicted of “one or more aggravated felonies and has served for such felony or felonies” a term of imprisonment of at least five years. 3 See § 306(a)(10) of the Technical Amendments. The IJ recited Petitioner’s convictions and acknowledged that no party disputed that the convictions were accurately characterized as aggravated felonies. The IJ also rejected Petitioner’s interpretation of § 306(a)(10) that time served pursuant to the three-year sentencing enhancement due to his 1992 convictions could not be counted toward the five-year IMMACT bar. Noting that “the enhancement itself *1126 cannot be regarded as a conviction independent of other convictions,” the IJ concluded that it was indisputable that the “enhancement ... imposed on Mr. Saravia in 1992 was part of the sentencing for the conviction ... for the violation of California Health and Safety Code § 11378.” The BIA affirmed the IJ on March 24, 1997, but remanded the case with leave for Petitioner to file a motion to reopen under Matter of Soriano, 21 I. & N. Dec. 516 (B.I.A.1996). 4 On May 30, 2002, the IJ determined that Matter of Soriano did not apply to Petitioner’s circumstances and ordered him deported under the previous findings from the February 26, 1996 hearing. The BIA affirmed the decision summarily on September 25, 2002. Under § 309(c)(4)(G) of IIRIRA, we then dismissed Petitioner’s initial petition for review for lack of jurisdiction.
After Petitioner was ordered to appear for deportation, he filed a petition for writ of habеas corpus on September 17, 2004 in the Northern District of California, asserting that the IJ erroneously concluded that § 212(c) relief was unavailable. The district court denied the habeas petition because Petitioner had served more than five years for his aggravated felony convictions, which, “under the plain language of the [IMMACT],” barred § 212(c) relief. After Petitioner filed a motion to amend the judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e), Congress passed the REAL ID Act, Pub.L. No. 109-13, 119 Stat. 231 (2005), which required the district court to transfer the case to us for consideration of the habeas claims as a petition for review.
5
See
8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(D)(5);
Smolniakova v. Gonzales,
II
Petitioner first argues that the IJ erroneously included time served pursuant to the three-year sentence enhancement under Califоrnia Health and Safety Code § 11370.2, when concluding that Petitioner had served more than five years for his aggravated felony convictions.
6
Petitioner claims that our authority in
United States v. Corona-Sanchez,
*1127
Petitioner’s reliance on
Corona-Sanchez
and
Rusz
is misplaced. In
Corona-Sanchez,
we rejected the Government’s theory that a conviction for petty theft under California Penal Code §§ 484(a) and 488, which resulted in a two-year sentence under California Penal Code § 666 (a recidivist statute), was an “aggravated felony” for purposes of increasing the penalty for a violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a) (being a deported alien found in the United States).
Corona-Sanchez,
In
Rusz,
we likewise declined to characterize a petty theft conviction under California Penal Code §§ 484(a) and 488 as an offense “for which a sentence of one year or longer may be imposed” under 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(i)(II), which barred appellate jurisdiction over a final order of removal, where a statutory maximum sentence of six months was enhanced td three years under § 666.
Rusz,
Finally, our recent decision in
United States v. Rodriquez,
Here, unlike in
Corona-Sanchez, Rusz,
and
Rodriquez,
we do not consider whether or not Petitioner committed certain past crimes, such as an “aggravated felony” or a “serious drug offense,” the
nature
of which might give rise to adverse consequences attaching to a present conviction. For this reason, the traditional concern that recidivism should not inform the nature of an offense,
cf. Apprendi,
Having rejected the applicability of
Corona-Sanchez, Rusz,
and
Rodriquez
to this context, we recur to the plain meaning of § 306(a)(10) of the Technical Amendments.
See Altamirano v. Gonzales,
In interpreting § 306(a)(10), the IJ here found that “the enhancement itself cannot be regarded as a conviction independent of other convictions,” concluding that the “enhancement ... imposed ... was part of the sentencing for the conviction ... for the violation of California Health and Safety Code § 11378.” Petitioner contends that this finding was in error because the prepositional phrase “for such felony or felonies” inserted into the IMMACT provision under § 306(a)(10) qualifies any time served so as to bracket out time served pursuant to an enhancement as distinct from the aspect of the sentence attributable to the substantive offense. This reading is unpersuasive.
Nothing in the language of § 306(a)(10) suggests that an enhanced sentence may not be imposed “for such felony or felonies.” As the IJ reasonably concluded, the enhancement is not separable from the sentence. Rather, the enhancement is, by definition, “an additional term of imprisonment added to the base term,”
see People v. Wims,
In a related theory, Petitioner argues that the congressional act itself of amending the IMMACT under § 306(a)(10) to add the prepositional phrase “for such felony or felonies” exhibited an intent that the time served be calculated without regard
*1129
to sentencing enhancements. Petitioner’s argument runs counter to our authority in
Toia v. Fasano,
Under the plain meaning of the IM-MACT provisions, we conclude that an IJ may include time served under a recidivist statute or any other sentencing enhancement when considering eligibility for relief under former § 212(c). In pretermitting relief, the IJ reasonably interpreted this statutory command and properly calculated the time served based on both the sentence attributable to the 1992 substantive offenses and the sentencing enhancement under California Health and Safety Code § 11370.2.
Ill
In his alternative claim, Petitioner argues that the IJ’s application of the IM-MACT bar to his 1988 sentence had an impermissibly retroactive effect by attaching new legal consequences to the criminal conduct underlying the convictions. 10
The Government claims that Petitioner waived his retroactivity argument under 8 U.S.C. § 1252(d)(1) because it was not raised before the IJ or BIA. Petitioner responds that we have jurisdiction over the
*1130
retroactivity claim because due process concerns are implicated. Alternatively, Petitioner argues that it would have been futile to assert such a claim because at the time he sought administrative review, our authority in
Samaniego-Meraz v. INS,
As a general rule, we “may review a final order of removal only if ... the alien has exhausted all administrative remedies available to thе alien as of right.” 8 U.S.C. § 1252(d)(1). However, “due process claims ... are exempt from this administrative exhaustion requirement.”
Garcia-Ramirez v. Gonzales,
Proceeding to the merits, we are guided by our circuit’s interpretation of the analytical framework for retroactivity established in
Landgraf v. USI Film Products,
Under the test in
Landgraf,
when a statutory provision lacks an effective date, we first ask whether Congress has prescribed its temporal reach.
See
In the immigration context, the Supreme Court in
Si Cyr
concluded that “IIRIRA’s elimination of any possibility of § 212(c) relief for people who entered into plea agreements with the expectation that they would be eligible for such relief clearly ‘attaches а new disability, in respect to transactions or considerations already past.’”
Plea agreements involve a quid pro quo between a criminal defendant and the government.... In exchange for some perceived benefit, defendants waive several of their constitutional rights (including the right to a trial) and grant the government numerous tangible benefits, such as promptly imposed punishment without the expenditure of prosecutorial *1131 resources.... There can be little doubt that, as a general matter, alien defendants considering whether to enter into a plea agreement are acutely aware of the immigration consequences of their convictions. ... [Preserving the possibility of such relief would have been one of the principal benefits sought by defendants deciding whether to accept a plea offer or instead to proceed to trial.
Id.
at 321-23,
In our circuit, we have generally limited
St. Cyr
to the factual context of a guilty plea. In
Toia,
we considered a challenge by an LPR to the retroactive application of the bar to § 212(c) relief under § 511(a) of the IMMACT after the petitioner was convicted of a drug-related aggravated felony on a guilty plea in 1989 and sentenced to ten years imprisonment.
Outside of the plea bargain context, however, we have declined to invalidate retroactive elimination of § 212(e) relief. In
Armendariz-Montoya,
we held that there was no impermissibly retroactive effect in applying § 440(d) of AEDPA to a petitioner who was convicted pre-AEDPA after a jury trial for a drug-related aggravated felony, but was still in deportation proceedings when AEDPA was enacted.
See
The Government contends that Land-graf s second prong, as applied under St. Cyr and Toia, can be distinguished from the case here, and that the authority in *1132 Armendariz-Montoya forecloses Petitioner’s theory, because Petitioner did not participate in the quid pro quo of the plea bargain and thus cannot have reasonably relied on the availability of discretionary § 212(c) relief prior to the jury trial conviction in 1988. Disregarding the significance of a guilty plea, Petitioner replies that the IMMACT provisions have an impermissible retroactive effect because, as applied to the 1988 convictions, the statutory change subjects him to new legal consequences in regard to his past conduct, i.e. the commission of the underlying criminal acts that gave rise to his 1988 convictions. Petitioner also replies that Armendariz-Montoya is not controlling because that case pertained to the retroactive application of § 440(d) of AEDPA, where the alien was convicted pre-AEDPA and requested § 212(c) relief after the effective date of AEDPA. As such, Petitioner argues that Armendariz-Montoya did not address the theory that the bar under IMMACT cannot be retroactively applied to the 1988 convictions and the underlying criminal conduct. We agree with the Government.
First, Petitioner’s attempt to distinguish
Armendariz-Montoya
based on its varying procedural posture from the ease here is unavailing. There is no meaningful difference between Petitioner’s and Armen-dariz’s circumstances. Petitioner was convicted in 1988. On May 2, 1990, he was placed in deportation proceedings and requested § 212(c) relief. However, due to Petitioner’s 1992 convictions, his claim for § 212(c) relief could not be adjudicated until February 26, 1996, after the IM-MACT effective date, at which time his 1992 sentence pushed Petitioner over the five-year limit. Armendariz was convicted of a felony offense in September 1995, was ordered to show cause on April 5, 1996 why he should not be deported, and in April 1997 requested § 212(c) relief after the effective date of AEDPA.
Armendariz-Montoya,
Petitioner’s main contention that we must consider as past relevant conduct the commission of the underlying crime, irrespective of any specific reliance on the pre-IMMACT law, is squarely foreclosed by
Armendariz-Montoya.
Although
Armendariz-Montoya
did not expressly designate the past relevant conduct, it can be readily inferred from the decision that the past relevant conduct is an alien’s decision whether to enter a guilty plea or to proceed to trial, and not the commission of the underlying criminal conduct.
See
Here, Petitioner makes only the unremarkable assertion that “pre-IMMACT alien defendants might either accept a plea or decide to go to trial” where, under the prior law, any sentence the alien received
*1133
would not be a factor for purposes of determining the availability of § 212(c) relief.
Armendariz-Montoya
negated the premise that new legal consequences arising from a change in statutory regime alone was sufficient to invalidate the retroactive application of the IMMACT provision.
See
Equally unpersuasive is Petitioner’s claim that the Government’s emphasis on
Armendariz-Montoya
is inapposite because that case is at odds with
Landgraf,
In a final effort to avoid the forbe of
Armendariz-Montoya,
Petitioner argues that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Fernandez-Vargas v. Gonzales,
— U.S. -,
These putative claims to relief are not “vested rights,” a term that describes something more substantial than inchoate expectations and unrealized opportunities .... Fernandez-Vargas’s claim to such relief was contingent, and it was up to him to take some action that would elevate it above the level of hope. It is not that thеse forms of relief are discretionary, ... it is rather that before IIR-IRA’s effective date Fernandez-Vargas never availed himself of them or took action that enhanced their significance to him in particular, as St. Cyr did in making his quid pro quo agreement.
Id. at 2432 n. 10 (internal citations and quotation marks omitted). Contrary to Petitioner’s contention, the Fernandez-Vargas decision thus reinforces the central premise in Armendariz-Montoya that an alien must demonstrate some affirmative reliance on a previously available immigration benefit to show impermissible retroac-tivity.
Under Armendariz-Montoya, an alien’s decision to enter a guilty plea or proceed to trial is the past relevant conduct for purposes of Landgraf analysis, not the commission of the underlying crime. We hold that application of the IMMACT provisions to time served for criminal sentences that stеmmed from jury convictions pre-dating both §§ 511(a) of the IMMACT and 306(a)(10) of the Technical Amendments creates no impermissibly *1135 retroactive effect. The IJ, therefore, did not erroneously include the three years and two months served for the 1988 convictions in concluding that § 212(c) relief was barred because of IMMACT’s rule that aliens who served five years or more for one or more aggravated felony convictions may not gain discretionary waiver of relief from deportation.
PETITION DENIED.
Notes
. When referring generically to the eligibility bar to those aliens who served at least five years for aggravated felonies under these amendatory statutes, we use the denomination "IMMACT provisions" or “IMMACT bar” where there is no significant difference between the two statutory versions.
. In the briefing, Petitioner asserts that he served only two years and one month for the 1988 convictions. This calculation is belied by Petitioner’s testimony before the IJ and the state court criminal records. Before the IJ, Petitioner attempted to shorten the period of incarceration for the 1988 convictions by calculating from the time of his sentencing in 1988 to reach the figure of two years and one month. The IJ rejected Petitioner's contention that pre-trial or pre-sentencing detention did not count as "time served,” concluding that the theory was foreclosed under Matter of Valdovinos, 18 I. & N. Dec. 343, 344 (1982). Based on Petitioner's prison records, the IJ found that Petitioner entered the California prison system on November 17, 1987 at the time of his arrest аnd was paroled on January 14, 1991. The resulting total is three years, one month and twenty-seven days, or nearly three years and two months as the IJ concluded. As for the 1992 convictions, Petitioner testified consistent with his prison records that he had been arrested on April 7, 1992 and released from prison on August 4, 1995, indicating roughly a three-year and four-month term of incarceration. However, the IJ settled on a more conservative figure of three years and three months.
. We note as background that Petitioner’s convictions occurred during a period in the development of this country’s immigration laws, which increasingly restricted availability of relief for LPRs convicted of felony offenses. Previous to IMMACT’s passage, “§ 212(c) allowed the Attorney Generаl to grant discretionary waivers of relief from deportation for aliens who were lawful permanent residents of the United States and who had accrued seven consecutive years of lawful unrelinquished domicile in the United States.”
Toia v. Fasano,
. Matter of Soriano, allowed repleading in cases where a petitioner relied on the availability of § 212(c) relief in conceding deporta-bility before passage of § 440(d) of AEDPA. See 21 I. & N. Dec. at 520.
. Under the REAL ID Act, we retain jurisdiction over “constitutional claims or questions of law raised upon a petition for review filed with an appropriate court.” See 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(D).
. As a remedy, Petitioner asks us to prorate the time served for the 1992 substantive offenses as separate from time served under the three-year enhancement. Petitioner reckons that of the 76-month sentence for the 1992 convictions, 36 months are attributable to the sentencing enhancement and 40 months are attributable to the substantive offenses. Petitioner calculates that 47% of the 39 months served should be prorated such that only "one year and 6.3 months” may be counted for purposes of the five-year prison term that bars relief. Thus Petitioner calculates that his “time served” amounts to only four years and 8.3 months so as to escape the IMMACT bar to § 212(c) eligibility.
.When the BIA does not perform an independent review of the IJ’s decision we review the IJ's decision.
See Khup v. Ashcroft,
. The congressional record is free of specific reference to § 306(a)(10). See 137 Cong Rec S18244 (daily ed. Nov. 26, 1991) (stating Senator Kennedy's description of the Technical Amendments to the IMMACT as "non-controversial but necessary" without mentioning § 306(a)(10)); see also Iris Gomez, The Consequences of Nonappearance: Interpreting New Section 242b of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 30 San Diego L.Rev. 75, 94-95 (1993) (reciting legislative history of the Technical Amendments without noting particular rationale for enactment of § 306(a)(10)).
. This unenacted federal legislation concerns the following proposed amendment to the definition of "aggravated felony” under 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(43): "[T]he term ‘aggravated felony' applies to an offense described in this paragraph, whether in violation of Federal or State law ... for which the term of imprisonment was completed within the previous 15 years, even if the length of the term of imprisonment is based on recidivist or other enhancements ...Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act, S.R. 2611, 109th Cong. § 203 (2006) (emphasis added).
."We review de novo whether a statute may be applied retroactively.”
Scott v. Boos,
. Because Garcia-Ramirez exempts Petitioner from the exhaustion requirement, we need not address his futility argument.
. Here, it is undisputed that the IMMACT provision is ambiguous with respect to whether Congress intended to apply the five-year eligibility bar to aliens whose convictions occurred before the statute’s effective date.
See Toia,
. Our decision in Armendariz-Montoya quoted Judge Posner’s rejection of a similar argument:
It would border on the absurd to argue that these aliens might have decided not to commit drug crimes, or might have resisted conviction more vigorously, had they known that if they were not only imprisoned but also, when their prison term ended, ordered deported, they could not ask for a discretionary waiver of deportation.
. Recently, in a case involving a retroactive application of the aggravated felon bar under § 304(b) of IIRIRA, we likewise rejected an argument that § 212(c) relief could be available for an alien convicted prellRIRA by guilty plea of the aggravated felony of armed imprisonment where in 1978 he seized several foreign nationals at a consulate in Chicago.
See Relava v. Gonzales,
. Although the Third Circuit has not confined its retroactivity inquiry to the
quid pro quo
of a guilty plea, it has recognized the validity of
LaGuerre
where an alien might have only an "attenuated” reliance interest in prеviously available § 212(c) relief because of the law's “causal remoteness” to one’s decision-making at the time he commits the underlying offense.
See Ponnapula,
. In
Landgraf
the Supreme Court did not inquire into a defendant business owner's reliance on the previous statutory framework where the defendant challenged the retroactive application of provisions in the Civil Rights Act of 1991 that authorized prevailing plaintiffs to recover compensatory and punitive damages for certain violations of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
See
