MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
The petitioner/plaintiff, Tasfa Wolde Wallace (“Wallace”), is an immigrant from Jamaica who first entered this country ten years ago. Just over two years ago, he pleaded guilty to a drug offense, on the basis of which he is automatically subject to deportation. Wallace now comes before this Court, seeking the opportunity to ask an Immigration Judge (“IJ”) to take into consideration not just his one crime, but also the humanitarian and social factors that weigh against his expulsion from this country.
The Respondents contend that, due to changes in the immigration laws enacted after Wallace had pled guilty he is no longer entitled even to ask for such discretionary humanitarian consideration. I reject that contention on the basis of the First Circuit’s recent holding in
Goncalves v. Reno,
I. FACTS
Wallace is a native and citizen of Jamaica. He entered the United States as an immigrant on May 10, 1988. It appears that he entered lawfully and resided lawfully as a permanent resident.
On February 15, 1996, however, Wallace pleaded guilty to the offense of possession of marijuana with intent to deliver in the Providence Superior Court, Providence, Rhode Island. He was sentenced to ten years imprisonment, three years to serve, seven years suspended, and seven years probation.
Wallace’s guilty plea had severe immigration consequences, unknown to him at the time. As an “aggravated felon” and alien convicted of a controlled substance offense, he suddenly became deportable from this country, with no possibility of return. Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”) §§ 241(a)(2)(A)(iii) and 241(a)(2)(B)®, 8 U.S.C. §§ 1101(a)(43), 1182(a)(2)(c), 1251(a)(2)(A)(iii), 1251(a)(2)(B)®. Nevertheless, at the time Wallace chose to plead guilty, discretionary relief for deportation under INA § 212(c), 8 U.S.C. § 1182(c) was still available to him. Within months, however, the law would change and even the avenue for relief from deportation would be off, at least prospectively.
One month after Wallace’s conviction, on March 18, 1996, the INS issued an Order to Show Cause (“OSC”), which it served on Wallace two days later. The OSC informed Wallace that he was deportable because of his conviction and ordered him to appear for a hearing before an Immigration Judge to show cause why he should not be deported. The Office of the Immigration Judge would schedule a hearing date, the OSC stated, and give Wallace notice of it by mail.
After serving Wallace with the OSC, the INS took no action on his case for almost three months. Finally, on June 14,1996, the INS filed the OSC with the Office of the Immigration Judge (“Immigration Court”) in Boston. 1
Wallace’s first hearing was not held until December 18, 1996. At that first hearing, Wallace admitted to the facts of his conviction and conceded deportability. He also indicated his desire to apply for discretionary relief from deportation under INA § 212(e), based on his ties to this country. 2 The hearing was continued until August 19, 1997.
*106 At Wallace’s final August hearing, the Immigration Judge refused to hear his request for discretionary relief, finding that amendments to § 212(c) enacted in April of the previous year had made him ineligible to apply. Accordingly, the IJ found Wallace deportable on the basis of his criminal conviction and ordered him deported to Jamaica. Wallace appealed this decision to the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”), which, on May 5, 1998, affirmed the IJ’s decision that he was ineligible for § 212(c) relief.
Because Wallace is considered an “aggravated felon,” he is barred by recent amendments to the immigration laws from seeking any direct judicial review of the BIA’s decision that he is ineligible to apply for § 212(c) relief. INA § 106(a)(10), 8 U.S.C. § 1105(a)(10) (amended by AEDPA § 440(a));
Kolster v. INS,
Put simply, all he seeks through this petition is the opportunity to be heard.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Discretionary Relief From Deportation under INA § 212(c)
Wallace’s deportability is not in doubt. At the time Wallace was convicted of possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, the INA provided that any alien convicted of any controlled substance offense at any time after entry was deportable. INA § 241(a)(2)(B), 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(B). 3 Wallace’s only defense against deportation was therefore to seek discretionary, humanitarian relief on the grounds of his long residence here and his ties to this country. His petition hinges on whether, after the enactment of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214, on April 24, 1996, that relief is still available to him.
Until recently, a request for the humanitarian relief Wallace seeks was made by applying for a waiver of “excludability” under INA § 212(c), 8 U.S.C. § 1182(e). INA § 212(c) provided:
Aliens lawfully admitted for permanent residence who temporarily proceeded abroad voluntarily and not under an order of deportation, and who are returning to a lawful unrelinquished domicile of seven consecutive years may be admitted in the discretion of the Attorney General ...
Id.
Although the section appears on its face to make relief available only to resident aliens facing “exclusion” at the border upon return from trips abroad, it has long applied with equal force to lawful residents facing deportation.
See Francis v. INS,
The decision whether to grant § 212(c) relief was a discretionary one, based on a balancing of equities, including the alien’s length of residence here, especially if it began at a young age, her family ties, the hardship to the alien if deported, proof of rehabilitation, work history, military service to this country, ownership of a business or property here, and any other evidence of her good character and value to the community and the nation. See Matter of Marin, 16 I. & N. Dec. 581, 584-85 (BIA 1978). Apart from his long residence here, the record does not reflect what Wallace’s equities are, because he was never allowed to apply for § 212(c) relief.
Prior to AEDPA, even an alien convicted of an “aggravated felony,” such as drug trafficking, could apply for § 212(c) relief unless he had served five or more years in prison *107 for the felony. 4 8 U.S.C. § 1182(c) (1996). Although the record does not reflect exactly how much time Wallace served, he was only sentenced to three years imprisonment. It thus appears undisputed that he would have been eligible for § 212(c) relief.
With the passage of AEDPA, however, several classes of criminal aliens were barred relief. The new § 212(c) concluded:
This section shall not apply to an alien who is deportable by reason of having committed any criminal offense covered in section 241(a)(2)(A)(iii) [aggravated felony], (B) [controlled substance offenses], (C) [firearms offenses], or (D) [offenses against national security], or any offense covered 'by section 241(a)(2)(A)(ii) for which both predicate offenses are covered by section 241(a)(2)(A)® [crimes of moral turpitude]. 5
AEDPA § 440(d), 110 Stat. 1214, 1277. AEDPA thus removed the five-year sentence requirement. It now barred relief for any alien convicted of any aggravated felony, regardless of the time served. Id. 6
B. Retroactivity
Wallace was served with an Order to Show Cause on March 20, 1996, charging him with deportability on the basis of his February 1996 conviction. AEDPA was not enacted until April 24, 1996. Whether Wallace is still eligible to apply for § 212(c) relief therefore depends primarily on the extent to which AEDPA § 440(d) can be applied retroactively.
1. The First Circuit’s Decision in Goncalves
In approaching this question, I am guided by the First Circuit’s recent in-depth consideration of the retroactivity of AEDPA § 440(d) in
Goncalves v. Reno,
Goncalves faced even lengthier delays than Wallace. Although he appealed to the BIA in early 1995, his appeal was not decided until March 24, 1997. By that time, of course, AEDPA had been passed, rendering aliens with criminal records like Goncalves’ ineligible for § 212(c) relief. Although the BIA itself had initially concluded that the new restrictions on § 212(c) should not be applied to § 212(c) applications filed prior to April 24,1996, by the time it came to consider Goncalves’ appeal, that decision had been reversed by the Attorney General.
Matter of Soriano,
Int. Dec. 3289,
The First Circuit reversed the District Court’s dismissal of Goncalves’ petition for a writ of habeas corpus and remanded the case to the BIA for a discretionary determination of the merits of the application for relief under the old INA § 212(e).
Id.
at 134. It noted that § 212(c) relief, although disere-
*108
tionary, is “plainly substantive.”
Id.
at 128. It was a form of relief present in our immigration laws since 1917, and which in recent years, had been granted to a majority of those who had sought it.
Id.
The court acknowledged that although no one who applied for this discretionary relief was guaranteed to receive it, the right to at least apply was a valuable one. Id at 125,129-130. Its elimination for certain classes of aliens therefore “clearly raise[d] retroactivity concerns” and triggered the strong presumption against retroactivity recently reaffirmed by the Supreme Court in
Landgraf v. USI Film Products,
Under the rule of
Landgraf
and
Hughes,
a statute should be presumed not to attach a “new disability” or “new legal consequences to events completed before its enactment.”
Landgraf,
’2. The Applicability of Goncalves to Wallace
If Wallace was in “Goncalves’ position,” that would be the end of the matter. In one important respect, however, he was not: Wallace’s application for § 212(c) relief was not already pending on the date of AEDPA’s enactment. 8 I must now turn, therefore, to the question of whether the holding of Gon-calves or the Supreme Court precedent underlying it require the Respondents to hear Wallace’s application for humanitarian relief from deportation.
The Goncalves court was confronted with the case of a permanent resident whose application for humanitarian relief under *109 § 212(c) had already been pending for a year and a half when AEDPA was enacted. The narrowest reading of its holding, therefore, is that AEDPA § 440(d) cannot be applied to those whose § 212(c) applications had already been filed and were pending as of April 24, 1996. The question before me is whether the presumption against retroactivity bars applying § 440(d) to individuals in a different position — (1) those who had plead guilty to a deportable offense before April 24, 1996, (2) those whose deportation proceedings were pending, or (3) those deportable on the basis of criminal offenses committed pri- or to that date.
It is important to note at the outset that
Goncalves
did not purport to create a new rule of law concerning the retroactivity of statutes in general or immigration laws in particular. Instead, it set out to apply the presumption against retroactivity “deeply rooted in our jurisprudence ... and centuries older than our Republic,” “guided [throughout] by the Supreme Court’s retro-activity jurisprudence.”
Goncalves,
In rehearsing its long tradition of applying the presumption against retroactivity, the
Landgraf
Court quoted with approval Justice Harlan’s opinion for the Court in
Chew Heong v. United States,
invoked the “uniformly” accepted rule against “giv[ing] to statutes a retrospeccive operation, whereby rights previously vested are injuriously affected, unless compelled to do so by language so clear and positive as to leave no room to doubt that such was the intention of the legislature.”
Landgraf,
The issues raised here are thus distinct from those raised by many prior challenges to the retroactivity of immigration statutes. Congress can, and often does, attach new and drastic immigration consequences to conduct that occurred long in the past.
See, e.g.,
IIRIRA § 309(c)(4)(G) (precluding appeal in the case of an alien who has committed two crimes of moral turpitude, “without regard to their date of commission”); IIRIRA § 321 (amending INA § 101(a)(43), 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(43) so as to dramatically expand the definition of “aggravated felony” “regardless of when the conviction occurred”);
Lehmann v. United States,
3. The Meaning of Retroactivity Under Landgraf, Hughes, and Goncalves
The presumption against retroactivity has roots as far back as the English common law and is reflected in our Constitution.
Landgraf,
It is simpler to recognize this presumption, however, than to apply it. This is not a simple or mechanical task, but one that requires the exercise of judgment and instinct.
Id.
at 270,
This analytical framework clarifies the application of
Goncalves
to this ease. Clearly, to bar a permanent resident alien from applying for humanitarian relief under § 212(c) not only impairs a substantive right,
Goncalves,
The question then becomes, which “past events” are at issue here. Some have occurred prior to the passage of AEDPA, some after.
Four possibilities present themselves: a) the plea that made Wallace deportable; b) Wallace’s initial formal request for § 212(e) relief; c) the initiation of Wallace’s deportation ease; and d) the criminal conduct underlying the conviction. I will address each in turn.
a. The Date of the Plea That Gives Rise to Deportability
Until a criminal defendant is found guilty or pleads, the defendant is presumed innocent of all charged offenses; surely no dire immigration consequences can attach at that point. Waiving the right to trial and pleading guilty is a momentous decision. Every criminal defendant must consider a range of factors before making such a choice. Chief among them are the penalties, both civil and penal, that she risks if she goes to trial and is convicted, compared to those she is sure to face as a result of a plea bargain. One of the most important consequence she might face is the risk of deportation.
By the time of Wallace’s conviction, it was widely recognized as a violation of an attorney’s professional duty to her client not to advise her of the immigration consequences of a plea or conviction.
See Mojica v. Reno,
In at least thirteen states, including Massachusetts, the presiding judge must inquire
*111
during a plea colloquy whether an alien defendant was, in fact, informed of the plea’s immigration consequences.
Mojica,
In the years immediately preceding the passage of AEDPA, moreover, any competent advice an alien defendant received about the immigration consequences of a guilty plea would have included a discussion of the possibility of § 212(c) relief and what is required to be eligible to apply. For a client charged with a narcotics offense, an attorney should have known that a § 212(c) waiver was the only relief available. Sfasciotti,
Representing Aliens,
79 Ill.B.J. at 78; Tapia-Ruano,
Recent Developments,
422 PLI/Lit at 995. Criminal attorneys were instructed by their own practice guides that a § 212(c) waiver “is probably the most common form of relief available, and also certainly the easiest to obtain .... ” SultanJ
Immigration Consequences,
30-JUN Ariz. Att’y at 31. Law reviews and government publications reported that a large percentage, or even a majority, of § 212(c) applications were granted.
See Goncalves,
For the minor or first time offenders who were the best candidates for § 212(c) relief, moreover, the immigration consequences of a plea would often have been even more severe than the penal ones. Even Wallace, who was facing a drug charge, was sentenced to only three years in prison by the state courts but now faces the immigration sanction of permanent exile from this country, where he has lived for ten years. For many other offenders, the disparity in consequences was far greater.
9
As many courts have noted, “[t]he possibility of being deported can be — and frequently is — the most important factor in a criminal defendant’s decision how to plead.”
Del Rosario,
At the moment of indictment, then, a non-citizen criminal defendant would most likely have been informed of and had good reason to consider the immigration consequences of a guilty plea. If the attorney had fulfilled her obligations, a defendant such as Wallace should have factored into those considerations his eligibility for § 212(c) relief and that a majority of those who sought it had succeeded.
There is thus a direct and meaningful connection between the operation of AEDPA’s new rule barring § 212(c) relief to many alien criminal offenders and a past event— those same offenders’ voluntary decision to waive their right to a trial and plead guilty. AEDPA’s bar to § 212(c) relief attached new legal consequences to the guilty pleas, after the fact. To apply those consequences now
*112
would offend principles of fair notice and respect for reasonable reliance and settled expectations.
See Landgraf,
This analysis is not affected by the fact that the underlying conduct was by definition unlawful at the time it was committed. As the Supreme Court has held, a “legal change that would have an impact on private parties’ planning” implicates the presumption against retroactivity, even if the change does nothing more than attach additional civil liability to conduct that was already sanctioned as “morally reprehensible or illegal.”
Landgraf,
Deportation, in the words of the Supreme Court, is “at times equivalent of banishment or exile ....”
Costello v. INS,
Recognizing the tremendous personal stakes involved, the Supreme Court has admonished that “[i]n this area of the law ... we do well to eschew technicalities and fictions and instead deal with realities.”
Costello,
A realistic rather than technical analysis of retroactivity strongly suggest that to attach additional consequences to this decision by barring all opportunity to present one’s equitable plea for relief from deportation would violate traditional notions of fair notice and upset settled expectations. In contrast, to link retroactivity to a particular moment in immigration proceedings as the INS request — whether the issuance of the OSC, the filing of the OSC with the Immigration Court, or the application for § 212(c) relief— would be to focus on just such a technicality.
b. The Date of the Immigrant’s Application for § 212(c)
Relief
The Respondent urges me instead to confine the holding of Goncalves to its facts and hold that § 440(d) would only be impermissi-bly retroactive were it to apply to applications for § 212(c) relief already filed as of April 24,1996.
This narrow application of Goncalves does not accord with the language of Goncalves itself; the opinion refers at times to “pending cases” and “pending applications” almost in *113 terchangeably. 10 More fundamentally, a focus on the date of application would be inconsistent with the Goncalves court’s underlying reasoning. The date on which a permanent resident filed for § 212(c) relief was usually determined by a random set of facts outside the resident’s control. 11 An alien in deportation proceedings had no opportunity even to express an intent to apply for § 212(c) relief until the first hearing before an Immigration Judge. 8 C.F.R. § 212.3(e)(1) (“An application for the exercise of discretion under section § 212(c) may be ... submitted in proceedings before an Immigration Judge. ”) (emphasis added). As a member of the BIA has pointed out, “eligible legal residents requiring a waiver have no control over when proceedings are commenced or how quickly and in what order hearings and appeals are set or adjudicated.” See Matter of Soriano, Int. Dec. 3289 (Op. of Rosenberg). Indeed, not only is the date of the initial hearing not in the immigrant’s control, the initiation of formal proceedings by the filing of the OSC with the Immigration Court is entirely within the control of the INS, her adversary in the proceedings. 8 C.F.R. § 3,14(a).
Here, it took the INS three months to complete the clerical task of filing the Order to Show Cause with the Immigration Court. In the interim, on April 24, 1996, AEDPA had been passed. Then Wallace faced an additional six month delay while the Immigration Court found an opportunity, in its crowded docket, to hold an initial hearing in his case. Although Wallace expressed his intent to apply for § 212(c) relief immediately at his first hearing, it is unclear when his application was formally filed. See 8 C.F.R. § 212.3(e) (not specifying when during the Immigration Court proceedings the 1-191 application form itself had to be filed).
Defining retroactivity as only encompassing pending petitions consequently ignores the Supreme Court’s directive that retroac-tivity is a “functional” concept, not an abstract, technical one.
Hughes,
Nor would confining
Goncalves
to pending applications make sense in light of the central theme of the Court’s retroactivity jurisprudence: that a statute is retroactive if it imposes additional burdens for
past conduct. See, e.g., Hughes,
520 U.S. -,
A successful applicant for § 212(c) relief normally had to demonstrate strong family ties in this country, the hardship that would arise from deportation, and her contributions to her community and to the nation, see Matter of Marin, 16 I. & N. Dec. at 584-85. The complete foreclosure of that relief burdens the resident, her family, and her community. None of their conduct is implicated by the time the first hearing at which the resident may apply for relief is held. The only conduct that triggers this event is the conduct of the INS and the Immigration Court. 12
Because the date of application may depend, as in this case, on random administrative factors beyond the applicant’s control, to limit the retroactivity analysis to pending applications would also run afoul of the “elementary considerations of fairness” that animate the presumption against retroactivity.
Landgraf,
Confronted with a similar question involving appeals against erroneous determinations by the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the First Circuit rejected a retroactivity analysis that pivoted on the date on which a claim was “finally adjudicated.” “The Secretary’s interpretation,” the court held,
would lead to an unacceptable disparity between claims based on the luck of particular applicant in pushing her claim through the sometimes frustratingly slow administrative and judicial process.
Dion v. Secretary of Health and Human Servs.,
C. The Application of Goncalves to Immigration Cases Pending as of AEDPA’s enactment
Similar consideration of fortuity and fairness govern the analysis of whether Gon-calves’ holding should be understood as ap *115 plying only to immigration cases pending on the date of AEDPA’s enactment. In most instances, an immigrant had as little control over the initiation of deportation proceedings as over the scheduling of her first hearing before an Immigration Judge. Wallace was convicted in February of 1996 and served with an OSC just over a month later. For many others, however, the connection between conviction and deportation was neither so immediate nor so direct. Years might elapse between conviction and deportation, with the deportation proceedings not triggered by the conviction itself but by a lawful resident’s random contacts with the INS. 14
As with the date on which a § 212(c) application was filed, the date on which a deportation case becomes a pending case is not a relevant past event within the Landgraf framework. That date has only a tenuous connection to the conduct that is in fact being burdened with additional liability by AED-PA, that is, to the criminal conviction itself. Considerations of both logic and fairness suggest that it is not the proper focus of the retroactivity analysis.
This conclusion is bolstered by the Supreme Court’s holding in
Hughes Aircraft v. United States,
The conduct “relevant” to the retroactivity analysis was either Hughes’ submission of the allegedly false claims or its disclosure of the claims to the government in a subsequent administrative audit.
Id.
at — ,
III. CONCLUSION
In February 1996, Wallace pleaded guilty to a drug offense. At that time, his plea rendered him liable to deportation from this country, but he still had the opportunity to present the equities of his case to an Immigration Judge and seek discretionary permission to remain. Two months later, AEDPA § 440(d) was passed, eliminating the right of aliens in Wallace’s situation to even present a case for discretionary relief.
Applying the rule of Landgraf and Hughes, clearly made applicable to AEDPA § 440(d) by Goncalves, I conclude that it would violate the presumption against retro-activity to apply that statute’s bar to a humanitarian relief from deportation to this ease. 15 .
*116 Therefore, I do not need to reach the question of whether the retroactivity analysis should extend as far back as the date of the criminal conduct on which that conviction was based. Nor do I reach Wallace’s constitutional challenges to the BIA’s application of § 440(d) to permanent resident aliens in deportation proceedings, but not to those in exclusion proceedings. 16
As I stated at the outset, Wallace has not come before this Court to ask not to be deported. That decision lies within the discretion of the Respondents. All Wallace asks is the opportunity to be heard. He seeks to come before an Immigration Judge and present the humanitarian and social factors that might make him deserving of discretionary relief. Because Wallace has been denied this opportunity, there is as of yet no record of what those factors may be. I neither have nor express any opinion on whether Wallace’s ties to this country and contributions to his community outweigh the fact of his drug conviction. I merely conclude that under the law as it existed at the time he admitted to and was convicted for that offense, he is entitled to argue his case before an independent decision maker before being expelled from the country that has become his home.
Wallace’s petition for habeas corpus is therefore GRANTED. This case is REMANDED to the Board of Immigration Appeals for a discretionary consideration of the merits of his application for relief under INA § 212(c), 8 U.S.C. § 1182(c) as it stood on the date of the February 1996 conviction that rendered Wallace deportable.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Office of the Immigration Judge is part of the Executive Office for Immigration Review ("EOIR"), the branch of the Department of Justice charged with hearing and deciding immigration cases such as Wallace's. The EOIR is, formally, a separate agency from the INS.
. As discussed in more detail below, § 212(c) allowed a deportable alien to seek a discretionary *106 waiver of deportation based on his ties to this country and his contributions to his community. See e.g., Matter of Marin, 16 I & N Dec. 581, 584-85 (BIA 1978).
. Other than a single offense of possession of 30 grams or less of marijuana for personal use. Id.
. When the ground of deportation was a conviction for drug trafficking, however, the alien had to show "unusual or outstanding equities.” Matter of Marin, 16 I. & N. Dec. at 589. As mentioned above, because Wallace has not yet been • able to apply for § 212(c) relief, there is no record of what his unusual or outstanding equities might be.
. Wallace was thus denied relief on the basis of his controlled substance conviction, which was also an aggravated felony under the immigration laws. Goncalves, potentially barred relief by the same section, had committed two crimes of moral turpitude.
See Goncalves,
.The Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA) passed after AEDPA has eliminated INA § 212(c) relief entirely. IIRIRA, Subtitle C, amending 8 U.S.C. § 1182. That provision, however, was expressly prospective, applying, like most of the statute, to deportation proceedings commenced after April 1, 1997. IIRIRA, § 309(c),
Goncalves,
. The First Circuit’s recognition that the ability to apply for, if not to receive, § 212(c) relief was a valuable, substantive right forecloses the Respondents’ reliance here on its contrary
dicta
in
Kolster,
. There is another distinction between Wallace and Goncalves; Goncalves was deportable by reason of having committed crimes of moral turpitude, while Wallace is deportable as an alien convicted of a drug crime. For the purposes of the retroactivity analysis here, however, that is a distinction without a difference. Both categories of aliens were barred from seeking § 212(c) relief by the same statutory provision, AEDPA § 440(d).
. Under the leading BIA case Matter of Ozkok, even a sentence of probation, restitution, or community service — indeed, the suspension of a driver’s license — may be considered a conviction for the purposes of immigration law. Matter of Ozkok, 19 I. & N. Dec. 546, 551 (BIA 1988).
.
See, e.g., Goncalves,
. Although the regulations technically allowed applications for a § 212(c) waiver to be filed with the INS District Director at any time, 8 C.F.R. § 212.3(b), in 1994, the INS took the position that this regulation "did not allow aliens to request § 212(c) relief as a form of relief from deportation prior to the actual institution of deportation proceedings.” 71
Interpreter Releases
949 (July 18, 1994). Although there is some debate over when a deportation proceeding "commences,” INS regulations state that “proceedings before an Immigration Judge commence when a charging document [such as an Order to Show Cause] is filed with the Immigration Court by the Service,” 8 C.F.R. § 3.14(a), not the issuance of the OSC, or its service. As discussed below, the INS has control over when the filing is complete. The alien can apply for relief only after this act is taken by INS.
See also Vargas v. Reno,
The argument that had Wallace applied for section 212(c) at the time when he was first served with the OSC, March 18, 1996, he would have been within the scope of the Goncalves decision is thus baseless. As the service of OSC docs not appear to “commence” the deportation proceedings, Wallace still had to wail until the OSC was filed before his application for relief could be submitted.
. The argument for the "moment of application” as a trigger point might be different if, in the very act of applying for § 212(c) relief, the alien made a meaningful strategic choice, waiving a defense to deportability, for example, in exchange for the opportunity to apply for discretionary relief.
See Landgraf,
. This analysis applies even more strongly to Respondent’s suggestion that AEDPA would not operate retroactively here because the INS did not manage to file the OSC with the Immigration Court for three months, and that therefore, under applicable regulations, Wallace's was not technically "in deportation proceedings” according to INS regulations on the date that AEDPA was enacted. See 8 C.F.R. § 3.14 ("proceedings before an Immigration Judge commence ... when a charging document is filed with the Immigration Court by the Service [i.e., the INS].” (emphasis added)).
. In approaching the "pure issue of law” of the retroactive effect of § 440(d),
see Goncalves,
. As noted above, IIRIRA has now eliminated altogether the form of relief Wallace is seeking here. Unlike AEDPA § 440(d), however, that elimination of relief carried an explicit effective dale: it applied to all those whose deportation
*116
proceedings commenced after April 1, 1997.
Goncalves,
. Wallace challenges AEDPA's bar to section 212(c) relief on the constitutional grounds that it precludes relief for aliens in deportation proceedings (resident aliens placed in deportation proceedings without having left the country), but not for those in exclusion proceedings (resident aliens stopped at the border on their return from abroad).
See Almon v. Reno,
Resident aliens in deportation proceedings and exclusion proceedings have a constitutional right to due process.
See e.g., Landon v. Plasencia,
