Lolita Wood, a native and citizen of Lithuania who overstayed her visitor’s visa, married a U.S. citizen during the final stages of her removal proceedings. In a last-ditch effort to stave off removal to her native country, she requested a continuance to apply for adjustment of status as the spouse of a U.S. citizen. An immigration judge (“IJ”) denied her request because Wood had already received a 14-month continuance by presenting herself as the “wife” of her asylum-seeking Lithuanian ex-husband at an earlier removal hearing. Wood appealed the IJ’s ruling to the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”), which adopted and affirmed the IJ’s decision. Based on the same conduct cited by the IJ as grounds for denying the continuance, the BIA also determined that Wood did not merit a discretionary adjustment of status. The BIA ordered Wood tо voluntarily depart the United States.
On petition for review to this court, Wood challenges the BIA’s denial of a continuance and its determination that she did not warrant a discretionary adjustment of status. We have no jurisdiction to review either determination.
See
8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(B)(ii);
Ali v. Gonzales,
I. Background
Lolita Wood overstayed a visitor’s visa that expired in October 2000. Daries Ben-dikas, Lolita’s Lithuanian husband at the time she entered the United States, аlso overstayed his visa, and in February 2002 he submitted an asylum application naming his wife as a derivative beneficiary. A few months later, however, Wood was no longer married to Bendikas; in May 2002 a Lithuanian court in Vilnius granted her divorce petition. Unaware of the divorce, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (which merged into the Department of Homeland Security as the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services in March 2003) denied Bendikas’s asylum application and referred the couple to immigration court for removal proceedings.
In January 2003 the couple appeared pro se before an IJ for their initial hearing. The IJ assumed the couple was still married; they appeared as husband and wife, and neither told the IJ about their divorce. Rather, Bendikas told the IJ he wished to challenge the denial of his asylum application, which still listed Wood as a derivative beneficiary by virtue of their marriage. To give the couple time to obtain counsel and prepare their asylum case, the IJ granted Bendikas and Wood a 14-month continuance and scheduled their final asylum and removal hеaring for April 2004.
Wood appeared with counsel at the April 2004 hearing, but Bendikas did not appear at all. By this time the IJ had learned of the couple’s May 2002 divorce and informed Wood that she was ineligible for asylum because she was no longer married to the primary asylum applicant. The IJ explained that the only type of relief available to Wood was voluntary departure, which he would determine in his discretion. Wood’s attorney then told the IJ that Wood planned to marry a U.S. citizen in
Before the December 2004 hearing, Wood moved for another continuance to afford her an opportunity to apply for adjustment of status based on her July 2004 marriage to an American citizen and her husband’s 1-130 petition (as yet unapproved). The IJ denied Wood’s request (as he previously warned he would), citing the prior 14-month continuance based solely on Wood having misrepresented her status as a derivative asylum beneficiary (available only for spouses and children, see 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(3)(A) (2000)). The IJ explained that Wood essentially bought herself an extra 14 months of unlawful presence by failing to disclose her divorce at the January 2003 hearing. Wood had no remaining defenses to removal. The IJ granted voluntary departure in lieu of removal.
Wood appealed the denial of her continuance to the BIA. While thаt appeal was pending, another division of DHS approved Timothy Wood’s 1-130 visa petition on Lolita’s behalf. Now armed with prima facie evidence that her marriage was bona fide (a prerequisite to applying for adjustment of status based on a marriage entered into during removal proceedings, 8 C.F.R. § 245.1(c)(8)(v) (2006)), Wood also asked the BIA to remand her case to the
II. Discussion
Because the BIA adopted the IJ’s decision but articulated a supplemental reаson for affirmance, we review both decisions.
Gjerazi v. Gonzales,
Constitutional claims and questions of law, however, are specifically exempt from the jurisdiсtion bar.
See 8
U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(D);
see also Ali v. Achim,
We review de novo thе question of whether the BIA’s action was ultra vires.
See Guevara v. Gonzales,
Wood claims thе BIA’s appellate jurisdiction extends only to issues actually decided by the IJ, not issues the IJ might have decided had he not denied her a continuance. We do not read the regulations so narrowly. As we have noted, under 8 C.F.R. § 1003.1(d)(3)(ii), the BIA’s power of de novo review extends to “questions of ... discretion ... and all other issues in appeals from decisions of immigration judges.” . In other words, for a legal or discretionary issue to be within the scope of the BIA’s review, it need only be a matter “in” the appeal. This does not require an explicit prior determination of the issue by the IJ. The BIA has routinely decided appeals based upon issues never reached by the IJ, a practice we have implicitly approved.
See, e.g., Palmer v. INS,
The issue of Wood’s entitlement to a status adjustment was certainly “in” her appeal because she asked the BIA to grant her a continuance and a remand to the IJ to pursue adjustment of status before the IJ. Implicit in Wood’s request was the assertion that she merited a favorable exercise of discretion, a prerequisite to adjustment of status. 8 U.S.C. § 1255(a);
Singh v. Gonzales,
Provided the BIA can do so without additional fact-finding, 8 C.F.R. § 1003.1(d)(3)(iv), we see no reаson why it must avoid issues of discretion in an appeal because they were never reached by the IJ. Although this proviso is potentially important, in Wood’s case the BIA did not stray from the administrative record; it premised the exercise of its discretion on' the IJ’s finding that Wood falsеly portrayed herself as Bendikas’s wife for purposes of asylum during the January 2003 hearing. We conclude the BIA acted with
Wood raises no other legal or constitutional challenge to the decision of the BIA. 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(D). Accordingly, her petition for review is DENIED.
Notes
. Only aliens physically present in the United States may apply for adjustment of status based on marriage to a U.S. citizen. 8 C.F.R. § 245.1 (2006). As such, by ordering voluntary departure, the IJ in Wood’s case would require her to pursue lawful permanent residency from abroad. As the IJ noted, once abroad, an alien married to a U.S. citizen must seek an immigrant visa for admission as a lawful permanent resident through a consular office of the U.S. Deрartment of State. 8 C.F.R. § 211.1; 22 C.F.R. §§ 42.21(a), 42.61(a). What the IJ failed to mention, however, was that an alien ordered to voluntarily depart the country as a result of a visa overstay is inadmissible for three or ten years depending on the length of the overstay. 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(9)(B)(i) (2000). The period of inadmissibility may be waived in cases like Wood's where the visa applicant is a spouse of a U.S. citizen, but only by the Attorney General — -not the Department of State — and only when “the refusal of admission to such immigrant alien would result in extreme hardship to the citizen.” Id. § 1182(a)(9)(B)(v). Wood understandably fears that consular officials in Vilnius, being under the direction of the Department of State and not the Attorney General, will fail to make provision for such a waiver request. The Department of State has issued regulations instructing consular officials to explain to aliens in Wood’s position the procedure for requesting a waiver from the Attorney General. 22 C.F.R. § 40.92(3).
