OPINION
Petitioner-appellant Young Hee Kwak petitions for review of a decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) affirming an order of the immigration judge (“IJ”) denying Kwak’s application for a continuance of proceedings and entering an order of removal. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the BIA’s decision and deny Kwak’s petition for review.
I.
Young Hee Kwak, a native and citizen of South Korea, was detained upon reentry to the United States on April 26, 1996. Five days prior, Kwak had married a naturalized United States citizen of South Korean birth. According to Kwak, before visiting South Korea for the marriage, he had been a student in New York and had moved to Cleveland with his fiancée shortly before the wedding trip. Upon entry, immigration officials determined that Kwak possessed an expired visa that had been modified to appear current. Kwak confessed that he and a friend altered the document and assured officials that he had a valid visa in Cleveland that he had forgot to bring with him to South Korea. The Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) charged Kwak with procuring a visa or other documentation by fraud and seeking to procure entry into the United States by fraud and with appearing not to be in possession of a valid visa in violation of 8 U.S.C. §§ 212(a)(6)(C)® and 212(a)(7)(A)(i)(I).
The INS granted Kwak a ninety-day visa to attend deferred exclusion proceedings against him in May 1996. After a *1142 continuance to permit a change of venue, a second hearing was held in Detroit, Michigan, on January 30, 1998. At that point, the IJ issued a second continuance to await the outcome of Kwak’s wife’s 1-130 petition to establish relative status, which Kwak intended to use to apply for an adjustment of status. The 1-130 was later approved. Kwak was granted a third continuance in August 1998 but failed to appear at the next scheduled appearance on September 17, 1999, at which point the IJ continued proceedings until February 4, 2000.
On April 28, 2000, the IJ granted Kwak’s motion to close his case administratively in order to permit the adjudication of his applications for a waiver of grounds of excludability (1-601 petition) and an adjustment of status (1-485 petition). The INS denied both applications on January 14, 2003, and the government subsequently moved to reopen and recalendar Kwak’s case. Exclusion proceedings were reopened, and the IJ issued a two-month continuance at the first hearing on April 4, 2006, because Kwak had only retained counsel the preceding day. In the meantime, Kwak appealed the denial of his 1-601 to the Administrative Appeals Unit (“AAU”) of the United States Citizen7 ship and Immigration Services (“USCIS”), which had since succeeded the INS. Consequently, Kwak requested another continuance at his June 6, 2006, exclusion hearing. The government agreed, and the IJ continued proceedings until November 28, 2006. At that hearing, Kwak’s counsel requested “one more continuance” on the ground that Kwak was awaiting the outcome of his appeal to the AAU of a denial of an 1-140 petition for permanent status as an alien worker. The government did not object but noted that “by the next hearing we require [rjelief [ ]or ... some sort of forward progress on the case.” The IJ granted the continuance but noted that “[fit’s the last continuance ..., even if the Government wants to give another continuance.” On March 6, 2007, the government again did not object to another motion for continuance because an AAU decision on the denied 1-601 was expected within several months. The IJ granted the continuance but warned that “this really is the final continuance and I wish that both sides would know that.”
At the subsequent July 17, 2007, exclusion hearing, Kwak again requested a continuance pending the AAU determination. The government opposed, and the IJ stated that he was “going to review the case further ... [and he would] either send [Kwak] a Hearing Notice or ... a final order in the case in a few days.” The IJ continued the proceedings, but the AAU appeal was still pending at the next scheduled hearing on September 11, 2007. The IJ again stated that he would review the case before issuing either a continuance or a final order. The government registered its objection to what would be the tenth continuance in the case and the sixth since reopening the case.
On September 13, 2007, the IJ denied Kwak’s request for a continuance and issued an order of removal. The IJ noted that Kwak’s case had been administratively closed pending adjudication by the US-CIS, that the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) had finally denied Kwak’s applications in 2003, and that Kwak had received “numerous continuances” since the case was reopened to permit adjudication by the AAU. The IJ further recognized that “[fit is not an abuse of discretion for the [IJ] to deny a motion for a continuance after repeated continuances have been granted, based on the possibility that the proper documentation may be approved in the future, and that the Respondent at some point may be eligible for adjustment of status.”
*1143 The BIA affirmed the IJ’s denial of the continuance. Pointing out the lengthy procedural history of the case and the number of prior granted continuances, the BIA agreed that Kwak failed to show good cause for yet another. Citing Matter of Hashmi, 24 I. & N. Dec. 785 (2009), which was handed down after the IJ issued his order, the BIA found that Kwak had not demonstrated that he was likely to succeed on the merits of his AAU appeal and had not even set out the grounds for his appeal. The BIA also relied on the DHS’s opposition to this continuance as an additional ground for the IJ’s denial. Kwak timely petitioned this court for review of the BIA’s decision.
II.
We have jurisdiction to review final orders of removal subject to the limitations of 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2). 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(1). Subsection (B)(ii) of that provision states that “no court shall have jurisdiction to review ... any ... decision or action of the Attorney General ... the authority for which is specified under this subchapter to be in the discretion of the Attorney General.... ” In
Abu-Khaliel v. Gonzales,
Our determination in
Abur-Khaliel
rested in part on a distinction that we drew between a determination at the discretion of the IJ and one at the discretion of the Attorney General, the former not being precluded by § 1152(a)(2)(B)(ii).
See Abu-Khaliel,
III.
“Because the BIA did not summarily affirm or adopt the IJ’s reasoning and provided an explanation for its decision, we review the BIA’s decision as the final agency determination.”
Ilic-Lee v. Mukasey,
An IJ “may grant a motion for continuance for good cause shown.” 8 C.F.R. §§ 1003.29, 1240.6. “Finding
‘good
cause’ is crucial since a continuance, in effect, allows an alien to remain in the United States for a period of time without any defined legal immigration status. An unreasonable continuance would thwart the operation of the statutes providing for removal of inadmissible ... and deportable ... aliens.”
Uhpabi v. Mukasey,
Kwak argues that the IJ abused his discretion by denying the continuance when, through no fault of his own, a petition for a waiver of excludability was pending before the AAU. However, we have previously held that a pending immigration petition does not entitle an alien to a continuance: “It cannot be the case that anytime an alien files an 1-485 petition or has an 1-130 petition filed on his behalf, the IJ is
required
to grant a continuance. Such a view would conflict with the discretion that the regulations explicitly provide to the IJ.”
See id.
at 408 (quoting
Ilic-Lee,
Moreover, in
Abu-Khaliel, El Harake,
and
Cika,
we found that the IJs did not abuse their discretion by denying requests for a continuance based on pending petitions for status adjustment that the US-CIS had yet to adjudicate.
See Abu-Khaliel,
Kwak next argues that the BIA abused its discretion by considering the number and length of the continuances granted throughout Kwak’s exclusion proceedings. In
Abw-Khaliel,
we found that an IJ did not abuse his discretion in denying a continuance based on the length of two — not nine — prior continuances and on a finding that the petitioner “had violated the laws of the United States.”
Finally, the BIA did not abuse its discretion when it relied, in part, on the DHS’s opposition to a continuance. In
Ilic-Lee,
we pointed to the DHS’s opposition to the motion for continuance to distinguish that case from
Badwan v. Gonzales,
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the BIA’s decision and deny Kwak’s petition for review.
