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[DO NOT PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
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No. 20-13124
Non-Argument Calendar
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Agency No. A209-238-182
SILVIA MARIBEL UCEDA-ALVARES,
MARIA GUADALUPE UCEDA-ALVARES,
Petitioners,
versus
U.S. ATTORNEY GENERAL,
Respondent.
________________________
Petition for Review of a Decision of the
Board of Immigration Appeals
________________________
(March 1, 2021)
Before ROSENBAUM, LAGOA, and BRASHER, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
Silvia Maribel Uceda-Alvares, on behalf of herself and her minor daughter,
Maria Guadalupe Uceda-Alvares, seeks review of the Board of Immigration
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Appeals’s (“BIA”) order denying her motion to terminate her removal proceedings.
On appeal, Uceda-Alvares argues that, based on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Pereira v. Sessions, 585 U.S. ___, 138 S. Ct. 2105 (2018), the immigration judge
(“IJ”) lacked jurisdiction over her removal proceedings because the notice to appear
that was served on her lacked information—the time and date of her initial removal
hearing—required by statute. Because Uceda-Alvares’s challenge is foreclosed by
our decision in Perez-Sanchez v. United States Attorney General, 935 F.3d 1148
(11th Cir. 2019), we deny her petition for review.
I.
Soon after Uceda-Alvares, a native and citizen of El Salvador, entered the
United States with her daughter on July 6, 2016, the government issued her a notice
to appear (“NTA”) charging that she was removable as an unauthorized immigrant.
The NTA ordered Uceda-Alvares to appear for a removal hearing before an IJ in
Miami, Florida, but it failed to specify the date or time of the hearing. Several
months later, Uceda-Alvares received a notice of hearing containing this
information.
Uceda-Alvares appeared for the initial hearing with counsel, admitted the
allegations in the NTA, and conceded removability. She later filed applications for
asylum and withholding of removal.
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Instead of proceeding on these applications for relief at the merits hearing in
July 2018, Uceda-Alvares’s counsel moved to terminate her removal proceedings on
the ground that the NTA was defective under the Supreme Court’s decision in
Pereira. The IJ denied the motion, stating that Pereira did not require termination
due to a defective NTA. Counsel then moved to withdraw Uceda-Alvares’s
applications for relief without prejudice. After cautioning counsel about the
consequences of withdrawal, the IJ permitted withdrawal of the applications and
ordered Uceda-Alvares and her minor daughter removed to El Salvador.
Uceda-Alvares appealed to the BIA, asserting that there was “only one issue
presented for review, and that is whether or not the Immigration Judge lacks
jurisdiction to proceed with the hearing in removal proceedings.” She maintained
that the initial NTA was defective under Pereira and could not be remedied by a
later notice of hearing, so “there is nothing to which the Court’s jurisdiction can
attach and the case needs to be dismissed.”
The BIA dismissed Uceda-Alvares’s appeal. The BIA observed that Pereira
addressed the issue of whether an NTA that does not designate a specific time and
place of removal proceedings triggers the “stop-time” rule for purposes of
cancellation of removal under 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(b). The BIA explained that its
subsequent decision in Matter of Bermudez-Cota, 27 I. & N. Dec. 441 (BIA 2018),
clarified that an NTA that does not specify the time and place of an initial removal
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hearing nonetheless vests an IJ with jurisdiction so long as a notice of hearing
specifying this information is later sent to the noncitizen. And it noted that our
decision in Perez-Sanchez agreed with Matter of Bermudez-Cota that the time-and-
place requirement was not a jurisdictional rule. Accordingly, the BIA concluded
that the IJ had jurisdiction over Uceda-Alvares’s proceedings because she received
notices that included the date, time, and location of her removal hearings after
service of her NTA, and she attended those hearings.
II.
Uceda-Alvares, on behalf of herself and her minor daughter, now petitions
this Court for review of the BIA decision. She maintains that an NTA that fails to
include the date or time of the removal hearing does not comply with the relevant
statute, cannot be cured by a later notice of hearing containing the missing
information, and does not vest the IJ with “authority to proceed with the removal
proceedings.” While she phrases her argument primarily in terms of the agency’s
jurisdiction, she suggests that the “issue is not about the label ‘jurisdiction’, it is
about complying with the specific requirements of the statute.”
We review the BIA’s legal determinations and interpretations of law or
statutes de novo. Gonzalez v. U.S. Att’y Gen., 820 F.3d 399, 403 (11th Cir. 2016).
We review our own subject-matter jurisdiction de novo, and we lack jurisdiction to
consider a claim raised in a petition for review “unless the petitioner has exhausted
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[her] administrative remedies with respect thereto.” Amaya-Artunduaga v. U.S.
Att’y Gen., 463 F.3d 1247, 1250 (11th Cir. 2006).
Here, Uceda-Alvares’s jurisdictional argument is foreclosed by our decision
in Perez-Sanchez. And while she attempts to broaden her challenge beyond
jurisdiction on appeal, she failed to exhaust that broader challenge by raising it
before the BIA when she had the opportunity to do so.
The initiation of removal proceedings is governed by 8 U.S.C. § 1229, which
provides that noncitizens “shall be given” written notice, referred to as a “notice to
appear” or NTA, specifying various information, including the nature of the
proceedings, the charges, and “[t]he time and place at which the proceedings will be
held.” 8 U.S.C. § 1229(a)(1). “The statute thus clearly requires that an NTA include
the time and place of a noncitizen’s removal proceedings.” Perez-Sanchez, 935 F.3d
at 1153. Accordingly, Uceda-Alvares’s “NTA was unquestionably deficient under
the statute—although [her] NTA listed the location, it left off both the time and date
of the hearing.” Id.
Moreover, we have rejected Matter of Bermudez-Cota’s interpretation that
“an NTA under section 1229(a) is not deficient so long as a subsequent notice of
hearing is later sent and specifies the time and location of the removal hearing.” Id.
In Perez-Sanchez, we explained that this interpretation was foreclosed by the
Supreme Court’s decision in Pereira, which “held an NTA that fails to specify the
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time and place of removal proceedings is defective” and was “not ‘some trivial,
ministerial defect’ that could be cured later.” Id. at 1153–54 (quoting Pereira, 138
S. Ct. at 2116). Rather, in the Supreme Court’s view, the failure to include the time
and place of removal proceedings “deprive[d] the notice to appear of its essential
character.” Pereira, 138 S. Ct. at 2116–17. In Pereira, therefore, the Court held
that a putative NTA that does not specify either the time or place of the removal
proceedings does not trigger the “stop-time” rule, 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(d)(1)(A), and
thus does not end the alien’s continuous physical presence in the United States for
purposes of cancellation of removal eligibility. Id. at 2110.
However, the fact that her NTA is deficient “does not mean the agency lacked
jurisdiction over [Uceda-Alvares’s] case.” Perez-Sanchez, 935 F.3d at 1154. In
Perez-Sanchez, we explained that § 1229a(a)(1) “empower[s] IJs to ‘conduct
proceedings for deciding the inadmissibility or deportability of an alien.’” Id. at
1156 (quoting 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(a)(1)). “This broad grant of authority,” we
continued, “is not limited in any way by the filing or service of an NTA.” Id. Rather,
“section 1229(a), states, at most, that removal proceedings are initiated upon the
service of an NTA to a noncitizen.” Id. In short, § 1229’s time-and-place
requirement does not create a “jurisdictional rule.” Id. at 1154.
Nor is a jurisdictional rule created by 8 C.F.R. § 1003.14, “a regulation that
purportedly sets forth the agency’s jurisdiction over removal proceedings,” because
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Congress alone controls an agency’s jurisdiction. Id. at 1154–55; see 8 C.F.R.
§ 1003.14 (“Jurisdiction vests, and proceedings before an Immigration Judge
commence, when a charging document is filed with the Immigration Court by the
Service.”); 8 C.F.R. § 1003.13 (stating that, for proceedings begun after April 1,
1997, a “charging document” includes an NTA). Instead, § 1003.14 “sets forth a
claim processing rule.” Perez-Sanchez, 935 F.3d at 1157.
For these reasons, Uceda-Alvares’s “Pereira challenge must fail.” Id.
“Because neither 8 U.S.C. § 1229(a) nor 8 C.F.R. § 1003.14 speaks to jurisdiction,
the IJ and the BIA properly exercised jurisdiction over [her] removal hearing based
on the authority conferred upon them by 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(a)(1),” notwithstanding
the defective NTA. Id.
“To the extent [Uceda-Alvares] argues [s]he is nonetheless entitled to a
remand because [her] NTA violated the agency’s claim-processing rules, we dismiss
this part of [her] petition for lack of jurisdiction because [s]he failed to exhaust the
claim before the agency.” Id. In particular, the “only” argument she presented to
the BIA was that the IJ lacked jurisdiction, even though Perez-Sanchez was issued
several months before she filed her appellate brief to the BIA. Given rules requiring
administrative exhaustion, see Amaya-Artunduaga, 463 F.3d at 1250, that is the only
argument we have jurisdiction to address. Because that sole argument is foreclosed
by Perez-Sanchez, we must deny the petition for review.
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PETITION DENIED.
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