Dominga Sanik Herrera v. Pamela Bondi

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 15, 2025
Docket25-3207
StatusPublished

This text of Dominga Sanik Herrera v. Pamela Bondi (Dominga Sanik Herrera v. Pamela Bondi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dominga Sanik Herrera v. Pamela Bondi, (6th Cir. 2025).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b) File Name: 25a0338p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

┐ DOMINGA SANIK HERRERA, │ Petitioner, │ > No. 25-3207 │ v. │ │ PAMELA BONDI, Attorney General, │ Respondent. │ ┘

On Petition for Review from the Board of Immigration Appeals. No. A 075 334 494.

Decided and Filed: December 15, 2025

Before: NALBANDIAN, DAVIS, and HERMANDORFER, Circuit Judges. _________________

COUNSEL

ON BRIEF: Margaret W. Wong, MARGARET WONG & ASSOCIATES LLC, Cleveland, Ohio, for Petitioner. Remi da Rocha-Afodu, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Respondent. _________________

OPINION _________________

HERMANDORFER, Circuit Judge. After Dominga Sanik Herrera entered the United States unlawfully, an immigration judge ordered her removed to her native country of Guatemala. Herrera later sought to reopen her removal proceedings on the ground that she lacked notice of the original removal hearing. Herrera’s attempt failed after she did not respond to an IJ’s request for more information about her lack-of-notice claim. Nearly a decade later, in 2020, Herrera re-raised her lack-of-notice argument in a second motion to reopen her removal No. 25-3207 Herrera v. Bondi Page 2

proceedings. The IJ denied her motion as number barred. The Board of Immigration Appeals agreed and dismissed Herrera’s appeal of the IJ’s decision. It also declined to reopen proceedings sua sponte. Because Herrera failed to exhaust her number-bar challenge, we deny her petition in part. And because we lack jurisdiction over the Board’s decision not to reopen sua sponte, we dismiss her petition in part.

I

Herrera, a native and citizen of Guatemala, entered the United States without inspection in January 1994. In March 1997, she applied for asylum and withholding of removal. It appears the address Herrera provided on her application was that of a Tennessee man who helped her complete the asylum application because Herrera believed him to be “a knowledgeable immigration attorney” at the time. A.R. 94. The application nonetheless attested that Herrera resided at the provided address and listed no alternative way of reaching Herrera. And Herrera did not make any changes to that address or provide an alternative address at her asylum interview.

Two months later, using the address from Herrera’s application, the Government served Herrera with a Notice to Appear. The Notice to Appear charged her as removable under 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(6)(A)(i). It set her removal proceeding for a date in August; the hearing was later advanced to June 19, 1997. Herrera did not attend the June hearing. An IJ then ordered Herrera removed in absentia.

Over a decade later, in September 2010, Herrera moved to reopen her removal proceedings and rescind the in absentia removal order. Herrera contended that she never received the Notice to Appear and that she lacked notice of the June 1997 hearing date. In December 2010, the IJ issued an interim order requesting additional evidence regarding Herrera’s lack-of-notice claim within 60 days. Herrera failed to provide more evidence or any further response. So the IJ denied her motion to reopen. Herrera did not appeal the IJ’s decision to the Board.

Herrera waited nearly another decade before filing a second motion to reopen in June 2020. That second motion asserted the same notice-based arguments Herrera pressed previously. No. 25-3207 Herrera v. Bondi Page 3

In response, the IJ recognized that persons previously ordered removed may generally file only one motion to reopen. See 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(c)(7)(A); 8 C.F.R. § 1003.23(b)(1). The IJ noted that agency regulations further specify that “an alien may file only one motion” to reopen and rescind an in absentia order of removal “based on lack of notice.” A.R. 54 (citing 8 C.F.R. § 1003.23(b)(4)(ii)). Herrera, in the IJ’s view, did not satisfy the changed-country-conditions exception to that number-bar rule as needed to advance a new asylum or withholding-of-removal claim. See 8 C.F.R. § 1003.23(b)(4)(i). So the IJ applied the number-bar rule to reject Herrera’s second motion.

Herrera appealed the IJ’s decision to the Board. Her brief before the Board contended that she never received adequate notice of the 1997 removal hearing and that extraordinary circumstances excused her failure to appear at that hearing. Herrera also argued that the in absentia order was erroneous because the IJ applied the incorrect legal framework. And she requested that the Board reopen her proceedings sua sponte. Missing from the brief was any argument about the IJ’s number-bar conclusion.

The Board dismissed Herrera’s appeal. It concluded that Herrera did “not meaningfully challenge the [IJ’s] determination that her motion [was] numerically barred.” A.R. 3. The Board also determined that Herrera did “not make any argument for equitable tolling of the numerical limitation.” Id. So the Board “deem[ed] these issues waived.” Id. And because the number-bar analysis was “dispositive,” the Board did not address Herrera’s merits arguments supporting her second motion to reopen. Id. at 4. Finally, the Board declined to reopen Herrera’s removal proceedings sua sponte. In explaining that “discretionary” decision, the Board cited Herrera’s lack of “due diligence in seeking reopening” over the 27 years following her removal order, her lengthy unlawful presence, and the “importance of finality in immigration proceedings.” Id.

Herrera timely petitioned for this Court’s review.

II

Herrera challenges three aspects of the Board’s decision. First, she contends that the Board erred in its number-bar analysis. That is so, she claims, because the Board failed to consider whether equitable tolling applied to the numerical limitation on her second motion to No. 25-3207 Herrera v. Bondi Page 4

reopen. She also asserts that the number bar did not preclude her motion in any event. Second, Herrera argues that the Board erred in declining to reopen her removal proceedings sua sponte. And third, she maintains that the Board violated her Fifth Amendment right to due process by failing to adequately explain its reasoning. We address, and reject, each challenge in turn.

A

The agency denied Herrera’s second motion to reopen on the ground that the motion was number barred. But as the Government points out, Herrera’s brief to the Board did not contest the IJ’s number-bar holding. From there, the Government argues that Herrera failed to exhaust her challenge to the agency’s reliance on the number bar. And it says her failure in turn precludes this Court’s review of the present arguments. We agree.

Courts generally “may review a final order of removal only if” “the alien has exhausted all administrative remedies available to the alien as of right.” 8 U.S.C. § 1252(d). Although non-jurisdictional, the exhaustion requirement is a claim-processing rule “that a court must enforce” when “a party properly raises it”—as the Government does here. Mazariegos-Rodas v. Garland, 122 F.4th 655, 664 (6th Cir. 2024) (quoting Fort Bend County v. Davis, 587 U.S. 541, 549 (2019)).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Barry v. Mukasey
524 F.3d 721 (Sixth Circuit, 2008)
Yan Xia Zhang v. Mukasey
543 F.3d 851 (Sixth Circuit, 2008)
Tamenut v. Mukasey
521 F.3d 1000 (Eighth Circuit, 2008)
Jose Lisboa v. Eric Holder, Jr.
570 F. App'x 468 (Sixth Circuit, 2014)
Jose Barajas-Salinas v. Eric H. Holder, Jr.
760 F.3d 905 (Eighth Circuit, 2014)
Muhammad Rais v. Eric Holder, Jr.
768 F.3d 453 (Sixth Circuit, 2014)
Richard Jahn v. Philip Craig Burke
863 F.3d 521 (Sixth Circuit, 2017)
Henrikas Malukas v. William Barr
940 F.3d 968 (Seventh Circuit, 2019)
Thompson v. Barr
959 F.3d 476 (First Circuit, 2020)
Alain Cuevas-Nuno v. William Barr
969 F.3d 331 (Sixth Circuit, 2020)
Alejandro Salazar-Marroquin v. William P. Barr
969 F.3d 814 (Seventh Circuit, 2020)
Vitalina Lucas Lopez v. Merrick B. Garland
990 F.3d 1000 (Sixth Circuit, 2021)
Djie v. Garland
39 F.4th 280 (Fifth Circuit, 2022)
Chen v. Garland
43 F.4th 244 (Second Circuit, 2022)
Damien Williams v. Merrick Garland
59 F.4th 620 (Fourth Circuit, 2022)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Dominga Sanik Herrera v. Pamela Bondi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dominga-sanik-herrera-v-pamela-bondi-ca6-2025.